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Doheny, Michael (1805-1863), poet and Young Irelander. Born in Brookhill near Fethard, Co. Tipperary, he qualified as a lawyer. He wrote as ‘Eiranach’ in The Nation, producing ‘A Cushla Gal Mo Chree’, and the patriotic ‘The Shan Van Vocht’. After 1848 he escaped to practise law in America, co-founding the Fenians. The Felon's Track, or History of the Attempted Outbreak in Ireland, appeared in New York in 1849.

 
 
Wikipedia: Michael Doheny
Michael Doheny (1805 - 1863)

Michael Doheny (May 22 1805-April 1 1863) was an Irish writer and member of the Young Ireland movement.

The third son of Michael Doheny, of Brookhill, he was born at Brookhill, near Fethard, Co. Tipperary, and married a Miss O'Dwyer of that county. He was admitted to Gray's Inn in November 1834.

Doheny became connected with the national movement in the forties, and wrote prose and verse to The Nation over his initials, and signature of "Eiranach." He may also have been "A Tipperary Man," who wrote poems in the same paper between 1842 and 1848. He contributed letters to the Irish Tribune in 1848. Thomas Mooney states in his History of Ireland that Doheny was a parliamentary reporter in London in his early days.

He took part in the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848, eluded arrest, and after being hunted by the police for some time, escaped to New York. He settled in the United States, and became a lawyer and a soldier with the Fenian Brotherhood.

On April 1 1863, he died very suddenly, and was buried in Calvary Cemetery, Queens, New York.

Is best known as author of a small work, The Felon's Track, (Text at Project Gutenberg) New York, 1867, and of two poems, "Achusha gal machree" and "The Outlaw's Wife."

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Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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