Farmhill House
Rathreagh, Killala, Co. Mayo
The only trace of Farmhill
House to be found in the landscape near Kilfian, Co. Mayo are the high walls of its large
walled garden. When mentioned, even today, the name of Farmhill and
that of its most infamous occupant Harriette Gardiner, still conjure stories of her cruelty that reverberate
locally. Farmhill was home to the Gardiner family, the last male member to live
there was Major John Gardiner. He was
born in October 1797, the son of John Gardiner and Anne Gildea and was known to
be the grandson of Charles Gardiner of Tonroe and Maria Bourke of Heathfield
near Ballycastle. In May 1819, John married Elizabeth, the daughter of James
Cuff, Lord Tyrawley who is associated with Deel Castle and Castle Gore near
Crossmolina. This union produced a daughter in 1821, named Harriette, who became
notorious after inheriting the estate from her father.
The Entrance Front of Farmhill House
Picture ( above) Copyright ICHC
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By 1876, the Farmhill estate
extended to over 4,000 acres which was not entailed and as a result Harriet
inherited everything when her father died in in 1850’s. The house at Farmhill
was a two storey residence with a large entrance hall, drawing room, dining
room, seven bedrooms and other ancillary areas for servants including the
kitchen. Relatives recorded that Harriette was known as ‘Hassie’, and most
people who knew her thought her to be mentally unstable and an alcoholic. Whether this is true or not, it is said that Harriet had a masculine appearance, she
supposedly dressed as a man and had her hair cut in a mannish fashion. Her
course language was matched by her bad manners and she seemed to relish an opportunity to cause trouble
for the tenants of her estate. Her family decided that maybe a companion would
help placate Harriette and she would mend her ways. A lady, Miss Susan Pringle,
who was known to be extremely religious arrived at Farmhill. However, the plan
backfired, instead of Susan having a calming influence on Harriette, the
debauched Miss Gardiner corrupted Miss Pringle. Soon the new arrival to
Farmhill was a seasoned drinker and the duo became notorious in the local towns
for causing trouble.
A site layout showing Farmhill House
Picture ( above) Copyright ICHC
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In the 1880’s the local and
national press often carried stories of evictions, tenants being imprisoned and
families being dispatched to the workhouse under the instruction of Miss
Gardiner. Harriette was ruthless as she pursued her goal of clearing as much of
her land of as many tenants as possible which she seen as a nuisance. Local
shop keepers were so disgusted by Harriette, that they banned her from entering
their premises. She retorted by threatening to shoot them with the gun she
carried at all times. Her need to be armed stemmed from an incident in 1869,
when an attempt was made on her life. On Christmas night in 1869, she was shot through
a window while sitting at her own kitchen table and received seven or eight
grains of shot to her head. It was reported that she would have been killed if
there weren’t two of her servants present at the time of the shooting. This was
supposedly an act of retribution as she had evicted a large number of tenants
over the preceding six months. As a result of this attack the RIC erected a
temporary police barracks opposite the gate to Farmhill. After this it
is said that Miss Gardiner spent little time at Farmhill, making it hard for
any would be attacker to know where she was in order to stage another attempt
on her life. The pettiness of Miss Gardiner was illustrated by a case that
appeared before the courts in 1881. Harriet had three of her tenants before the
Ballina Petty Sessions Court for the removal of mud from a nearby bog. The
tenants were using the mud as manure for their farms, which had been allowed in
Harriet’s father’s time however Harriet stated that if they wanted the mud,
they would have to pay for it. Miss Gardiner announced to all present in the
court that ‘ I do not care what my father
did. He chastised you with rods, but I will chastise you with scorpions’.
One wonders about the origin of this statement as there couldn’t have been too
many scorpions found in Kilfian in the 1800’s. In one week in 1885, she evicted
12 families from their homes aided by the sheriff and his bailiffs. The report
of this event concludes that ‘the only prospect
that now lies before them is the detested workhouse’. Harriet and her accomplice
Susan Pringle now had a reputation that preceded them and both became known as
‘The Witches on the Warpath’.
Harriet Gardiner
died aged 71 on the 24th July 1892 at her cottage in Tully, Belcarra
near Castlebar where Miss Gardiner also had extensive land holdings. Her
remains were removed from Belcara at 7 o’clock in the morning to Castlebar
Train Station and from there transported to Ballina for interment in Rathreagh. It appears
from newspaper notices that Miss Pringle was in residence at Farmhill at this
time. The Connaught Telegraph reported that ‘a weird and grotesque figure, and a baneful one, has passed away from
this mortal stage’. The reports continued that’ She will long be remembered in County Mayo not alone for her
semi-masculine attire and her repulsively eccentric ways, but for the Pharaoh–like
and utterly unfeminine hardness of heart which she exhibited for years towards
a most miserable and poverty stricken tenantry……She occupies an unique niche, even in the temple of that dark pantheon
which is filled with the ghosts of landlordism’.
An advertisement for the sale of the contents of Farmhill in 1910
Picture ( above) Copyright ICHC
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