Irish Nationalist. Along with William Philip Allen and Michael O'Brien, he was executed for the killing of a policeman in Manchester, England, in the wake of the failed 1867 Fenian Rising. The three men became popularly known as the "Manchester Martyrs". The son of a shopkeeper, he was trained in that profession and in 1858 moved to Manchester to set up his own shop there. He was married and had three children. By all accounts Larkin was mild-mannered in business and personal dealings, and it is not known when he got involved with the Fenian movement and the Irish Republican Brotherhood, which took an increasingly militant stance on the question of Irish home rule. Two leaders of the Fenians, Colonel Thomas J. Kelly and Captain Timothy Deasy, had planned to launch an armed uprising against the English in February 1867 with a raid on the arsenal in Chester, but their plans were exposed and they found themselves hunted men. When they were arrested in Manchester seven months later, a local Fenian organizer, Edward O'Meagher Condon, determined to free them. On September 18, 1867, Kelly and Deasy were being transported from the city courthouse to the county jail in a police van under mounted escort; with them were three female prisoners, a juvenile offender, and one guard, Police Sergeant Brett. As it passed under a railway arch, a group of about three dozen men suddenly surrounded the van, shot one horse and seized the rest. The unarmed escort soon fled and the group ordered the immediate release of the two Fenians. The lone policeman refused, and after failing to open the van door with hammers and hatchets, one of the rescuers tried to blow open the lock with his revolver. At that moment Sgt. Brett peered through the keyhole to see what was happening, and the gunshot killed him instantly. A woman prisoner finally took the keys from his pocket and passed them to the Fenians through a ventilator in the van roof. Kelly and Deasy escaped and eventually found refuge in the United States. A brief manhunt resulted in 29 arrests, and five men were brought to trial for Brett's murder: Condon, Larkin, Allen, O'Brien, and Edward Maguire. All were convicted, even though the prosecution could not prove which men in the mob were armed or who fired the fatal shot. In his pre-sentencing speech Larkin said he had received a fair trial and concluded, "So I look to the mercy of God. May God forgive all who have sworn my life away. As I am a dying man, I forgive them from the bottom of my heart. May God forgive them". The defendants were sentenced to death; Maguire would be pardoned as a case of mistaken identity, and Condon had his sentence commuted to 10 years because he was an American citizen. Larkin, Allen and O'Brien were hanged at the New Bailey Prison in Salford, and buried in quicklime in its graveyard. The executions aroused much protest in the UK and in Ireland the dead were hailed as patriots and martyrs. Two weeks later a symbolic funeral was held for them in Dublin, in which 60,000 people followed three empty hearses to Glasnevin Cemetery. A memorial to the Fenians was later dedicated there, while their rallying cry at the trial, "God Save Ireland!", was celebrated in poetry and song. New Bailey Prison closed in 1868 and the bodies of Larkin, Allen and O'Brien were transferred to Strangeways Prison Cemetery, where they remained for over a century in unmarked graves. In 1991 their remains were cremated and reinterred at Blackley Cemetery in Manchester. Since then there has been a movement to have them brought back to Ireland for burial in their native soil.
Irish Nationalist. Along with William Philip Allen and Michael O'Brien, he was executed for the killing of a policeman in Manchester, England, in the wake of the failed 1867 Fenian Rising. The three men became popularly known as the "Manchester Martyrs". The son of a shopkeeper, he was trained in that profession and in 1858 moved to Manchester to set up his own shop there. He was married and had three children. By all accounts Larkin was mild-mannered in business and personal dealings, and it is not known when he got involved with the Fenian movement and the Irish Republican Brotherhood, which took an increasingly militant stance on the question of Irish home rule. Two leaders of the Fenians, Colonel Thomas J. Kelly and Captain Timothy Deasy, had planned to launch an armed uprising against the English in February 1867 with a raid on the arsenal in Chester, but their plans were exposed and they found themselves hunted men. When they were arrested in Manchester seven months later, a local Fenian organizer, Edward O'Meagher Condon, determined to free them. On September 18, 1867, Kelly and Deasy were being transported from the city courthouse to the county jail in a police van under mounted escort; with them were three female prisoners, a juvenile offender, and one guard, Police Sergeant Brett. As it passed under a railway arch, a group of about three dozen men suddenly surrounded the van, shot one horse and seized the rest. The unarmed escort soon fled and the group ordered the immediate release of the two Fenians. The lone policeman refused, and after failing to open the van door with hammers and hatchets, one of the rescuers tried to blow open the lock with his revolver. At that moment Sgt. Brett peered through the keyhole to see what was happening, and the gunshot killed him instantly. A woman prisoner finally took the keys from his pocket and passed them to the Fenians through a ventilator in the van roof. Kelly and Deasy escaped and eventually found refuge in the United States. A brief manhunt resulted in 29 arrests, and five men were brought to trial for Brett's murder: Condon, Larkin, Allen, O'Brien, and Edward Maguire. All were convicted, even though the prosecution could not prove which men in the mob were armed or who fired the fatal shot. In his pre-sentencing speech Larkin said he had received a fair trial and concluded, "So I look to the mercy of God. May God forgive all who have sworn my life away. As I am a dying man, I forgive them from the bottom of my heart. May God forgive them". The defendants were sentenced to death; Maguire would be pardoned as a case of mistaken identity, and Condon had his sentence commuted to 10 years because he was an American citizen. Larkin, Allen and O'Brien were hanged at the New Bailey Prison in Salford, and buried in quicklime in its graveyard. The executions aroused much protest in the UK and in Ireland the dead were hailed as patriots and martyrs. Two weeks later a symbolic funeral was held for them in Dublin, in which 60,000 people followed three empty hearses to Glasnevin Cemetery. A memorial to the Fenians was later dedicated there, while their rallying cry at the trial, "God Save Ireland!", was celebrated in poetry and song. New Bailey Prison closed in 1868 and the bodies of Larkin, Allen and O'Brien were transferred to Strangeways Prison Cemetery, where they remained for over a century in unmarked graves. In 1991 their remains were cremated and reinterred at Blackley Cemetery in Manchester. Since then there has been a movement to have them brought back to Ireland for burial in their native soil.
Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/5747056/michael-larkin: accessed
), memorial page for Michael Larkin (c.1837–23 Nov 1867), Find a Grave Memorial ID 5747056, citing Glasnevin Cemetery, Glasnevin,
County Dublin,
Ireland;
Maintained by Find a Grave.
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