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Honoring Matilda and Willam Tone in Brooklyn
By Gerry Regan |
| What have you got in your hand? A green bough. Where did it first grow? In America. Where did it bud? In France. Where are you going to plant it? In the crown of Great Britain. -- From the United Irish catechism |
On a brilliantly warm and sunny day here, about 36 individuals marched to the Tones' graves, in a tribute organized by the Brooklyn Irish American Parade Committee. The committee, with 50 members, has worked since 1975 to remember the Irish in the Battle of Brooklyn and to honor the Irish for their vast contributions to the United States, to Brooklyn, and to the city and state of New York.
| Read more about the life and times of Matilda and William Tone on The Wild Geese Today.
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Wolfe Tone was born in Dublin in 1764, and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. He was called to the Irish Bar in 1789 and a few years later, with Thomas Russell and William Drennan, founded the Society of the United Irishmen. Though a Presbyterian, he became assistant secretary of the Catholic Committee in 1792, and worked to overcome the religious discord that Britain manipulated to weaken Ireland's cause. He was expelled from Ireland for his intrigues against England, and spent part of his exile in America.
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| WGT Photo/Gerry Regan Chuck Laverty by the grave of Matilda Tone. |
With Tone and most of the rebellion's other leaders either dead or in prison, the British snuffed out the light of liberty in Ireland for more than 100 years. The Rising of '98 is one of Ireland's most tragic events. In the space of just a few short months that summer, about 30,000 people were killed. Many of the dead were peasants who charged cannons armed with farm implements or crude pikes, and a significant number of them were women.
"I've been here since 1960 with (the late Irish Northern Aid activist) Michael Flannery, and other rascals of that type, real revolutionaries all," Laverty recalled, smiling, saying he even had to unearth adjacent grave markers to read them. He noted with satisfaction that finally, three years ago, a coalition of New York Irish groups finally had Matilda's gravestone refurbished, and rededicated by then-Irish President Mary Robinson.
Committee Chairwoman Kathleen McDonagh announced at the site that the Tone commemoration would become an annual event. A week earlier, the Committee organized a commemoration of Irish-born Brig. Gen. Edward Hand and the 'Maryland 400,' who helped save Washington's army from destruction by repeated attacks against a much larger British force.
For more information on Wolfe Tone, visit:
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