Irish Ghost Tales (6 page)

Read Irish Ghost Tales Online

Authors: Tony Locke

BOOK: Irish Ghost Tales
10.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Locals believe that her ghost haunts the castle walls. It is as if she walks the battlements that look out over Lough Sheelin, hoping in vain to be reunited with her lost love. Some people say that her father was cursed to wander for all eternity by the victims of his cruelty and evil deeds, as well as out of grief for the loss of his only daughter.

12
T
HE
L
EGEND
OF
P
ETTICOAT
LUCY
COUNTY TIPPERARY

P
etticoat's real name was Mary Hannigan. Born during the time of the hedge schools in the early part of the nineteenth century, she was the only child of a well-to-do farming family. They lived in the townland of Colligan, which is not far from Clogheen in Tipperary.

Mary was not the type of woman you could call feminine; she was as tough as nails, almost six foot tall and built in proportion. She did the work of a man on her father's farm without thinking twice about it. If there was one thing that Mary Hannigan was known for far and wide it was her dancing. Spinning and whirling around the dancefloor, no man could match her. That is, except for one hefty lad and his prowess led him into a marriage with Mary, a marriage that was closely followed by his early death. How Mary came to be called Petticoat Lucy came about like this …

There was a wedding in the neighbourhood, with drinking and dancing well into the night and through to the early hours of the morning. Mary was able to drink as well as she could dance and as she spun around in a drunken dance the buttons of her skirt caught on a nail. The buttons burst open and her skirt fell to the ground, to the great delight of the others in the room, who laughed and jeered at her. This is the incident that earned her the name of Petticoat Loose, which became Petticoat Lucy over time. Not being one to take foul comments lightly, fists were soon flying in all directions as Mary landed many a clout on those who had mocked her.

It is said that Mary and her husband had difficulties with their herd of cattle and often added water to the milk to make it go further. There were rumours that when Mary's milk was added to tea it turned blue. Some older locals whispered that she might be a witch.

Mary had been married a year when one night as she and her servants were milking the cattle there came a cry of agony from a nearby field. A servant girl began to run towards the field; however, she was soon stopped by a milking stool, which hit the poor girl square on the back of the head, knocking her out. When she came to, Mary told her it was she who had thrown the stool, that it served her right and that in future she should learn to mind her own business. Mary's husband was never seen again after that night. The locals in Colligan concluded that Mary's lover, a local hedge schoolmaster, had committed the murder. When asked of her husband's whereabouts, Mary would simply answer that he had gone away and would return some day. Nobody dared question her further as she was known to have a violent temper.

One night about a year later Mary went on a drinking bout in a local public house with some local workmen. After several pints she was challenged by one of the workmen to prove her drinking skills. She accepting the challenge only to have half a gallon of beer placed before her. She drank it down with ease and was in the middle of gloating to the other workmen when suddenly she slumped forward onto the table, dead. She died without a priest, which was considered an awful thing back then. There was a big wake for Mary and the whole village turned up to pay their last respects but no priest was called, not even for the burial.

Seven years passed and Petticoat Lucy was almost forgotten. Then one night there was a dance in Colligan. Around midnight, a man went out to catch a breath of fresh air. When he returned he was as white as a sheet. His voice quivered as he told the others in the hall that he had seen Mary sitting on one of the benches in the yard. Everyone was afraid to leave the dance hall until the next morning.

After that night Mary was seen often in the area. Many believed she had become a witch. One night a man was travelling down a dark country lane with his horse and cart when he came upon Mary standing by the roadside. The driver didn't want to stop for her, but she jumped aboard the cart anyway.

Once on the cart, she decided to punish the driver for his reluctance to stop for her. She raised her left hand and declared, ‘I have one ton in this hand!' The horse slowed down a little as though the cart had become heavier, but he kept walking. Then the witch raised her other hand and announced, ‘I've got one ton in this hand!' The horse slowed a little more but continued on his journey. The witch smiled and announced, ‘I've got one ton in this leg!', at which the horse began to strain very hard to pull the cart. ‘I've got one ton in the other leg!' Then she said, ‘I've got one ton in my belly!' With this, the struggling horse fell down dead and Petticoat Lucy ran away laughing. Soon it became common practice for people travelling at night to bring a safeguard with them, such as a religious relic or a hazel stick.

Eventually the people grew tired of living in fear of Petticoat Lucy, so they called upon the parish priest to rid the county of Mary. The priest set out that very night on a pony and trap, accompanied by two men. After some time they spotted her coming across a field. The priest asked her name and she replied, ‘I'm Petticoat Lucy.' The priest then got off the trap, took out a bottle of holy water and said, ‘I am going to banish you from this place forever! All the devils in hell can't help you now! For all the cruel things you did during your life, especially getting a man to kill your husband, I shall send you to the far banks of the deepest lake in the Knockmealdown Mountains and you shall be condemned to empty it with a thimble!' With these words and a splash of the holy water Mary vanished in a flash and was never seen again.

Many believe that she is still up there, sitting on the far bank of Bay Lough with her thimble, vainly trying to empty the lake. The priest died two weeks later. Some say she had drained the life out of him. If you ever pay a visit the lake, you will be struck by the feeling of loneliness that permeates the area.

Few dare to swim in that lake out of fear that the spirit of the old witch will grab their legs, pull them under and keep them there forever. It is said that Petticoat Lucy, like many other Irish lake monsters, can take on a half-horse, half-human shape. Whether or not this is true, Bay Lough will forever be associated with the legend of Petticoat Lucy or, as she is also known in this area where she did so much harm, the Witch of the Knockmealdowns.

13
T
HE
A
RNEY
W
OMAN
COUNTY FERMANAGH

H
ere in Ireland we have an old saying, ‘A man who dies owing money or a woman who leaves a newborn baby will never lie quiet in the grave.' Talk about making people feel guilty when they are at their most vulnerable!

The dead were considered to be very possessive and would return from the grave to claim what was rightfully theirs. This was especially true of mothers and their children. It was widely believed in rural areas that if a mother died during childbirth she would return to care for the baby. However, there was a more macabre side to this belief for sometimes the dead mother missed the child so much that she would return to carry the baby back to her grave. One way to prevent this was to lay the clothes of the father across the foot of the baby's cot or cradle. This was thought to act as a protection against the fairies and the dead until the child could be baptised. If a child were to be taken before baptism it would be lost to the world of the living forever.

The story that follows concerns one of these poor unfortunate women. Once well known, it is becoming little more than a fading memory, like so many of the old stories. It is our job as storytellers to make sure that the stories that make up the rich tapestry of Irish folklore are retold and, in this way, continue to be passed down from generation to generation.

Roughly three miles from Gilleese's public house at the Arney crossroads in Fermanagh, a man called Peter Maguire and his wife set up house. Peter was a local carpenter, known by everyone as a kind and decent man, quiet but friendly and always ready to help his neighbours. He never had a bad word to say about anyone and could always be relied upon. His wife, however, was a horse of a different colour. Mrs Maguire was described by the locals as surly, sullen, miserable and bad-tempered. Of course it may have had something to do with the fact that she wasn't a local girl. She was from the far side of Bellanaleck, which was a village up the road, and no one knew anything about her or her people. The locals considered her to be unfriendly and it was even said that she would sooner issue a curse than a blessing.

As a ‘blow-in', she was considered to be a strange character. She had vibrant red hair, very pale skin and a physical deformity – one of her legs was shorter than the other, which resulted in a very pronounced limp. Around the Arney area these attributes marked her out as a witch. On top of that, she never attended mass, so the locals decided that she was in league with the fairies, the devil and any number of other evil demons. Well, what else would you expect from a blow-in?

Despite all this, Peter Maguire was very happy and totally unaware of what his good neighbours said behind his back. His wife was a good cook, she kept a neat house and she was a quiet woman, at least when she appeared in public with him. The locals, however, believed that this was all an act and that Peter must have led a dog's life, with her controlling ways and her foreign habits. Some felt certain that she had put Peter under an evil spell. People began to avoid looking at her and local farmers kept their animals away from her on market days as it was feared that she would put the evil eye on them.

A year after they were married some of the local women began to notice that Mrs Maguire was putting on a little weight around the middle and soon Peter announced the good news. He was going to be a father. Of course his wife said nothing and she was seen to be as bad tempered as ever. Some of the local women attempted to make friends with her. They called to the Maguires' cottage to wish her well and offer advice but they found Peter's wife to be very cold and unfriendly and soon left.

However, the women did notice that the pregnancy was taking an awful toll on Mrs Maguire. They said she seemed to be wasting away. Soon the rumours began to spread. It was well known that those who had fairy connections have great trouble carrying and delivering children.

The time arrived for the baby to be born but still Mrs Maguire wanted nothing to do with the local women, even though many of them were ‘wise women', experienced in the ways of the midwife.

On the night of the birth Peter ran to a neighbour's cottage and battered on the door. The baby was coming but his wife was very ill. If she didn't get help he feared she may not survive. The neighbours ran to Peter's cottage. They managed to save the baby – a little boy – but they could do nothing for Mrs Maguire. By the time morning came, she was dead. Of course some said it was no more than she deserved and that it was no bad thing that she had died. There was no funeral in Arney graveyard. Peter was struggling to look after his baby and trying to come to terms with his grief, so the locals took it upon themselves to send the body back to Bellanaleck where Mrs Maguire had come from.

Other books

Be My Lover by Cecily French
Cast in Stone by G. M. Ford
The Face of Death by Cody Mcfadyen
War Baby by Colin Falconer
Thicker Than Water by Maggie Shayne
Hollywood Boulevard by Janyce Stefan-Cole
02 Madoc by Paige Tyler
Dog Daze by Lauraine Snelling