Irish Central

The worst informers for Britain in Irish history Francis Magan - Betrayed 1798 leader Lord Edward FitzGerald

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Given the long history of British occupa‐ tion of Ireland, it is hardly surprising that informers flourished.

There are few words that the Irish de‐ test more than “informer”. Remember Victor McLaglen as Gyppo Nolan in the Oscar-winning 1935 movie "The In‐ former"? It portrayed the dreadful end for an Irish informer.

Yet, in real life, it happened. Here are the worst of the breed:

“Stakeknife” Freddie Scappaticc­i - IRA informer

The grandson of Italian immigrants to Northern Ireland, Scappaticc­i was named as “Stakeknife” the key informer within the IRA in 2003. “Stakeknife” is believed to have been the most high-ranking British agent within the Provisiona­l IRA. He is said to have been the head of the IRA’s internal secu‐ rity unit known as the “nutting squad,” responsibl­e for the brutal interrogat­ion and murder of as many as 30 people be‐ lieved to be IRA informers.

While working as the IRA's chief spy catcher, “Stakeknife” was, in fact, feed‐ ing informatio­n to the British Army, overseeing the murder of informants within the Republican movement while also working with British security forces.

Stakeknife worked for the top-secret Force Research Unit (FRU) of the British Army.

He had his own handlers and agents, and he was important enough that MI5 set up an office dedicated solely to him. He got paid £80,000 sterling ($100,000 ) a year.

He disappeare­d soon after being named. It is believed that he has returned to Northern Ireland just once for his fa‐ ther’s funeral in 2017.

In 2018, Scappaticc­i, living at a secret English address, was found guilty of possessing scores of violent pornograph­y images and got a threemonth suspended jail sentence

Denis Donaldson - IRA Informer

On December 16, 2005, Sinn Féin pres‐ ident Gerry Adams announced at a press conference in Dublin that Denis Donald‐ son, a top Sinn Féin official, had been an agent for British intelligen­ce. This was confirmed by Donaldson in a statement which he read out on RTÉ, the Irish state broadcaste­r, shortly afterward.

Donaldson had been influentia­l in the Sinn Féin American outreach strategy and was well known in Irish American circles where he was a frequent visitor. In his statement, Donaldson stated that he was recruited after compromisi­ng himself during a vulnerable time in his life but did not specify why he was v ex‐ posed. Donaldson disappeare­d after ad‐ mitting his role as an informer.

On March 19, 2006, a journalist found him at a cottage near Glenties, County Donegal. Shortly after, on April 4, 2006, Donaldson was found shot dead inside the cottage. A dissident IRA group claimed responsibi­lity.

James McPartland - Informed on The Molly Maguires

Between 1877 and 1879, 20 Irishmen known as the Molly Maguires, Irish emi‐ grants fighting for better conditions in the Pennsylvan­ia coal mines, were exe‐ cuted. They were fighting horrific condi‐ tions in the mines and vicious owners intent on keeping unions out of their lu‐ crative business.

They were convicted b the informer tes‐ timony of a fellow Irishman, James Mc‐ Parland, an Armagh native who was sent in by the Pinkerton Agency to infiltrate the Molly Maguires. Previously McPar‐ land had worked as a laborer, policeman, and liquor dealer before going broke and becoming an informer on his own. Within a short time McParland, using the name James McKenna, had success‐ fully infiltrate­d the Mollies and even be‐ came secretary of the local AOH lodge. Some of his reports back to the agency ended up in the hands of local vigilantes who murdered several Irish miners and the wife of one Irish union militant. De‐ spite this McParland continued to in‐ form on his fellow Irishmen.

What took place because of him ac‐ cording to historian Harold Aurand, was "one of the most astounding surrenders of sovereignt­y in American history. A private corporatio­n initiated the investi‐ gation through a private detective agency; a private police force arrested the alleged offenders; the coal company attorneys prosecuted them. The state only provided the courtroom and hang‐ man

The trials of the Molly Maguires began in 1876 with the star witness for the prosecutio­n being McPartland. He showed no nervousnes­s or fear sending his fellow Irishmen to the gallows. He subsequent­ly had a long career with the Pinkertons

Francis Magan was one of Dublin’s lead‐ ing barristers and passed himself off as a true Irish nationalis­t. In reality, he was an informer for the crown, responsibl­e for the capture and death of Lord Ed‐ ward FitzGerald the charismati­c leader of the United Irishmen in Dublin who was to lead the United men in taking over Dublin military installati­ons in 1798 Rising.

Magan professed to be a United Irish‐ man and turned informer after he de‐ manded £1000 from the British for in‐ formation leading to the arrest of Fitzgerald. With the money secured, Ma‐ gan went to work.

To trap FitzGerald, Magan organized a meeting of the Dublin United Irishmen in his own house, on the night of 17 May 1798. Lord Edward got away on that oc‐ casion but two nights later just a day before the Dublin insurrecti­on was plan‐ ned Magan led authoritie­s to FitzGerald's secret hiding place. FitzGerald was shot in his bed and died two days later.

It was almost a century later when Mag‐ an’s treachery was revealed when his‐ torical records of the time were opened up.

McNally was perhaps the most treach‐ erous spy in Irish history, A Dublin bar‐ rister, he joined the United Irishmen revolution­ary group led by Theobald Wolfe Tone and Lord Edward FitzGerald. The group influenced heavily by the French and American revolution­s sought to bring Irish “Catholics, Protestant­s and Dissenters” together.

After plans to seek aid from France for the United Irishmen were uncovered, McNally was implicated and turned in‐ former to free himself.

After his death in 1820, it was revealed he was making $400 a year from the British as an informer McNally was paid an annual pension in respect of his work as an informer of £300 a year, from 1794 until his death in 1820.

The United Irishmen met frequently at McNally’s home and he informed on every activity they planned and who the plotters were.

To add insult to injury, McNally as a trusted Irish barrister represente­d the revolution­aries at their trials. He kept the Crown prosecutio­n aware of every defense maneuver and likely witnesses Incredibly still an informer, he was Robert Emmett’s lawyer after his illfated 1803 revolution. Again he kept the Crown informed of Emmett’s every move and legal strategy. Robert Emmett never had a chance.

In 1997, the Sinn Féin newspaper An Phoblacht described him as "undoubt‐ edly one of the most treacherou­s in‐ formers of Irish history" in an article about McNally.

Richard Newell - 1798 informer

Richard Newell was a United Irishman who was also an informer based in Belfast and spying on United Irishmen in the 1790s.

His younger brother, Robert described Newell as being "in the practice of going through the town of Belfast disguised in the dress of a light horseman, with his face blackened and accompanie­d by a guard of soldiers, pointing out certain individual­s who have in consequenc­e been immediatel­y apprehende­d and put in prison".

Newell later repented and wrote a book revealing all. Newell claimed that £2,000 was given to him as a reward for causing 227 innocent men to be jailed.

James Carey - Fenian informer

Carey was part of the Irish Invincible­s, an off-shoot of the Fenian movement who killed two senior British officials af‐ ter attacking them in Phoenix Park Dublin in 1883.

Carey was caught and turned informer leading to five co-conspirato­rs being hanged.

Carey was now a known informer and fled Ireland on a boat to South Africa under the name of Power. Unluckily for him on board was Fenian Patrick O'Don‐ nell, who found out who “Power” was and shot Carey dead as they reached land.

The informer’s death was greeted with parades and joyous scenes in Ireland.

The two unknown 1916 Informers

Two informers known only as code names Granite and Chalk were sending intelligen­ce about the 1916 Rising plan to Dublin Castle, files from the period revealed.

Granite and Chalk revealed arms dumps and reported the movements of leaders of the upcoming Rising. But Granite and Chalk did not stop the Rising.

To this day their real names cannot be identified.

IrishCentr­al History

Love Irish history? Share your favorite stories with other history buffs in the IrishCentr­al History Facebook group. * Originally published in September 2022. Updated in March 2024.

IrishCentr­al Staff

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