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The Manchester Martyrs: Unique sculpture on show in Salford to mark anniversary of infamous Irishmen’s death


A new sculpture to mark the anniversary of the deaths of the infamous Manchester Martyrs has gone on show at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford.

The foot-high maquette (model) of a proposed monument by Liverpool sculptor, Arthur Dooley, forms part of the Irish Collection at the celebrated library on the Crescent.

It was commissioned to act as a centenary memorial to William Allen, Michael Larkin, and Michael O’Brien, collectively known as the Manchester Martyrs.

The maquette is currently on display in the Library hall, to mark the anniversary of their deaths on 23 November.

SalfordOnline.com filmed at the Library in 2013 to tell the full story of the Manchester Martyrs: a group of desperate armed Irishmen who freed two Fenian prisoners from a prison van on Hyde Road, Manchester in 1867.

During the raid a policeman, Sergeant Charles Brett, was accidentally shot dead.

Allen, Larkin and O’Brien, were convicted for the shooting and hanged in public outside the New Bailey prison, Salford on 23 November 1867.

This model is thought to be the only record of the monument, which was envisaged in 1967.

The sculpture was to consist of three standing steel pillars, with attached Celtic shields, representing the three men, and a five ton block of granite from County Wicklow, to which a metal plaque with the men’s names, and some detail on the event and its significance, was to be attached.

Manchester Martyrs sculpture

Because of opposition both from councillors on the planning committee and from other groups and individuals, all the indications are that the sculpture itself was never made.

Watch: Horrible History – The Manchester Martyrs, 1867

Few believed that the three men were guilty, and major demonstrations were held in protest in England, Ireland and the United States.

The executions also served as a spur to those seeking Irish independence.

Frederick Engels was living in Manchester at this time with an Irishwoman, Lizzie Burns.

After the execution he noted prophetically that the executions had “accomplished the final act of separation between England and Ireland. The only thing the Fenians still lacked were martyrs. They have been provided with these”.

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SalfordOnline.com's Local History Editor and Senior Reporter.