Tom Reilly (author)


Tom Reilly is an Irish author and former regional newspaper columnist, who has written books on Oliver Cromwell and religion, as well as a book based on his own newspaper columns.

Biography

Reilly is currently the manager of Ardgillan Castle, located between Balbriggan and Skerries in Ireland. To date in total, he has published ten books, three of which have been conventionally published, the other seven have been self-published. A native of Drogheda, County Louth, Reilly is a director of a local printing company, Burex Manufacturing Ltd. of Dunleer, 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 a storm of controversy when Cromwell's death mask was displayed for two months under the slogan 'He's Back! The lowest ebb of the affair was when local protestors, led by the Deputy Mayor of Drogheda, Frank Godfrey daubed tomato juice on the walls of the graveyard surrounding the Centre.' Cromwell Was Framed ', the first major book from new imprint Chronos Books appeared on the bookshelves in 2014. Drogheda's Forgotten Walls hit the shelves in December 2015. Reilly is an obsessive runner. He has run eleven marathons and has a PB of 37.09 for 10k and 18.10 for 5k. He lived all of his life in Drogheda and still lives there. He is still running five times a week in his mid-fifties. He is married to Noeleen and has two children, Cathy and Eoin.
Reilly's best-known work on Cromwell is the highly contentious tome,
Cromwell – An Honourable Enemy: The Untold Story of the Cromwellian Invasion of Ireland, 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."

''Cromwell – An Honourable Enemy: The Untold Story of the Cromwellian Invasion of Ireland''

Positive reviews

Both Cromwell in Ireland and The Story of Ireland were major Irish TV documentaries, conclude that Cromwell was guilty of wholesale civilian atrocities and almost completely ignore any revisionist work.
Reilly responded to academic criticism by publishing a further work '''Cromwell Was Framed ', in which he counters his academic detractors, by the inclusion of contemporary documents.
Amongst Reilly's assertions, is the identity of two contemporary individuals of whom he cites as personally responsible for creating the alleged myth that Cromwell deliberately killed unarmed men, women and children at both Drogheda and Wexford, and that a 1649 London newspaper reported that Cromwell's penis had been shot off at Drogheda.