Midwives: Celebrating the lives and work of Ireland’s ‘women of the knee’

Castlebar exhibition features a 124-year-old midwifery bag used to give medical aid to Volunteers during the 1916 Rising

Original framed photograph of Mary Ann Fanning: A familiar and welcome figure, she could be seen travelling with her midwifery bag in the basket on her bicycle, in all sorts of weather. Photograph: Mary Ann Fanning Collection
Original framed photograph of Mary Ann Fanning: A familiar and welcome figure, she could be seen travelling with her midwifery bag in the basket on her bicycle, in all sorts of weather. Photograph: Mary Ann Fanning Collection

Mary Anne Fanning worked as a district midwife and nurse in Co Kerry and later in Garristown, Co Dublin, and used the contents of her now 124-year-old leather midwifery bag to give medical aid to Volunteers during the 1916 Rising.

The bag is among the artefacts collected for a new exhibition celebrating the contributions of Irish community midwives in the early 20th century, which opened recently at the National Museum of Ireland – Country Life which is in Castlebar, Co Mayo.

Known as a familiar and welcome figure in her district, Fanning could be seen travelling with her midwifery bag in the basket on her bicycle in all sorts of weather. Sometimes her job kept her away from her own family for days and nights at a time. Later in her 48-year-long career, she got from one place to another by driving a Model-T Ford car.

Due to the importance of her work, the issue of Fanning’s petrol permit was raised in the Dáil during the second World War during a time of shortages, and received a response from the then minister for supplies, Seán Lemass. Documents detailing this exchange also feature in the exhibition, alongside some of Fanning’s medical instruments, midwifery certificates, a writing bureau and a christening gown from 1902 still in use by her family.

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Fanning’s granddaughter, Pacelli Linscheid, expressed her pride at seeing her grandmother’s legacy honoured by the National Museum of Ireland.

“Her dedication to the community and to helping families in their most vulnerable moments is something that has inspired generations of our family,” Linscheid says.

The exhibition also features the stories of several other midwives and nurses from Clare, Cork, Galway, Mayo, Tipperary and Wicklow, researched by 22 groups in the Irish Community Archive Network (iCan).

Midwifery bag dating from 1898, leather with metal handle and clasp. Photograph: Mary Ann Fanning Collection
Midwifery bag dating from 1898, leather with metal handle and clasp. Photograph: Mary Ann Fanning Collection

Drawing on her own personal experience and family history, Emma Laffey, a healthcare assistant at the maternity unit in Portiuncula University Hospital in Ballinasloe, Co Galway, co-curated the exhibition, which is free to visit and will remain open until March 8th, 2025.

For Laffey, who also works as a community volunteer at the Skehana and District Heritage Group, her dedication to preserving the memory of local midwives became a passion project after the discovery of her great-grandmother, Sarah McBride’s, death certificate.

“On the certificate, it said that she had suffered from cardiac arrest due to maternal exhaustion,” Laffey says. This information, coupled with Laffey’s own background in maternity care was the catalyst for her community-based research.

“Understanding the women who guided mothers through that time was so fascinating to me… These women overcame so many barriers to get educated and work for themselves.”

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Laffey points out that midwifery was one of the few professions a woman could continue after marriage at that time. “They were pillars of the community, and I am delighted they are being given the recognition they deserve,” she says.

The inspiration for this exhibition stems from Laffey’s award-winning book, An Bhean Ghlúine, which is the Irish translation of “woman of the knee”, a phrase commonly used to describe local community midwives during the 19th and 20th century.

Mary Anne Fanning in later life, with her grandson John Fanning, an only child who passed away at just 38.
Mary Anne Fanning in later life, with her grandson John Fanning, an only child who passed away at just 38.

Virginia Teehan, chief executive officer of the Heritage Council, which funded An Bhean Ghlúine’s publication, says: “Laffey’s book and this exhibition remind us of the importance of local midwives in providing culturally sensitive, community-based care, addressing unique challenges such as geographic isolation, limited access to medical facilities and the need for personalised care.

“Acknowledging these heroines recognises their self-sufficiency and preserves traditional healthcare knowledge within localities.”

Featuring several interactive elements such as audio recordings and touchscreen stories, the exhibition also encourages members of the public to contribute their own memories through a Midwives’ Memory Book. Through this moment of collective reflection within the exhibit, Laffey hopes to gain further insights into the role of midwifery in Irish communities.

Co-curator and National Museum of Ireland director of collections and access Éimear O’Connor imagines this opportunity for shared learning as effectively “taking the walls of the museum down” and starting a conversation among the local community.

Mary Anne Fanning: Remembering Our Community Midwives is free to visit at the National Museum of Ireland, at Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co Mayo, until March 8th, 2025

Pacelli Linscheid (Mary Anne Fanning's granddaughter), Éimear O’Connor (National Museum of Ireland) and Emma Laffey (Skehana & District Heritage Group): Mary Anne Fanning's story highlights and celebrates the often-unsung contributions of community midwives to maternity care in Ireland in the early 20th century. Photograph: Brian Farrell
Pacelli Linscheid (Mary Anne Fanning's granddaughter), Éimear O’Connor (National Museum of Ireland) and Emma Laffey (Skehana & District Heritage Group): Mary Anne Fanning's story highlights and celebrates the often-unsung contributions of community midwives to maternity care in Ireland in the early 20th century. Photograph: Brian Farrell