The next story concerns a house that was to be
re-named. Is it a true story or just a tale told to get children to go to bed. I can’t understand the logic of telling a
child a story like this before you tucked them in for the night but there’s
many strange people out there.
Horrible
Events at Hungry Hall
Hungry Hall is an old place name in the townland of
Barreen and is situated approximately 150 meters south of Balraheen crossroads
and one mile north of Rathcoffey in North Kildare. The name refers to a gateway
that leads into a division of land and its origin comes from the very tragic
circumstances in the 1800s.
There are a number of versions of the story but the
most interesting account was recorded in the schools collection that was
conducted between 1937 and 1938 for the Irish Folklore Commission.
The tale began when young boys began to disappear
without trace in the general Rathcoffey area. Despite intensive searches and
thorough investigations no trace of the missing children were found.
One day a man travelling in the Balraheen area
close to Rathcoffey was passing by a house and needed to light his clay pipe.
The house was a thatched house with a half door in which an old woman and her
son dwelled. One record suggests on this occasion her son was away from the
house as he was a soldier in the British army. The traveller was in the habit
of getting a light for his pipe from the woman in the house. However, on this
occasion the woman was not in the house and having called out her name he got
no reply.
As the door was open he decided to enter the house
and help himself to light the pipe. There was a big cooking pot over the fire
and the traveller bent down to the fire to get a cinder in order to light his
pipe. As he bent down he saw the foot of a young boy projecting out from the
pot. The unfortunate got such a shock he immediately ran out from the house
screaming.
The woman was arrested and eventually brought
before the local magistrate Thomas Wogan Browne from Castlebrown now Clongowes
Wood. The incident can be dated to the period when Wogan Browne served two
terms as a magistrate, firstly, for some years before 1797 and secondly, for a
four year period between 1806 and 1810. At her trial she was accused of
cannibalism and admitted the charge. Apparently she enticed the children into
her house by offering them food. The Judge, Wogan Browne who was a landlord in
the area informed her that he had many fine bullocks on his property and
wondered why she didn’t she take any of his cattle. To this she replied
‘your lordship, if only you tasted the flesh of
young boys” which she described as tastier than veal, “you would never eat
another scrap of animal meat”.
This remark horrified the court and not
surprisingly she was sentenced to death.
Executions at the period would usually take place
at the scene of the crime. Many highway men for instance that were apprehended
and convicted of robbery in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were
brought back to a scene and hanged at the spot of their crime.
The execution of this woman took place close to her
house at Barreen. There was a large tree beside the house where a gate was hung
that led in to the fields at the rear. A rope was placed across a branch of the
tree where she was hung. One problem that arose was how to dispose of her
remains. As one convicted of eating human flesh she would not be allowed to be
interred in consecrated ground. This problem was easily solved at the hanging, a barrel of tar was placed under her body and
the tar set on fire. Her body soon fell into the barrel and was consumed by the
flames. She was regarded in the local area as a witch and her execution is the
last recorded burning of a witch in the locality.
The house where she lived was never again occupied
and soon became a ruin. Due to the incident both the house and the adjoining
division of land came to be known as ‘Hungry hall’. In later years a black dog
thought to be the Witch in disguise was often seen running from Hungry hall to
the roads nearby.
The story of the horrific events at Hungry hall was
often told to children in order to get them to bed early and that is one of the
reasons why the story survived in folklore to modern times. I must admit it
wouldn’t get me off to a goods night sleep.
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