Arthur O'Connor (United Irishman)

Arthur O'Connor (4 July 1763 – 25 April 1852), was a United Irishman who was active in seeking allies for the Irish cause in England and, in a last constitutional effort to pursue reform, sought to return to the Irish House of Commons, where he had earlier served, in the parliamentary elections of 1796. Arrested on the eve of the 1798 rebellion, in 1802 he went into exile in France where he rose to the rank of general in the army of Napoleon.

Arthur O'Connor
O'Connor in French military uniform
Member of Parliament for Philipstown
In office
1790–1795
Preceded byJohn Toler
Henry Cope
Succeeded byWilliam Sankey
John Longfield
Personal details
Born(1763-07-04)4 July 1763
Bandon, County Cork
Died25 April 1852(1852-04-25) (aged 88)
Spouse(s)
Alexandrine Louise Sophie de Caritat de Condorcet
(m. 1807)
RelationsRoger O'Connor (brother)
Children5, including Daniel

Early life

Portrait of O'Connor, by François Gérard.
Arthur O'Connor.

O'Connor was born near Bandon, County Cork on 4 July 1763 into a wealthy Irish Protestant family. Through his brother Roger O'Connor, the author of the Chronicles of Eri who shared his politics, he was an uncle to Roderic O'Connor, Francisco Burdett O'Connor, and Feargus O'Connor among others.[1] His other two brothers, Daniel and Robert, were pro-British loyalists.[2]

As a young man, he embraced the Republican movement early on as he was encouraged by the American Revolution overseas. After his oldest brother Daniel got into debt, his brother Roger bought out his inheritance. The family's political and financial conflicts were only deepened when their sister Anne committed suicide, after having been forbidden by the family from marrying a Catholic man she was in love with.[2]

Career

From 1790 to 1795 he was a Member of Parliament in the Irish House of Commons for Philipstown. The Irish House of Commons was part of the colonial parliament that sat in College Green. O'Connor was also a member of the Kildare Street Club in Dublin.[3]

United Irishmen

In 1796, he membership Test of the Society of United Irishmen and determined, on its platform, to contest what had been his uncle Lord Longueville's Irish parliamentary seat in Antrim. In January 1797, to the "free electors" of the county he commended the "entire abolition of religious distinctions" and the "establishment of a National Government", while protesting the "invasion" of the country by English and Scottish troops and the continuation of the continental war.[4] Arrests, including his own in February for seditious libel, frustrated his attempts to canvass.[5] With Lord Edward Fitzgerald and others in the leadership in Dublin his thoughts turned to securing "fraternal" Franch support for a revolutionary insurrection.

While traveling to France in March 1798 he was arrested alongside Father James Coigly, a Catholic priest, and two other United Irishmen Benjamin Binns (also of the London Corresponding Society), and John Allen. Coigly, who found to be carrying an clear evidence of treason, an address from "The Secret Committee of England’" to the Directory of France, was hanged.[6][7] O'Connor, able to call Charles James Fox, Lord Moria and Richard Brinsley Sheridan other Whig luminaries to testify to his character, was acquitted but was immediately re-arrested and imprisoned at Fort George in Scotland along with his brother Roger. On his way to confinement,[8] he distributed a poem, which, seeming to recant his republican beliefs, with verses re-ordered (see below), was instead a ringing re-affirmation of them:[9]

(1) The pomp of courts, and pride of kings,
(3) I prize above all earthly things;
(5) I love my country, but my king,
(7) Above all men his praise I'll sing.
(9) The royal banners are display'd,
(11) And may success the standard aid:

(2) I fain would banish far from hence
(4) The Rights of Man and Common Sense.
(6) Destruction to that odious name,
(8) The plague of princes, Thomas Paine,
(10) Defeat and ruin seize the cause
(12) Of France, her liberty, and laws.[10]

Life in France

O'Connor was released in 1802 under the condition of "banishment".[11] He travelled to Paris, where he was regarded as the accredited representative of the United Irishmen by Napoleon who, in February 1804, appointed him General of Division in the French army. General Berthier, Minister of War, directed that O'Connor was to join the expeditionary army intended for the invasion of Ireland at Brest.

When the plan fell through, O'Connor retired from the army. He offered his services to Napoleon during the Hundred Days. After Napoleon's defeat he was allowed to retire, becoming a naturalised French citizen in 1818. He supported the 1830 revolution which created the July Monarchy, publishing a defence of events in the form of an open letter to General Lafayette. After the revolution he became mayor of Le Bignon-Mirabeau. The rest of his life was spent composing literary works on political and social topics.[12] Arthur and his wife continued the efforts of her mother, Sophie de Condorcet (who was herself an accomplished translator of Thomas Paine and Adam Smith), to publish her father's, the Marquis de Condorcet, works in twelve volumes between 1847 and 1849.[13]

Personal life

In 1807, although more than twice her age, O'Connor married Alexandrine Louise Sophie de Caritat de Condorcet (b 1790/1-1859), known as Eliza, the daughter of the scholar the Marquis de Condorcet and Sophie de Condorcet.[14][15][16][17]

Following his marriage he borrowed money from fellow exile William Putnam McCabe to acquire a country residence. O’Connor's tardiness in repaying the debt to McCabe, whose own investments into cotton spinning in Rouen failed, resulted in a lawsuit.[18] Cathal O'Bryne suggests that the debt was behind O'Connor's later suggestion to R. R. Madden that McCabe had been a double agent, a charge to which, Madden notes, the French government lent no credence.[19]

O'Connor's wife gave birth to five children, three sons and two daughters, almost all of whom predeceased him.[17] Only one son, Daniel, married and had issue.[20]

  • Daniel O'Connor (1810–1851), who married Ernestine Duval du Fraville (1820–1877), a daughter of Laurent-Martin Duval, Baron Duval du Fraville, in 1843.[21] She died at Cannes in 1877.[22]

O'Connor died on 25 April 1852. His widow died in 1859.[23]

Descendants

His descendants continued to serve, as officers, in the French army and still reside at Château du Bignon.[23] Through his only surviving son Daniel, he was a grandfather of two boys, Arthur O'Connor (1844–1909), who served in the French army, and Fernand O'Connor (1847–1905), a Brigade General who served in Africa and was made a Knight of the Legion of Honour.[24] His grandson, Arthur, married Marguerite de Ganay (1859–1940), a daughter of Emily and Etienne, Marquis de Ganay, in 1878. They had two daughters, Elisabeth O’Connor, the wife of Alexandre de La Taulotte; and Brigitte Emilie Fernande O'Connor (1880–1948), who in 1904 married the Comte François de La Tour du Pin (1878–1914), who was killed ten years later at the Battle of the Marne.[25][lower-alpha 1]

Publications

  • The Measures of Ministry to Prevent a Revolution: Are the Certain Means of Bringing it on (1794)
  • A Letter to the Earl of Carlisle, Occasioned by His Lordship's Reply to Earl Fitzwilliam's Two Letters, Exhibiting the Present State of Parties in Ireland (1795)
  • State of Ireland (1798)
  • Paddy's Resource: Being a Select Collection of Original and Modern Patriotic Songs: : Compiled for the Use of the People of Ireland (1798)
  • The Portrait of an Irish Executive Director, by Himself and His Friends (1799)
  • État actuel de la Grande-Bretagne (1804)
  • Lettre du général Arthur Condorcet O'connor au général La Fayette: sur les causes qui ont privé la France des avantages de la révolution de 1830 (1831)
  • État religieux de la France et de l'Europe d'après les sources les plus authentiques avec les controverses sur la séparation de lÉglise et de l'État, Volumes 1 à 2 (written with François-André Isambert and Charles Lasteyrie, 1844)
  • Le monopole, cause de tous les maux (1849)
  • To the People of Ireland

See also

References

Notes
  1. They had two sons and one daughter: Aymar de la Tour du Pin, Marquis de la Tour du Pin-Chambly (1906–1979), Patrice de la Tour du Pin (1911–1975),[26] and Philis de la Tour du Pin.
Sources
  1. Casey, Brian (2013). Defying the Law of the Land: Agrarian Radicals in Irish History. The History Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-7524-9952-9.
  2. "Arthur O'Connor United Irishman". www.hayterhames.co.uk. Jane Hayter-Hames. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  3. Thomas Hay Sweet Escott, Club Makers and Club Members (1913), pp. 329–333
  4. O'Connor, Arthur (20 January 1797). To the free electors of the County of Antrim. Belfast. pp. 2, 7. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  5. McSkimin, Samuel (1906). Annals of Ulster: from 1790 to 1798. Belfast: Jmes Cleeland, William Mullan & Son. p. 45.
  6. Madden, Richard Robert (1846). The United Irishmen, Their Lives and Times: v. 1. J. Madden & Company. pp. 27–30, 41.
  7. Webb, Alfred (1878). "Arthur O'Connor - Irish Biography". www.libraryireland.com. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
  8. The Casket: Flowers of Literature, Wit and Sentiment, Vol. 5. Philadelphia. 1830. p. 234.
  9. Hitchens, Christopher (15 July 2006). "Bones of Contention". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  10. http://www.rc.umd.edu/editions/warpoetry/1799/1799_5.html The Monthly Mirror, VII (February 1799), p. 127. The author was identified as Arthur O'Connor in a letter to the editor of Drakard's Paper (later The Champion) on 14 April 1813.Retrieved 3 Feb. 2013.
  11. http://www.pgil-eirdata.org/html/pgil_datasets/index.htm O'Connor at Princess Grace Irish Library. Retrieved 9 October 2007.
  12. http://www.iol.ie/~fagann/1798/bios.htm Extracts from A Biographical Dictionary of Irishmen in France. By Richard Hayes. Published by MH Gill & Sons Ltd. Dublin 1949. Retrieved 9 October 2007.
  13. http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=17200149
  14. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 14 July 2007. Retrieved 11 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 27 September 2010. Retrieved 11 January 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  16. Clifford D. Conner. Arthur O'Connor: The Most Important Irish Revolutionary You May Never Have Heard Of, iUniverse, 2009 – 340 pages. See p. 182 for marriage date and ages of bride and groom
  17. "Arthur O'Connor". Retrieved 29 December 2012.
  18. "Arthur O'Connor - Irish Paris". www.irishmeninparis.org. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  19. O'Byrne, Cathal (1946). As I Roved Out: A Book of the North : Being a Series of Historical Sketches of Ulster and Old Belfast. Blackstaff Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-85640-204-3.
  20. http://www.condorcet-tourcoing.fr/spip.php?article149 Archived 2013-12-17 at the Wayback Machine "The O'Connor-Condorcet couple had five children, only one of whom, Daniel O'Connor, left a posterity: two sons, including General Arthur O'Connor, who married Marguerite Elizabeth de Ganay in 1878. From this union, two daughters were born: the first, Elizabeth O'Connor, married Alexandre de La Taulotte; the second, Brigitte O'Connor, to Count François de La Tour du Pin who gave her three children: Philis, Aymar and Patrice de La Tour du Pin."
  21. Révérend, Vicomte Albert (1902). Titres, anoblissements et pairies de la restauration 1814-1830 (in French). Chez l'auteur et chez H. Champion.
  22. Annuaire de la noblesse de France et des maisons souveraines de l'Europe (in French). Bureau de la publication. 1879. p. 276.
  23. Conner, Clifford D. (2009). Arthur O'Connor: The Most Important Irish Revolutionary You May Never Have Heard Of. iUniverse. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-4401-0517-3.
  24. Porch, Douglas (2010). The French Foreign Legion: A Complete History of the Legendary Fighting Force. Skyhorse Publishing Inc. p. 324. ISBN 978-1-61608-068-6.
  25. King, David (2008). Vienna, 1814: How the Conquerors of Napoleon Made Love, War, and Peace at the Congress of Vienna. Three Rivers Press. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-307-33717-7.
  26. Patrice de La Tour du Pin Summary. www.bookrags.com. BookRags. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
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