Evictions! What Major O’Shaughnessy Saw!
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It was on the 'ever glorious Fourth' that  we first struck Ireland via Dublin, and, as the latter was our first stopping  place, we naturally called upon Colonel McCaskill,  the American Consul." 1  So began an account  published in  True Witness and Catholic Chronicle  written by Major E. J. O'Shaughnessy about  a visit to Ireland during a European trip in the  summer of 1888. This account, and an interview  published at the same time in the  Catholic Union  and Times served not only as travelogues but as  the only known American witness account of the  infamous evictions on the Vandeleur Estate in  County Clare. 2  By design or by happenstance,  "the Major," as he was called by friends and  family, was among a handful of American and  British tourists present for the wholesale evictions  of twenty-four families near the town of Kilrush,  one of the more sensational and certainly the  most photographed of the late-Victorian era Irish  evictions.
Who was this Major E. J. O'Shaughnessy  who saw it a natural thing to make a July 4th  office call on the American Consul while visiting Ireland? According to one contemporary  publication "Major E. J. O'Shaughnessy, of  this city, is well known in Irish Nationalist  circles, and has been prominent in Irish  political movements this side of the water  during many years past." So stated the news - paper's introduction to its interview with  him. 3  The Major was indeed a well-known  Irish nationalist, and also was a prosperous  New York City merchant supplying wholesale cloth to the Garment District. Despite  the title of Major he so publicly carried, E. J.  O'Shaughnessy had never served in uniform. 4   Born in Montreal in 1848, he arrived in New  York City in 1865 "only one step ahead of  the law" his son would say with a smile. The  Major claimed to have been a member of a  Montreal Fenian group, plotting revolution-ary activities. When his group was revealed by an informer he ran for the border. No proof of this is likely ever to be found, but if the company one keeps is truly an indication of one's  character, his claim has the ring of truth. The  contemporary press frequently reported him  in the company of Fenians, several of them of  the "physical force" persuasion. 5 The Major starts to appear regularly in  the New York press in the wake of Charles  Stewart Parnell's January 1880 visit to the  city. He becomes an actor in the organizations that subsequently formed seeking land  reform in Ireland, relief of the Irish poor,  financial support of the Irish Parliamentary  Party, and advancement of Home Rule. He  was not unique in this. Parnell's visit to the  Evictions! What Major O'Shaughnessy Saw!  Ed O'Shaughnessy was  surprised to discover that  his great grandparents  were present at the famous  Vandeleur Estate evictions in  County Clare during 1888.  Since the discovery Ed has  researched these evictions,  searched for and found  forgotten photographs, com - municated with descendants,  and published his work in  Ireland. Ed holds an under - graduate degree in history  and graduate degrees in  political science and execu - tive management.   ©2018. Printed with  permission of Edward J.  O'Shaughnessy.
Photo:   M ajor E. J.  O'Shaughnessy in a  picture taken around  1920. He was a  former Canadian  Fenian, a member of  numerous New York  City Irish nationalist  societies (some semisecret), a wholesale  cloth merchant and,  when this photograph  was taken, a deputy  collector for the U.S.  Treasury with duty at  the Customs House,  New York City.  Courtesy of Edward J.  O'Shaughnessy.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   38/27/18   2:03 PM Vol. 31, 2017 United States provided direction to many  Irish Americans who only needed direction.  As participation in Irish nationalist activities gathered momentum, so did interest in  visiting the old country. By the mid-1880s  travel to Ireland was widely advertised and  easily booked. Days after the Major's fortieth  birthday, the O'Shaughnessy party of six,  three adults and three children, steamed off  to adventure. 6 his communications from ireland At the time of the Major's visit, Ireland was in  the throes of the so-called Land War, pitting  the formidable might of the landlord class,  backed by every element of power the British  Crown had at its disposal, against the tenant  farmers, backed by the Irish National League,  underwritten to a significant degree by contri - butions from Irish Americans. Wholesale evictions, devastating during the Famine years,  were again becoming frequent. Then, in 1887,  a terrible tool was added to the paraphernalia  of eviction - the battering ram. The Major would see the monstrous ram in action. 7 We are able to recreate much of the Major's  experiences while visiting Ireland  "under coercion," as Ireland was so described, because of  his determination to communicate what he saw.  A remonstrative man, he was outraged by much  of what he perceived while in Ireland and felt  compelled to get his story out. How he did so  has uniquely advanced our understanding of  this episode of history and gives us hope that  more of his communications might be found.
During his six months abroad the Major  communicated regularly with colleagues in  New  York City. He did so through cable and  the post. In one report of his communications  we read: ...[w]riting later from the hand - some watering place known as Kilkee, on  the west coast of County Clare, Major  O'Shaughnessy proceeds to give us an  account of the horrible deeds that have  been going on in that landlord-ridden  country on the land which the heartless  Captain Vandeleur claims to own.... 8  Photo: Captain Hector  S. Vandeleur, the  absentee landlord of  the Vandeleur Estate,  Kilrush, Ireland.  Captain Vandeleur  inherited the Kilrush  estate upon the  death of his father,  Colonel Crofton  Vandeleur, in 1881.  Rarely visiting the  Estate, Captain  Vandeleur lived  with his English wife  variously in London  or on the Continent.  Courtesy of the Clare  County Library.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   48/27/18   2:03 PM A favorite recipient of the Major's communiques was John M. Wall, a special cor - respondent for the  New York-Tribune and a  colleague of William O'Brien, the editor of  United Ireland , the National League's mouthpiece. John Wall, a minor celebrity in the  New York Irish community, would ensure  that the Major's friends and associates were  kept informed while he was abroad. 9  In the  Home News section of the  New-York Tribune,  dated August 1, 1888, it was noted that  "Major E.J. O'Shaughnessy, well-known in  Irish Nationalist circles, is at present witnessing the horrible eviction scenes on Captain  Vandeleur's estate in County Clare, Ireland." 10   The attentive reader may find similarity in the  description of Major O'Shaughnessy here and  in the introduction to the published interview.
Some months after returning to New  York, the Major gathered his notes and com - posed a lively account of his travels from  which we get details of his visit to Ireland, and he was interviewed, perhaps by special correspondent Wall. His account and a report from  the interview were published in the  Catholic  Union and Times .  A third publication, in a  1901 edition of  The Gael , presented not only  an account of the evictions he witnessed, it  also featured four eviction photographs he  provided to illustrate the story. (Those four  photographs appear in this article.) We know  from family memory that the Major brought  home several eviction photographs, one so  important that he had it enlarged, framed,  and hung prominently in his home. 11 attention to the evictions Newsworthy in their day, the evictions on the  Vandeleur Estate have taken on a new significance in the present century because of the surprising number of photographs that continue  to surface, and the resulting exploration of how  cleverly they were used. We know now that the  evictions witnessed by the Major were the most  photographed of the nineteenth-century Irish  Vol. 31, 2017  Illustration:   A n advertisement for  lectures in Brooklyn by  Professor George Reed  Cromwell, "America's  Most Famous Forgotten  Magic Lantern  Showman." Courtesy  of the New York Public  Library.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   58/27/18   2:03 PM evictions. 12  Furthermore, many of these shocking  photographs would rapidly travel great distances  and be seen by diverse audiences. In this dissemi - nation the Major played an important part as an  analysis of his following statement about the photographs taken on the Estate reveals: Thos. [recte Timothy] O'Connor, a  photographer of Limerick, was present and  took photographs of all the eviction scenes  and Professor Cromwell [of New York]  reproduced them on his immense canvas  in the Grand Opera House in this city last  winter, and will show them again...."  13 In this one sentence we find two strikingly  important revelations. Timothy O'Connor of  Limerick was named as the photographer who  took the eviction photographs. 14  No other witness, reporter or otherwise, bothered to identify  the photographer who was ever-present. We  learn also that Professor George Reed Cromwell  reproduced O'Connor's eviction photographs  and projected them onto an immense screen  before New York City audiences in the Grand  Opera House. 15  Furthermore, we read that Professor Cromwell had a New York City showing of the photographs provided by the Major  during the preceding winter and that more  showings would occur. The Major was com - municating to his readers what some already  knew. He had provided his eviction photographs  to Professor Cromwell who copied them and  incorporated them into his illustrated lecture  on Ireland. If the readers had missed the first  showing last winter, they were informed of more  opportunities not to be missed. It helps to know  that Professor Cromwell was the most famous  illustrated lecturer in New York City in his day,  using "magic lantern" technology to project  images onto a large screen on stage. There was  Vol. 31, 2017  Illustration: Advertisement for  Professor Cromwell's  illustrated lecture  on Ireland updated  with the inclusion  of "Eviction  Scenes." The scenes  were photographs  stated by Major  O'Shaughnessy to  have been taken by  Timothy O'Connor  of Limerick. This  lecture was for  Sunday, March  17, 1889, the  second of three  mentioned by Major  O'Shaughnessy  in his published  account of the  evictions. From the  New York Herald ,  March 17, 1889.  Courtesy of Edward  J. O'Shaughnessy.
Photo: This photograph is  titled "Demanding  Possession. Home of  John Connell." For  this eviction, the ram  was not used because  Connell was coaxed  out of his home by  officials. Officials  can be seen clustered  near the window  through which a  constable entered to  lead Connell out.  This was published  in the August  1901 edition of  The Gael  and was  provided by Major  O'Shaughnessy.  Courtesy of Edward  J. O'Shaughnessy.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   68/27/18   2:03 PM Vol. 31, 2017 no better source to publicly disseminate the  Vandeleur eviction photographs. The first illustrated lecture incorporating the Major's eviction  photographs was Sunday evening, December  16, 1888, within three months of the Major's  return to New York City. The New York Times  in announcing this lecture stated the "pictures  will include...timely scenes of evictions, show - ing how the constables turn out the tenants."  Two more illustrated lectures were to follow,  March 17, 1889, St. Patrick's Day, and one in  December, 1889. 16 to kilkee and kilrush When the O'Shaughnessy party arrived in  Dublin on the fourth of July they were half-way  through their European travels. After several  months on the continent they were now visiting the land of their parents for the first time.  They did not tarry in Dublin and, according to  his account, after a week in Limerick  "we took  a small tug boat called the Vandeleur - some dub  it a steamer - to Kilrush, the seat of the infamous  Vandeleur evictions against the Plan of Campaign."  As it happened, they shared the ride along the Shannon with a contingent of British troops: A detachment of soldiers was packed  down on the lower deck among the cattle,  and I said to myself that it served them  right for donning the hated red coat of  English tyranny. They were going to pro - tect the cut-throats and Emergency Men  in evicting helpless families from their huts  and holdings." 17 The Major and his family were on their way to  the seaside resort of Kilkee. The British soldiers  were on their way to a temporary encampment  at the Kilrush House, the home of landlord  Captain Hector Vandeleur, on the grounds of the  Vandeleur estate. The two parties would soon  meet again.
Kilkee, a popular tourist location, had several hotels facing the ocean around a crescentshaped bay. Normally a calming setting, it was  now abuzz with those gathered to attend the  evictions. The crowd included the press, members of Parliament, and a handful of British and  American tourists. We may imagine the extro - verted Major O'Shaughnessy working the crowd   Photo: "First Stroke of  the Ram. Michael  Cleary's House." This  photograph captures the  sheriff standing near  the back of the ram,  the district magistrate,  Colonel Turner, to  the left with his hand  on his hip, members  of the Royal Irish  Constabulary, plus other  officials and observers.  This was published  in the August 1901  edition of The Gael,  and was provided by  Major O'Shaughnessy.  Courtesy of Edward J.  O'Shaughnessy.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   78/27/18   2:03 PM Vol. 31, 2017 and insinuating himself into the center of things  to come. It was the custom of the times to introduce oneself and hand over a calling card. The  family has memory of the Major's calling cards .  The cards would prove useful.
Early in the morning on Wednesday, July  18, the Major, his wife and her sister were in  a jaunting car, along with a string of others,  travelling to Kilrush to meet up with the evic - tion column. He observed that "The evictions  took place within a radius of ten miles around  the town of Kilrush, of all of which property the  Vandeleurs and Studderts have been landlords and  agents respectively for generations." It was said in  his circles back in New York City that to understand the Land War in Ireland one had to travel  to Ireland to see it first-hand. The Major was  about to see it first-hand:  "I went to the evictions  in company with the representatives of the Dublin  newspapers, and I took my wife and her sister along  for I knew the sight would make their hair curl, as  it did."  18 The observers from Kilkee would link up with  the eviction column shortly after nine o'clock  in Kilrush. The eviction party was formidably  organized, and consisted of the sub-sheriff, mag-istrates of various levels, the landlord's agent, 50 mounted Hussars, 120 regular British infantry, and 120 Royal Irish Constabulary men (the  RIC was a paramilitary force looking much like  the regular infantry), plus the paraphernalia of  eviction , including a cart carrying a newly delivered battering ram. The Major stated that  "The  battering ram, or 'Balfour's Maiden' as it is now  happily called, always accompanied this procession of evictors." 19  The civilian observers were  marshalled into place at the end of this very long  column. The Major later observed that what a  "...curious and novel sight it is to a stranger, and  particularly an American, to see a whole regiment  of Hussars, infantry, constabulary and Emergency  Men, comprising over a thousand men marching  over the roads and highways of County Clare to  evict a family of little children and old people out of  their thatched cottages." 20  As the eviction column  departed Kilrush for the eviction sites we are told  that a ...notable incident occurred during the  march of the troops. The bell of the parish  church of Kilrush would ring its funeral  sound and all the shops and stores would  have their shutters up, while the country  around would be black with people follow -  Photo:  "Attacking the Breach.  Michael Cleary's House."  The constables are seen  here gripping their  batons awaiting the  word to rush the breach  and attack defenders  inside. Colonel Turner  is the man with leggings  and a stick. Men with  black equipment belts  are the Royal Irish  Constabulary. Those  with white equipment  belts are regular British  infantry. This was  published in the August  1901 edition of The  Gael and was provided  by Major O'Shaughnessy.  Courtesy of Edward J.  O'Shaughnessy.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   88/27/18   2:03 PM   ing in the wake of this ghastly  procession  of evictors. 21 The bell was rung to alert the local population  that the eviction party was on the march, the sig - nal to start moving towards the roads along the  route of march. The Major reported that  "As the  procession moved from one beat to another beat it  looked like a huge funeral with its long line of military in front, and outside cars following, with the  people on foot bringing up the rear, besides thousands (of other spectators) crossing the fields." 22 On Day 1 of the eviction operation three  families were visited. The first two offered no  resistance, but the third family visited, the Cleary  family, had prepared for a spirited defense. After  the sheriff went through the process of demand - ing possession, to be refused by the occupants,  an attempt was made to force the front door.  Finding the door too stoutly barricaded, the ram  was brought from its cart and erected facing an  exterior wall: ...[so] they begin at the stone wall  near the door to force an entrance, and  when they make a break in the cabin, out  would come a spray of (supposed to be) hot  oatmeal water, and Sheriff Croker (and  he is a corker) would be the first to receive  it on his wicker shield. Then he and the  constables would rush in and club the  occupants. 23 The Crown had learned lessons from previous  eviction operations: for example, to include the  need for overwhelming force and the need for an  effective machine to break into a defended cottage. The use of crowbars and sledge hammers  had proven excessively time-consuming and put  the men wielding those tools at risk. The idea  to procure a massive battering ram was the solu - tion. 24 Major O'Shaughnessy brought home two  photographs of the Cleary eviction, titled by  Timothy O'Connor as "Frist Stroke of the  Ram" and "Attacking the Breach." In both  scenes the ram is seen in the center of the  photograph. The "Emergency Men" stand  on both sides to swing the ram. The RIC  are standing close to protect the Emergency Men, the bailiffs, and magistrates. Those with black equipment belts are the paramilitary RIC and those farther back, wearing white equipment belts, are regular infantry. Though hard to see, the RIC near the ram are grip-ping their batons in anticipation of attacking the breach.
Major O'Shaughnessy, his wife and her  sister, were granted permission to be within  the military perimeter. The process to request  permission was repeated daily by providing a  calling card for consideration by Colonel Turner,  the Divisional Magistrate. The Major gave in  to some braggadocio:  "No one but the reporters, your humble servant, and my two ladies were  allowed within the lines of steel. Even Jeremiah  Jordan, the M.P. for that district was summarily ejected by the Magistrate Cecil Roche." 25  In  an environment where military titles abounded  Major O'Shaughnessy's calling card may have  helped grant him access over other, civilian, witnesses. The Limerick Journal noted that among  the witnesses to the evictions was a "Major  O'Shaughnessy of the American Army, New  York." 26  The Major's calling card did not state  that he was "of the American  Army," but he  probably did not see it an advantage to correct a  misrepresentation.
Inside the lines of steel the Major was often  close to the action and the actors. He described  the Emergency Men as  "broken down soldiers,  the scum and blacklegs from the North who do  the dirty work of the sheriff and the removables."  The man who bossed the ram crew  "would have  his twelve cutthroats on either side of the battering  ram, sailor-fashion, so that when they were ready  he would say - 'Back away with them - Back  away with them' - but whether he meant away  with the Irish or away with the stones that fell at  every thud of the battering ram the writer is at a  loss to discover, but certain it is that one would not  like to meet any of these emergency men on a dark  road." 27 When a breach was made, according to the  Major, "...the constables would rush in and club  the occupants right and left and, being bruised  and bleeding, they would be taken before Cecil  Roche, the so-called removable-magistrate, who  would plant himself on top of a hedge wall and  NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   98/27/18   2:03 PM   arrogate to himself the powers of judge, court and  jury...." Magistrate Cecil Roche was known to  be a particularly nasty character, selected over  others to be the sentencing official for these  evictions. Magistrate Roche  "would vent his  spleen on these poor victims, with his hat cocked  on the side of his head and nearly covering his  nose." This characterization was repeated by  many who witnessed Roche's harsh treatment  of cottage defenders. After sentencing  "they  would be handcuffed to each other, young and old  alike, and marched off under military escort to  the bridewell, as they call it, or prison, in Kilrush,  a distance of perhaps seven miles from where they  were evicted." 28 Following evictions, buildings were sometimes demolished. The Major stated that After they evicted Cleary's family they  razed his cabin to the ground, because it  was a good substantial farm house, slated  roofed and with three chimneys. Their  object in demolishing the house complete - ly was so that nobody could re-occupy it  again. This was their policy right straight  through. An old tumbled down hut, they  would only go through the formality of  evicting, but where it was a fine house  they would tear it to the ground.It is important to remember that the Major was telling a story. Demolishing a cottage out of sheer cussedness is the story. A dispassionate examination of the historical record indicates that the  decision to raze a home to the ground had more  to do with the level of resistance encountered  than the state of construction. 29 As the first eviction to experience  the ram, the Cleary family eviction was a  shocking thing to see. Several newspaper  accounts reported that the American visitors made clear their displeasure and dis - may. This dismay can be appreciated in the  Major's extensive telling of the Cleary story  in his accounts, more so than his recounting of any of the other evictions. The  London Daily News  reported that after the  Cleary family's eviction several American  "supporters" handed money to the par - ish priest for the tenants. 30  We know the  identities of the Americans present for this  eviction, and of the priest. The priest was  Fr. Thomas O'Meara, a local pastor and  a National League man. The Americans  were the O'Shaughnessy party of New York  and Thomas Fitzpatrick of Boston. Both  the Major and Mr. Fitzpatrick were aptly  described as supporters, as both were U.S.  National League men, supporters of this  Photo:  "Ram at Work. Tom  Birmingham's House."  The last eviction of  twenty-four removals.  Birmingham tenaciously  resisted dispossession, and  his home was deliberately  demolished. The lady  in the foreground just  might be the famous  British women's  rights advocate, Lady  Margaret Sandhurst.  Published in the August  1901 edition of The  Gael and provided by  Major O'Shaughnessy.  Courtesy of Edward J.  O'Shaughnessy.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   108/27/18   2:03 PM   cause for years. Though not mentioned by  name in this account we may feel confident  that the Major gave money to Fr. O'Meara. It  would be in keeping with his reputation. The  Major's interviewer from the  True Witness  made the point in his introduction that the  Major "always subscribed liberally but never  wanted anything said about it." 31 From his written accounts, from other  first-hand accounts, and from the photo - graphs he brought home, we may place the  Major at many of the evictions that occurred  during the nine-day eviction operation. The  Major described specific eviction actions for  Days 1, 2, 3, and 6; the photographs he provided for use in the 1901 edition of  The Gael  were of evictions on Days 2, 8, and 9. He  also described a weekend off-duty encounter with some of the Army officers that took  place in Kilkee on the weekend before evictions resumed on Day 7. If he did not attend  each day of the evictions, it appears that he  remained in the area and was able to obtain  photographs developed at the conclusion of the eviction operation.
When not describing a specific eviction the  Major provides a general narrative giving the  impression that he was present throughout the  operation. He stated that Thousands of families on this  Vandeleur estate have been kept in sus - pense for months expecting any day to be  evicted, and after they would evict one  family, the parade and show of    c avalry,  battering rams, dragoons, etc. would take  up their line of march again and go to  some other hut perhaps nine miles away.  No one knew whose turn it would be next,  but when they did,  smoke  would be issu - ing from the chimney, a sure sign that they  were preparing to give these emergency  men a warm reception, before they would  surrender.  32 Once the eviction party arrived at the  next house on the eviction list they would  secure the site with a perimeter estab - lished by the regular infantry. The sheriff,  Illustration: Absentee landlordism  was a severe burden  on Irish people as this  drawing, published  in 1830, suggests.  Growing significantly  in the sixteenth and  seventeenth centuries,  it drained wealth  from the land away  from the Irish and to  owners who, like Hector  Vandeleur, did not  live in Ireland. It gave  control of the land to  these owners who could  evict Irish tenants when  they wanted properties  for their own purposes.  Courtesy of Victoria and  Albert Museum.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   118/27/18   2:03 PM   magistrates, the Emergency Men, and the  RIC would station themselves at the front  door of the cottage, and the Major would  place himself as close as observers were  allowed to be:  "When smoke was seen issuing  from the chimney these pirates would get a ladder  climb up and stuff the chimney with straw, in order  to suffocate and smoke the tenants out, but they  would never budge until compelled to by superior  force." 33 comments on conditions & people The Major's narratives also provide insightful  comments about the conditions around Kilrush,  landlordism in general, overheard conversations  and chance observations which are useful to the  researcher and provide authenticity to his report - ing. He indicated that  "Dotted all over the green  isle can be seen the barracks, the workhouse and  the prison. This is the triangle that by which the  paternal government of England rules poor old  Ireland." The Major would have seen all three around Kilrush. He was deeply disturbed by the significant presence of British soldiers stationed in major towns. When describing the British soldier in Ireland he commented "...five-sixths of ...[them] are Protestants and have no sympathy for the feelings and aspiration of the Irish people."  He adds that these  "Scotch-capped and red-coated  gravel crushers...are a standing menace to every  little town and hamlet throughout Ireland." 34 But not all of the officers present at the  evictions were happy with the service they were  tasked to perform. During one eviction the  Major reported that the  "...officers remarked to  the reporters that this was not the kind of warfare  that they had agreed to engage in when they got  their commissions. There is no doubt this is true in  some circumstances." 35 The Major also caught the actions of some  officers and eviction party officials during an offthe-record moment: On Sunday during the eviction times,  some of the officers in civilian dress and  some of the authorities in command drove  from the Kilrush House to Moore's Hotel  in Kilkee, and, after making a day of it,  returned to the hotel drunk. When asked  to settle, they disputed their bill, kicked  and squirmed, and finally fought among  themselves. Some of these officers in 'Her  Majesty's Service' think they can ride  rough shod over the poor people of Ireland,  (but) when they doff their gorgeous regi - mentals they look very 'snide' and bum, to  say the least. 36 It was not just the Scotch-capped and red-coated  regulars that the Major mistrusted; most of the  officials at every level were either serving or former British officers. The Divisional Magistrate  in charge of these evictions was, as we know,  Colonel Turner; the majority of the Resident/ Removable Magistrates had officer titles. The  Sub-Sheriff was Captain Croker, and the landlord  (an absentee one) was Captain Hector Vandeleur,  son of Colonel Crofton Vandeleur. According to  the Major,  "Another singular fact is that the majority of the landlords are all officers 'On her Majesty's  Service', another reason why brute force and wealth  keeps Ireland on the ragged edge." 37 Illustration:  A campaign flyer for  Benjamin Harrison, the  Republican candidate  for President in the  election of 1888. Major  O'Shaughnessy said he  would vote for Harrison  on election day even  though he thought  himself a Democrat.
Irish support may have  been crucial in Harrison's  victory. He lost the  popular vote but carried  the Electoral College,  including electors from  New  York State. Courtesy  of Library of Congress.
NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   128/27/18   2:03 PM   on the landlord & other subjects The Major shared in his accounts some  tittle-tattle about Captain Hector Vande - leur: Report[s] had it that the pres - ent Captain Vandeleur, married to an  English wife...would not live in Ireland,  and during the evictions they resided in  London....  Knowing that the owner was away, the Major  went to see Kilrush House. Speaking with the  housekeeper he learned that the custom of  the itinerant residents was to  "...invite guests  from London to visit with them for a month, or  six weeks, [in] their demesne in Ireland." Their  rural retreat over, all would happily return to  urbane London. But the place was not entirely  devoid of residents because Kilrush House had  been "...converted with its grounds into a camp  with barracks." It must have been an interesting  sight. The officers and officials of the eviction  party were billeted in the very large manor  house, and the rank and file were billeted in  the stables and outbuildings  or under canvas in  rows of tents.
While engaging in criticism of Captain  Vandeleur's poor stewardship and lack of humanity towards his tenants, the Major made a declarative and intriguing statement:  "It is a fact that  thousands of American dollars have gone into the  coffers of this same Vandeleur and his father before,  to keep 'the wolf' (agent Studdert) from the door." 38   When the Major stated it to be a fact that thousands of American dollars went to the Vandeleur  landlords, he was speaking with some authority.  He was an associate of those who collected funds  in New York City, an accounting of which was a  regular feature in the American press, and with  those who knew how funds were distributed in  Ireland, down to individual tenants, identified  by estate landlord, an accounting of which was  a regular feature of  United Ireland. But how the  Major knew how many American dollars went to  the Vandeleurs is, at the moment, unknown. 39 Speaking disdainfully, the Major opined that  "...landlordism has seen its best days...thanks to  Davitt, Parnell and William O'Brien, and it sur-prised me to find that the Land League agitation did not begin a hundred years ago instead of ten, for no matter where you go in Ireland you will see evidence of extreme wealth and extreme poverty." 40  It was true enough, the landed estates were in  trouble, and within two decades the laws would  change allowing for divestiture of land and  estates.
The evictions on the Vandeleur Estate  would prove to be a significant embarrassment  to the Crown, and one of the outcomes was that  Captain Vandeleur was forced into an arbitration process with his evicted tenants. The Major  commented that  "... it seems Vandeleur has  returned a poorer, if not a wiser, man and he had  to finally submit to arbitration, proving that the  'Plan of Campaign' was, after all, successful." It  was a pyrrhic victory, for though the tenants were  eventually returned to their holdings, there was  considerable suffering along the way. 41 Towards the end of the published interview the Major turns from things that were  in Ireland to things that were to come in New  York. The Major concluded that Ireland was  a monumental ruin and that  "the British are  responsible for this condition of affairs, and,  from what I can gather from their newspa - pers, Cleveland seems to be their favorite for  the Presidency of the American Republic!" 42   In a deft move the Major associates the  Democratic candidate for President, Grover  Cleveland, with the horrid British administration of Ireland. It is true that Cleveland  was considered by many Irish American  nationalists as pro-British, reason enough  to vote for his opponent. But why would an  interviewer permit so partisan a statement to  be published? Was this a hint of a shift in the  political winds? a postscript Major O'Shaughnessy was not only an Irish  republican he also was an American Republican.  On November 1, 1888, when the Major was  freshly back from Europe, a New-York Tribune  reporter engaged him in a discussion of the  American general election, only days away. The  Major noted that everyone in England talked  NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   138/27/18   2:03 PM   about the U.S. election, and they all wanted  Cleveland to be re-elected. It was only when  talking with an Irishman that he heard a good  thing said about Harrison. Asked if these manifestations had any influence upon his political  views, the Major replied that they had. He said  that while he had always thought of himself  as a Democrat, when he went to the polls on  November 6, 1888, he was voting for Harrison.  Asked why, he replied, "because he is the  American candidate and Cleveland is the English  candidate." 43 Endnotes 1 Tr ue Witness and Catholic Chronicle, September 4,  1889, p. 2. 2  T he two accounts were printed in the  Catholic Union  and Times, a New York weekly. They were reprinted  in the  True Witness and Catholic Chronicle, a Montreal  weekly, September 4 and October 9, 1889. The latter can be read online. The third account appeared in  The Gael  during August, 1901, also available online.  If readers are interested in another account of Major  O'Shaughnessy at these evictions, see "Photographing  the Evictions on the Vandeleur Estate, Kilrush, July  1888" at    3 Tr ue Witness and Catholic Chronicle, October 9, 1889,  page 2. 4  T he title "Major" seems to be a social application, perhaps in reference to the popular pulp fiction character  Major O'Shaughnessy featured in Charles O'Malley's  novel, The Irish Dragoon, and on stage in Better Late  Than Never  performed in 1869. A review of this play  noted that "The Major is a rollicking, frank, generous  Irish officer, with a good deal of native humor...." 5  T he Major was frequently found in a rogues gallery of  Fenians and  Clan na Gael  members, to include General  Michael Kerwin, his "spoils system" patron, Alexander  Sullivan of  Clan na Gael  "Triangle" fame, John Breslin,  Colonel Denis Burke, and Patrick Ford, to name a few.  When Michael Davitt was invited to speak in New  York City in 1887 the Major was seated on the stage  with other prominent activists. 6  T hey sailed from New York to Le Havre on the  La  Champagne. Courrier des Etats Unis, April 7, 1888.7  The size of the ram was intimidating. The legs of the  tripod to support the ram may be estimated to be 16  feet high. The battering ram itself may be estimated  to be 24 feet long. The ram was suspended from the  tripod by a chain and hooks. 8  True Witness, October 9, 1889, p. 2. 9  In October, 1881, John Wall, then a young newspaper correspondent and member of the Land League  in Ireland, was imprisoned in Kilmainham jail along  with Charles Stewart Parnell, William O'Brien, and  other prominent Land League activists. They were  released in May, 1882, through an agreement made  between Parnell and the liberal Prime Minister William  Gladstone, an agreement sometimes referred to as the  "Kilmainham Treaty." In December, 1883, Wall emi - grated to the U.S., resumed work as a correspondent  for the  New-York Tribune , and continued his activities  in support of the Land League and Home Rule. 10  New-York Tribune, August 1, 1888, Home News section. 11  Family memory recalls that the Major brought home  photographs of the evictions. Four can still be seen in  the August, 1901, edition of  The Gael , pp. 252-254.  The Major's eviction collection was last seen by the  author's father in the early 1930s. The story of the  enlarged photograph was passed down within the family. We do not know why this, now lost, photograph  was important to the Major. 12  It had been thought for a century or so that only  twenty-one Vandeleur Estate eviction photographs  had survived the years, and survived because they  were commercialized by the William Lawrence firm of  Dublin. Continued interest in these evictions, however,  has uncovered a score of additional photographs, scattered about in private collections, archived files, and in  early twentieth-century publications. 13  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 14  I t has since been verified that Timothy O'Connor of  Limerick was one of two photographers present, and  that O'Connor took at least twenty photographs and,  likely, more. The Major guessed O'Connor's first name  incorrectly. O'Connor's  carte de visite  photographs are  identified on the obverse side as from the photographic  studio of T. O'Connor, 20 George St, Limerick. 15  P rofessor George Reed Cromwell, said to be "America's  Most Famous Forgotten Magic Lantern Showman,"  gave illustrated travel-themed lectures to New York  audiences in large auditoriums on Sunday evenings.  NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   148/27/18   2:03 PM   Professor Cromwell's lectures were accompanied by  dramatic changing lights and by carefully selected  music played on a piano on stage often by Cromwell  himself. 16  N ew York Times , December 14, 1888. Notes of the  Stage, page 4. 17  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 18  T rue Witness , October 9, 1889, p. 2. 19  A rthur "Bloody" Balfour became the Chief Secretary  for Ireland in 1887. A nephew of the Prime Minister,  Lord Salisbury, he was an implacable foe of Home  Rule. Much hated by the Irish then, he is much hated  by many in the Arab world today for his role in the  creation of a Jewish state in Palestine. The Balfour  Declaration was his work as the Foreign Secretary. 20  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 21   Ibid. 22  T rue Witness , October 9, 1889. 23  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 24  W hen exactly the idea of a battering ram was accepted  for use in wholesale eviction operations is an open  question. It is thought by some that the idea originated  with a member of the Royal Irish Constabulary. Others  think it originated with Arthur Balfour, the Secretary  for Ireland. One or two rams were put to use in 1887.  The ram used in the Vandeleur Evictions was reported  to be new, delivered to Sub-Sherriff Croker at his home  in Ennis about two weeks before the evictions began.  Clare Journal, July 5, 1888. 25  T rue Witness , October 9, 1889, p. 2. 26  L imerick Journal, July 21, 1888. 27  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 28   Ibid. 29  T he Major witnessed the Cleary and the Magrath  family homes razed to the ground. Both had been  rigorously defended by the children of the tenants.  The total destruction of these cottages was intended to  intimidate, but it backfired. These two demolished cottages became, in effect, pilgrimage sites for the stream  of visitors who continued to visit months after the  evictions. The two demolished cottages were repeatedly  photographed and served the propaganda purposes for  the National League. 30  D aily News , London, July 18, 1888.31 True Witness, October 9, 1889. 32  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 33  T rue Witness , October 9, 1889, p. 2. 34  T rue Witness , September 4, 1889, p. 2. 35   Ibid. 36   Ibid. 37   Ibid. 38   Ibid. 39  H undreds of thousands of American dollars went to  Ireland in the decade after Parnell's 1880 visit to the  US, most of it eventually going to the National League.  There were, as expected, frequent criticisms of expenditures. The author once read a contemporary report in  the Irish press that if the Americans knew exactly how  their dollars were spent their generosity would cease. 40   Ibid. 41  U nlike the evictions during the Famine period, evictions in the 1880s were not an immediate death sentence. None-the-less they were brutal and disrupted  terribly the lives of those who stuck with the Plan of  Campaign. The adult males who resisted were sentenced to several months of hard labor. The evicted  families were helped by the Land League and grants   were made available to them. The National League  built wooden cabins on a neighboring estate, but it  took several months for the construction of these to  begin, and although families eventually were allowed  access to attend their fields, their activities and occupations had been severely impacted. It was a brave thing  to stand up to the abuses of landlordism and the crush - ing weight of state coercion.  42  T rue Witness , October 9, 1889, p. 2. 43  N ew-York Tribune , November 1, 1888.  "Major  O'Shaughnessy's Conversion." NYIHR_P03_Shaughnessy_V31_5R.indd   158/27/18   2:03 PM
