Edmund Lenihan, also known as Eddie Lenihan, is an Irish author, storyteller, lecturer and broadcaster. He is one of the few practising seanchaithe remaining in Ireland. He has been called "one of the greatest of Irish story-tellers" and "a national treasure".
In the 2004 reprint of his 2003 book, Meeting the Other Crowd: The Fairy Stories of Hidden Ireland Mr. Lenihan explained his continuing dismay at the rapid loss of Irish cultural heritage and artefacts resulting from industrialisation of rural Ireland. He described his motivation to preserve hill forts, rural dwellings and native plants in the context of general preservation of folkways. He also briefly described how his conservation ethics had come to disagreement with the centralised progressive goals of modernistplanners. This had come to international attention in 1999 when Lenihan had stood up to road builders in County Clare who had wanted to cut down a special whitethorntree. In local tradition, this specific tree was believed to serve as the meeting place for the fairies of Munster whenever they prepared to ride against the fairies of Connacht. His activism and protests had made international headlines, and succeeded in altering the road project to spare the tree. Mr. Lenihan is not a violent activist. In the 1999 incident he used the tactic of mobilising public awareness by telling the old, traditional stories that mentioned the traditional significance of the tree, as well as the punishments that came to those who harmed the abodes of the fairies.
Lenihan's informants
In his cultural preservation efforts Mr. Lenihan relies heavily on local informants. These individuals are members of the rural community who are steeped in a tradition of oral history.
Jimmy Armstrong
Jimmy Armstrong was born in 1914 in Ballyrougham, the son of a land steward for a Protestantlandlord. His stories of the people, places and heroes of County Clare were incorporated into the 1982 book, Long Ago by Shannonside. His importance in Lenihan's estimation was "...remarkable, then equally significant is the fact that one such man's death can deprive an area of a large part of its oral tradition at one blow".
Books
Lenihan, Edmund. Long Ago by Shannonside Mercier Press. Cork; Dublin.
Lenihan, Edmund. A Loss of Face and Other Poems Inchicronan Press. Crusheen, Co. Clare. OCLC: 17518025
Lenihan, Edmund. The Portrait Gatherer Inchicronan Press. Crusheen, Co. Clare.
Lenihan, Edmund. Even Iron Men Die Inchicronan Press. Crusheen, Co. Clare. OCLC: 33124197
Lenihan, Edmund. Humorous Irish tales for children Mercier Press. Cork; Dublin.
Lenihan, Edmund. Wad of Notes Gem and Emerald Books.
Lenihan, Edmund. The Savage Pigs of Tulla Mercier Press. Cork; Dublin
Lenihan, Edmund. Rowdy Irish Tales for Children Mercier Press. Cork; Dublin.
Lenihan, Eddie; Carolyn Eve Green. Meeting the Other Crowd: The Fairy Stories of Hidden Ireland Gill & Macmillan. Dublin. Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam. New York.