Roundtable: The Islandmagee Witches 1711 Creative and Digital Project

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2023-12229

Keywords:

County Antrim, Irish Witchcraft Act, Islandmagee Witches 1711 Project, Mary Dumbar, trials

Abstract

In March and September of 1711, in Carrickfergus, County Antrim, Ireland’s last witch trials took place. Eighteen-year-old educated gentlewoman Mary Dunbar accused eight Presbyterian women and one man from Islandmagee and the surrounding areas of using witchcraft to attack her in spectral or spirit form and to summon demons to possess her body. The women were tried on 31 March 1711 at the Spring Session of Carrickfergus County Assize Court. Despite pleading not guilty, they were convicted under the 1586 Irish Witchcraft Act and sentenced to one year’s imprisonment and four stints in the pillory. Unlike most demonically-possessed persons, the incarceration of the convicted witches did not improve Dunbar’s health. Dunbar now claimed that William Sellor, husband and father to two of the convicted women, had begun bewitching her. William was convicted of witchcraft at the Summer Assizes in September 1711. Mary Dunbar however had died a few weeks earlier, just after the first trial, turning William’s original offence into a capital crime for which he was probably executed: he was thus one of a possible two people executed in Ireland under a witchcraft Act. The story of the trial is told in Andrew Sneddon’s book Possessed by the Devil: The Real History of The Islandmagee Witches and Ireland’s Only Mass Witchcraft Trial (History Press, 2013). Along with Victoria McCollum, Sneddon now heads the Islandmagee Witches 1711 Project (w1711.org). The following discussion outlines the origins, aims and outputs of the project.

Author Biographies

Victoria McCollum

Victoria McCollum is an internationally-recognised educator and researcher from Ulster University who writes books on films, TV shows and video games (especially horror), to explain why popular culture matters in helping us gain a deeper understanding of our moment in time. Among a wide range of publications, she edited Make America Hate Again: Trump-Era Horror & The Politics of Fear was published (Routledge, 2019) and authored Post-9/11 Heartland Horror: Rural horror films in an era of urban Terrorism (Routledge 2016). She has collaborated on projects with Apple, Cartoon Network, Cinemax, Facebook, HBO, New Line Cinema, RTE, Sky Atlantic, Telltale Games, Time Warner, Twitter and Universal Music Group.

Andrew Sneddon

Andrew Sneddon is the leading expert on the history of the Islandmagee witch trial of 1711, and has published widely on Irish witchcraft and magic, including four books, most recently Representing Magic in Modern Ireland: Belief, History and Culture (Cambridge University Press 2022). Since publishing Possessed by the Devil: The Real History of the Islandmagee Witches and Ireland’s Only Witchcraft Mass Trial (History Press, 2023), he has taken the untold story of the Islandmagee witches and Irish witchcraft to new, diverse, international audiences. He regularly appears on local and national TV and Radio, including BBC, ITV, TG4 and RTE. Between 2016 and 2021, he was historical consultant on the first 6-part series dedicated to Irish witchcraft, An Diabhal Inti (The Devil’s in Her), produced by Lagan Media. He is outgoing President of Ireland’s oldest professional historical society, Ulster Society for Irish Historical Studies.

Frank Ferguson

Frank Ferguson is Director of the Centre for Irish and Scottish Studies and Research Director for English at Ulster University. Balancing Acts: Conversations with Gerald Dawe on a Life in Poetry was published in 2023 by Irish Academic Press. His publications include numerous articles on Irish, Scottish and Ulster-Scots literature as well as Ulster Scots Writing: An Anthology. He was part of the Expert Advisory Panel which produced the report Recommendations for an Ulster-Scots Language, Heritage & Culture Strategy (2021) for the Department for Communities for Northern Ireland.

Stephen Butler

Stephen Butler is Lecturer in English (Modern Fiction) at Ulster University. His research focuses on crime fiction, modern Irish writing and global literature and has published widely on these topics. He co-edited John Banville and his Precursors (Bloomsbury, 2019), The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Contemporary British and Irish Literature (2020) and Crime Fiction: A Critical Casebook (Peter Lang, 2018).

Alice McCullough

Alice McCullough is a poet, visual artist, and filmmaker based in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her short film “Earth to Alice” (2021) was commissioned by the BBC, and has been enthusiastically received internationally (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ni3I9sZTfxI) She was poet-in-residence with Disability Rights California (DRC) in 2023 and received a Major Individual Artist Award from the Arts Council of Northern Ireland in 2022.

References

[1] Song of the Bones, a collaboration with Claire McCartney and Beccy Henderson of the band VOKXEN, puppeteer Claire Roi Harvey, and percussionist David McLaughlin was staged at the Lyric Theatre, Belfast in October 2022.

Published

2023-12-18

How to Cite

McCollum, V. ., Sneddon, A. ., Ferguson, F., Butler, S., & McCullough, A. (2023). Roundtable: The Islandmagee Witches 1711 Creative and Digital Project. Estudios Irlandeses, 18(2), 112–118. https://doi.org/10.24162/EI2023-12229