The Ancient Order of Hibernians
by Mike McCormack National Historian
The Protestant Reformation that swept Europe in the 16th century was marked by Royal intrigues over control of the Roman Church's wealth, and conflicts over which religion could be practiced. Violence erupted in many countries. Elizabeth I declared the Church of England the State religion, and considered Ireland part of her state. Most Irish did not agree. The Papacy launched a counter-reformation and Ireland became a battlefield between the two forces as the Irish, who embraced the Church introduced by St. Patrick, became the target of a campaign to reduce Rome's power by converting the masses to Protestantism. The persistence with which the Irish clung to their religion drove the English to extremes in repression. Penal laws disenfranchised Irish Catholics from the political, social, and economic life of their own country, and with their religion outlawed and their clergy on the run, they became an underground society practicing their religion in secret.
Not surprisingly, secret societies were formed to protect the
values under attack. In various locales, groups with names like Whiteboys, Ribbonmen, and Defenders
were identified with attacks on landlords, but each society included in
its avowed purpose the protection of the Roman Church and its clergy.
As time and government prevailed, some societies were suppressed, but
most reorganized under a new name for the same purpose – defense of
faith and homeland. History provides us with the names of many of
these organizations, and even limited details of some. We know, for
example, that the motto of the Defenders in 1565 was Friendship, Unity, and True Christian Charity,
but the secret manner in which these societies operated left few
records for modern analysts. As a result, a true history of their
times may never be written.
What history does tell us however,
is that continued oppression and periodic crop failures forced many
Irish to flee to other lands for survival. The inclination toward
secret societies which had developed in Ireland by now became an Irish
defense mechanism, especially among those emigrants committed to the
ethnic slums of the lands to which they fled. Initially formed as
fraternal associations to promote the welfare of its members and
families, like the Hibernian Sick and Funeral Society in England, they
soon found a militant dimension necessary to protect their church and
clergy and defend members from bigoted opposition. In early nineteenth
century America, the Ancient Order of Hibernians with its motto Friendship, Unity, and Christian Charity
became the most recent link in the evolution of those ancient
societies. Organized with the same intention of defending Gaelic
values under attack, it can claim continuity of purpose and motto
unbroken back to the Defenders of 1565. The need for a defensive
society in America was the same as it was in Ireland.
Colonial
America was an extension of England in language, customs and traditions
and though American historians claim religious freedom back to William
Penn’s Pennsylvania, John Locke’s Carolina, Roger Williams Rhode
Island, and many others, this freedom did not include Catholics. These
were still English colonies and though the English were willing to
accept other Protestant sects, they refused Catholics because of a
biased belief that Catholics owed their allegiance to a foreign prince
- the Pope. By 1700, New York's Catholic population was almost stamped
out by drastic penal laws. Then came the Revolution, and in spite of
the large number of Catholics who supported Washington, the spirit of
the leading colonists was still intensely anti-Catholic. The first
flag raised by the Sons of Liberty in New York was inscribed “No Popery”.
Not much changed after independence either. At the Constitutional
Convention in 1777, a strong anti-Catholic faction was led by John Jay,
first Chief Justice of the United States, who denied civil rights to
Catholics until they swore an oath renouncing the authority of the
Pope. Thereafter, Catholics remained barred from public office unless
they took that “Test Oath.” This was the America to which a steady
flow of Irish Catholics emigrated after the failed rising of 1798 in
Ireland.
As the Irish population grew, anti-Catholic forces
celebrated Pope Day, and carried straw effigies of St. Patrick on March
17 which were desecrated to taunt the Irish. The new Irish were quick
to defend their honor; their reaction was swift, and violence was a
normal result. The influence of the growing Irish population finally
forced the city to ban such effigies in 1802. Then, in 1806, Francis
Cooper became the first Catholic elected to the New York Assembly; he
was told he would have to take the Test Oath. A petition signed by the
parishioners of St. Peter’s - the city’s only Catholic parish -
complained that the oath denied Catholics the opportunity of
discharging their civil duties, and again, the large number of
signatures prompted State Senator and city Mayor De Witt Clinton to
sponsor a bill that abolished the Test Oath. But some forces were not
happy, and a few months later, an anti-Catholic mob attacked St. Peters
Church. They were held off by members of the Irish community who
formed a guard around the building, but the confrontation sparked two
days of rioting Anti-Catholic bigotry, cloaked in the guise of American patriotism,
emerged in a nativist prejudice against immigrants – especially German
and Irish, who were arriving in large numbers. A period of extreme
intolerance was launched in 19th century America that began with social
segregation, resulted in discrimination in hiring, and reached its
climax in the formation of nativist gangs such as the Order of the Star
Spangled Banner, the True Blue Americans and others bent on violence
against the Irish Catholic immigrant population. These gangs would
coalesce in 1854 into the American Party or Know Nothings.
Reminiscent of the penal laws, they sought legislation against the
immigrant population who, it was stated, diluted American principles.
The growing number of Irish, fleeing conditions in their native land,
became a focus of that prejudice. They were driven to the most
difficult and demanding forms of labor where even minimal safety and
welfare standards were ignored. In Ireland, the bias of their colonial
masters made it necessary to guard their activities from public
scrutiny; in America the prejudice from nativists and abusive employers
made similar secrecy necessary. Gradually, they came together in the
same type of secret societies that had protected them in Ireland.
Nativist prejudice grew from intolerance to violence. St. Mary’s RC
Church in New York was burned to the ground in 1831; in 1832, 57 Irish
railroad workers suffering from Cholera near Malvern, Pennsylvania were
refused medical attention, died and were dumped in an unmarked mass
grave; in 1834, the Ursaline Convent in Massachusetts was burned down;
while in 1834 and 5, nativist gangs attacked the Irish neighborhood of
Five Points in New York resulting in several major street brawls that
lasted for days. Then, in 1836, according to The Miner’s Journal, a newspaper in
Pennsylvania’s Schuykill County anthracite coalfield region, and other
newspapers, journals and verified sources of information we have
learned that a contingent of miners from a local group called the
Hibernian Benevolent Society traveled to New York’s St Patrick’s Day
parade. While there they met with a group of New York Activists from
the St. Patrick’s Fraternal Society. The subject of the meeting is not
recorded, but since nativist activity was becoming a national threat,
it is not difficult to imagine the Irish seeking to coalesce several
societies into one major defensive organization. Thus was born The
Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH). In several versions of the their
own history, written and expanded over its lifetime, reference is made
to the founding of its first Division at New York’s St James Church on
May 4, 1836 – less than two months after the historic meeting of the
New York and Pennsylvania activists. Coincidentally, another Division
was formed at the same time in the coal-fields of Pennsylvania. Local
tradition notes that one Jeremiah Reilly of Cass Township,
Hecksherville, Schuylkill County, PA started the first AOH division
there, but no records have been found to authenticate this.
Know nothing activities spread across the country. In 1854,
construction of the Washington Monument was halted when nativists stole
and destroyed a granite block donated to the project by Pope Pius IX
since they would tolerate no Catholic stone in that icon to America’s
first president. The following year, a nativist attack on an Irish
neighborhood in Louisville, KY caused 22 deaths and considerable arson
and looting. Although the secrecy surrounding the early operation of
the AOH makes their origins and their reaction to such attacks
difficult to define, it is not unlikely that those who had been members
of secret societies in Ireland and England called on their collective
experience, and banded together in this new land for the same or
similar defensive purposes and dispensed home-grown justice. Soon,
other societies like the Hibernian Friendship Society in Arlington
Virginia, founded in 1831, joined the growing union of Irish societies
that became known as the Ancient Order of Hibernians. As nativist
bigotry spread across America, so too did the AOH. True to their
purpose, they stood guard to defend Church property. After their
formation, actual attacks were few and far between, but the long, cold,
and lonely nights of vigil were many. At about this time, a society in
Ireland adopted the name Ancient Order of Hibernians and the
organization now had Irish links.
As the heroism of the Irish Brigade and other Irish units in the
American Civil War had America cheering for the exploits of the sons of
Erin in American uniform, the honesty, devotion, and natural charm of
the Irish girls, who had found employment as domestic help, were
winning admirers on the home front. The natural result of this new
regard was a decrease in prejudice against the Irish, and the Know Nothing
movement, recognized for the bigoted group it was, faded away. It
would emerge again in organizations like the Ku Klux Klan, and other
groups dedicated to ethnic hatred and anti-Catholic propaganda, but
never again would America support a national army of zealots. The AOH,
on the other hand, grew stronger. It followed Irish immigrants as they
worked their way across the country.
The early AOH in America
remained a defensive, yet secret, society, and while little is known of
its specific activities, it is known that it assisted Irish immigrants
in obtaining jobs and social services. Membership was well-guarded and
restricted to Irish-born. Even minutes books used member numbers
instead of names to protect identities. The first national conventions
of the Order were held in New York, but as the Order grew. Other
jurisdictions began seeking the honor, with Boston becoming the site of
the first non-NY gathering. Other controversial issues of the early
Order included opening membership to Irish Americans so that
American-born sons of immigrants could join and the right of the AOH in
Ireland to speak for the Order when they were still dominated by the
Crown. At the same time, the militant Fenian Brotherhood began to
infiltrate the AOH and run their people for top AOH offices. In the
midst of all these issues the AOH split!
In 1883, the Land League called for a Philadelphia convention of all
the Irish organizations in America to support Charles Stewart Parnell's
Irish Parliamentary Party in their fight for Home Rule. The Irish AOH
endorsed Home Rule and Alexander Sullivan, a former member of AOH Div
8, Chicago, who had been suspended for non-payment of dues, aspired to
Presidency of the new American branch of the Land League. Sullivan
conspired with Henry Sheridan of Div 8, to have the Division financial
secretary give him credentials as the Division representative to the
convention instead of to an officer named O'Malley, who had been
elected by the membership. Sullivan was nominated for President of the
American Land League, and Andy Brown, County delegate from St Louis,
seconded the nomination guaranteeing a subscription of $60,000. if
Sullivan were elected. Sullivan was elected. When asked where the
money would come from, Brown replied, “from the AOH”. Sullivan went to
AOH National Delegate (President) Jeremiah Crowley, asking that an
assessment be levied on every member to honor the pledge he made at the
Convention. The assessment was so ordered with no regard for the
feelings of the members - many of whom vehemently objected to the Irish
AOH position.
Meanwhile,
many of the rank and file of the American AOH refused to
communicate further with Crowley, and appointed Francis Kiernan as
National Delegate until the next National Convention in Cleveland on
May 16, 1884. At that convention, Crowley appeared and, after a bitter
credentials battle, was seated. At the end of a stormy convention,
Henry Sheridan of Chicago, Sullivan's co-conspirator was elected
National Delegate by a slim majority, and Crowley was made Chairman of
National Directory. Three months later, a notice in the New York Times
announced that another National Convention of the Order had been held
on August 13 in New York City during which the members of the National
Board, who were elected in Cleveland, were tried and expelled on
charges of conspiring to introduce Irish National Politics into the
American Order and merge it with the fragmented Fenian Brotherhood.
John Nolan (formerly of the Irish AOH) was elected National Delegate.
On August 26, the `expelled' Board sent a circular to all Divisions
reporting, "a conspiracy has been unearthed in New York which has been
in secret operation for 18 months, headed by Hugh Murray of New York
County and aided by one Mr Nolan, ex-member of the Irish AOH." They
accused the `conspirators' of holding a mock convention, electing
officers, and seceding from the organization. They also revealed that
they had come to New York to determine the state of affairs, and
learned that before the Cleveland Convention had even met, the New
Yorkers had raised $800. and sent Mr Nolan to Ireland with a message to
the Irish AOH that he would be elected National Delegate for America if
the Irish AOH would support them as the legal AOH. The circular
reported that the Irish order agreed, and, by that agreement, had
conspired with the `New York traitors' and thereby demonstrated that
they were “unfit to preside at the head of an organization of the magnitude of ours”. The Cleveland Board therefore announced that they had severed all links with the group that they had once “looked to as a faithful friend and father”
adding, for good measure, that they were a drain on the Order in
America, intellectually a disgrace, and had sacrificed the whole
organization for a few New York favorites. It was signed by the
Cleveland National Board including Henry Sheridan, National Delegate
and Jeremiah Crowley, Chairman.
Law suits followed by both sides
over Division and County property and the right to use the name
`Ancient Order of Hibernians'. There were now two organizations in
America: one took the name of the AOH, Board of Erin, and the other the
AOH in America. American branch also changed the title of National
Delegate to National President. Some of the Board of Erin members in
Ireland continued to send correspondence and merchandise to the Board
of Erin in America, while others recognized only the AOH in America.
In 1886, National President Nolan of the American Board of Erin
traveled to the Board of Erin Convention in Ireland to stop them from
communicating with the AOH in America. He charged that some of the
Board of Erin members had continued their support for the American
faction, and the animosity which had split the Order in America was
thereby exported to Ireland and they too split with expulsions and law
suits resulting.
Thus did politics, personal greed, and petty jealousy bring to a
shameful and disgraceful state, one of the noblest of the ancient
Orders of Ireland. It would be many years, filled with accusations,
lies, and treachery before saner heads prevailed and the two factions
in America were brought to true brotherhood. The sad part is that the
bond between the American and Irish branches of this noble order were
never officially reconciled. The intervening years have dimmed the
recollection of the dispute, but the memory that one existed was never
truly forgotten.
Years later, the apolitical and religious posture of the Irish organization dictated their decision to support Parnell's struggle for an independent Ireland through Parliamentary reform and they became champions of Home Rule in Ireland. The appearance in the early 1900's of a more militant faction never swayed the AOH Board of Erin from that commitment, and they were often criticized for not being outspoken disciples of the revolutionary action proposed by the heroes of Easter Week. They remained true to their principles, and gave neither support nor opposition to the militants during the 1916 insurrection, the War of Independence, and the Civil War that followed. This again strained relations with the American AOH who supported the militants although AOH divisions in Ireland who remained affiliated with the American Board did take part in the rising.
For years, the two Boards remained as distant cousins who never spoke.
Few remembered, or even knew, the old animosities, and fewer still held
grudges against the branch of the Order across blue highway home, yet
the breach remained - in spite of the fact that the AOH in America
proudly pointed to their Irish heritage and the fact that the Irish
organization had a litany of proud accomplishments and opposition to
the Crown.
Then, in 1981, Jack Connolly, President of the AOH in America, stopped
into an AOH hall in Ireland. His historic gesture, opened dialogue
between the two branches of the Order, and resulted in the visit of a
group of Belfast Hibernians to Boston and New York to march in their St
Patrick's Day parades. Hospitality was provided to visiting Hibernian
officials during the next few administrations, but little of
significance occurred until 1992 when Board of Erin Secretary Frank
Kieran visited America. Hibernian hospitality was extended by the
American Board and, in conversations held during that visit, it was
proposed that the two branches consider a joint project. At the 1994
American National Convention in Louisville Kentucky, it was announced
that the joint project would be a memorial to the victims of the Great
Hunger to be erected in Ireland in 1995.
On August 20 1995, the dream came true as the American and Irish
National Boards gathered in Ennistymon, Co. Clare to dedicate that
memorial. In unveiling the memorial, Dail Eireann's Minister of State,
Donal Carey, noted that this was the first national monument in all of
Ireland to the victims of the Great Hunger, and it took the AOH to do
it. It was a proud moment for the AOH, and a visible indication of
what unity can achieve. More significant, but less publicized was an
event that took place days earlier on August 12, just after the
American Board had arrived in Ireland. It was the first joint meeting
in history between the AOH National Boards of America, Ireland,
England, Scotland, and Wales. That meeting opened a new chapter in
Hibernian history, which was confirmed by the hospitality extended in
Hibernian Halls in Counties Louth, Down, Antrim, and Derry where the
American Board was hosted and celebrated. The American Order also
marched in solidarity with Board of Erin AOH in Co Derry in
commemoration of the Feast of the Assumption and later, Bloody Sunday.
As a result of those historic gatherings and marches, the prejudice of
the past has been buried, and the AOH now stands, not only as the
oldest Catholic Lay organization in America, but as the largest Irish
Catholic society in the world with Divisions across the United States,
and close ties with the AOH in Ireland, England, Scotland, and Wales.
In America, the Division is the basic unit of the Order. Divisions are
combined into County Boards, which are in turn governed by State
Boards, and an overall National Board elected every two years. Annual
dances, concerts, and parades sponsored at all levels of the Order
raise millions for charity while providing a showcase for the positive
contributions the Irish have made in every walk of American life.
Divisions and Hibernian Halls across the country have traditionally
provided a welcome for new immigrants. Here, the unique art, dance,
music, and other interests of the Irish are fostered and preserved,
making the AOH a home away from home for many. They are at the
forefront of support for issues concerning the Irish such as
Immigration Reform, MacBride Legislation, and the Right to Life. They
serve their Church well, yet, they never forget their ancestral
homeland, and can always be found lobbying, praying, and working for
the total independence of a united 32-county Ireland – as their
constitution avows: ``by all means constitutional and lawful''.
The initials AOH may tell the story best. Those who say it means “Add One Hour” are describing the easygoing, no rush attitude of many of its members, while “America’s Only Hope”
has been used to define the loyalty of the Irish to the principles of
their adopted land. In any case, its members are best described by the
statement, “To be Irish is a Blessing, To be a Hibernian is an Honor.”