by Aaron Mahnke
We’ve covered pooka and leprechauns before, but Irish folklore has a plethora of other little creatures skittering about. The grogoch is described as a small old man, covered in thick hair that’s matted and tangled with sticks and leaves. Most legends say that the grogoch is half fairy and half human, but unlike the tales of the pooka, these are friendly creatures that help humans with daily life.
Then, of course, there’s the human-stealing fairy known as the changeling, yet another of Ireland’s popular folklore exports. But they aren’t the only fairy creature to be afraid of. Irish legends speak of the dearg-dur, the “red bloodsucker,” which may have had a bit of influence on Bram Stoker, who was born and raised in Ireland.
The dearg-dur is described as a pale young woman who lures men into a graveyard, where she then drains them of their blood. To stop her, folklore says that all you really need to do is find her grave and pile stones on top of it. That’s an episode of Supernatural right there, just waiting to be written. Throw in some pie and it’s perfect.
But Ireland is more than just spooky mythology, however entertaining it might be. For every wailing woman and tiny old man cobbling shoes in the night, there seem to be two or three local spots with their own unique stories.
One such tale comes to us from the coastline north of Belfast, in the small village of Ballygally. It was there in 1625 that a castle was constructed by a man named James Shaw. They say the castle was immaculate, that it was beautiful and well-designed, and that Shaw obsessed over every detail of it.
Naturally, he wanted to pass his beloved home down to his heir someday. But when his wife, Isobel, finally gave birth to their first child, Shaw was enraged to discover it was a daughter, not a son. Of course, this is the sort of frustration you’re guaranteed to experience when you base your entire system of inheritance and power on the biological roll of the dice, but I doubt anyone could have convinced Shaw of the folly of it all.
His response, though, was brutal. He locked Isobel away in one of the towers and had the infant girl removed from the castle entirely. Shortly after, his wife fell to her death from the window of the tower. Some say it was suicide, driven by her grief over the loss of her daughter. Others say it was an accident, that her desire to see her baby again drove her to climb out and try to escape.
Ever since, people outside the castle claim to have seen a pale woman in the window of the tower. Today the castle is a hotel, but the tower prison cell, now known as the Ghost Room, is off-limits to guests. Still, those who’ve managed to spend time in it claim to have felt a dark presence. Laughter has been heard in the castle hallways, and some have even seen the ghostly figure of a woman disappearing around corners.
For another legend full of mystery and death, we need to travel to County Clare, home to the ancient McMahon Castle. It’s nothing more than an abandoned shell today, absent of life and the comforts of home. But according to the legend, there is something there, hidden inside the castle’s walls: a secret chamber.
No one is sure what the chamber was used for, but the story tells of how a great evil was locked inside and hidden away from the rest of the world. Locked away, that is, until the 1920s, when a local priest was brought in to cleanse the space. They say that the exorcist opened the room and stepped inside, but never walked back out again.
The following morning, someone found the priest’s dead body lying just outside the chamber door. Most assumed the man had died of a heart attack, which wouldn’t be entirely unusual. What was unusual, though, was the expression on the dead man’s face: complete and utter horror, as if he had been frightened to death.
The list could go on and on, of buildings and bridges and public spaces that are filled with ominous echoes of another time. But there’s one place in Ireland that seems to hold more darkness, more bloodshed, and more treachery than all the others combined. From its ancient roots in bloody conflict to Victorian tales of spiritualism, there isn’t much that hasn’t taken place within its walls.
If you’re looking for frightening tales, dark history, and unsolved mysteries, there’s no better place in Ireland than Leap Castle.
AN INSIDE JOB
The earliest mention we have on record in Ireland of the O’Carroll clan is a soldier named Cearbhall who fought alongside King Brian Boru at the Battle of Clontarf in 1014. And I want to point out right away that the word cearbh literally means “to hack.” It’s both appropriate, given the man’s occupation, and more than a little bit of foreshadowing.
The O’Carrolls claimed descent from an ancient Irish clan that dated back at least a thousand years. By the sixteenth century, though, the O’Carrolls of County Offaly represented the last powerful fragment of that older clan. But it was sometime before then that the O’Carrolls took control of a castle in their territory, once held by a secondary clan, the O’Bannons. This castle was called Leap.
Dating the original structure has proven a bit challenging to historians, but there are a couple of things that are known for certain. First, there are signs of significant settlement on the site of the castle dating back at least twenty-five hundred years. Second, most scholars agree that the main keep was built around the year 1250. Which means that it was already well known and very old by the time the O’Carrolls moved in near the end of the 1400s.
Leap Castle certainly had a reputation, too. Originally built as a simple tower house—essentially a tall, solid rectangle of stone and mortar—its purpose was to protect anyone inside. Over the centuries, more wings and extensions were added on, but that protective nature never really went away. For a very long time, Leap was considered impenetrable.
From outside, at least. You see, the O’Carroll clan wasn’t known for getting along with others—with neighboring clans, or even among themselves. Family discord like that has a way of creeping inside the walls, like a cold December wind. And if their story hasn’t piqued your interest yet, don’t worry—winter is coming.
The first O’Carroll to rule in Leap Castle was John O’Carroll, but he died of the plague around 1490, passing the leadership on to his son, Mulrooney. And this new clan leader filled his father’s shoes beyond anyone’s expectations. Through the years, he became known for his bravery in battle and his honor as a leader. He even earned the nickname the Great Mulrooney…at least among his clan.
When he passed away in 1532 after over four decades in control, he left Leap Castle in the hands of at least three sons. Teige was known as a hothead, always quick to move toward violence. Fearganainm seems to have been a bit calmer. Thaddeus had trained as a priest and served the family in the chapel at the top of the castle.
Following the death of their father, the three brothers fell into months of arguing over who should lead the clan and control the castle. The tensions were high, and with Teige that was never a good thing. And it was a stewing pot of frustration and entitlement that was about to boil over.
The legend says that Thaddeus—the family priest and one of the contenders for the leadership of the clan—had waited to start Mass until his brother Teige could arrive, but eventually gave up and began without him. Sometime later Teige walked through the door and, despite being late, was shocked to see that the service had already begun.
In a fit of rage, it’s said, Teige drew his sword and rushed at Thaddeus, screaming about how insulting it was to be left out. Of course, Thaddeus was in the right, and would have explained that to his brother…if Teige hadn’t run the sword straight through him instead.
The priest screamed as Teige pulled the blade free and blood began to spill out on the floor of the chapel. Mortally wounded, Thaddeus staggered backward, swaying in front of the others who had come for Mass. And then he toppled over the altar, facedown, and stopped breathing.
Because people are very good at giving incredibly obvious names to places, you might not be surprised to hear that, ever since, the site of th
is gruesome murder has been known as the Bloody Chapel. Creative, I know. But humor aside, there are those who believe that something dark took place that day.
Brother killing brother, putting ambition and petty disagreement ahead of loyalty and family…those things have a way of standing out as powerful. They’re atypical in the grand scheme of things. On top of that, though, a priest was killed right inside his chapel, and in the middle of a religious service, no less.
It wasn’t long after the murder of Thaddeus that Teige himself was killed by a nephew. In the end, the only remaining brother, Fearganainm, took over leadership of the clan and castle, but even he wasn’t immune to the bloodshed.
Legend says that during his reign, the O’Carrolls hired another clan, the MacMahons, to help them defeat a common enemy. The plan worked, and the O’Carrolls achieved victory in the battle. To celebrate, the MacMahons were invited to Leap Castle for a grand meal…with a hidden purpose. Some say they were given poisoned wine, while others say they were murdered in their sleep. Either way, the MacMahons never left Leap Castle alive.
Now, I’ll admit, this is a lot of death for one family over the course of just a single century. Some would say it’s so atypical that, given enough time, this sort of history could leave a mark. It’s this, then—this dark cocktail of violence, betrayal, and blasphemy—that many think was enough to taint the well, so to speak. It tore a hole in the very fabric of reality.
Something the rest of the story only seems to confirm.
A TAINTED WELL
The bloodshed inside Leap Castle went on for generations, until 1659, when the fortress passed into the hands of a new family through marriage between Finola, the daughter of the ruling O’Carroll, and an Englishman named Captain Darby.
Over the years, Leap Castle was improved and extended. Gothic architectural elements were added, and the gardens were expanded. With every change it became less an Irish tower house and more an English manor house. It was being tamed, at least from the outside.
In 1881, the castle passed to Jonathan Darby, and after his marriage to Mildred Dill in 1889, the couple settled into their new life there. Perhaps inspired by the dark atmosphere of the castle, Mildred soon began to write novels in the popular gothic genre, that beautiful blend of horror and romance, terror and literature that attracted the likes of Mary Shelley, Ann Radcliffe, and Edgar Allan Poe.
She published under the pen name Andrew Merry, and her novel Paddy-risky was well received. But it was more than the architecture of Leap Castle that inspired her fiction. The halls there, at least according to her, were full of something darker and more evil.
At first there were noises, as if furniture were being moved in distant parts of the house. But noises quickly evolved into something more sinister. One October night, Mildred was awakened after midnight by the sensation that someone was in the room with her. After looking toward the foot of the bed, she was horrified to see the shape of a person in the darkness. This figure was dressed all in red and had raised a hand toward her.
“What is it?” she said aloud, thinking a servant had come in to wake her, and then she reached for the bedside table to find a match. She struck it, lit a candle, and then lifted it to illuminate the darkness. When she turned toward the foot of the bed, though, she caught her breath. The room was empty.
Now, this was the sort of experience that would probably convince most of us to back off and avoid the castle’s dark history, but not Mildred. She was obsessed. Instead of turning away, she rushed headlong into the world of the occult and paranormal. She held séances and occult gatherings, maybe just to deepen her reputation as a gothic novelist, or perhaps to quench a personal thirst.
The consequences, though, were darker than she could have imagined. Something was there in the castle with them, and her experiments only seemed to attract its attention. Then, one night, it made itself known.
According to Mildred, she’d been up late writing in her room when she heard something in the hallway bump against the door. She opened it to find the hallway filled with a putrid, rotting odor, but otherwise empty. So she closed it again.
Moments later, the bumping and scratching sounds returned, only this time she could also hear sniffing at the foot of the door. Expecting a burglar, Mildred picked up a loaded pistol and quickly pulled the door open once again, and then froze, the hair on the back of her neck standing on end. There was something squatting in the doorway. Something unnatural and gruesome.
“The Thing,” she later wrote, “was about the size of a sheep, thin, gaunt, and shadowy in parts. Its face was human, or to be more accurate, inhuman, in its vileness, with large holes of blackness for eyes, loose slobbery lips, and a thick saliva-dripping jaw.”
According to Mildred, the Thing stood silently in the doorway, locking eyes with her for what seemed like an eternity. And then, with a jump, it moved inside her room. She raised the pistol and fired, nearly point-blank, but still somehow managed to miss. She fired again, this time even closer to the Thing, and still the bullet exploded against a piece of furniture behind it.
Whatever the creature was, whether immaterial spirit or some demonic animal, the shots didn’t seem to have any effect on it. Frightened out of her mind, she brought the pistol up for a third shot and, she claims, pressed the gun right against the Thing’s chest, just as it brought its arms up to reach for her.
She fired, and then quickly pulled back from its grasp, tripping over something on the floor behind her. And then, she claims, everything went black.
Later, Mildred reported all of this in the most unusual manner. She wrote it up and had it published in a journal called The Occult Review in December 1908. But like her novels, she signed the name Andrew Merry to this new tale. The following month, the journal published letters from others that seemed to verify and support her stories, but whenever a novelist is involved, it’s impossible to be 100 percent certain everything is being reported with undecorated accuracy.
Still, it’s not difficult to believe, is it? This castle, designed for warfare and built around generations of bloodshed, was home to more than the people inside. Evil events have a way of filling a building like explosions; while the initial shock might eventually fade away, the echoes can still be heard ringing through the halls long after it’s over.
Whether those echoes took the form of red ghosts and rotting elemental creatures, or just an overwhelming atmosphere of dread, we can’t deny the power—and the darkness—of the explosion itself.
In the end, it seems, the only thing more frightening than our deepest nightmares might just be our own violent humanity.
REMNANTS OF THE PAST
Ireland certainly has a lush and fertile landscape when it comes to folklore. The stories that are still told around fires and in crowded pubs cover the spectrum, from the deeply mythological to the downright terrifying. And I wouldn’t expect anything less from such a textured, poetic culture.
But that line between fact and fiction has a way of getting blurry when you add in our violent human nature. The events we hear about, or the things we ourselves do to others…those things have a way of giving birth to tales far more frightening than anything we could invent.
Reality, though, often fails to have the tidy ending we’ve come to expect from books and film. Leap Castle isn’t the same today as it once was. In fact, it’s literally a shell of its former self.
In early 1922, sensing a growing political tension in the country, the Darbys left their home and moved to England. On July 30, 1922, just one month after the Irish Civil War began, eleven men knocked on the castle door and demanded that the caretaker, Richard Dawkins, provide them lodging for the night. When he opened the door for them, though, they forced their way inside and began to cover everything with gasoline, and then set it all on fire.
The following day, more men arrived and burned the parts
of the castle that had been missed the night before. Dawkins tried to save as much of the furniture and belongings as he could, but the outbuilding he hid them in was later broken into and looted. By the time the Darbys returned, Leap Castle was nothing more than a smoldering ruin of charred stone.
One of the tragic losses that resulted from the burning of Leap was the vast collection of stories and novels that Mildred had yet to publish. According to one report, she lost an estimated 150 short stories, roughly forty longer manuscripts, and two finished novels.
Some things, though, still remain. For decades, while the castle sat empty, locals would look up at night to see lights in the old fortress windows. It was as if someone were walking the halls armed with a dim candle.
Others who ventured closer to the property reported that the ruins smelled of rotting flesh, and although they could never find the source, many reported hearing the sounds of some animal or creature. Sniffing sounds.
Today, Leap Castle is being restored by the current owner, with work being done to rebuild the two wings that extend out from the original tower house. But it’s something else, something that was discovered decades earlier, that might be the most chilling revelation of the castle’s last century.
Upstairs, just north of the Bloody Chapel, workmen stumbled upon a secret chamber. Think of it more as a pit, because it was only accessible from a trapdoor. The room below was small, barely larger than a closet.
These sort of rooms were called oubliettes, a French term that loosely means “place of forgetting.” Unwelcome visitors or betrayed family members might be led over to the trapdoor and tossed inside. If the fall didn’t kill them, the large spikes protruding from the floor certainly would.
And this oubliette, it turns out, was filled with skeletons.