Roger David Casement was born on 1 September 1864, Sandycove, County Dublin.
Casement was a British consul in Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique; 1895-98), Angola (1898-1900), Congo Free State (1901-04), and Brazil (1906-11). He gained international fame for revealing atrocious cruelty in the exploitation of native labour by white traders in the Congo and the Putumayo River region, Peru; his Congo report (published 1904) led to a major reorganisation of Belgian rule in the Congo (1908), and his Putumayo report (1912) earned him a knighthood.
Ill health forced Casement to retire to Ireland in 1912. Although he came from an Ulster Protestant family, he had always sympathised with the predominantly Roman Catholic Irish nationalists. Late in 1913 he helped form the Irish National Volunteers, and in July 1914 he travelled to New York City to seek American aid for that anti-British force. After World War I broke out in August, Casement hoped that Germany might assist the Irish independence movement as a blow against Great Britain. On arriving in Berlin in November 1914, he found that the German government was unwilling to risk an expedition to Ireland and that most Irish prisoners of war would refuse to join a brigade that he intended to recruit for service against England.
Later, Casement failed to obtain the loan of German army officers to lead the insurrection planned for Easter 1916. In a vain effort to prevent the revolt, he sailed for Ireland on April 12 in a German submarine. Put ashore on Banna Strand, County Kerry, he was arrested on April 24 and taken to London and kept in the Tower of London. The British Government eventually decided that Roger Casement should be tried for High Treason.
At the Central Criminal Court (known as the Old Bailey) in London, on 29 June 1916, Roger Casement was convicted of treason and sentenced to death.
An appeal was dismissed, and he was hanged at Pentonville Prison on 3 August 1916.
Casement was executed despite attempts by influential Englishmen to secure a reprieve in view of his past services to the British government. During this time, diaries reputedly written by Casement and containing detailed descriptions of homosexual practices were circulated privately among British officials. After years of dispute over their authenticity, the diaries were made available to scholars  by the British home secretary. It was generally considered that the passages in question were in Casement's handwriting.
In 1965 Casement's remains were returned to Ireland and, after a state funeral, buried in Glasnevin Cemetery in Dublin.
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"Ireland that has wronged no man, that has injured no land, that has sought no dominion over others. Ireland is treated today among other nations of the world as if she was a convicted criminal. If it be treason to fight against such an unnatural fate as this, then I am proud to be a rebel and shall cling to my rebellion with the last drop of my blood."
"Self government is our right, a thing born to us at birth a thing no more to be doled out to us by another people then the right to life itself then the right to feel the sun or smell the flowers or to love our kind."