O'Reilly, John Boyle

O'Reilly, John Boyle (1844 - 1890)

Biography

John Boyle O'Reilly, the greatest Irishman in America at the time of his death, was born at Douth Castle, Drogheda, Ireland, on June 28, 1844. After an education at the National School, and an early career in journalism, he enlisted in the Hussars and became a Fenian. Discovery of his revolutionary sympathies led to his trial for high treason and finally to exile in the penal colony in Australia. He escaped Australia by boat and made his way to America, first Philadelphia, and then Boston, where he worked for the Pilot, a newspaper of which he eventually became editor. O'Reilly published two volumes of poems, Songs of the Southern Seas (1873) and Songs, Legends, and Ballads (1878), as well as several novels. He worked tirelessly to integrate the Roman Catholic Irish community into Protestant Boston. At his death on August 10, 1890, from an accidental overdose of sleeping pills, he left his wife Mary Murphy O'Reilly and four daughters. Daniel Chester French's memorial statue of O'Reilly stands today in Fenway Park, Boston, a testimony to the pride of its Irish natives in a poet buried in Hollyhood Cemetery in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Given Name
John Boyle
Family Name
O'Reilly
Birth Date
June 28, 1844
Death Date
August 10, 1890
Nationality
Ethnicity
Family Relations
wife : Mary O'Reilly
Education
Honours
Occupations
  • Editor



Literary Period
Literary Movement
Illness
Cause of Death
First RPO Edition
2002