Old Drogheda
Society
The
first Old Drogheda Society Lecture of the year will take place tonight on Wednesday
February 4th in the Governor's House at 7.30pm when Audrey Smyth will give a
talk A History of Drogheda Jail.
Drogheda Jail was a place of incarceration since
its construction in the early nineteenth century. It housed a succession of
petty criminals, prostitutes, murderers and rapists. During the Famine, people
who committed crimes did so with the sole aim of being imprisoned there; as the
meagre rations offered at the jail, were often better than what was on offer at
Drogheda’s local poorhouse. The jail was a powerful symbol of British rule
on the island of Ireland, and was used as a tool by local elites, to suppress
the most meagre of crimes in order to maintain their version of law and order.
This lecture is a colourful telling of the history of the jail and just some of
its colourful residents over the course of the nineteenth century.
Audrey Smith is a Senior Sophistor student reading
Single Hons History, at Trinity College, Dublin. She is currently in the
process of finishing her thesis on The History of Drogheda Jail, which she
intends to publish afterwards.
There will be a bookstall on the night and all are
welcome.
Old Drogheda Society - History,
Archaeology & Heritage, Millmount, Drogheda, Co. Louth, Ireland. Tel.
041-9833097
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