February 1900

Fatal Confusion

Cappamore and the surrounding district lost a medical practitioner in early February 1900 when Dr Charles Philip Tennant died after accidentally swallowing carbolic acid during an evening visit to a family at Rath. Tennant served patients across the Cappamore and Murroe area, where a country doctor might travel considerable distances to reach sick people in their homes. The surviving reports describe no deliberate act and no dispute over the cause. An ordinary medical call ended in tragedy because two liquids carried to the house were confused, turning a customary gesture of hospitality into a fatal emergency.

Election Violence

The South Mayo by-election of February 1900 drew Limerick directly into a bitter struggle over the direction of Irish nationalism. John Daly, the veteran Fenian then serving as Mayor of Limerick, travelled to County Mayo to support Major John MacBride, whose candidature was promoted while he fought beside the Boers in South Africa. Daly’s intervention carried symbolic importance: a former political prisoner and leading republican, he represented a separatist tradition sharply critical of parliamentary dependence upon Westminster. Reports that he was attacked during the campaign showed how readily political argument could pass into physical intimidation.