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John Shine
John
Shine was born in 1839 on the County Roscommon side of Athlone.
He worked as a labourer whilst a young man. However, times were
hard for the labouring classes in the middle of the 19th century
and he recognised the need for more stable employment. With a recommendation
from a local J.P. he secured an appointment as a constable with
the Royal Irish Constabulary in May 1862. He was then aged 23, a
Roman Catholic, 5 foot 8 inches in height. He was allocated the
service number 27673. His first posting was to the West Riding of
County Galway in October 1862. The RIC was run very much on military
lines including the carrying of arms. John Shine fell foul of the
strict regime several times, experiencing a series of disciplinary
measures with fines imposed and even a reduction in rank on one
occasion. An infamous escapade occurred one night when he was part
of a patrol sent out to raid an outlying farm where, according to
information received, a distilling operation had been established
to produce the illicit liquor, poteen. Concerns were raised the
following morning when his patrol failed to return. Another patrol
was sent out on a rescue mission. When the relief patrol arrived
at the farm all was quiet. In fact it was too quiet. The constables
in the first patrol had not been captured or harmed - they were
all blind drunk!
John Shine mellowed and matured after his marriage
to Mary Healey at the end of 1869. She was a local girl from Co.
Galway but they were soon to move from the area. In July 1870 he
was transferred to Ballinrobe in Co. Mayo. It was here that at least
4 of their 13 children, John, Louisa, Bridget and William were born.
The 13 years that he served at Ballinrobe included
the most testing time of his career, when a series of events led
to the introduction of a new word into the English language. Several
years of bad harvests in Ireland culminated in demands from tenant
farmers for rent reductions and pressure for land reform. The response
of many landlords to a refusal, or inability, to pay rent was eviction
of the tenant. This was the situation in 1880 a few miles outside
Ballinrobe on the Lough Mask estates of Lord Erne. Process servers
of eviction notices were often attacked by local people. Lord Erne,
an absentee landlord, employed an agent to run his estates. The
unfortunate agent, who bore the brunt of local unrest, was one Captain
Charles Boycott. He was ostracised by many of the local people -
"boycotted".
John Shine was one of the local constables faced
with keeping the peace and providing protection for process servers
and, with the military, for the 2,000 Orangemen from Co. Monaghan
who marched from the railway station at Claremorris to Lough Mask
House to save the harvest. A photograph of a line up of constables
in the grounds of Lough Mask House may well include John Shine.
He retired in 1883, after 21 years service, with
a pension of £40 10s 4d. A short stay in County Galway was
followed, in February 1884, by a move with his family back to Athlone.
He opened a shop at 14, Bastion St. Athlone which he and his wife
ran. The window sills of the substantial living accommodation, above
the shop, were crammed with flower boxes and pots. Sides of bacon
and other produce filled the window display. Wooden barrels lined
the pavement in front of the shop. He must have sold alcohol as
the 1901 census records him as a publican.
His date of death has not yet been located but
he did not survive to the census of 1911. This census records that
Mary Shine was a widow and that only 4 of their children were still
alive.
References
Census of Ireland 1901 & 1911
PRO HO184 Royal Irish Constabulary 1816 - 1922
PRO PMG 48 Royal Irish Constabulary Pensions 1873 - 1925
Marlow J. (1973) Captain Boycott & The Irish, London, Andre
Deutsch.
John Shine was my great-grandfather. If you
have any interest in John Shine or Mary Healey I would be pleased
to hear from you. Send an e-mail to me: Terry
Bigley
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