213:. His associates included the radical followers of Thomas Spence, (advocate of the common and democratic ownership of land), who were eager to recruit among London Irish communities that had provided the most dependable elements in Coigly's United Britons and in the
181:
executed for treason in
January 1803. Finnerty assisted Burdett in his attempts to gain a parliamentary seat in Middlesex in 1802 and 1804. He remained involved in electoral politics in London. Alongside William Cobbett, he supported
141:, and Arthur O'Connor who held an umbrella over the prisoner's head. When he was released from the pillory he struck a defiant: 'ou see how cheerfully I suffer. I can suffer anything provided it promotes the liberty of my country".
267:
hailed
Finnerty as a man "imprisoned for persisting in the truth.โ Finnerty kept the controversy alive by complaining about the conditions of his confinement to Parliament in a petition that repeated the libel against Castlereagh.
228:
of 1820. In 1817, he did come to their defence, exposing one of the jurors in the trial of the organisers of the Spa Field meeting as one of the government's principal informers against the United
Irishmen, Thomas Reynolds.
122:, appeared less concerned with addressing the charges against Finnerty, than in joining Finnerty in decrying the treatment of Orr. Finnerty was sentenced in the spring of 1798 to a session in the
271:
Finnerty returned to the
Morning Chronicle but, as he was increasingly given to drink, in the last years before his death in 1822 he faded from public notice.
433:
75:, the son of a town trader. Contemporary sources propose different dates for his birth, the earliest being 1766 and the latest 1778. He moved to
443:
681:""Let no man write my epitaph": the contributions of Percy Shelley, Thomas Moore and Robert Southey to the memorialisation of Robert Emmet"
561:
249:
56:
88:
727:
Case of Peter
Finnerty, including a full report of all the proceedings which took place in the Court of Kings Bench upon the subject ...
589:
Case of Peter
Finnerty, Including a Full Report of All Proceedings which Took Place in the Court of King's Bench Upon the Subject ...
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495:
381:
252:. When in 1811, Finnerty further accused Castlereagh of sanctioning torture and extra-judicial executions in the suppression of the
191:
163:. But it is otherwise supposed that Finnerty remained in London where he busied with, not insurrectionary, but electoral politics.
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On his release in 1800, Finnerty emigrated to London. There was a report of
Finnerty in 1803 travelling to Dublin to help
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398:
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in his preparations for a renewed insurrection, and even an account of him commanding men on the streets during the
107:
84:
42:
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The Cato Street
Conspiracy: Plotting, counter-intelligence and the revolutionary tradition in Britain and Ireland
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in
Ireland, the establishment struck back. Finnerty was convicted of libel and imprisoned for eighteen months.
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Finnerty associated with veterans of the artisan radical clubs. In the 1790s these had federated in the
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and two years in prison, and was required to give security for his good behaviour for a further seven.
259:
Radicals and reformers raised subscriptions for
Finnerty in London, Liverpool, Belfast and Dublin. In
783:
297:"An Anglo-Irish Radical in the Late Georgian Metropolis: Peter Finnerty and the Politics of Contempt"
264:
26:
119:
186:, the Irish playwright, satirist, and poet, who won the Westminster seat in 1807, and in 1811 the
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and Francis Dillon, fellow natives of Loughrea who built the local branch of the United Irishmen.
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When Finnerty was taken to the pillory he was accompanied by the leading United Irishmen,
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https://web.archive.org/web/20090507181204/http://www.loughreahistory.com/more_book1.html
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which he to personally distribute around Dublin on a visit to the city early in 1812,
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541:. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. 28 November 2017.
767:
714:
488:
Radical Underworld: Prophets, Revolutionaries, and Pornographers in London, 1795-1840
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associated with radical, reform and democratic causes. In Dublin, he was a committed
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The District of Loughrea: Vol. I History 1791โ1918, pp. 19โ25,37 ISBN 0-9546567-0-9
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Finnerty's two years in prison, however, meant that he could play no role in the
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to death for allegedly administering a United Irish test to a soldier and of the
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Revolutionary Dublin: The Letters of Francis Higgins to Dublin Castle, 1795-1801
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and been drawn into insurrectionary conspiracies by the United Irish emissaries
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30:
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562:"Peter Finnerty, un antepasado de los corresponsales de guerra modernos"
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236:, which exposed the sale of military commissions by the mistress of the
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38:
34:
114:, who refused to reprieve him, resulted in Finnerty being tried for
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where he became a printer, later publishing (as titular proprietor)
240:, the King's brother. In 1809 he reported on the disasters of the
220:
Finnerty was not implicated alongside the Spenceans in either the
459:
Elliott, Marianne (May 1977). "The 'Despard Plot' Reconsidered".
166:
In London, Finnerty found work as a parliamentary reporter with
234:
An Appeal to the Public, and a Farewell Address to the Public
55:, imprisoned again in 1811 for libel in his condemnation of
173:
This brought him into the orbit of the reform candidate
432:
McElligott, Jason; Conboy, Martin (17 December 2019).
102:
The Press's condemnation of the judges who sentenced
376:. Dublin: Four Courts Press Ltd. pp. 184 n93.
248:special correspondent, laying blame at the feet of
739:The District of Loughrea: Vol. I History 1791-1918
490:. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 23.
146:uprisings that occurred in the summer of 1798.
49:. In London he was a campaigning reporter for
8:
45:, but was imprisoned in the course of the
696:
630:"The Shelleys in Ireland | History Today"
655:"Shelley's adventure in Irish politics"
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87:paper established in September 1797 by
95:Finnerty was closely associated with
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118:. His defence counsel, the renowned
547:10.1093/odnb/9780192683120.013.9474
512:"Thomas Reynolds - Irish Biography"
604:"Peter Finnerty - Irish Biography"
14:
358:Dictionary of National Biography
232:In 1808 Finnerty contributed to
190:and proponent of minimum wages,
177:who had championed the cause of
560:Durรกn de Porras, Elรญas (2014).
438:. Manchester University Press.
361:. Vol. 19. pp. 38โ39.
261:An Address to the Irish People,
63:United Irish pressman in Dublin
679:Morgan, Alison (3 July 2014).
399:"The Rising of 1803 in Dublin"
295:Wright, Jonathan (July 2014).
1:
628:Fitzsimmons, Eleanor (2014).
698:10.1080/09670882.2014.926124
538:Finnerty, Peter (1766?โ1822)
203:London Corresponding Society
151:Radical journalist in London
244:, which accompanied as the
161:aborted rising of July 23rd
22:(1766?โ11 May 1822) was an
16:Irish printer and publisher
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569:Textual & Visual Media
301:Journal of British Studies
108:Lord Lieutenant of Ireland
372:Bartlett, Thomas (2004).
184:Richard Brinsley Sheridan
33:, and journalist in both
586:Finnerty, Peter (1811).
397:O'Donnell, Ruan (2021).
352:"Finnerty, Peter"
608:www.libraryireland.com
516:www.libraryireland.com
226:Cato Street Conspiracy
131:Lord Edward Fitzgerald
486:McCalum, Ian (1993).
422:Wright (2014), p. 670
211:William Putnam McCabe
169:The Morning Chronicle
67:Finnerty was born in
52:The Morning Chronicle
774:People from Loughrea
741:, pp. 19โ25,37
685:Irish Studies Review
634:www.historytoday.com
592:London: J. M'Creery.
473:10.1093/past/75.1.46
467:(1): (46โ61) 56โ60.
265:Percy Bysshe Shelley
735:, Helen Mahar, 1976
313:10.1017/jbr.2014.55
175:Sir Francis Burdett
120:John Philpot Curran
461:Past & Present
323:– via JSTOR.
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104:William Orr
768:Categories
575:: 163โ184.
275:References
715:170900710
707:0967-0882
81:The Press
31:publisher
613:27 March
521:27 March
349:(1889).
321:24701793
69:Loughrea
664:15 June
639:15 June
196:Bedford
194:MP for
124:pillory
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