Background
Micí Mac Gabhann was born "in a little thatched cottage" near the Atlantic Ocean in Derryconnor Townland on 22nd November,1865.
Micí Mac Gabhann was born "in a little thatched cottage" near the Atlantic Ocean in Derryconnor Townland on 22nd November,1865.
He is best known for his posthumously published emigration memoir Rotha Mór an tSaoil (1959). Despite spending some time attending the district school at Magheraroarty, Mac Gabhann lamented that he never knew enough English to understand the teacher. He later attributed his education to local resident Sean Johnny, who had attended a hedge school as a youth and who taught Mac Gabhann and other local boys according to the same method.
The Hiring Fairs
In May 1874, the Mac Gabhann family had become so destitute that Bridget brought her 8-year old son to a hiring fair in Letterkenny.
There, wealthy farmers and landowners "were looking for boys that would herd and give a bit of service around and for bigger boys that would help with the agricultural work." After bargaining through an interpreter, a landowner from Glenveagh bought Micí until the following November in return for the sum of £1 paid to his mother. As he said a brief and painful farewell to her, Micí noticed that his mother, "was tightening up her face as though a dagger was going through her heart."
During his months herding cattle near Glenveagh, Mac Gabhann befriended many local residents, learned a considerable amount of English, and listened to stories about the mass evictions decreed in 1861 by Anglo-Irish landowner Captain John George Adair.
In November 1874, he completed his indenture and returned home. In May 1875, Micí and his mother returned to the Letterkenny hiring fair.
After spending the night in a ceilidh house and hearing a story he would always remember, Micí was hired out to an Ulster Scots farmer from Drumoghill, where he lived until November.
A bronze sculpture, The Hiring Fair, by artist Maurice Harron is inspired in part by the book In 2002, his "Saint Patrick’s Day in the Klondike" was read in Irish, Welsh, and English at Cardiff, for the Saint Patrick’s Day Ceremony of Remembrance and Reflection, at the Wales National Great Famine Memorial, Cathays Cemetery. A culture night was held at his house, near Magheraroarty, in September 2013.