In
1847 the Irish Poor Law Act was revised to give those landlords the right –
under the Gregory Clause – to deny public emergency assistance to tenants
holding more than a quarter of an acre of land. If they were to be held responsible for their tenantry, the absentee
landlords asserted – and since they dominated Imperial Parliamentary
representation they could force through any measure they desired – they wanted
a reason to remove tenants from what they
deemed unworkable parcels of land.
The
Earl of Lucan (a more recent Lord Lucan also is recorded in infamy!) who
‘owned’ over 60,000 acres in Mayo removed more than 2,000 tenants and cleared
the lands for pasture. Houses were
tumbled and the shells levelled or burned to prevent distressed tenants from
seeking shelter in the remains.
Often
tenants were offered the stark choice between eviction and assisted forced
emigration to Canada (the
British Government wanted workers and settlers in her North American dependency
and made emigration there cheaper than to the new United States – though many Irish
used the former as a way-station to the latter, their preferred final
destination).
Denis
Mahon, a similarly harsh landlord, was murdered in November 1847. Already then he had evicted 3,000 tenants
from his holding in Strokestown (now the site of the Famine Museum). Mahon
shipped out, for example, 981 passengers on four vessels, two of which, the
Naomi and the Virginius suffered 464 passenger deaths on the journey. The Erin’s Queen and John Munn also saw many
passenger deaths. Of the almost one
thousand total Mahon tenants, more than half
died en route to Canada.
In
the same Famine year refugees from Lord Palmerston’s Sligo
estate were shipped out to Grosse Isle on board the Lord Ashburton. Virtually all the 174 people on board were
naked or almost naked on arrival and had to receive charity clothes so as not
to cause public offence to those on the quayside. Palmerston was British Foreign
Secretary. Lord Clanricarde, the
Postmaster-General was another evicting landlord as was Lord Brougham, who in
the Lords on March 23, 1846 asserted,
‘Undoubtedly
it is the landlord’s right to do as he pleases, and if he abstained he
conferred a favour and was doing an act of kindness.
If
on the other hand, he chose to stand on his right, the tenants must be taught
by the strong arm of the law that they had no power to oppose or resist.’
Is
this the same lesson being ‘taught’ by the present-day property defenders and
the Irish Court
system, on behalf of the international corporation exploiting Irish national
resources off our coast?