Castleisland celebrates pardons for Poff and Barrett
SYLVESTER Poff and James Barrett were hanged in Tralee Jail on January 23, 1883 for the murder of Thomas Browne of Dromoulton on October 3m 1882.
Both men were innocent of the crime. Today their innocence is acknowledged by the government of Ireland in the announcement of posthumous pardons for both men.
Castleisland gained a gruesome reputation as the ‘blood capital of Ireland’ during the Land War for its brave and daring response to landlord oppression.
In the wake of the murder of a local magistrate Arthur Edward Herbert by an unidentified assassin in 1882, Castleisland was a dangerous place to be. It might be argued that Poff and Barrett were scapegoats for the murders of both Thomas Browne and Arthur Edward Herbert.
The pardons of Poff and Barrett, like John Twiss before them, removes the murderous stain that Castleisland and those innocent men have borne, unjustly, for almost a century and a half as a new dawn breaks on the historic town.
John Twiss, was pardoned in 2021 following a campaign by Castleisland District Heritage. He was hanged in 1895 for the murder of James Donovan in 1894.
The pardons of Sylvester Poff and James Barrett brings this figure to five.
Outgoing TD Brendan Griffin played a huge role in getting this pardon over the line as the self selected conclusion to his political career looms. He raised the issue several times in Dáil Éireann over the past few years and, like Seánie O’Shea in Croke Park on that fateful game against Dublin in July 2022, he delivered the good news with the very last kick of the game. Sound man Brendan - as the old stout advert went.
Useful reading: John Twiss Judicial Murder in Castleisland (2021) and Poff and Barrett A Miscarriage of Justice (2021) both by Castleisland District Heritage and available from their offices at The Island Centre, Main Street, Castleisland.