The opening of Nenagh Gaol in the summer of 1842 marked a dark turning point for the North Tipperary market town. Designed after Jeremy Bentham’s “panopticon” model, the prison was an imposing addition to the local landscape, featuring 192 sleeping cells and a central inspection point. While public executions had long been a gruesome pageant in Irish urban life, the spectacle arrived late to Nenagh. It was only with the completion of the local gaol that a legal place of execution became available, setting the stage for one of the most controversial legal cases in the county’s history.

A Brutal Crime in Loughane

The catalyst for this historic event was the violent murder of Rody Kennedy, a well-respected widower and father from Loughane. On Sunday, 22 May 1842, Kennedy’s body was discovered in a field near his home, his head “dreadfully mangled” by a hatchet. The investigation moved swiftly in a county that, at the time, held the highest homicide rate in Ireland. Within a week, James Shea (also known as James Smith), a servant who lived in the same house as Kennedy, was charged with the murder.

The Trial at Nenagh Assizes

The trial of James Shea took place on 1 August 1842, presided over by Lord Chief Justice Doherty. The prosecution’s case relied heavily on circumstantial evidence and eyewitness accounts. John Butler testified to seeing Shea running toward the murder site, while Eliza Mooney claimed to have encountered a pale-faced Shea near the scene. Despite the defense’s attempts to highlight the lack of bloodstains on Shea’s clothing and the questionable motives of witnesses seeking rewards, the jury returned a guilty verdict after hours of deliberation.

Retribution at the “Drop”

On 20 August 1842, a “multitude” gathered outside Nenagh Gaol to witness the town’s first public execution. Standing on an iron balcony at the front gate, Shea maintained his innocence until the very end. His final words were a haunting proclamation:

“I call Almighty God… to witness that I die innocent of the murder of Rody Kennedy; that I had neither hand, act, or part, or any knowledge of it.”

As the hood was drawn, the crowd knelt in prayer. Shea was “launched off” at noon, his body remaining suspended for an hour before being buried within the prison walls. To this day, the safety of his conviction remains a subject of historical debate, leaving a lingering cloud over the first execution at Nenagh Gaol.