Neal_O'Boyle

Neal O'Boyle

Neal O'Boyle

Irish Republican leader


Neil John O'Boyle, also known as NJ O'Boyle, was president of the Irish Republican Brotherhood from 1907 to 1910. Seán Ó Faoláin later characterised O'Boyle in Belfast and Tom Clarke in Dublin as typical of the 'older realists' of the movement in the period prior to the Easter Rising.[1]

His family owned a Public House, one of many in the southern half of Duneane Parish with strong Republican traditions and he was one of the main negotiators for the IRB when they met with Clan na Gael[2] in America.

Through the intervention of Bulmer Hobson, an ageing O'Boyle relinquished his position as Ulster representative on the Supreme Council in favour of Denis McCullough.[3]

As a businessman working in Belfast, he was a member of the National Literary Club, a clandestine IRB grouping. O'Boyle was born within Duneane Parish in an area known as Cargin in Co Antrim in the townland of Staffordstown (McVeighstown), between the village of Toome and Randalstown. A noted orator, devotee of the United Irishmen theology and with excellent commercial acuity, he was also a committed Nationalist who travelled incessantly promoting the Fenian message and was large supporter of the Land League and Fishermen's Rights on Lough Neagh.

Following his death at his Staffordstown home in January 1912, he was buried at the Sacred Heart Church, Cargin on the Staffordstown Road, Toome, Co Antrim, with the Rev J McConnell delivering the Mass.


References

  1. O'Faoláin, Seán (1939). De Valera. Penguin books limited. p. 16.

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