Pitt's "Reign of Terror" Without a further commission and having been pursued by his enemies in the Bay with lawsuits, in London Despard found himself confined for two years in a
debtors' prison. There he read
Thomas Paine's
Rights of Man. A response to
Edmund Burke's
Reflections on the Revolution in France, it was a vindication of the "wild and Levelling principle of Universal Equality" he had been accused of administering in the Bay. By the time Despard was released from the
King's Bench Prison in 1794, Paine had been forced to take refuge in the new
French Republic, with which the British
Crown was now at war, and in both Britain and Ireland some of his more ardent admirers were beginning to consider universal franchise and annual parliaments a cause for physical force. In October 1793, a British Convention in
Edinburgh, with delegates from English corresponding societies attending, was broken up by the authorities on charges of
sedition.
Joseph Gerrald and
Maurice Margarot of the
London Corresponding Society and their host
Thomas Muir of the
Society of the Friends of the People were sentenced to fourteen years
transportation. When in May 1794 an attempt to indict the radical English MP
John Horne Tooke for treason misfired with a jury, the
ministry of William Pitt (Grenville's cousin) renewed what was to have been an eight-month
suspension of Habeas Corpus. In the summer of 1795 crowds shouting "No war, no Pitt, cheap bread" attacked the prime minister's residence in Downing Street and surrounded
the King in procession to Parliament. There was also a riot at
Charing Cross at the scene of which Despard was detained and questioned, something which a magistrate suggested Despard might have avoided had he not, in giving his name, used the "improper title" of "citizen". In October, the government introduced the "Gagging Acts" (
Seditious Meetings Act and the
Treason Act), which outlawed "seditious" gatherings and rendered even the "contemplation" of force a treasonable offence.
United Britons Despard joined the
London Corresponding Society (LCS), and was quickly taken on to its central committee. He also took the
United Irish pledge (or "
Test") "to obtain an equal, full and adequate representation of all the people of Ireland" in a sovereign parliament in
Dublin. At a time when the Irish movement was turning increasingly towards the prospects for a French-assisted insurrection, Despard would have found it represented in LCS and other radical circles in London, by the brothers
Arthur and
Roger O'Connor, and by
Jane Greg. In the summer of 1797
James Coigly, a Catholic priest who had risen to prominence among the United Irishmen during the
Armagh Disturbances, arrived from
Manchester. There, as a test for "United Englishmen", he had been administering an oath to "Remove the diadem and take off the crown ... [to] exalt him that is low and abuse him that is high". In London, Coigly met with the leading Irish members of the LCS. In addition to Despard, these included Society President Alexander Galloway, and the brothers Benjamin and
John Binns. Meetings were held at Furnival's Inn,
Holborn, where, convening as the "United Britons", delegates from London, Scotland and the regions committed themselves "to overthrow the present Government, and to join the French as soon as they made a landing in England" It is possible that this was Coigly's party. In December 1797 Coigly returned from France with news of French plans for an invasion, but on 28 February 1798, when seeking again to cross the Channel in a party of five he and Arthur O'Connor were arrested. O'Connor, able to call
Charles James Fox,
Richard Brinsley Sheridan and
Henry Grattan in his defence, was acquitted. Coigly had been caught with a letter to the
French Directory from the United Britons and was convicted of treason and hanged in June. While its suggestion of a mass movement primed for insurrection had been scarcely credible, it was sufficient proof of the intent to invite and encourage a French invasion.
Detention The government swooped on the London Corresponding Society. On 10 March 1798, Despard was detained at lodgings in Soho, where
The Times reported he had been found in bed with "a black woman" (his wife, Catherine). Along with around thirty others, he was held without charge in
Coldbath Fields, a recently rebuilt high-security prison in
Clerkenwell. Further repressive measures followed. The Corresponding Societies were comprehensively suppressed and the
Combination Laws of 1799 and 1800 rendered union activity among workers criminal.
Return to Ireland and renewed engagement With hostilities with France suspended by the
Treaty of Amiens, Despard, who had not been charged, was released in May 1802. There was no indication that he was intending to renew his seditious activityin prison he had petitioned for voluntary transportation. But he returned to Ireland where he met with William Dowdall, recently released from
Fort George in Scotland. With
Thomas Russell and other state prisoners, Dowdall had been in contact with the young militants
Robert Emmet and
William Putnam McCabe who were determined to reorganise United Irishmen on a strict military-conspiratorial basis. Members would be chosen personally by its officers, meeting as the executive directory. The immediate aim of the reconstituted society was, in conjunction with simultaneous risings in Ireland and England, to again solicit a French invasion. The roving McCabe (Belfast, Dublin, Glasgow, Manchester, London, Hamburg, Paris) was to take up the role that had been Coigly's . Despard may also have been swayed by what he observed in his home county of
Queens (Laois). Government informers were reporting that while the
Rebellion that had flared in 1798 had been "put down" it was "by no means suppressed. The blaze is only smothered". Meanwhile, in England, the influx of refugees from Ireland, the angry response of workers to the
Combination Acts, and continued protest over food shortages encouraged renewed organisation among former conspirators. A military system and pike manufacture began to spread across the mill districts of Lancashire and Yorkshire, and regular meetings resumed between county and London delegates. ==Treason trial==