Shattered Hearths
For May McClintock and John Mulhern.

In April 1861 - The Month of the Shattered Hearth - landlord John George Adair evicts over 250 tenants from Derryveagh, their ancestral homeland in Donegal, Ireland. Adair blamed the unsolved murder of his land steward on the whole community and uproots them, utterly. Some die on the Roads; others in the Workhouse. Derryveagh‘s young are “assisted” by ship to farthest Australia. Having swapped his Gaelic “eyesores” for imported Scottish sheep, “Black Jack” builds a castle next door at Glenveagh for his new American bride, and the region falls Silent. The scandal splits Parliament, sparking a firestorm across Ireland, England, Australia and America. But John Adair prevails, keeping his titles and dreams. Derryveagh is just the tip of the iceberg: step one in Adair‘s fevered transatlantic quest for a vast, personal empire. “The great thing,” advises his wife, “is to miss as little as possible, and to share as much.” Adair rejects the latter half. His grasp is matched only by its wake: the tragic impact on native peoples - red, white and green - across 3 continents. Today, Derryveagh‘s traces remain hidden in plain sight. As its shockwaves continue to spread, dedicated others still work to preserve and fix the broken links.
Rathdaire ruins

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Ruined castle in the foreground of the Derryveagh Mountains

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this map of the Adair homeland, visit for more Derryveagh Maps

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Recent posts

Aftermath: Interview with an Evicted Woman

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Aftermath: Interview with an Evicted Woman I was called out of my little den to see a woman, one of the evicted tenants of Mr. Adair. She was on her way to ...

Preface to a Tragedy: Part Three

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With the advice of the last stanza, I, for one, fully agree. Let Irishmen beg no act of grace from an alien Senate,- no miserable mouthful of liberty flung a...

Preface to a Tragedy: Part One

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“The following pages are the result of no stretch of imagaination, no creation of fancy. The Glenveigh evictions, by which two hundred and forty human beings...

Bad Reviews: From the Times of London

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Bad Reviews: From the Times of London To invoke the aid of the sheriff and the presence of the resident magistrate to turn out some fifty families, numberin...