Jane Greg
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Jane Greg | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1749 Belfast, Ireland |
| Died | 1817 (aged 67–68) Quarry Bank Mill, Cheshire England |
| Movement | |
Jane "Jenny" Greg (1749–1817)[1] in the 1790s was an Irish republican agitator with connections to radical political circles in England. Although the extent of her activities is unclear, in suppressing the Society of United Irishmen the British commander, General Lake, described Greg as "the most violent creature possible" and as someone who had caused "very great [political] mischief" in her native Belfast.[2]

Greg was the second of thirteen children born to Elizabeth (Hyde) (1721–1780) and Thomas Greg of Belfast (1718–1796). With his business partner and brother-in-law, Waddell Cunningham, her father commanded one of the greatest mercantile fortunes in Ireland.
The son of a Scottish blacksmith, in the 1740s Thomas Greg bought a small ship which carried provisions to the West Indies and returned with flaxseed. Dealings in New York brought him into contact and partnership with Waddell Cunningham, another Belfast Presbyterian. By 1775 Greg and Cunningham was one of the largest shipping companies in New York, having benefitted from the rise in the prices of provisions during the Seven Years’ War and from the license to attack and plunder enemy vessels. After the war, Greg and Cunningham set up a sugar plantation on Dominica called "Belfast" for which Greg's brother John, already established on the island, supplied slaves.[3][4]
At home, as Belfast's richest merchants, the partners began to improve the town's commercial infrastructure, investing in the Lagan navigation canal, new docks and quays, and the construction of the White Linen Hall which, together, attracted the linen trade to Belfast that had formerly gone through Dublin.[4]
In the 1780s Cunningham cut a patriotic figure as a patron and officer of the Volunteers. Formed in anticipation of a French attempt upon Ireland during the American War, in the Presbyterian north the independent militia demonstrated sympathy for their kinfolk in the colonies with parallel demands for free commerce and Irish legislative independence. Jane's father may have shared a disdain for the Church of Ireland Ascendancy (in 1783 he refused a Baronetcy).[5] but with Cunningham, Thomas Greg alienated popular and radical opinion. Townspeople looked with favour neither on their eviction of poor tenants from lands in which they had speculated [6] nor their proposal to commission Belfast vessels for the Middle Passage.[4]
Radical connections in England

In a public debate following Belfast's 1792 "Bastille Day" celebrations, Cunningham's objection to an immediate and liberal extension of the franchise to include Catholics was defeated by interventions from members of a new democratic club. The Society of United Irishmen proposed the "equal representation of all the people" in the Irish parliament and its "real independence" from England.[7]
If there were family connections on Jane Greg's path to these radical reformers they were likely, not her father and his associates, but her sister-in-law. Jane Greg spent most of her adulthood in England in the society of her younger brother Samuel Greg. In Manchester, Samuel, who with his maternal uncles rose to be one of the great northern "cotton kings", married Hannah Lightbody. Like many northern merchant families, the Lighbodys were Unitarians, their indulgence of "rational dissent" broadly comparable to the "New Light" teaching of Belfast's Glasgow-educated Presbyterian clergy. Hannah completed her education at a Unitarian academy at Stoke Newington outside London, where she lived with her cousin Thomas Rogers, a close friend and an immediate neighbour to Richard Price.[8]

Richard Price was the "non-conforming minister of eminence" that Edmund Burke pilloried in his Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) as the leading light of a circle of "literary caballers and intriguing philosophers" naïve and seditious in their embrace of the French revolutionary doctrine of popular sovereignty.[9] Possibly with her sister-in-law as a connection, Greg was closely acquainted with a number of these figures, including John Horne Tooke of the London Corresponding Society (arrested, but acquitted, in 1794 of high treason) and Roger O'Connor. In London, O'Connor, with his brother Arthur, were seeking to build a network of sympathetic contacts for the United Irish cause.[10]
Among Price's friends, Greg may also have met, and will certainly have read, Mary Wollstonecraft. With her Vindication of the Rights of Men she was the first (in advance of Thomas Paine) to reply to Burke. Her subsequent, and ground-breaking, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) was the talk of Greg's close friend Martha McTier in Belfast,[11] where it had been reviewed and commended by the United Irish paper, the Northern Star[12] Wollstonecraft's call for women to secure the liberty without which they could "neither possess virtue or happiness"[13] may have been among the reasons Greg gave herself for refusing marriage.
Greg shared McTier's abhorrence for the highly-restrictive model of education for the poor advanced by the conservative evangelical Hannah More. Having encountered Hannah More and her sisters in Bath and discussed their schools and other good works, Greg reported to McTier that she found their "minds crippled in an astonishing degree".[14] McTier prided herself that in her school for poor girls in Belfast, her pupils "do not gabble over the testament only" and that she had those who "can read Fox and Pitt".[15]
