The
wife of a restless refugee revolutionary and the mother of six, Jane
Verner Mitchel (Jenny) was born
in County Armagh in 1821.
She was the daughter of Mary Ward who was
herself the daughter of a coachman on the Church Hill estate of the Verners of
Loughgall. Indeed one of these Verners
was the first Grand Master of the Orange Order in the previous generation.
Jenny
grew up in Newry in the home of Captain James Verner, whom she considered to be her
father. A long time later – in fact
after his death in 1847 – his brother Sir William Verner disclaimed any
relationship, saying that Jenny was the bastard daughter of a local
schoolmaster in Loughgall.
In
any case in Newry Jenny was sent to Miss Bryden’s school for young ladies and
it was while returning from school that she met and fell in love with John
Mitchel, the son of the local Presbyterian minister. She eloped with him to Chester. Caught and returned she married him secretly nevertheless the following year (1837)
in Dromore, Co Down.
Jenny
set up the first of many homes in a cottage in Dromalane, near the Mitchel
family home there. When her husband
practiced as an attorney in Banbridge she made a new home there where she
reared her first four children, Johnnie, James, Henrietta and William, and
where she regularly entertained her husband’s friends, John Martin, Gavin Duffy
and John O’Hagan.
In
1845 her husband moved to Dublin to work on The Nation newspaper and so Jenny
and her four children set up home there, first in 1 Upper Leeson Street and later at
8 Ontario Terrace near Charlemont Bridge. In Dublin
she was hostess to her husband’s Young Ireland friends; also she gave birth to
another daughter, Minnie. In Green
Street courthouse she saw her husband sentenced to fifteen years’
transportation for ‘seditious journalism’. Jenny’s house was seized and she had to return to Newry with her
children and wait for her husband to serve out his sentence.
When
informed in 1851 that her husband was a ticket-of-leave man in Van Diemen’s
Land (Tasmania)
she, five children, and two servants set sail on board the Condor to meet
them.
Jenny
and her husband settled at Bothwell in Tasmania
where another daughter Rixie was born in 1852.
In
1853 Jenny and her six children, accompanied by her husband, who was disguised
as a Jesuit, sailed to New York (via Sydney, Tahiti, San Francisco
and Nicaragua). There she set up home in Brooklyn
after being toasted as ‘brave Mrs Mitchel’ at an Irish banquet in Broadway
Theatre.
In
Brooklyn she kept open house for all the Young Ireland exiles before following
her husband to Washington. There he started another newspaper.
In
1859 John joined revolutionary friends in Paris,
France and
naturally Jenny went too. They lived in
Choisy-le-Roi. Her older daughters went
to Sacre Coeur Convent School, and one, Henrietta, became a Catholic and decided
to enter the Order. She died as a
postulant in 1863 and was buried in Montparnasse. By then Jenny was on her way to the USA, following
her husband who had gone there to report on the Civil War. In that War her son Willie was killed at
Gettysberg and her son Johnnie at Fort
Sumner in 1864. When her husband was forced into exile in Paris on the defeat of The South, Jenny moved to New York.
There
she was joined by her husband, now stricken with tuberculosis but still
enthusiastic for Irish politics. In 1875
he returned to fight an election there. He died soon after in Newry (see John Mitchel entry here).
Jenny
never saw his burial place in Newry but his Irish-American friends left her
secure financially with a memorial fund of $30000. Jenny lived to see Rixie and her first child
die; her son James marry and give her a grandson; and her daughter Minnie give her
another grandson. Minnie then left her
alcoholic husband and moved back to Jenny’s house in Brooklyn.
Jane
Verner Mitchel died on the last day of the century and was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery, faithful to the last to her
husband, to her children and to her husband’s career as a revolutionary. |