The
Society of United Irishmen, originally proposed by Tennant's friend in Dublin,
William Drennan, was formed in Belfast by a group of the town's more radical Presbyterian reformers, enthused by the
French Revolution and
Thomas Paine's vindication of
The Rights of Man. They had read
Theobald Wolfe Tone's
Argument on Behalf of the Catholics of Ireland in which he argued that that division between Catholics and Protestants was being used by English and landed interests to balance "the one party by the other, plunder and laugh at the defeat of both." Tone put forward the case for unity between Catholics, Protestants and Dissenters. In October 1791 they invited Tone and his friend
Thomas Russell for what proved to be the Society's inaugural meeting. Despairing of the prospects for reform, by 1795/6 Tennant was convinced of the case for a revolutionary insurrection against the
British Crown and the
Ascendancy. According to Wolfe Tone, Tennant had been a member of a pre-United Irishmen secret society in Belfast which included McTier and Haslett, as well as
Samuel Neilson and
Gilbert McIlveen. This was the
Jacobin Club described by
William Drennan's sister
Martha McTier in 1795 as an established democratic party in Belfast, composed of "persons and rank long kept down" and chaired by a "radical mechanick". In April 1795
Earl Fitzwilliam, Lord Lieutenant for just fifty days, was recalled to London for publicly urging support for
Catholic Emancipation. With hopes for reform buried, these Jacobins, who had also organised in
Dublin and
Derry, flooded United Irish societies. == Arrest and Imprisonment ==