Henry Hamilton O'Hara, also known as "Mad O'Hara" or "The Mad Squire of Craigbilly" or "Crebilly" (born 1820 – died 1875) was the last squire of Craigbilly Castle in County Antrim, Ireland. The O'Hara family was, for over 600 years, the landed gentry of Ballymena and surrounding areas. He Was A Most Kind and LiberalLandlord And This MonumentIs Erected By The Tenants On HisEstates In Grateful Remembrance and Blessed Are The MercifulFor They Shall ObtainMercyMATH VC = C7
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| - Henry Hamilton O'Hara "Mad O'hara" (en)
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| - Henry Hamilton O'Hara, also known as "Mad O'Hara" or "The Mad Squire of Craigbilly" or "Crebilly" (born 1820 – died 1875) was the last squire of Craigbilly Castle in County Antrim, Ireland. The O'Hara family was, for over 600 years, the landed gentry of Ballymena and surrounding areas. He Was A Most Kind and LiberalLandlord And This MonumentIs Erected By The Tenants On HisEstates In Grateful Remembrance and Blessed Are The MercifulFor They Shall ObtainMercyMATH VC = C7 (en)
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| - Henry Hamilton O'Hara, also known as "Mad O'Hara" or "The Mad Squire of Craigbilly" or "Crebilly" (born 1820 – died 1875) was the last squire of Craigbilly Castle in County Antrim, Ireland. The O'Hara family was, for over 600 years, the landed gentry of Ballymena and surrounding areas. Henry Hamilton O'Hara is the subject of many local legend. He was a gambler and bigamist with a ferocious temper. Most famously, one day on returning from gaming he entered the house with several friends, and his wife would not stand to greet them. He is said to have shoveled hot coals onto her lap with the words, "Now will you rise?" It was for such actions that he was labelled "Mad O'Hara". These stories stand in contrast to some of the primary evidence of the time. For example, he was considered a good landlord as evidenced by the inscriptions on his tombstone: He Was A Most Kind and LiberalLandlord And This MonumentIs Erected By The Tenants On HisEstates In Grateful Remembrance and Blessed Are The MercifulFor They Shall ObtainMercyMATH VC = C7 It is believed that O'Hara's unique grave marker is the source of the "Headless Horseman" ghost story. It is still visible in the local graveyard, and consists of a pillar, jaggedly shorn at the top: this "headless" tomb was expanded into the headless horseman tale. While it is commonly believed that the unusual marker was actually created to represent a shattered and broken life: O'Hara gambled away the family fortune, and died a broken man, this type of column is a common feature. It is either used to symbolise someone whose life ended prematurely, or is a masonic symbol. (en)
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