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Written by John McCullagh
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Sunday, 15 October 2006 |
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Denis
Caulfield Brady J.P. D. L. contested the British General Election of 1835
(about the time of the Repeal of the Corn Laws) on behalf of the Liberals,
opposing Sir Thomas Staples K.C.

When
Brady won with a majority of 28 votes it was a major upset. Only recently had Roman Catholics been allowed
to vote (equality of treatment under the law for Catholics had been promised as
part of the Act of Union package) and
now there was actually a Roman Catholic Member of Parliament, the first such in
Ulster since the time of King James II.
It
was a time of relative political stability and the town of Newry was thriving. The new Roman Catholic Cathedral was recently
opened and there were new Protestant Churches too. The Union
was becoming more accepted if still deeply resented by Catholics and by commercial
interests, discriminated against by the ‘Mother Parliament’.
Everything
was to change a decade later with the Great Hunger – the defining event of all
modern Irish history.
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