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Written by Martin Payne
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Monday, 03 March 2008 |
As
you enter Brown’s Yard from High Street the first cottage of the row of four is
the home of a man called Mr M Teggart. I don’t have a lot of information on
this man except that he had the ability ...

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to set a photograph into a frame, and I must say that he made an exceptionally
good job of it. Mr Teggart had a
relation, a nephew, who was in the photographic business and it was this young
man who took the photograph of the young girl in communion dress standing at
her door in Brown’s Yard.
At
this time (1929) the next two houses in the row were occupied by two sisters,
the first of the two sisters was called Catharine. Catharine lived in number two and she was
married to a Dundalk man, he was called Thomas
McDermott. Thomas was a war veteran, and
suffered from the effects of the mustard gas that assailed him in the course of
the Great War. The McDermott’s had no
family of their own, but they housed and reared two of Mrs McDermott’s sister’s
children from next door. This was a
practice not at all uncommon in those days. The little girl in the photograph
is one of those two children.
One
interesting thing to be said about this particular cottage, number two, is that
before the McDermott’s lived there, the cottage was let out to a man who sadly
committed suicide by hanging himself from a rafter on the stairwell. After this sad occurrence the cottage was
reputed to have been haunted. Because of
this haunted house rumour the landlord, who was called Mr. McKenna, was having
a difficult time finding another tenant to take up the tenancy of this
reputedly haunted building. Mr and Mrs
McDermott needed to find accommodation so they accepted the tenancy of Number 2 Brown’s
Yard.
………. more later ……..
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