School: Dún Bhéacháin (Dunbeacon) (roll number 15552)

Location:
Dunbeacon, Co. Cork
Teacher:
Tomás Ó Foghlú
Browse
The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0289, Page 156

Archival Reference

The Schools’ Collection, Volume 0289, Page 156

Image and data © National Folklore Collection, UCD.

See copyright details.

Download

Open data

Available under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

  1. XML School: Dún Bhéacháin (Dunbeacon)
  2. XML Page 156
  3. XML “The Famine”
  4. XML “Epidemic”
  5. XML “A Shipwreck”

Note: We will soon deprecate our XML Application Programming Interface and a new, comprehensive JSON API will be made available. Keep an eye on our website for further details.

On this page

  1. Long ago during the famine there were special houses in which they stored meal. They also kept a big pot in the house in which they used boil the meal. Certain people were in charge of these houses and used give the meal to the people that used come for it. One day a man having eaten too quickly got choked and died immediately. Another man ate an overdose of it and also died. He was buried in the dyke of the road. One of these houses was in the neighbourhood of Lowertown.
    Transcribed by a member of our volunteer transcription project.
    Topics
    1. time
      1. historical periods by name (~25)
        1. the great famine (~4,013)
    Language
    English
    Collector
    Mary Roycroft
    Gender
    Female
    Address
    Dunbeacon, Co. Cork
    Informant
    Mrs Scofield
    Gender
    Female
    Age
    74
    Address
    Dunbeacon, Co. Cork
  2. In the year 1918 a great epidemic swept the whole country. It followed the war. Many people both young and old died of it in this locality.
    Transcribed by a member of our volunteer transcription project.
  3. About eighty years ago or so a ship whose name was the "Lady Charlet" was wrecked off the coast
    (continues on next page)
    Transcribed by a member of our volunteer transcription project.