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'Hanging is too mild for such a savage': The story of the youngest man executed by the Irish State

William O’Neill was executed four days after Christmas, on the 29 December 1927. He was 19 years old.

PastedImage-86045 The Lawrence Photograph Collection / National Library of Ireland The Lawrence Photograph Collection / National Library of Ireland / National Library of Ireland

THE VALLEY OF Glenmalure, situated in the heart of the Wicklow Mountains, is surely one of Ireland’s most beautiful, and isolated, places.

It has a strong tradition of Irish rebellion and many Irish freedom fighters spent time hiding in the vast expanse – most noticeably Michael Dwyer.

There have also always been hardy local folk willing to eke out a living from the lonely mountains and valleys. Peggy O’Farrell was one such woman whose family had a long history in the area. She was 84 years old and lived in the remote townland of Carriglineen in the valley.

She had never married so resided alone in her neat one-storey cottage which lay several miles from the nearest village. She did have close neighbours, one within 50 yards of her dwelling, and she lived happily on her well-kept six acre farm, employing a labourer who aided her with sowing oats and potatoes as well as keeping fowl, pigs and cows.

PastedImage-65879 Glenmalure The Lawrence Photograph Collection / National Library of Ireland The Lawrence Photograph Collection / National Library of Ireland / National Library of Ireland

She was also known to have a good deal of money, drawing an old-age pension while also receiving an inheritance totalling £100 a year from a deceased brother who had gone to Australia.

Her nephew James Byrne also lived in the locality, one quarter of a mile up the valley.

On the night of the 7 May 1927, Byrne went to visit his aunt arriving at 10.20pm. He was a dutiful nephew and called to her frequently. His aunt seemed her usual self at the time and the pair talked and had tea together for over an hour.

Byrne did think that he heard noises out in the yard on two occasions but saw nothing when he went out to check. He left at around 11.30pm, closing the door and gate after him to keep the dog in.

He did not meet anyone on his way home.

At 11am the following morning Mary O’Brien called to O’Farrell’s to get some milk. To her surprise, she found the front gate and door open and objects strewn all over the house.

Badly beaten

There was no sign of Peggy in her home so Mary went out to the back garden where she found her neighbour. She had been badly beaten and was dead. Her hands were bound tightly with a blue belt over her head and a scarf was tied around her mouth. The lower part of her clothing had been disturbed and her body was covered with a sack.

Mary ran to the neighbouring Byrne house to summon help.

Gardaí and the doctor arrived from nearby Rathdrum quickly. The doctor, on removing the scarf, discovered Peggy’s mouth and ears were covered in blood. Her face had been struck with several heavy blows. Death was due to shock, exposure and partial suffocation.

She had also been ‘outraged’, the term most commonly used for sexually assaulted at the time.

Ransacked

The house was in disarray and had clearly been ransacked. Despite the fact that it was known that Mary had kept large amounts of money at home, there was no notes or coins present and an expensive silver watch was missing.

There was also a stick on the bed which did not belong to her. A huge crowd attended the funeral on 11 May, the locals expressing their shock at such a brutal crime occurring in such a tranquil rural place.

The national media also took a huge interest in what must have been a particularly distressing crime, one regional newspaper commenting:

One would have thought that such an abominable outrage was impossible in a civilised or Christian country.

Arrest

Gardaí were very quick to arrest a potential suspect. William O’Neill was about 19 years old, although he was unsure of his own age. He was an illiterate casual labourer who was known for working anywhere and occasionally sleeping rough, despite his father and sister living in Rathdrum.

His mother had died nine years before, and his father admitted that his youngest son “had to look after himself the best he could”.

William was arrested on 8 May on the way to Peggy O’Farrell’s wake.

Gardaí had found out the day after the murder that O’Neill had shown a silver watch and chain to two men which he claimed he’d won playing cards. When gardaí heard this, they were immediately suspicious that it was the same one missing from Peggy O’Farrell’s house.

They questioned O’Neill, who initially denied possessing a watch.

When he was confronted with the sworn testimonies of the two witnesses who had seen him with it he admitted he had shown it to them, but swore that he had found it the year before.

He had then hidden it in a field on Byrne’s farm, where he had been labouring for some time. When questioned as to why he had hidden the watch, O’Neill claimed that he was “afraid he would break it getting up on a horse”.

He brought the gardaí to the field where he claimed to have left it but it was nowhere to be found. He did lead the gardaí to a dilapidated house nearby where he kept a suit, shoes, a mirror and razor. The shoes had the appearance of having been vigorously scrubbed.

After a seven-hour search of the rest of Byrne’s farm, the gardaí finally found incriminating articles.

A silver watch was discovered in a patch of bushes, while £17 in £1 and £5 denominations was found rolled up in a collar. On one of the notes the name Margaret O’Farrell was written clearly.

On the 10 May, William O’Neill was charged with wilful murder, to which he replied “very well, charge me with whatever you like”.

His trial began in Dublin on the 14 July 1927. As O’Neill entered the courtroom, his demeanour was cool and he smiled at acquaintances. He walked to his father with an outstretched hand.

His father shouted “Go away, go away.”

The younger O’Neill then showed signs of agitation, sitting down and saying, “Don’t take it that way.”

His father gave evidence of his son’s movements on the night, stating that the younger O’Neill had arrived home after 1am on the morning of the murder and given his father several half-crowns, a rare occurrence, before going to bed.

On the day of the murder O’Neill told the court that he had been working on Laurence Byrne’s farm. That evening Byrne had went to a wake in Glenmalure and O’Neill also claimed to have attended the same event, although none of the mourners could vouch for his presence.

He also said he did not hear about the murder until the day after it had occurred and had not been near the deceased woman’s house. James Toomey, neighbour of Peggy O’Farrell, contradicted this, however, asserting that he had met the accused walking towards Carriglineen at 11pm on the 7 May and they exchanged greetings.

O’Neill pleaded not guilty.

His defence said that he had not been in trouble with the law before. He had been working regularly for several farmers in the district, and was therefore in no great need of money.

When the accused took the stand himself he denied emphatically having anything to do with the murder. His story had, by now, changed about his movements on the night in question.

He was left alone in Byrne’s house when the farmer had gone to the wake. O’Neill had shaved before going out into the field with two dogs hunting rabbits. He had then slept briefly but was awoken by the dogs so he got up and took the “shortcut” to Rathdrum arriving home at 1am.

He had not been to the wake or near Ms. O’Farrell’s house and had found the silver watch the next day. He did not know why he had said he won it or told other lies. He explained that the money in his pocket was earned by himself in his labouring but the money found in the field was not his.

O’Neill admitted he was in the habit of telling lies and found it easy to do so but added that he was now definitely telling the truth because “he was cautioned”.

Second trial

PastedImage-7255 The vast majority of death sentences, including William O’Neill’s, were handed out from this building. National Library of Ireland National Library of Ireland

In the first trial the jury could not agree. The second trial began on the 30 November, hearing the same evidence. This time, O’Neill’s pathological and persistent lying worked against him and he was found guilty of the murder of Peggy O’Farrell and sentenced to death.

He had brutally and callously ended the life of an old woman. In doing so, he inadvertently brought about his own death.

One newspaper had said before the trial that “hanging is entirely too mild for such a savage”.

William O’Neill was executed four days after Christmas, on the 29 December 1927. He was, in all probability, 19 years old and the youngest man ever executed by the Irish State.

Colm Wallace has written a book Sentenced to Death: Saved from the Gallows about 30 Irish men and women who had the death penalty imposed on them between 1922 and 1985. It is available in all good bookshops, on Kindle and on Amazon.com. For more information see Facebook or Somerville Press

Read: 50% more people were executed last year than in 2014

More: The man who lived: How one convicted murderer escaped Ireland’s death penalty

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    Mute MintCrisp2
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:19 PM

    Interesting article, sad case.

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    Mute I Pee Freely
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:29 PM

    How times change. Nowadays he would told the tough upbringing story and been out in six or seven years. Said he was drunk and he could of been out even sooner.

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    Mute Diarmuid Lenihan
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:24 PM

    We should execute more and lock up more for longer.

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    Mute Kerry Blake
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:32 PM

    Lock up yes execute no.

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    Mute Arnie
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    Jun 12th 2016, 5:30 AM

    Execution is barbaric and until recently most people were executed for petty crimes.

    And what would have happened to the Birmingham Six if execution was legal. Too many miscarriages of justice still happen.

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    Mute Malvolio32
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:57 AM

    But they only had their whole lives upended, brutalised by the system and lost 20 years of their lives. So that’s alright then.

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    Mute Paddy Ryan
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    Jun 11th 2016, 11:11 PM

    An 84 year old living alone in 1927…. Wow… that’s got to be like a 110 years adjusted for changes in healthcare etc.It’s always a tragedy when someone is killed but there seems to be an extra poignancy when they’re very young or very old.

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    Mute Eamon Mac Gowan
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:33 AM

    @Paddy Ryan,
    80 and 90 year old’s were quite common in those times. It’s infant mortality that brings down the average life expectancy, if you made out of childhood you had a reasonable chance of growing to old age.

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    Mute Fintin Stack
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    Jun 12th 2016, 1:29 AM

    @Eamon, It wasnt just about infant mortality. People did on the whole die a lot younger for various reasons. There would be a lot more people living to old age in this day and age..

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    Mute Arnie
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    Jun 12th 2016, 5:28 AM

    Eamon is correct – lots of people lived into their 80s or 90s. Infant mortality does bring the average down. Even as far back as medieval times lots of people lived into old age, it’s just that lots more people died in childhood back then.

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    Mute Marg murphy
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:17 PM

    @arnie. And on the battlefield.

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    Mute prouesse f
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    Jun 11th 2016, 11:10 PM

    ““hanging is entirely too mild for such a savage” sounds pretty much like many many comments found on the Journal. You can’t stop progress…

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    Mute China Photo Daily
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:52 AM

    It’s great that we have mindful moralist like yourself to remind us all of our place

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    Mute prouesse f
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:15 PM

    “Moralists” usually have no issues with hanging another human being in the name of their morality…

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    Mute China Photo Daily
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:29 PM

    Moralists infer that the masses are lacking their virtue.

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    Mute prouesse f
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    Jun 12th 2016, 4:09 PM

    Therefore, they think they have the right to hang the masses that are lacking their virtue. You get it?

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    Mute nf
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    Jun 11th 2016, 11:03 PM

    It may be from times past but it still happens in rural Ireland. There’s a case to be had for capital punishment

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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:37 AM

    No there isn’t. It’s barbaric and doesn’t work as a deterrent. Killing people is wrong. End of.

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    Mute Fiona Fitzgerald
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    Jun 12th 2016, 5:30 PM

    I wonder whether it would have deterred that woman’s murderer if he had been able to read about other hangings for the crime of murder?

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    Mute Aindriú Purfield
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    Jun 12th 2016, 2:45 AM

    Human beings have Human rights in this day and age.

    Any country that executes stoops to the level of the killers themselves.

    Belarus is the only country in all of Europe, including Russia, that still actively has the death penalty written into its’ laws.

    Are people seriously suggesting we apply a similar level of morals here because murders and brutal murders occur?

    People might feel like such people deserve to die and brutally, but it’s not the job of the State to be cruel and vicious. The potential for miscarriage of justice is also huge. The Irish Free State did execute at least 2 innocent men afaik.

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    Mute emily davison
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    Jun 12th 2016, 5:15 AM

    What about child rapes and murders? Or conspiracy to blow up an airplane. Certain things for fit rights

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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:44 AM

    Emily – the crimes are disgusting, but killing people is wrong. Someone has to hold the higher moral ground, the state must protect its citizens not seek vengeance, no matter how much we might want it.

    Look at Saudi, Egypt, Iran etc. Look at the USA. Is that a crime free country because they lock people up for decades and have the death penalty?

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    Mute The Hype
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    Jun 12th 2016, 8:31 AM

    If you are putting a picture of a building in your article then you should also name the building.

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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:45 AM

    Which building are you wanting to know

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    Mute The Hype
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:26 AM

    The picture of the courthouse

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    Mute George Eliot
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:33 AM

    Yeah, the Journal are pretty bad for this. If you follow the link to the NLI that they have, you’ll see that it’s that old building on Green Street, near Capel Street.

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    Mute George Eliot
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:37 AM
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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:41 AM

    Green street courthouse

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    Mute The Hype
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    Jun 12th 2016, 11:47 AM

    Thanks lads

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    Mute Malvolio32
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:00 PM

    Also left wondering where execution was carried out, Mountjoy presumably.

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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:12 PM

    Yea there 29 unmarked graves in mount joy he buried there. One of the 29 have been provin innocent late last year. Look up a book called hanged for murder the 29 cases are in it

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    Mute David Harries
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    Jun 11th 2016, 11:29 PM

    Sure can we not blame the British

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    Mute Dec O'Farrell
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    Jun 12th 2016, 4:08 PM

    As is more usually the case, David.

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    Mute Kevin Kennedy
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:31 AM

    ‘Had went to a wake’????

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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:39 AM

    Be thankful it wasn’t ‘of went’

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    Mute emily davison
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:11 PM

    $cum executed this man

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    Mute emily davison
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    Jun 11th 2016, 10:18 PM

    He’d probably get 4 years today

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    Mute Martin Byrne
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:36 AM

    Hmm – not sure it’s that simple – although there doesn’t seem to have been a lot of evidence. I’m glad we live in a time where we are more humane.

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    Mute John Considine
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    Jun 12th 2016, 12:53 PM

    Well, if the marauding gangs who travel rural Ireland with seeming impunity terrorising old people and carrying out aggravated burglaries, in many cases causing death directly or indirectly, were to face ‘Old Sparky’, I would be in favour of it. Conventional policing isn’t working for us.

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    Mute Michael McLoughlin
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    Jun 12th 2016, 9:39 AM

    What’s the fine looking building in the second photo? A mill? A convent? Interested to know

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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:51 AM

    An English army barracks

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    Mute Ian Begley
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:50 AM

    He got what he deserved

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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:51 AM

    Really ?

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    Mute Rosa Parks
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    Jun 12th 2016, 5:01 AM

    He probably did do it.

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    Mute Brian Carter
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    Jun 12th 2016, 10:51 AM

    What makes you think that

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    Mute Eilish Deegan
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    Jun 12th 2016, 8:23 AM

    So no allowances made for mental health issues there !!Wouldn’t like seeing the death penalty being brought back ,as it dehumanised everyone ,and says it’s OK for the state to kill.So how can it be OK for one group to take lives and not another ?

    11
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