Background
He was born in Tubbercurry, Co. Sligo but emigrated to the USA at an early age, returning in the later 1870s to Bunninadden, Sligo, where he was a farmer and lived for the rest of his life.
Member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
He was born in Tubbercurry, Co. Sligo but emigrated to the USA at an early age, returning in the later 1870s to Bunninadden, Sligo, where he was a farmer and lived for the rest of his life.
He was connected with Irish political movements from 1880 onwards and in 1881-82 was imprisoned as a ‘suspect’ under the then coercion legislation. He was a veteran of the Land League and active in the United Irish League. He was associated with the Irish Republican Brotherhood after his return from the USA. He was elected unopposed to represent North Sligo on 7 March 1900 following the resignation of Bernard Collery, and transferred unopposed to his native South Sligo constituency at the general election later that year.
He held this seat unopposed through successive general elections until December 1918, when he was defeated by the Sinn Fein candidate Alexander McCabe by 9,113 votes to 1,988. O’Dowd had made representations on McCabe’s behalf when the latter had been tried, and acquitted, for possession of explosives. Maume (1999) states that O’Dowd was accused of corruption and of organising violence against Sinn Féin supporters during the North Leitrim by-election of 1908, and that he was himself beaten up and severely injured by Sinn Féin supporters on polling day in 1918.
He published a volume of poems, Lays of South Sligo, and contributed poems to T. D. Sullivan’s Weekly News.
[26th United Kingdom Parliament. 27th United Kingdom Parliament. 28th United Kingdom Parliament.
29th United Kingdom Parliament. 30th United Kingdom Parliament]
As a local authority representative, O’Dowd was a member of the Irish Convention of 1917-18, which unsuccessfully attempted to reconcile North and South Ireland.