NORTHAMPTON:
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1805.
James Halligan and Dominick Dealey, were, on Friday evening last, committed
to prison in this town, for the murder of Marcus Lyon, at Wilbraham, as mentioned
in our paper of last week.- They were apprehended at Rye, in the state of New-York,
and are both foreigners. |
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Dominic Daley and James Halligan were two Irishmen from Boston who were tried and executed in 1806, in Northampton, Massachusetts, for a murder they did not commit. Francis Blake, one of the defense lawyers, focused on the anti-Catholic, Irish-hating atmosphere of the trial in his summation: "Pronounce then a verdict against them! Tell them that the name of an Irishman is, among us, but another name for a robber and an assassin: . . . that when a crime of unexampled atrocity is perpetrated amongst us, we look for an Irishman; . . . that the moment he is accused, he is presumed to be guilty until his innocence is proved." Northampton was not an isolated case. There were strong anti-Catholic and anti-immigrant sentiments in all of Massachusetts during the early part of the 19th century.
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"Northampton" article on Dealey [Daley] and Halligan from the Hampshire Gazette newspaper
publisher Hampshire Gazette |
date Nov 20, 1805 |
location Northampton, Massachusetts |
width 4.0" |
height 2.25" |
process/materials printed paper, ink |
item type Periodicals/Newspaper |
accession # #L05.088 |
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