Thomas Henry Hassett (1841-1893)
Thomas Hassett was born in Doneraile,
County Cork. Little is known of his early life, but we can safely
assume he saw firsthand the evictions and state-imposed starvation
in the “Famine” years. He was a carpenter by trade. He joined the
Young Irelanders’ Phoenix Literary Society in 1859 and left Ireland
to serve in the Irish Papal Brigade in 1860; he was wounded at the
Battle of Perugia. Upon returning, he joined the British Army in
1861 and was sworn into the Irish Republican Brotherhood in 1864.
Hassett was an extraordinary organizer —it is believed he swore
about 270 members of his regiment into the Irish Republican
Brotherhood. He wanted to organize a raid of a munitions storehouse
where he had sworn in two-thirds of the guards, but this plan was
turned down by the Fenian leadership who believed they were not
ready for outright warfare.
When he was made aware that the British
planned on arresting him for his seditious activities, he deserted
his post in the Twenty-Fourth Foot Regiment and marched straight to
Thames Street in Dublin, where he knew a Fenian meeting was
underway. John Boyle O’Reilly recalled a tense scene when Hassett
arrived at that Fenian meeting in a British uniform— “The rebels sat
in council upstairs; faces grew dark, teeth were set close, and
revolvers grasped when they heard the steady stamp on the stairs and
the ‘round arms’ at their door.
A moment after, the door opened and
the man in scarlet walked into the room; all there knew him well.
With full equipment’s (sic), knapsack, rifle and bayonet, and sixty
rounds of ammunition, Hassett had deserted from his post and walked
straight into the ranks of rebellion… The red coat was voted to the
fire, and the belt and arms were stored away with a religious hope
in the coming fight for an Irish republic.” Presenting himself to
John Devoy, he remarked, “Most of the fellows who desert for
Ireland’s sake come to you empty-handed, but here am I, ready for
work.”
Hassett was one of many Fenians arrested based on information
from an informer and pleaded guilty to treason in August 1866. He
served time in English prisons, where he was branded with a “D” for
“deserter,” sentenced to death, which was commuted to life
imprisonment and then sent to the penal colony of Fremantle, Western
Australia
Contributed by
the Fenian Memorial Committee of
America
For additional details click on
the following link
Grave Markers Installed for Two Fenian Rebels: Michael Harrington
and Thomas Hassett | Irish America
CEMETERY
and grave location
Name:
Calvary
Cemetery
ADDRESS:
4902 Laurel Hill Blvd, Flushing, NY 11377
GRAVE LOCATION:
Section 5, Range 6, Plot AA, Grave 9
HEADSTONE
The headstone was erected by the Fenian
Memorial Committee of America
and unveiled
on Saturday, October 15, 2022
|
Posted 09/02/2023 |