Tom Reilly (born 1960) is an Irish author and former regional newspaper columnist (Life of Reilly, Drogheda Independent), who has written books on Oliver Cromwell and religion, (Hollow Be Thy Name) as well as a book based on his own newspaper columns. He has also written about the 1916 rising with his biography Joe Stanley, Printer to the Rising. Reilly is not an academic historian, and his theories about Cromwell have little support among academic historians who study the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland. [1] Although it must equally be pointed out that no 17th century historian has so far made any serious challenge to Reilly's assertions, which he insists are based on facts, and not hyperbole or propaganda.
Reilly is currently the manager of Ardgillan Castle, located between Balbriggan and Skerries in Ireland. He has published thirteen books, and has been responsible for the publication of a fourteenth - Cromwell and Ireland, New Perspectives, (Liverpool University Press), which is a collection of essays from an eclectic mix of seventeenth century historians. A native of Drogheda, County Louth, he spent most of his working life in the printing and allied trades and is an avid local historian. He set up the Drogheda Heritage Centre along with his wife, Noeleen in 1999 in St Mary's Church of Ireland, Drogheda, the site of Cromwell's entry into the town in 1649. The Centre caused local controversy when Cromwell's death mask was displayed for two months under the slogan 'He's Back!' While the death mask was on display protests were led by the Deputy Mayor of Drogheda, Frank Godfrey daubed tomato juice on the walls of the graveyard surrounding the centre. [2] 'Cromwell Was Framed (Ireland 1649)', the first major book from new imprint Chronos Books appeared on the bookshelves in 2014. Drogheda's Forgotten Walls (and other stories) was published in December 2015.
He is married to Noeleen (Crinion) and has two children, Cathy and Eoin.
Reilly's best-known work on Cromwell, Cromwell – An Honourable Enemy: The Untold Story of the Cromwellian Invasion of Ireland (1999), which holds that Cromwell did not intentionally target civilians during the campaign. He was quoted as stating: "Cromwell's entire Irish mission was fought on a purely military basis, and it is to his enormous credit that he never once departed from those parameters." [3] The central thesis of this argument has been challenged in the public domain by some leading Irish historians but without supporting evidence. Many other leading historians agree with Reilly. [4]
In response to those experts who criticized his Magnum Opus, he published Cromwell was Framed, which was a significant rebuttal of their attempts to dismiss his work.