and
Seán Mac Diarmada In the summer of 1883, Daly, moved to
Birmingham, England, and settled in the home of
James Egan, an old friend from Limerick and a generally inactive IRB man. E.G. Jenkinson, head of Special Branch, was informed that John Daly was on his way to Britain from America; Daly had been asked by the Supreme Council to deliver the graveside oration at the funeral of
Charles J. Kickham while in the United States. When Daly arrived, a plain-clothes detective was assigned to follow him at all times. As a result of this, Special Branch as alerted to the importance of
John Torley in Glasgow, Robert Johnston in Belfast and
Mark Ryan in London of the IRB. Jenkinson used
agents provocateurs in his attempts to convict Republicans. One such recruit was a publican and local IRB man named Dan O'Neill. Both Jenkinson and Major
Nicholas Gosselin persuaded O'Neill to betray Daly. O'Neill then asked Daly to deliver sealed cases to some associates in London, and on 11 April, Daly was arrested as he was about to board the train for London, and explosives were found in the case he was carrying. The police then raided the home of James Egan where explosives were "allegedly found buried" in Egan's garden in addition to some documents. In Chatham prison, he became friends with
Tom Clarke, who would later marry his niece
Kathleen and who was a leader of the 1916
Easter Rising. While in prison he claimed that he was being poisoned with
belladonna which caused an investigation by a commission of inquiry in 1890; it was admitted by prison officials as an error by a warder. A series of articles in the
Daily Chronicle in 1894 analysed prison methods. Daly gave an interview to the
Chronicle which appeared on 12 September 1896. ==Released==