On the afternoon of Wednesday 10 January 1923 Lulu Bagwell wrote to her mother-in-law Harriet informing her the family house had been destroyed in a blaze earlier that morning. Lulu and the children had been obliged to stand shivering at gunpoint on the lawn watching the conflagration the raiders responsible for the fire only leaving when it was too late to save Marlfield. Afterwards she discovered her handbag and all the family s overcoats had been stolen. We hadn t even a handkerchief she lamented everything has gone. The fate of Marlfield was not unique. It is estimated that between 250 and 300 Irish country houses were burnt in the early 1920s during the course of the War of Independence and subsequent Civil War. The reasons behind their destruction were various but because of their scale and prominence on the Irish landscape setting fire to them was judged by perpetrators to be good propaganda. Relatively little investigation has been undertaken into this devastation to both property and lives.But how was it for the owners of these buildings? How did they feel when in the course of just a few hours they saw their worlds overturned? Hitherto historians have concentrated on the actions and motivation of those responsible for carrying out the burnings. Left Without a Handkerchief will tell the other side of the story of history seen from the perspective of the losers left homeless and struggling to cope emotionally and financially.Left Without a Handkerchief will fill a gap in the national narrative featuring the stories of ten houses and their owners. From Galway to Wexford Mayo to Cork it will give a voice to the dispossessed to the people who thought they had a place in Ireland until usually in the course of a single night they were disabused of this belief. As the centenary of the onset of house burnings arrives now is the time to tell their story.
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