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Hidden Irish American history uncovered at Notre Dame

Irish legacy includes patriot's sword and Irish Brigade battle flag


General Thomas Francis Meagher, known as "Meagher of the Sword"
General Thomas Francis Meagher, known as "Meagher of the Sword"

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Notre Dame is a wonderful place to teach Irish-American history. The topic fascinates students, many of whom take great pride in their Irish heritage. The place also stands as a living monument to the rags-to-riches narrative that animates much of Irish-American identity. For many Irish Americans, the nickname “the Fighting Irish” epitomizes the mythic story that many believe defines the group. Once a term of derision, “fighting Irish” now resonates as a point of pride.

Notre Dame also holds surprises. When I was preparing a lecture on Eamon De Valera’s visit to the university during his 1919 American tour, I discovered that on the stop he viewed the Civil War sword of Thomas Francis Meagher.

Known as a leader of the failed Young Irelander rising of 1848, Meagher championed a republican movement that sought to free Ireland by any means necessary. For his efforts, “Meagher of the Sword,” as he is remembered in Ireland, escaped the hangman’s noose only to be exiled in Van Diemen’s Land. Eventually, he was smuggled on board a ship, reaching San Francisco to a tumultuous welcome, before making his way to New York. Here, in the wake of Bull Run, he would found the famous Irish Brigade.

Famine immigrants

Meagher saw no contradiction in fighting for the Stars and Stripes and fighting for Ireland. He believed, as did famine immigrants, that the cause of American freedom was Ireland’s as well.

Like the United Irish émigrés who flocked to American cities in the 1790s, Meagher believed that the true republican was at home in both nations. After the war, General Meagher became first territorial governor of Montana, a place awash in Irish immigrants. Senator Thomas Walsh of Montana presented the sword to the university in 1914.

So when De Valera laid eyes on that sword at Notre Dame a little more than 50 years after Meagher had brandished it in battle, he was gesturing toward what he regarded as a vital relationship between Irish and American freedom, one that the American-born De Valera epitomized. 

When he visited places like Notre Dame, he was traveling as President of the Irish Republic fighting for its freedom. But he was also journeying through his homeland – a different country, to be sure, but one that Irishmen and women had fought for.


Nster.com


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It's pron Note'tra Dam. Notre Dame is French for Our Lady, as in the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris. Went to Easter Mass there one time. The organ was played throughout the High Mass. The Cathedral's structure is so built as to capture the organ's magnificent sounds almost overwhelmingly. Worth going to Mass or Benediction there just to hear that fabulous resonating sound through the building. >>> Question: Was this Thomas Meagher the same Meagher who first proposed the Irish Tricolour flag, based on the French and Newfoundland flags?? Would love to know...
Yes but why do Americans ( Iris and otherwise)persist in calling it Notter Daym.Surely to goodness even in an American University there is someody who speaks correct French
Interesting article. It may be another 100 years before the impact of the Kennedys on Irish America has been fully chronicled.
Oh please. If you don't know Irish history, don't write about. Where did Notre Dame's nickname come from? One of Notre Dame's presidents was an Irish Brigade Chaplain. The Irish Brigade's founding regiment (there were too many of them for a regiment so they joined as a brigade) the 69th New York has carried the nickname "Fighting Irish" ever since the Civil War. That's where Notre Dame got it's nickname. As my uncle a New Yorker and Notre Dame alumnus told me (eyes raised to heaven), everyone knew that. "They'll see the Fighting Irish are the Fighting Irish yet" Joyce Kilmer, 1917, 69th New York, Trees and Other Poems, KIA France.
And De Valera trousered all that money. And Bobby & Teddy Kennedy put an end to the Irish freedom to emigrate to America.
 




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