27th , 1846
William Smith O’Brien (Irish: Liam Mac Gabhann Ó Briain; 17 October 1803 – 18 June 1864) was an Irish nationalist Member of Parliament (MP) and a leader of the Young Ireland movement. He also encouraged the use of the Irish language. He was convicted of sedition for his part in the Young Irelander “Famine Rebellion” of 1848 but his sentence of death was commuted to deportation to Van Diemen’s Land.
In 1854, he was released on the condition of exile from Ireland, and he lived in Brussels for two years. In 1856 Smith O’Brien was pardoned and returned to Ireland, but he was never active again in politics.
Young Ireland and the Irish Confederation
In 1843, in protest against the imprisonment of Daniel O’Connell, he joined O’Connell’s anti-union Repeal Association.
Within the association he identified with the circle around Charles Gavan Duffy and his paper The Nation which O’Connell in hostile reference to Giuseppe Mazzini’s anti-clerical and insurrectionary Young Italy dubbed Young Ireland.
After O’Connell and his son John forced a division with resolutions renouncing a resort to revolutionary force regardless of circumstances, Smith O’Brien withdrew with the Young Irelanders into a new Irish Confederation, although he was to continue to preach reconciliation until O’Connell’s death in May 1847.
The objectives of the Confederation were “independence of the Irish nation” with “no means to attain that end abjured, save such as were inconsistent with honour, morality and reason”.
In the Confederation Duffy was trying to hold together a broad national coalition, and had for that reason advanced Smith O’Brien, as a Protestant and a landowner, to the leadership. On the Confederation’s Council Duffy and Smith O’Brien were supported by Patrick James Smyth who argued that with propertied classes, as well as the priesthood opposed, the Confederation could not, in the event of insurrection, hope to call out a single parish in Ireland.[
As the famine took hold, Smith O’Brien started organising practical relief. By the spring of 1848, the scale of the catastrophe facing the country persuaded all factions on the Irish Confederation Council that independence was an existential issue; that the immediate need was for an Irish national government able take control of national resources. In March 1848, Smith O’Brien called for the formation of a National Guard. He was arrested, but acquitted on a charge of sedition.[12] In May, Duffy published “The Creed of the Nation.” If Irish independence was to come by force, it would be in the form of a Republic.
The Government made clear that its chosen response to the crisis in Ireland was coercion not concession. John Mitchel was convicted under new martial law measures approved by Parliament (including by a number of “Old Ireland” O’Connellite MPs).
On 9 July 1848 Duffy was arrested for sedition. He managed to smuggle a few lines out to The Nation but the issue that would have carried his declaration, that there was no remedy now but the sword, was seized and the paper suppressed.