Roscommon was one of the hardest hit counties during the Famine, losing 31 percent of its population.
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In 1845, County Roscommon was one of the first counties to record the appearance of the blight in the locality. The return of the disease the following year – earlier in the season and more lethal – resulted in an immediate increase in distress. On 12 October 1846, the local constabulary stated that 7,500 people were existing on boiled cabbage leaves only once in 48 hours.
The second failure of the potato crop in 1846 also brought a number of voluntary relief workers to the country. A young Quaker from Liverpool, Joseph Crosfield, passed through Boyle in December and reported:
“In this place, the condition of the poor previously to their obtaining admission into the work-house is one of great distress; many of them declare that they have not tasted food of any kind for forty-eight hours; and numbers of them have eaten nothing but cabbage or turnips for days and weeks.”
As was the case elsewhere, the potato failure put pressure on the local workhouses. To cope with the increase in disease, a 40-bed fever hospital was erected near to the Roscommon workhouse and an addition house was rented to accommodate fever patients, while local stables were fitted up for the reception of patients. However, at the beginning of 1847 the Roscommon workhouse was full and, under the terms of the 1838 Poor Law, had to refuse relief to other applicants regardless of their need. The suffering of the local poor was captured in the Dublin-based newspaper The Nation in March 1847: “In Roscommon, deaths by famine are so prevalent that whole families who retire at night are corpses in the morning.”
The town of Strokestown achieved grim notoriety at the end of 1847 when the local landlord, Major Dennis Mahon, was assassinated. Mahon was an “improving” landlord, and he used the dislocation caused by the Famine to make changes to his estate. The resulting evictions (3,000 in 1847 alone) and assisted emigration (a large portion of whom died during the voyage) made him deeply unpopular within the community. Mahon’s death caused outrage in Britain, confirming, in the eyes of some, the lawlessness of the Irish and their ingratitude. It may have contributing to a hardening in attitudes in terms of providing further relief – either government or private – the Irish poor.
The impact on the county was devastating, with Roscommon losing 31 percent of its population in the decade after 1845. This makes it one of the highest losses in the whole of the country. Moreover, in the post-Famine decades, the population continued to fall dramatically: in 1841, the population of Roscommon had been 252,118, in 2011, it had fallen to 64,065.
Today, Strokestown is associated with the Famine Museum, which opened in 1994. The Museum is located on the grounds of the Strokestown House estate, thus providing a compelling contrast between the lives of the poor and the lives of the wealthy Anglo-Irish elite during the Famine. It is also home to the Strokestown Park Archive, which contains over 50,000 original documents describing life on the estate in the mid-nineteenth century. A large part of the collections relates to the period of the Great Hunger.
In May, 2017, Strokestown inaugurated a National Famine Walk recreating the route – almost a 100 miles on foot – along the Royal Canal, from Longford to Dublin, taken by the 1,490 tenants who were evicted and sent to Canada in 1847.
The tenants were escorted by Bailiff Robinson to Dublin to ensure they boarded ship and did not return home. The story of the tenants’ fate after they left Dublin is a harrowing one. They traveled on open deck packet steamers to Liverpool, where they waited in the cellars of quayside buildings at Liverpool docks to board their ships to Canada.
The four ships they boarded – Erin’s Queen, Naomi, The Virginius, and The John Munn – were badly fitted out and poorly provisioned. Almost half of those who embarked died aboard ship or in the fever sheds at Grosse Isle when they arrived in Quebec. ♦
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Dr. Christine Kinealy, director of Ireland’s Great Hunger Institute at Quinnipiac University, took part in the Famine Walk in May. Her publications include the groundbreaking work This Great Calamity: The Irish Famine 1845-52 (Roberts Rinehart, 1995) and The Bad Times: An Drochshaol (XanEdu, 2015), a graphic novel written with John Walsh.
Peter Quinn says
Informative piece by a terrific historian. Anyone interested in a scholarly masterpiece that tells this story in full should read Robert Scally’s “The End of Hidden Ireland.”
Kura Geere-Watson says
Are there lists of names of those who were in the workhouses please
Saoirse la Wivre says
If anyone has information about the Fitzpatrick family who lived in Ballyglass West between 1780 and 1850, it would be of great interest to my mother and I. I suppose there are a lot of Fitzpatricks, so I will narrow it down. The Fitzpatrick in question was a Patrick Fitzpatrick, son of John, son of Michael, son of James.