[The Felon’s Track by Michael Doheny]@TWC D-Link bookThe Felon’s Track PREFACE 9/27
The Irish Confederation worked hard to bring about this essential union.
Directly and indirectly it achieved for a moment a semblance of national unity.
The Irish Council, composed largely of the resident landlords--who mostly endeavoured to alleviate the distress--came into being, reasoned with the Government and, when the Government ignored reason, fell to pieces.
George Henry Moore, a young sporting landlord and a Tory (afterwards, as a result, to become a Nationalist leader), conceived the design of getting all the Irish members of the British Parliament to act together against the existing British Government or any British Government which did not deal honestly and effectively with the crisis.
With the Marquis of Sligo, a nobleman who did his duty to his tenantry during the Famine, Moore travelled around Ireland and secured between sixty and seventy Irish members of Parliament and forty-five Irish peers to subscribe to his independence programme.
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