Taylor's Field, used to be Clonbrock House

What Secrets does Taylor’s Field Hold? by Lorna Sixsmith

Lorna Sixsmith is an Irish author and dairy farmer. Her latest book is Till the Cows Come Home by Black and White Publishing.
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Taylor's Field
Taylor’s Field is just past that copse of trees.

Taylor’s Field is named for the family who once lived there – a Joseph Taylor and his brothers. The field has some notoriety as one of the Taylors was hanged as a convicted murderer in 1903. The murder didn’t happen in this field, but one of the two persons found guilty was Joseph Taylor. The victim was John Daly who lived in a five-acre field at Clonbrock, about three hundred yards from Taylor’s Field, at the other side of the river. John Daly lived in a two-roomed cottage with his wife Mary and their two children aged nine and eleven. They had a vegetable garden, two cows and a mare. He worked as a carter, selling breakage, which was small pieces of coal mixed with ‘culm’ (coal dust). Some time before 1902, when the murder happened, it was reported that his and Mary’s marriage had collapsed and they were sleeping separately.

Meanwhile, Joseph Taylor was having an affair with Mary. Ten years younger than her, he had worked as a miner and a carter in the past and was employed as a farm labourer in 1902. He drank heavily and was alleged to have hit Mary on at least one occasion.

John Daly was killed late one night and was found the next morning with wounds to his head. It seemed he was hit and stabbed with a pitchfork. Initially it was believed that Joseph Taylor was the murderer, but he claimed Mary herself had given him carbolic acid to murder her husband. The fact that her children gave conflicting evidence and that she didn’t send for the police on discovering her husband’s body meant her defence was weak. Her trial lasted a mere two days. The jury for Joseph Taylor took only fifty minutes to reach their decision and the jury for Mary took fifty-five minutes.

Mary Daly and Joseph Taylor were sentenced to death by hanging. He was hanged on 7 January 1903 in Kilkenny and she was hanged on 10 January 1903 in Tullamore. The case – known as the ‘Clonbrock Murder’ – received much media attention at the time, reported in local and national papers. Some reports argued that Mary Daly was unfairly treated by British law as four other women (all British) were found guilty of murder around this time and had their sentences commuted to twenty years’ imprisonment. It was argued that Mary received the death penalty because she was Irish and Roman Catholic. Her remains were buried three times: the first in the corner of the prison yard, then they were moved to a pauper’s graveyard in 1937 when the Tullamore gaol was sold, and finally brought back by her brothers to her home in Co. Laois. The murder case is discussed in more detail on the Offaly history blog.

If only fields could talk – we might know if both, or one, was guilty. It might make an interesting historical novel someday but if one was to just glance quickly at this field, it’s one of our most unassuming, not as wet as its neighbouring field The Bog but not our best field either.

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Lorna Sixsmith
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