Background
He was born in Dublin and made his considerable fortune in land speculation, brewing, and silk trading.
He was born in Dublin and made his considerable fortune in land speculation, brewing, and silk trading.
Keogh was of an obscure family. He owned land in Dublin, County Sligo, County Roscommon, and County Leitrim, and by the 1790s he had an income of around £6,000 per year. In 1784, Keogh joined in a plan for Ulster and Dublin radical elements to combine to push for Catholic franchise, and by 1790 Keogh was leading the Catholic Committee.
He was part of a delegation that was denied a hearing by the Lord Lieutenant, and so they went to England to make their case for the repeal of the penal laws and extension of the vote to Catholics.
They met with government ministers personally, and they received promises. However, Lord Kenmare quashed all progress.
Tone"s nickname for Keogh was "Gog". By 1792, Keogh led the Catholic Convention in Dublin.
He and others took their grievances to the King, and the result was the Catholic Relief Acting of 1793, which gave Catholics the vote and repealed many of the penal laws.
In return, Keogh made concessions on behalf of the Catholic Committee: they would not press for independence, and they would dissolve the committee. Keogh was criticized sharply for making these concessions, and conservatives in England were unhappy with the Relief Acting. In 1795, Earl Fitzwilliam, who had favored Irish Catholic causes, and tried to extend their involvement in politics, was recalled as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and replaced with a conservative.
When another delegation headed by Keogh went to London, it got no aid and little audience.
Keogh"s authority and influence in the Catholic movement in Ireland decreased as newer leaders emerged, though he remained on the Dublin committee of the United Irishmen into 1798. Although he was frequently arrested and searched, Keogh was a moderate radical, and he used his wealth to aid his co-religionists" cause without crossing the line to overt illegality.
He was on the non-violent wing of the United Irishmen, along with Thomas Addis Emmet. Days before the outbreak of the 1798 Rebellion, in despair at the likely result, Keogh printed a pamphlet warning his followers in Dublin that it could not succeed.
Some nationalists such as Walter Cox (who acted as a body guard to Lord Edward Fitzgerald in the 1798 rebellion) were sceptical of Keogh"s motives.
He died in Dublin in 1817 and was buried in Saint Kevin"s Churchyard, where his grave can be seen.
He became involved in the political struggle for Roman Catholic rights in the 1780s, when he was a member of the Catholic Committee from 1781.