Hugh Higgins of Tyrawley

Last updated

Hugh Higgins of Tyrawley was a blind Irish harper, 1737-after 1791.

Higgins was a descendant of the Ó hUiginn family of poets, scribes, and historians. He was a native of Tirawley in north-east County Mayo and noted as having a more "respectable appearance and retinue than most travelling musicians." O'Neill remarks that "his parents being in comfortable circumstances. Blindness in early life led him to the study of the harp, and being gifted in a musical sense, he made rapid progress."

Higgins was a friend of the harper Owen Keenan, who was imprisoned in Omagh for attempting to break into the house of a Mr. Stuart of Killmoon, near Cookstown, County Tyrone. He was conducting an affair with Mr. Stuart's French governess.

Upon hearing of Keenan's plight (according to Captain Francis O'Neill), Higgins

"...readily procured his admission to see his friend. The jailer was not at home but his wife was. She loved music and cordials and being once a beauty was by no means insensible to flattery even from men who could not see. She fell an easy victim to their wiles, and the blind harpers contrived to steal the keys out of her pocket, oppressed as she was with love and music."

"They did not forget to make the turnkey drunk also, and while Higgins remained behind soothering his infatuated dupe, Keenan escaped with Higgins' boy on his back to guide him over a ford in the river Strule, by which he took his ,,, back to Kilmoon and repeated the offense for which he had been previously imprisoned."

He was the Hugh Higgins, blind Native of Mayo age 75 years, who performed at the Belfast Harp Festival in 1791. He had performed at Granard in 1791 "but won no premiums. In fact, he did not play at all at the second hall at Granard, having taken offense at something connected with the arrangements. Arthur O'Neill's avowed friendship for Higgins was a guarantee of his respectability."

Related Research Articles

Eachmarcach Ó Catháin, Irish harper and composer, 1720–1790).

Martin O'Reilly (1829–1904) was a blind Irish piper.

William Madden, Irish piper.

William Boyle was an Irish piper.

Owen Bohan was an Irish piper.

Nance the Piper is an Irish piper.

Patrick Flannery was an Irish piper.

William Walsh, Irish piper.

Patrick Cummins, aka Cummings was an Irish piper and tutor.

Peter Kelly was an Irish piper. Kelly was born in the town of Galway but blinded in infancy. When old enough, his parents saw to it that he was taught the pipes by Martin O'Reilly as a means of ensuing his welfare. When aged about thirty he moved to Glasgow with fiddler John Crockwell, where he married and had nine children. He was survived upon his death by his widow and three children.

Stephen Ruane was a farmer and Irish piper.

Denis "Dinny" Delaney was a well-known blind Irish piper who lived most of his life in Ballinasloe. The Dinny Delaney Festival is celebrated annually in Ballinasloe in his honour.

Diarmuid Ó Dubhagáin was an Irish harper.

Máel Ísa Ó Raghallaigh, also known as Myles O'Reilly, was an Irish harper.

Thady Ó Cianáin was an Irish composer of the early 17th century.

William fitz Robert Barry was an Irish harper. His full name was William fitz Robert fitz Edmond Barry, that is, William son of Robert son of Edmond Barry. He was a blind harper in the service of David de Barry, 5th Viscount Buttevant, the same person who "had been commissioned by Queen Elizabeth to exterminate the harpers."

Charles Fanning, Irish harper, born Foxford, County Mayo, 1736, died after 1792.

James O'Brien (1823–85), Irish piper.

John O'Gorman, born 1860s, Irish piper.

John K. Beatty, Irish uillean piper.