Henry Dixon (Irish republican)

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Henry Dixon was an Irish nationalist at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries. He was a key member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood and Sinn Féin, and was active in organisations such as the Young Ireland League, the Celtic Literary Society and the Sinn Féin Printing & Publishing Company.

Dixon appears for the first time in open political activity in the spring of 1885 when he gave a lecture on the need to protect Irish industry to a meeting of the Dublin Young Ireland Society.[1]:146

Between then and the end of the century he was active in nationalist organisations, most with overlapping memberships, all controlled by the IRB. He ran the National Club Literary Society with Patrick Lavelle.[1]:163 He was the only non Dublin city councillor on the Charles Stuart Parnell Leadership committee established by the National Club to create an alliance between local government officials across the country to consolidate Parnell’s support base.[1]:196 He was also on the executive of the Parnell Leadership Fund with Fred Allan. The purpose of this fund was to raise money to maintain a Parnellite presence in the press.[1]:201

Dixon was also on the Young Ireland League executive with John MacBride and Patrick Lavelle; they organised republican commemorative events, including those of the National Monuments Committee, in Dublin.[1]:235 During this period Dixon wrote political letters to the Northern Patriot.[1]:244 A provisional 1798 committee was set up in 1896 consisting of Dixon, Lavelle, and Fred Allan amongst others.[1]:246

He was active in the Celtic Literary Society, run by William Rooney. Arthur Griffith and Denis Devereux were also members, and Dixon went on to work with those two men in the Sinn Féin Printing & Publishing Company.[2]

A practising solicitor, he looked after the legal affairs of personalities like Seán T. O'Kelly and helped to structure Irish nationalism in the early 1900s. Liked many of his nationalist peers, he was interned at Frongoch after the 1916 Rising.[3]


References

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  2. Mathew Staunton, 'The Nation Speaking to Itself: A History of the Sinn Féin Printing & Publish Co. Ltd. 1906-1914' in The Book in Ireland, J. Genet, S. Mikowski, F. Garcier [eds.] (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Press, 2006), p 232.
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