John J. Geary

John J. Geary (c.1835  1870) was a Fenian active in Cork, Ireland in the mid-19th century. Geary was from near Newcastle West, County Limerick. He was an associate of other Cork Fenians Brian Dillon, James Mountaine and John Lynch. A grocer for a time, Geary operated a pub at 27 North Main Street, Cork which was a regular meeting place of local Fenians. He was accused of being the "Head Centre" of the Fenian Brotherhood in Cork.[1] Geary avoided arrest and fled to New York where he lived in exile.

Biography

While probably working as a grocer in 1861, he wrote a letter to the Cork Examiner regarding the procurement of tea by the Cork Lunatic Asylum, which was published. He complained that his tender had been rejected even though it was cheaper than the accepted tender.[2]

After changing profession to being a publican, local Fenian meetings and lectures were often held at Geary's pub.[3] The meetings were also attended by informants such as John Warner.[4] Geary employed James O'Brian at his pub as a porter, who was later accused of being a Fenian and arrested.[5] He was later released because of lack of evidence.[6] From 1964, the movements of Fenian leaders were closely watched by police.

1865 saw a purge of the Fenian leadership around Ireland. John Sarsfield Casey, John Thompson and Patrick Shaughnessy were arrested in Geary's pub in September 1865.[7][8] The police failed to capture Geary at his pub, although it was suspected that he was there when the police arrived.[9] A reward of 100 pounds, later increased to 200 pounds,[10] was offered for his capture. He was described as "height, 5 feet 8 or 9 inches; medium make, (rather slight); tender eyes; fair hair, cut short; small fair whiskers; walks erect" [11] Incriminating documents were found at Geary's pub.[12] A person matching his description stayed at a hotel in Waterford but police were unable to locate Geary.[13] Geary managed to evade police and escaped to New York.

Unsurprisingly, Geary did not apply to renew his alcohol license in October 1865.[14] An satirical article in the Cork Examiner claimed that Geary was a traitor to the Irish Republican Brotherhood.[15]

In New York, he quickly became the corresponding secretary of the Fenian Brotherhood under William R. Roberts.[16] This put him at odds with the faction led by John O'Mahony. In 1967, he spoke in support of the Fenian Rising in Kerry.[17]

He was killed in April 1870 when he fell into a boiling vat at the distillery where he worked.[10]

gollark: The number the uninstaller prints?
gollark: The incident report system does actually work, by the way. All incidents are logged in SPUDNET. The only ones I know of are the test ones I triggered to test the system and various incident triggers. Incidents are reported when:- one known sandbox escape is detected- banned programs (Webicity) are executed- potatOS is uninstalled- invalid disk signing key
gollark: You can't make a program to fully autonomously uninstall potatOS from within it - ignoring sandbox escapes - because while sandboxed processes can use queueEvent to fake keypresses they cannot read the output of the uninstaller. The best they can do is, I don't know, guess what the random seed was when it was generating two primes, figure out what the primes were, and queue the key/char events accordingly.
gollark: <@184468521042968577> `is_valid_lua` isn't deliberately bad, but it's also IIRC not actually used anywhere.Also, that person was bundling potatOS with some other project but wanted people to be able to remove it even more easily if they don't like it. This feature does actually work but must be enabled before installation. Weirdly enough factorizing small semiprimes is beyond many users.
gollark: You could say that.

References

  1. Cork Constitution, 12 January 1866
  2. Cork Examiner, 17 September 1861
  3. Cork Examiner 24 August 1866
  4. Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier 03 January 1866
  5. 23 October 1866, Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier
  6. Cork Examiner, 31 March 1867
  7. Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier 18 September 1865
  8. 27 September 1865, Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier
  9. Cork Examiner 18 September 1865
  10. 29 April 1870, Cork Examiner
  11. Southern Reporter and Cork Commercial Courier, 20 September 1865
  12. Cork Constitution 05 March 1866
  13. Cork Examiner 26 September 1865
  14. Cork Examiner, 10 October 1865
  15. Cork Examiner 28 December 1865
  16. New York Times, The Fenian Explosion, December 12, 1865
  17. Cork Examiner, Fenianism in the United States, 05 March 1867
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