Stone row, Lettergonnell, Co. Longford
Co. Longford |
Stone Monuments
On a drumlin, one of those smooth, oval hills left behind by retreating glaciers, four upright stones stand in a line across a Longford pasture.
They are not tall or imposing; the highest reaches only 0.75 metres, roughly knee-to-hip height on most adults. But they are deliberately placed, spaced several metres apart along a northeast-to-southwest alignment that stretches 14.1 metres in total, and one of them, the third in the sequence, is set with its axis running across the line of the row rather than along it, a quirk that has no obvious explanation. Stone rows are prehistoric monuments found across Ireland and Britain, their original purpose debated by archaeologists for generations; alignment with solar or lunar events, territorial markers, and processional routes have all been proposed, but none proven conclusively.
What makes this particular row stranger still is the layer of local memory that has settled over it. The stones are known in the area as the Croppies' Graves, understood to mark the burial places of rebels who died during the 1798 insurgency. The United Irishmen's rebellion of that year left a deep imprint across the Irish midlands, and the word "croppy", derived from the close-cropped hair associated with French Revolutionary sympathy, became a common term for the insurgents, often applied posthumously to unmarked graves and field monuments that communities wanted to account for. Whether any actual burials took place here is unknown; the association may say more about the power of 1798 in local memory than about the prehistoric monument itself. Land reclamation work disturbed much of the surrounding area, though the drumlin rise on which the stones stand was left intact. A low scarp running parallel to the stones about two metres to their east remains unexplained, as does the function of an angled stone tucked in among apparent field-clearance debris beside the third upright.