Walter (Watty) Graham (also called Watty Grimes) (1763-1798) was a farmer and
Presbyterian Church
Presbyterianism is a part of the Reformed tradition within Protestantism that broke from the Roman Catholic Church in Scotland by John Knox, who was a priest at St. Giles Cathedral (Church of Scotland). Presbyterian churches derive their nam ...
elder
An elder is someone with a degree of seniority or authority.
Elder or elders may refer to:
Positions Administrative
* Elder (administrative title), a position of authority
Cultural
* North American Indigenous elder, a person who has and tr ...
in the north of
Ireland who was executed for his role as a
United Irishman in the
Rebellion of 1798.
Graham was born outside
Maghera,
County Londonderry
County Londonderry ( Ulster-Scots: ''Coontie Lunnonderrie''), also known as County Derry ( ga, Contae Dhoire), is one of the six counties of Northern Ireland, one of the thirty two counties of Ireland and one of the nine counties of Ulster. B ...
, where, like his father he was an elder of the local Presbyterian church. During the revival of the
Irish Volunteer movement in the early 1790s, the church minister,
John Glendy, regularly advanced theological justifications for democratic reform, and celebrated the
French Revolution. In a sermon that Graham and other congregants had reported, with a vote of thanks, in the
United Irish newspaper,
''Northern Star'', Glendy hailed the French
victory at Valmy in September 1792 as "the signal interposition of heaven on behalf of the French Nation and Universal Rights of Conscience"
As a delegate to Presbyterian synods in Dublin, Graham made contact with the leadership of the United Irishmen
[Joseph McCoy (2020), ] In the face of a new
martial-law regime, and in the hope of French assistance, they began to organise for a republican insurrection
With his congregants in Maghera, Graham formed a new volunteer corps under the United Irish county command of William McKeever, a Roman Catholic.
After the French example, they styled themselves the National Guard.
When the call came, Maghera was to rise simultaneously with
Toome and
Randalstown, disarm the local forces of the
Protestant (Church of Ireland)
Ascendancy—the
yeomanry and
Orangemen
Orangemen or Orangewomen can refer to:
*Historically, supporters of William of Orange
*Members of the modern Orange Order (also known as Orange Institution), a Protestant fraternal organisation
*Members or supporters of the Armagh GAA Gaelic foot ...
—and march, as needed, to join rebels from
Antrim.
United plans were disrupted by sweeping arrests. Two weeks after the initial rising in the south, Graham received orders from
Henry Joy McCracken who in the confusion had taken command in
County Antrim: "Army of Ulster, tomorrow we march for Antrim. Drive the Garrison of Randalstown before you and hasten to form a junction with the Commander-in-Chief. The first year of liberty the 6th day of June, 1798."
On June 7, 1798, Graham mustered with several hundred men (reports suggest anywhere between 300
and 5,000
). They held Maghera that night, and marched next morning to Crewe Hill about a mile from the village. When the news was received of McCracken's
defeat at Antrim Town, and that a large government had forced the bridge at Toome and was approaching, in council with McKeever, Glendy, and Thomas Clarke from
Swatragh, Graham concluded, with few firearms and no artillery, the town was lost.
They hoped for a covered withdrawal, but in the event most of assembled host fled the field (some later joining the loyalists)
while a few stood their ground, resulting in small skirmishes.
In the days that followed men, women and even children were flogged, and everything, but the bible, in Maghera Presbyterian Church was burned.
Among those rebels subsequently taken prisoner, the local magistrate,
Colonel George Lenox-Conyngham of Springhill House, insisted that with the exception of a single "Papist" and one "Church of England man", they were all Presbyterians. Father Matthew McCusker, however, is recorded as giving last rites to an insurgent in the town on the 8th, and the priest later organised a surrender of arms.
The local
Red-Coat commander, Colonel
James Leith, reported on June 19 that United men among the Presbyterians continued to conspire, with "a Dissenting minister
ossibly Glendy the schoolmaster ... and others deeply implicated".
Glendy, who eventually surrendered himself, was tried for sedition, but like a number tainted Presbyterian clergy was permitted exile in the United States. Graham, with less hope of leniency, sought to board a ship undetected, but was betrayed by the
Church of Ireland rector in
Tamlaght, from whom he had tried to collect a debt. On June 19 Graham was hanged, according to local tradition, from a tree in
Church of Ireland Rectory in Maghera. His body was then decapitated and his head paraded through the village.
Henry Cooke, the later conservative and loyalist Presbyterian Church leader, recalled seeing soldiers burning Graham's house.
Graham's betrayer was subsequently murdered.
Graham's wife and daughter (whose names are unrecorded) eventually emigrated to the United States.
The local
GAA Club in Maghera and their playing field are named in Graham's honour.
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Graham, Watty
1768 births
1798 deaths
United Irishmen
People from County Londonderry
18th-century Irish people