Friday, 7 November 2025

Down The Rocky Road – What Is Civilisation? Two Lessons From History

 


On Monday 27 October, autumn half-term, we decided to head to two places in County Roscommon that are very important to the history of this island: the National Famine Museum in Strokestown, and Rathcroghan, which is one of Ireland’s five ancient royal sites and the burial ground of the kings of Connaught.

Aoife had told us of a lot of noteworthy events and places to go during this week, so we took her advice. She is a particularly wise woman and her husband works at the museum in Strokestown. We were told it was an interesting place, but until we arrived, I don’t think any of us were prepared for what awaited us. The vast grounds lead up to a sprawling complex of buildings housing a multiple-award-winning testimony to the horrors of the early Victorian period in Ireland.

The reason the National Museum dedicated to the single most catastrophic event to befall these islands is located in Strokestown is explained in the main exhibition itself. Major Denis Mahon, a British Army officer, was the landlord of Strokestown House at the time of the Famine and was ambushed, shot and killed on his way home from an emergency relief meeting. There are still question marks over the identity of his killer and also over his character, but on the whole, he was another in the long line of English ruling class bigwigs who put value for money above the struggle for equity and justice. The events leading up to his death, the potential motives for them, the records left intact and the buildings that bear testimony to the Famine make Strokestown the most important remnant of the age.

In 1836, nine years before the Famine, Major Mahon took over Strokestown House from his uncle Maurice, against whom he brought an injunction claiming he was unfit to care for the estate. This was primarily because he had waived the rent agreements of the village of Ballykilcline under his control and ceded part of the estate back to the Crown. Maurice was handed an official declaration stating he was a lunatic, and that Denis was to be his legal guardian and the sole executor of Strokestown House along with its vast lands and estate.

A typical dwelling of the time made out of turf, or peat

The estate itself was in serious debt – £30,000 to be precise, or over £4 million in today’s money, so Major Mahon set to work trying to claw back the debts. This included demanding the three years of rent owed by the villagers of Ballykilcline and various other tenants his uncle had turned a blind eye to.

Many of the inhabitants of Roscommon, the county where Strokestown is situated, were so disgruntled by the obligation to pay rent despite all the hardships befalling them, that they went on strike. Mahon tried to evict many of his own tenants, but they kept returning, so in 1847, two years into the Great Famine, he took the advice that the price of hiring a couple of ships to send his own tenants off to Canada would cost less than their upkeep in Strokestown.

It was about 70km to Sligo Harbour in the west, but he was advised it was cheaper to make them walk to Dublin, over double the distance away. From there they had to catch a boat to Liverpool before being herded onto four of the notorious Coffin Ships and transported across the Atlantic. The journey in 1847 took about six weeks but could last double that time, depending on the skill of the navigator and the clemency of the weather. Added to that, people weren’t always allowed to leave the ship upon arrival: many ships were quarantined due to disease.

Some of the faces of those from the area, placed on pillars and hung from the ceiling

The lack of food, water, hygiene and space experienced by these émigrés meant that only a little over half of all Mahon’s former tenants made it to Canada. That is why they were called Coffin Ships – a fact that even the sharks of the Atlantic Ocean were aware of, as they were often seen trailing these vessels, for obvious reasons. When word about the conditions reached those back in Strokestown who hadn’t made the journey, there was great distress.

We have to understand the political situation at the time to get a fuller picture. I won’t go into the minutiae of details, but it’s safe to say that the Prime Minister of the time, Sir Robert Peel, was about as popular in Ireland as a bout of e-coli. Indigenous Irish Catholics, who made up the vast majority of the population, were more or less at the mercy of the Protestant landed gentry. A famine a century earlier, along with several promises to raise the Catholics from their status as second class citizens that had been broken, had already made the Westminster ruling elite and the British Crown deeply unpopular.

William Pitt the Younger actually resigned as Prime Minister after 18 years because he was thwarted by the aristocracy while trying to emancipate the Irish Catholics. George III, a man who had already misjudged the American situation, showed further signs of being tone deaf when he refused to allow Catholics to sit in Parliament. This meant that when Ireland and Great Britain merged as the United Kingdom on 1 January 1801, not a single MP was representing the majority in Ireland in the House of Commons.

In August of 1847, three months after many of his tenants had left Strokestown, Mahon showed up at his domain having been in England far away from the chaos. What chaos do I mean? In September 1845, a little under two years before this, a disease called Phytophthora Infestans had arrived on the shores of Ireland having been detected in other parts of Europe from 1842 already.

The blight had not affected other countries’ inhabitants as much as those of Ireland because they had a more varied diet. In Ireland, there was only one main crop: the potato. It provided the nutrients needed to sustain the people and up to 6kg of the stuff was consumed per grown man each day. With the arrival of this blight, it soon became clear that there was going to be a national emergency pretty soon.

A list of people
designated to receive
 a package of meat
at Christmas
But the government in London wasted an abominable amount of time holding inquiries and conducting research into the causes and the likely outcome of the potato blight. Indeed, all this obfuscation and mindless wasting of precious time meant that by the time a consensus had been reached, the whole island had been engulfed in a horrific famine. In many parts of the island, it was reported that not a single animal lived, and not a sound could be heard from the countryside. When it was decided that action needed to be taken, Major Mahon thought shipping his tenants off to Canada was the best course of action.

For that reason, upon Mahon’s return in August 1847, he was a deeply unpopular man, and the priest Father Michael McDermott, who Mahon had left in charge of the Relief Committee in his absence, gave a vitriolic diatribe from his pulpit, accusing Mahon of taking pleasure in turfing his tenants out and destroying their properties to keep them from returning. It was claimed by a sitting Lord in Westminster, raising the subject later on, that Father McDermott had denounced Mahon as being “worse than Cromwell”, going on to add “yet he lives”.

This alone was an inelegant and unintentional authorisation to remove Mahon by any means necessary.

One thing led to another and in early November of that year, Mahon was ambushed and killed while riding home from a relief meeting. Four suspects were named and pursued, but nobody actually admitted to the murder, and anyone who may have known never came forward, such was the feeling of contempt towards Major Mahon.

One of the suspects most likely to have been involved lamented the “accursed system” of the secret society known as the Molly Maguires, who used to bring turmoil and disorder wherever they went, and may have been instrumental in Mahon’s murder. The Dubliners wrote a song about them, containing the lines:

“Make way for the Molly Maguires,
They're drinkers, they're liars but they're men;
Make way for the Molly Maguires,
You'll never see the likes of them again.”

Major Mahon is interred in a mausoleum in the grounds of Strokestown House, and was the first of the landed gentry to be killed. His daughter, Grace, who was on her honeymoon at the time of the murder, vowed never to set foot again at Strokestown, so her new husband, Henry Sandford Pakenham, who himself came from a family owning a vast amount of land, took on the administration of the estate. Under his guidance, the huge debts accumulated by the Mahon family were paid off, but the evictions and dispatching of tenants continued.

The Pakenham-Mahon family remained owners of Strokestown House right up until 1979, when it was sold to the Westward Group, a large enterprise with a greatly varied portfolio. Since then, they have invested a significant amount of funds into restoring the estate. It was the logical site of the National Famine Museum because of the events I described, but also because when the Westward Group took over the estate, they found a colossal number of records, letters and artifacts from the time, enough to turn it into the most evocative and illuminating museum I have been in for many years.

One of the most shameful parts of this story was the way the British government handled it: the strict adherence to procedures that led to more suffering and the miserly way the British treated the Irish through introducing levies and tariffs on Irish exports meant for their salvation, they were totally dependent on the very rulers who chose to treat them as competitors and suppress them.

The fact that it has won several prizes comes as no surprise: it has been meticulously restored and everything that could be displayed is there for all to see. I wholeheartedly recommend a trip to Strokestown House if you are in the area, and make sure you set aside a good half-day as there’s a lot to take in.

A plan of Strokestown from the period

We arrived on a rather grim, wet autumn afternoon. Coming through the town outside the gates, a pretty and lively place with a wide boulevard leading up to the premises, it gave off an air of a bygone era of enormous wealth and prestige. It reminded me a little of the streets outside Het Loo in Apeldoorn or the Palais de Versailles with their avenues all pointing to the main residence in the area. The domain itself was situated at the end of a long and well-asphalted driveway where the car park overflow had reached the front of the main building. There were evidently a lot of people who had the same idea as us.

Dedication to
the Choctaw
We parked and went in through an ultra-modern portal into a very welcoming foyer area with a gift shop and a café with woodland views just through the back. After consulting the receptionist at front desk, it was clear she loved her job. She gave us multiple suggestions including a Samhain walk for kids through the wooded grounds that went round in a spyglass pattern.

We went to the café first as it was lunchtime and we were hungry. They had a proper selection of food, which is one of my chief requirements when I visit a public building: what’s on the menu, and is it fresh? They passed very well – my second positive impression. We went back to the reception and opted for the main museum and the Children’s Samhain Walk.

Passing through a courtyard that contained a memorial of thanks to the Choctaw people of North America for coming to the assistance of the Irish in the Famine, I could instantly tell that this was going to be an intense experience. From the moment you walk in the main museum, you are greeted with texts and artifacts in chronological order explaining the story, the main points of which I explained earlier in this article.

A few weeks ago, Dainoris and Milda had asked us about the history of Ireland and Bonny Bee had found a series of images from the 1800s including those of the hardships, so they were aware of this period of time. Now they were in the museum, they went round the pictures and maps asking all sorts of pertinent questions and for the first time they didn’t hurry from room to room, like they did at Dublin Castle recently. It was an exceptionally gratifying experience, and they deserved their Children’s Samhain Walk.

The museum did a great job with the woodland
Despite the rain, we trudged through the woodland area with a map containing some blank spaces to be filled in to win a prize. They had really thought the whole thing through because there were lots of informative placards explaining the origins of Samhain all round the course. The woodland area itself was also pleasingly landscaped and planned: native trees, some obviously very old, lined the trail.

Back at the museum, we got our prizes and went back to the café to warm up and have dessert. They had such a terrific selection of cakes and biscuits, it was difficult to choose which one. And the day was still fairly young… what to do?

I suggested paying a short visit to Rathcroghan Archaeological Site, just down the road. It was in this area of over 500 hectares with 60 individual monuments and 20 ring forts, that Samhain was first conceived, which then spawned Halloween. The period around 31 October-1 November has for centuries been associated with death and remembering ancestors. These days, the church has of course gentrified it into the time of year when descendants visit the graves of their predecessors and reverentially drop off a few flowers.

But it is a sanitised and rather pious interpretation of this time of year.

Samhain always marked the end of the year, when the fecundity of the spring and summer turned into autumn and then into winter. Very often the inhabitants would have saved all the fruit they didn’t eat and put it in underground storage – peat was a very good pantry in those days. By the time they took it out, the fruit would have fermented and turned alcoholic. Mixed with some ground grain, it would turn into a centrepiece for a midwinter feast to celebrate the turning of the darkness into light. This is where those Christmas sweets come in – they are direct descendants of early humankind’s marking of the seasons.

Livia takes her own route
Let us focus on Samhain for a moment: it is said that this time of the year is when the veil between this life and the one beyond is at its thinnest. It is said we can communicate more easily with our ancestors and deceased loved ones during Samhain. If you think talking to the dead is a bit fanciful, ask a Catholic priest – they do all kinds of acts to communicate with the dead, mainly so-called “saints” and beatified figures they feel worthy of being addressed. The pre-Christian folk did that but to people they actually knew.

And at this place, with so many standing stones and circles, the calendars were marked and observed by the people. It helped them know when to plant, when to reap, mow, sow, dig, and prepare for what was to come. They even made babies according to the calendar, so that the majority of pregnancies had a good chance to last during the gentler summer months. They were also used for ceremonies to mark the passage of time and to celebrate or commemorate. They probably held feasts during times of abundance and convened gatherings there during times of scarcity or war.

The view due south from the top of the mound

One of the reasons women were in charge more than at any point since the Church took over is because of their biological faculties. They had the power to populate villages, so they would take matters into their own hands. Marriage was (and kind of still is) a root of population decline, and they weren’t always a prerequisite. Morals have always been open to interpretation and for sure they fit the times and the conditions, but it’s really much more about necessity than about developed-world trends and expectations. Back then, it was about survival more than anything else, so women would aim to get pregnant by any means.

After Christianity spread, morals concerning sex were very much guided by people who often chose to be celibate. They berated and vilified the people adhering to the old ways: one of the reasons why the stereotype of a demon is a horned, red-faced pitchfork-wielding creature is because the Christian clergy would point at ruddy-faced peasants out in the land, turning the soil with their forks. They would often have skulls of animals like goats or deer near the entrances of their houses, hence the horns. This was how the Church cajoled society into abandoning ways they had grown accustomed to for generations.

They took the old pagan festivals and spun them into stories about their own deity. Samhain, the festival commemorating the dead, became “All Hallows’ Day” and “All Saints’ Day”; Yule, the darkest time of the year when there were fires and feasts celebrating the returning of the light, became Christmas, when a symbolic light was personified and came to take us from so-called “darkness”; and the festival of fertility and rebirth named after the Germanic goddess Ostara and the Anglo-Saxon goddess Eostre, possibly going back to the Greek Eos and maybe even to the Akkadian goddess Ishtar, became Easter, when another kind of rebirth was foisted in to replace the original one.

Out with nature, the seasons, astronomy and agriculture, and in with a calendar centred around a story about some strangers in a faraway land and agreed upon by people who had never set foot in a muddy field. They would spend centuries proselytising and moralising, shaming and cajoling non-believers to join their flocks. They would send kings and armies to invade their Holy Land, send emissaries to far-off countries to overpower and enforce their book upon the people, causing untold amounts of death, pain and indignity on people from Aztec Mexico to the rainforests of Africa. Hundreds of thousands fell victim to enslavement and deracination, all due to the insistence that the deity being introduced to them was the one and only.

Select to expand
and read the text
What do these two stories tell us?

Firstly, that those with the power to do so will direct the narrative in their favour, no matter how much damage they may have inflicted. Nobody has ever brought criminal charges against any Witchfinder, Conquistador, or English landowner for their roles in the respective calamities they were responsible for. Indeed, many of the Popes and Crusaders that foisted their religion on everyone in the name of “enlightenment”, killing, displacing, enslaving, or expelling the folk from their lands were elevated to sainthood, or at least beatified by their patrons. They were quite within their rights to act with total impunity as it just took too long for history to catch up to their crimes.

The one thing that democracy has brought us is the ability to bring charges against those responsible for causing harm and to act as a dam holding up the waters of decline and deprivation. They don’t always get justice done, but it’s the best we have. Over the years, many people have been brought out of their rudimentary conditions and elevated to a higher standard of living. The fundamental principles of a functioning democracy is its aspiration to continual development and advancement of its society. But this doesn’t always mean it’s the best thing for everyone – most civilisations get on with their own thing far better just by being left alone to sort it out.

How would Ireland have fared if it had been left to its own devices? We’ll never know, but my guess is maybe something like a warmer version of Iceland but maybe with its monarchs. Imagine if the Incas or the Aztecs had been able to ward off the Spanish: would they be a superpower now? How about religion? The last country to remain pagan was Lithuania, and it still has a thriving community today. It is possible that the old gods of Ireland would have been more relevant for much longer. They are making quite a comeback these days, so it’s not totally lost. More on that another time.

The day we visited Rathcroghan, it was a windy, blustery afternoon approaching darkness. Nevertheless, it made an impression on us all as the view from the top was indisputably breathtaking, and we all understood the significance of the site. We will return when the weather is more clement. What the visits to these two places taught us personally is that our ancestors paid heavy prices for us to have what we do today, and it would be unwise or even foolish to think that a dose of autocracy or outside interference is what we need. Considering what happened to the Irish, it most definitely is not.








Turnips used to be used in Ireland as Jack O'Lanterns until the Americans used pumpkins. The final photo shows a fairy door in one of the trees.