Patricia Byrne (writer)

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Patricia Byrne
BornBridget Patricia Murphy
1950 (age 73–74)
Bekan, County Mayo, Ireland
OccupationWriter
NationalityIrish
Alma materNUI Galway, University of Limerick, Maynooth University
Period2007–present
Spouse
Michael Byrne
(m. 1980)
Children2

Bridget Patricia Byrne (née Murphy; born 1950) is an Irish writer of narrative nonfiction. Two of her books deal with historical events in nineteenth-century Achill Island.

Biography[edit]

Byrne was born in the townland of Greenwood, in the parish of Bekan, County Mayo, in 1950. She attended Bekan National School and St Louis Secondary School in Balla, County Mayo. She holds a BA from Maynooth University.[citation needed]

She worked as a civil servant in the Irish public service in Dublin. She moved to Limerick in 1980 and worked as an enterprise development executive, and later as an executive director, with Shannon Development – a regional economic development agency for the Mid-West region of Ireland.[1] She was awarded a Master’s in Business Studies by the University of Limerick in 1996 and an MA in Writing by NUI Galway in 2008.[citation needed]

Works[edit]

Byrne has published three books, two in the narrative nonfiction genre based on historical events on Achill Island.

Her most recent book The Preacher and The Prelate: The Achill Mission Colony and the Battle for Souls in Famine Ireland published by Merrion Press in 2018 recounts the story of Edward Nangle and his nineteenth century Achill Mission Colony.[2][3] The narrative traces the evolution of Edward Nangle’s vision for an evangelising colony from his days as a young clergyman in Cavan at the time of the Second Reformation, through the charges of souperism against his Achill colony in the Great Famine years, on to the period when the Achill Mission became the largest landlord on Achill Island.[4][5]

The Veiled Woman of Achill: Island Outrage and A Playboy Drama (Collins Press, 2012) recounts the story of an infamous crime on Achill Island in 1894, when James Lynchehaun attacked the English landlord, Agnes MacDonnell, causing facial disfigurement, and burnt her home – the Valley House. (The Valley House is located in the north east of Achill Island in a townland known as The Valley or Tóin an tSeanbhaile). The narrative relates how James Lynchehaun attracted notoriety following two spectacular escapes from custody and became an Irish folklore figure.[6] There is an account of the ground breaking legal case in the United States in 1903 when Lynchehaun successfully resisted extradition.[7] Following the Abbey Theatre riots of 1907 around the performance of The Playboy of the Western World, the writer John Millington Synge admitted that Lynchehaun and the ‘Aran case’ of O Máille had influenced him in writing the play.[8][9]

Byrne’s poetry collection Unstable Time was published by Lapwing Press in 2009.

Awards[edit]

Byrne’s essay Milk Bottles in Limerick[10] was named as one of the Notable Essays of the Year in The Best American Essays 2017.[11] She won the Dromineer Poetry Prize (2007) and was shortlisted for a CUIRT annual award (2007). She was a prize winner in the Unbound Press First Chapters competition (2010).

Bibliography[edit]

Narrative nonfiction[edit]

  • The Preacher and The Prelate – The Achill Mission Colony and The Battle for Souls in Famine Ireland (2018) ISBN 978-17-8537-172-1; ISBN 1-78537-172-X
  • The Veiled Woman of Achill – Island Outrage and A Playboy Drama (2012) ISBN 978-18-4889-147-0; ISBN 1-84889-147-4

Poetry[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Shannon Development Annual Report, 2001, iczm.ucc.ie. Accessed 29 September 2022.
  2. ^ Henry Seddall, Edward Nangle, The Apostle of Achill — A Memoir and A History, 1884
  3. ^ Dictionary of Irish Biography, Cambridge University Press, entry for Edward Walter Nangle
  4. ^ Ní Ghiobuin, M (2001). Dugort, Achill Island, 1831-1861: The Rise and Fall of a Mission Community. Dublin: Irish Academic Press. ISBN 978-0716527404.
  5. ^ Comerford, P (1999). "Edward Nangle (1799-1833): The Achill Missionary in a New Light". Cathair na Mart (Journal of the Westport Historical Society).
  6. ^ Byrne, P (2011). "Talk, Gossip, Yarns and Anecdotes: Folklore Surrounding James Lynchehaun of Achill". Cathair na Mart (Journal of the Westport Historical Society).
  7. ^ An Irish-American Victory over Great Britain: Complete Proceedings of the Great Extradition Case of Edward VII vs. James Lynchehaun, as tried in the United States Court. James Lynchehaun Defence Committee.
  8. ^ McCormack, W.J. (2001). Fool of the Family: A Life of J.M. Synge. New York University Press. ISBN 9780814756522.
  9. ^ Synge's comments during the week of The Playboy disturbances appeared in the Dublin Evening Mail of 29 January 1907, and in The Freeman's Journal of 30 January 1907
  10. ^ New Hibernia Review
  11. ^ Jamison, Leslie. The Best American Essays 2017. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 292.

External links[edit]