Title of article :
CHARLES ROWCROFT, IRISH-AMERICANS, AND THE ‘RECRUITMENT AFFAIR’, 1855–1856
Abstract :
This article examines the prelude to, and machinations surrounding, the arrest, trial, and
expulsion from America of Charles Rowcroft, the British consul in Cincinnati. Rowcroft’s difficulties were a
direct consequence of the conniving of Irish-American nationalists in the region during the Crimean War.
The article places these events in Cincinnati against a backdrop of intense Anglo-American diplomatic
distrust. It also highlights the exaggerated Hibernophobic response of some British officials in the United
States. A study of Irish-American nationalism during the 1850s, bridging the historical and historiographical
gap between the 1848 Young Ireland rebellion and the beginnings of Fenianism, has long been
wanting. This article is a first, important step toward filling that void, elucidating the hitherto hidden extent
of Irish-American agitation during the Crimean War.