Presbyterian minister, tenant-right campaigner Bell was born in Mosside,
County Antrim, the son of a
Secessionist Presbyterian minister Thomas Bell. He was educated locally, and in the
Royal Belfast Academical Institution collegiate department. In 1839 he became the Secessionist Presbyterian minister of Derryvalley Presbyterian Church close to his father's hometown of
Ballybay, in
County Monaghan. In the same year, 1850, Bell lobbied
Westminster, calling upon the "Imperial Legislature to render the poor man's property as sacred as that of the rich". When Bell was selected Moderator of the Presbyterian Synod of Armagh, the
Young Irelander paper,
The Nation (24 May 1851), rejoiced at the "intimation of the deep hold which the principles of the League have taken upon the minds of the.. .farmers of Ulster". Yet Bell found himself unable to deliver for what
Gavan Duffy had optimistically hailed as the "League of North and South". In 1852 the all-Ireland
Tenant Right League helped return Duffy and 49 other tenant-rights
MPs to
Westminster. Despite efforts of Bell,
James MacKnight,
William Sharman Crawford and other Protestant activists in the north, none represented the Protestant-dominated
Ulster counties. In the Monaghan election Bell's appeal for unity could not prevail against calls of the Union in danger, and "No Popery". The League candidate,
Dr. John Gray, was a Protestant but editor of the pro-
Repeal, largely Catholic,
Freeman's Journal. Of the one hundred Presbyterians who a signed the requisition asking Gray to stand only eleven had the courage to vote for him. The unity represented by the League-supported MPs sitting in Westminster as the
Independent Irish Party itself proved elusive. In the south, Catholic Primate,
Archbishop Cullen approved MPs breaking their pledge of independent opposition and accepting positions in a new Whig administration. In the north League meeting continued to be broken up by
Orange "bludgeon men". In 1853, members of his Presbytery forced Bell to resign his ministry.
Physical-force republican In Manchester, in the Spring of 1864 Bell met
Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa and swore the oath to the Irish Republican Brotherhood|Irish Republican ["Fenian"] Brotherhood. Already, "thoroughly imbued with the radical separatism of the Fenians", he was the editor of the weekly the
Irish Liberator, the paper of the IRB-aligned National Brotherhood of St Patrick. Fenians, who were practising Catholics, were resentful of their bishops' vocal hostility to their movement. But they may have regarded as unwelcome Bell's intercession: at a meeting in Dublin in May 1864, Bell opined that "men should be free to follow what forms of religion they pleased; ... free unmolested, even if they believed in no religion at all". Such liberality appeared only to confirm the charge that Fenianism actually encouraged infidelity. Accused, despite his protests, of being critical of the Catholic clergy, his was forced out of the editorship in June 1864. This was not before assuring his London-Irish readership of the basis for renewed republican confidence: We know our fellow countrymen in American will do their duty; and if we had 400,000 volunteers with rifles in their hands, what then was to hinder [our country from rising] from the ashes of her desolation, with the diadem of freedom on her brow, and the sceptre of sovereignty in her hand. In pursuit of this vision, and escaping what he understood as an "outcry" raised against him in the St. Patrick Brotherhood as a former Presbyterian minister, in October 1864 Bell was sent on a fund-raising lecture tour, and mission to the Fenians, in the United States.1 Back in Dublin in the summer of 1865, Bell was on the executive council of the IRB, meeting with, Rossa,
James Stephens,
Thomas Clarke Luby, and
Charles Kickham to discuss proposal to issue bonds in the United States "to meet the emergency of an impending fight". Deliberations were cut short in September when police raided the offices of the
Irish People and there was a general round up of the Fenians in Dublin. Bell fled first to Paris, then to the United States. ==United States 1866–1890==