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The Catalpa rescue was the escape, on 17–19 April 1876, of six Irish Fenian prisoners from the Convict Establishment (now Fremantle Prison), a British penal colony in Western Australia. They were taken on the convict ship Hougoumont to Fremantle, Western Australia, arriving 9 January 1868. In 1869, pardons had been issued to many of the imprisoned Fenians. Another round of pardons was issued in 1871, after which only a small group of "military" Fenians remained in Western Australia's penal system.

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  • The Catalpa rescue was the escape, on 17–19 April 1876, of six Irish Fenian prisoners from the Convict Establishment (now Fremantle Prison), a British penal colony in Western Australia. They were taken on the convict ship Hougoumont to Fremantle, Western Australia, arriving 9 January 1868. In 1869, pardons had been issued to many of the imprisoned Fenians. Another round of pardons was issued in 1871, after which only a small group of "military" Fenians remained in Western Australia's penal system. In 1874, prisoner James Wilson secretly sent a letter to New York City journalist John Devoy, who worked to organize a rescue. Using donations collected by Devoy from Irish-Americans, Fremantle escapee John Boyle O'Reilly, then living in Boston, purchased a merchant ship, Catalpa, and sailed her to international waters off Rockingham, Western Australia. On 17 April 1876 at 8:30 am, Wilson and five other Fenians working outside the prison walls, Thomas Darragh, Martin Hogan, Michael Harrington, Thomas Hassett, and Robert Cranston, boarded a whaleboat O'Reilly had dispatched, were taken aboard Catalpa, and escaped to New York. (en)
  • Ar an 17 Aibreán, 1876, d'éalaigh seisear Fíníní as príosún i Fremantle, an Astráil, ar an long Catalpa. (ga)
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  • center (en)
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  • Or the Yankees will steal them away. (en)
  • Remember Perth regatta day (en)
  • So come all you screw warders and jailers (en)
  • Take care of the rest of your Fenians (en)
  • On the seventeenth of April last the Stars and Stripes did fly (en)
  • Prepared to take the Fenian boys in safety o'er the sea. (en)
  • On board the bark Catalpa, waving proudly to the sky; (en)
  • She showed the green above the red as she did calmly lay (en)
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  • Traditional Full lyrics (en)
  • Traditional Lyrics and guitar chords (en)
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  • 100.0
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  • Ar an 17 Aibreán, 1876, d'éalaigh seisear Fíníní as príosún i Fremantle, an Astráil, ar an long Catalpa. (ga)
  • The Catalpa rescue was the escape, on 17–19 April 1876, of six Irish Fenian prisoners from the Convict Establishment (now Fremantle Prison), a British penal colony in Western Australia. They were taken on the convict ship Hougoumont to Fremantle, Western Australia, arriving 9 January 1868. In 1869, pardons had been issued to many of the imprisoned Fenians. Another round of pardons was issued in 1871, after which only a small group of "military" Fenians remained in Western Australia's penal system. (en)
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  • Catalpa rescue (en)
  • An Tarrtháil Catalpa (ga)
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