He was born in
Castletownbere, County Cork in 1851; son of Denis Harrington and his wife, Eileen (née O'Sullivan). He was educated at the
Catholic University of Ireland and
Trinity College Dublin. As a member of the
Irish Parliamentary Party, he represented
Westmeath from February 1883 to November 1885. In 1885 he was elected for the new constituency of
Dublin Harbour, which he represented until his death in 1910. He served as
Lord Mayor of Dublin three times from 1901 to 1904. He owned two newspapers,
United Ireland and the
Kerry Sentinel and was a member of the so-called
Bantry band of prominent nationalist politicians from the Bantry vicinity. They were also more pejoratively known as the Pope's brass band.
Tim Healy was another prominent member of this unofficial group. In 1884, Harrington published a pamphlet, "Maamtrasna Massacres - Impeachment of the Trials" in which he dismantled the Crown Prosecution's case against the eight men accused of the
murders of the Joyce family on 17 August 1882. He provided evidence that Crown Prosecutor George Bolton had deliberately suppressed evidence that would have acquitted Myles Joyce, who was hanged, and four men who were sentenced to twenty years of penal servitude. Harrington was secretary and chief organiser of the
Irish National League (INL), a supporter of
Charles Stewart Parnell and was largely responsible for devising the agrarian
Plan of Campaign in 1886. He became a Parnellite Nationalist when the party split in 1891 continuing as secretary of the INL. In 1897 he proclaimed himself an
Independent Nationalist and sided with
William O'Brien's
United Irish League from its early days. He was briefly considered as a possible alternative to
John Redmond as leader of the re-united Irish Parliamentary Party in 1900 when he stood in the general election that year as a Nationalist again. Thereafter he became excluded from Redmond's closed circle of confidants, he retained sympathy with O'Brien, and represented the interests of the tenant farmers at the 1902
Land Conference negotiations which led to the enactment of the unprecedented
Wyndham Land Purchase (Ireland) Act 1903. Harrington is celebrated by a statue erected in 2001 at the east end of
Castletownbere near the Millbrook bar. On Saturday, 7 September 1901, the
Lord Mayor of Dublin, Harrington kicked off at the official ceremony to open
Bohemian FC's new home,
Dalymount Park. ==References==