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18th century coffin carrier used in workhouses during Irish famine on display

Some workhouses cut costs by using a coffin with a hinged door so they could lifted from the grave and reused.

A COFFIN CARRIER that was used in the Irish famine is on display at an exhibition in Dublin city centre this summer.

The 18th century coffin carrier played a vital role during the Irish Potato Famine – a time when starvation, workhouses or emigration were the only options for hundreds of thousands of Irish people.

Gerard McCarthy from West Cork has produced the exhibition, which is now in its second year but the coffin carrier is a new addition.

The body of a person who died in the workhouse was placed in a coffin and brought to their final resting place on the coffin carrier.

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However, McCarthy explained that some workhouses found a way to cut costs by using a coffin with a hinged door. The body would drop out and the coffin could then be lifted from the grave and used for the next victim.

McCarthy told TheJournal.ie that the coffin carrier in the exhibition is the only one he knows about. “I suppose people just never thought to keep them.”

The exhibition also tells stories of Irish people who fled the famine, including the story of Florence Burke who fled to New York from Cork in 1848 aged just 19.

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He later moved to Massachusetts where he got married and had a family while working as a tenant farmer. In 1864, he enlisted in the Union Army during the American Civil War as a ‘substitute’ for a wealthy man in exchange for a portion of farmland.

Six months later, aged 35, he died in a battle in Petersburg, Virginia.

Between 1845 and 1851, around 1.2 million people left Ireland and it continued at a high level after the famine with five million people emigrating by 1910.

The famine exhibition, which is on the top floor of St Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre, is open from now until 30 September.

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    Mute Johnny Mason
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    May 19th 2018, 9:22 AM

    The old back door exit what a way to go !

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    Mute marty johnbann
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    May 19th 2018, 10:00 AM

    Should send it to may as reminder that he won’t forget the starvation of our people

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    Mute FlopFlipU
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    May 19th 2018, 10:13 AM

    @marty johnbann: yea because she caused it

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    Mute Peter gowan
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    May 19th 2018, 10:26 AM

    @marty johnbann: well said marty

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    Mute Rúairí O’ Sullivan
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    May 19th 2018, 7:24 PM

    What potato famine? Do you mean the British Genocide of the Irish people? This is established fact and calling the famine is pure ignorance

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    May 19th 2018, 9:26 PM

    @Rúairí O’ Sullivan:
    There is always one…

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    Mute Bruce van der Gutschmitzer
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    May 19th 2018, 1:05 PM

    Should it not read 19th century? Given the famine occurred in the 19th century??

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    Mute psychiatrist
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    May 19th 2018, 4:27 PM

    @Bruce van der Gutschmitzer: Don’t be so pedantic.

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    Mute John Considine
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    May 19th 2018, 4:32 PM

    @Bruce van der Gutschmitzer: it could have been made in the 18th.

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    Mute Joe O'riordan
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    May 19th 2018, 1:43 PM

    They should have used it todayfpr the wedding…

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    Mute Philip Murphy
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    May 19th 2018, 11:44 AM

    I find this to be offensive. We should bury this dark period of our history forever

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    Mute Rob
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    May 19th 2018, 11:55 AM

    @Philip Murphy: Burying our history, that would be an affront to all who died!

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    Mute eastsmer
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    May 19th 2018, 11:13 PM

    ‘Bring out your dead’ was the cry.
    Where are they from – Clonakilty (God Help Us)

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