Hi Jack
Have really enjoyed your webpage - many thanks for sharing the info on
the web.
There's a snippet below from the Irish Times from a few years back that
you may/may not have come accross. Hope you find it useful, in some
way.
Slan go foill,
In 1867 and 1921 respectively, two men of the name O Meachair met with
sudden ends. The first was Thomas Francis Meagher, 'Meagher of the
Sword', who, at the age of forty-four, fell overboard from a steamboat
on the Missouri river and drowned. There was a strong suspicion that he
had been murdered. The death of Patrick Maher, however, was no accident
for he was hanged on 7 June 1921, along with Edward Foley, charged with
the shooting of an RIC sergeant at Knocklong, Co. Limerick in May of
that year. Thomas Francis Meagher was born in Co. Waterford, the son of
a wealthy man and MP. Educated at Clongowes and Stonyhurst in England,
he was prominent in the Young Irelanders, and after an abortive rising
in 1848 he was, like Edward Maher, condemned to hanging. However he was
reprieved and transported to Van Diemen's Land. He escaped to America
in 1852, where he founded the Citezin newspaper, lectured widely,
organised the Irish Brigade for the North in the American War, where he
fought with distinction, and was appointed Secretary (in effect
governor) of Montana by President Johnson after the war.
Though Ireland's freedom was the aim of both, Patrick Maher's background
was more modest, his education less prestigiois and his lifespan
considerably shorted. He was convicted of being involved in the rescue
of Sean Hogan who had been arrested in connection with the ambush at
Soloheadbeg earlier that year. A small party of volunteers led by Sean
Tracey effected Hogan's rescue, and two of the constables guarding Hogan
were fatally wounded.
The surname which derives from michair, 'kindly', is anglicised as
Meagher and Maher, both of which, according to Mac Lysaght in his 'Irish
Families' are bisyllabic, and not pronounced Marr. This is a sept of
the O Carrolls of Ely, but unlike so many of the Irish septs, they were
not driven from their homeland after the Anglo-Norman invasion. Their
territory was near Roscrea, Co. Tipperary, at the foot of the famous
Devil's Bit Mountain. The Annals of the Four Masters/Annala Rioghtachta
Eireann records the deaths in 1413 and 1462 of O Meachair, chiefs of Ui
Cairrin. The name of this territroy was later anglicised to Ikerrin to
name a barony. The 'great and virulent' plague which raged universally
in the year 1383, and was to cause the death of many of Ireland's
notables, was not given as the cause of the demise of Honora, wife of O
Meachair, the then chief of Ui Cairrin.
John O Magher of Clonakenny, Esq., Irsi Papist, was the largest land
owner in the barony of Ikerrin in 1640, having in excess of three
thousand acres. CLONAKENNY, the name of a townland in the parish of
Bourney, dervies from Cluain Ui Cionnaoith, O Kenny's meadow. We have
been unable to trace KNOCKBALLYMAGHER, the location of some of John O
Magher's land in 1640 but it appears to be 'the hill of the homestead of
the (O) Meaghers'. Of the sixty land owners then in Ikerrin,
thirty-eight of them were Meaghers. The Census of 1659 lists the
Meaghers as among the Principal Irish Names in seven of Co. Tipperary's
baronies; in the Co. Clare barony of Tulla; in three Co. Laois baronies;
in two Co. Offaly baronies; and one each on Cos. Carlow and Waterford.
All but one of the six 'gentlemen's seats' occupied by Meaghers, listed
for the year 1814, were in Co. Tipperary. The name was equally numerous
in Cos. Kilkenny and Tipperary in the list of land owners in 1876, with
the Munster holding of 4.552 acres at Turtulla in the Co. Tipperary
parish of Fertiana being the largest.
Ciaran O Meachair
KNOCKBALLYMAGHER
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