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Irish Deaf Archives: BRIDGET HEANY

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    (Irish Dead Archives - Case Study No 9: Bridget Heany)
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    (Narrated by Josephine O'Leary)
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    (Munster Circuit. Limerick County Assizes, 1845. Friday, March 7. Crown Side. (Before the Honourable Mr. Justice Jackson.) - The Queen v. O'Brien (a))
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    (Witness - Evidence. The testimony of a deaf and dumb person ...)
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    ("The testimony of a deaf and dumb person" - Is this admissible?)
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    Here is another court case.
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    This time, someone was charged with killing a man called McNamara
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    with a blow to the head with a turf shovel.
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    At the time it happened, a lot of people were working in the turf field,
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    in between haystacks that dotted the landscape.
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    (Something happened behind one of the haystacks!)
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    Two women working away saw the defendant walking away with a shovel,
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    but didn't take much notice, wondering about the second man.
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    Later on, they walked around and found McNamara on the ground dead,
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    with a bloody head.
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    (People came forward as witnesses)
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    The woman told the police what they saw happened,
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    about the man walking off.
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    This woman was with her Deaf sister.
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    When they heard she was deaf, they had a problem.
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    They wanted her witness testimony, but how would they get it interpreted?
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    The sister claimed that she could interpret, that she could sign very well,
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    that her sister was well able to understand the priest.
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    That her sister was a staunch Catholic,
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    and well able to converse with people in sign language.
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    After the court heard her statement,
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    they decided to allow her to interpret the Oath,
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    for her sister to swear.
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    Hence the two of them could give their testimonies to the Court.
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    (Limerick County Assizes)
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    (Main Courthouse, Limerick - www.limerickslife.com)
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    (However, the counsel for the defence had an important question.)
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    The Defence Counsel asked the interpreter what exactly was said for the oath,
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    the wording conveyed,
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    and questioned whether the Deaf woman understood the Oath fully.
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    The sister said that the Deaf woman understood fully
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    because she was told that if she did not tell the truth,
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    the priest would kill her.
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    (Southside Courthouse and Jail www.limerickslife.com)
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    After some deliberation,
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    the Defence Counsel moved to reject the claim that
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    the Deaf witness fully understood the nature and meaning of the Oath.
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    (So Bridget Heany was not accepted as a witness after all.)
Title:
Irish Deaf Archives: BRIDGET HEANY
Description:

Bridget Heany

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Video Language:
American Sign Language
Duration:
02:21
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Irish Deaf Archives: BRIDGET HEANY
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Irish Deaf Archives: BRIDGET HEANY
Claude Almansi edited English subtitles for Irish Deaf Archives: BRIDGET HEANY
Claude Almansi added a translation

English subtitles

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