Bishop's House items sold to help settle abuse claims
In recent years the diocese was sued by a number of people who were sexually abused as children by Dromore clergymen, including the late Fr Malachy Finegan.
The Bishop's House, set in grounds off Newry's Armagh Road, was earmarked in 2023 as being among the diocesan assets that could be sold to meet its liabilities.
In a statement, the diocese said it was also selling the contents of the house to fund "various safeguarding matters, including redress for victims and survivors of abuse".
Finegan, who died in 2002, was headmaster of the neighbouring St Colman's College boys' school and also served as parish priest in Clonduff, County Down.
Some of his victims received six-figure sums in compensation after initiating legal action against the Diocese of Dromore, including one man who secured £400,000.
A few months after that 2023 settlement, the diocese identified assets it could sell "in order to meet our existing and ongoing safeguarding responsibilities".
These included the Bishop's House and adjacent lands close to St Colman's College.
This week hundreds of items from inside the listed building, including ornate furniture, paintings and ornaments, went under the hammer.
The auction attracted interest from several hundred bidders from around the world, according to Victor Mee Auctions, the County Cavan firm which handled the sale.
Among the more significant items was a marble-topped table, originally from Tandragee Castle, which was bought by a priest in a 1950s dispersal sale.
The table had a top estimate of €8,000 (£6,700), but on Wednesday it sold for €33,600 (£28,000).
"We knew it was going to do a lot better than the estimate, but it probably went higher than we thought," auctioneer Brian Mee told BBC News NI.
He could not reveal the buyer's identity but said the transaction meant the table would stay on the island of Ireland.
"It's nice that it's staying, because it is a piece of Irish history," he added.
At the weekend the Bishop's House was opened to the public so bidders could view its contents.
Mr Mee estimated about 700 people visited the house over three open days, and a similar number of online bidders took part in the first auction on Wednesday.
He added there was plenty of interest from the USA, Canada, Australia, Italy, the UK and across Ireland.
Although there were more than 1,000 lots in the Bishop's House auction catalogue, many of them were not owned by the Diocese of Dromore.
About half were from other estates, including some of the quirkier items such as antique guns and taxidermy animals.
Asked if the Bishop's House has now been sold, the diocese replied: "The auction is taking place while the process for the sale of the house and lands is ongoing."
The building is the former residence of previous Dromore bishops.
The last man to hold that post was Bishop John McAreavey, who resigned seven years ago following criticism of how he dealt with Fr Finegan.
Bishop McAreavey was not replaced when he stepped down in 2018 - instead his duties were taken on by apostolic administrators appointed by Pope Francis.
Dromore's current apostolic administrator is the leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland, Archbishop of Armagh Eamon Martin.
In a letter to people in the Diocese of Dromore in November 2023, Archbishop Martin announced a proposal to sell the Bishop's House and nearby lands.
At the time, he said some abuse survivors had taken compensation cases against the diocese and he was "conscious that remaining diocesan funds are limited".
In the letter, Archbishop Martin repeated his apology "for the hurt and damage" caused to victims and survivors of clerical abuse, describing it as a "terrible wrong".
He said he wanted to tell parishioners how the diocese was going to find the resources needed to meet its ongoing responsibilities "for the legacy of abuse and for keeping all children and vulnerable people safe now and in the future in all Church activities".
However, one of Finegan's victims told BBC News NI he is concerned about how local parishioners will respond to the sell-off of Church property.
Tony Gribbon leads the Dromore Group, which represents 15 men who were abused as children by clergy in the diocese.
He said a damaging narrative was emerging that the diocese felt like it had to sell off "the family silver to pay off childhood sex abuse survivors".
"We're frightened that there could be a public reaction if the Church continues to link redress to the selling off of key Church assets," Mr Gribben said.
His group is also seeking reassurances from the diocese about what will happen to the archives of former Dromore bishops after the sale.
The campaigner added the auctioned items may appear "glamourous" to some bidders but for Dromore survivors they will be forever "tainted" by association with abuse.
Fr Malachy Finegan was recently described by lawyers representing his victims as "one of Ireland's most prolific child abusers".
The priest was accused of abusing several boys at St Colman's College where he taught from 1967 to 1976, eventually becoming its headmaster.
After leaving the school, he was appointed parish priest of Clonduff, where he was also accused of a long campaign of child sexual abuse.
But during his lifetime he was never prosecuted or questioned by police about the allegations against him.
Proposals to demolish parochial house of accused priest
Finegan abuse survivor in £400,000 settlement
Ex-pupil awarded £30k damages over alleged abuse
Man abused by priest gets six-figure settlement

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Boston Globe
2 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Derk Sauer, champion of a free press in a new Russia, dies at 72
Mr. Sauer, a lifelong socialist, continued to promote these freedoms after President Vladimir Putin came to power in 1999 and began dismantling Russia's nascent democracy. Advertisement 'He kept on defending journalism until his very last breath,' Pjotr Sauer, who writes for The Guardian, said in a phone interview Friday. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Mr. Sauer was fatally wounded in a 'freak accident' while sailing with his wife, Ellen Verbeek, his son said. Mr. Sauer was under the deck when the boat hit an underwater rock, causing him to fall from a set of stairs and land on his back, his son said. Mr. Sauer underwent surgery at a hospital in Athens before being transferred to a hospital in Amsterdam, where he spent 10 days, Pjotr Sauer said. After leaving the hospital in Amsterdam, Mr. Sauer spent his final days at a family home in Zeeland with his wife and sons. Mr. Sauer's ability to combine high-quality journalism with business acumen made him a wealthy man. Advertisement He introduced glossy magazines to Russia, beginning with a highly successful local edition of Cosmopolitan. After decades of shortages and travel restrictions, Russians in the 1990s flocked to these aspirational titles for a taste of Western pop culture and consumerism. Mr. Sauer's business newspaper, Vedomosti , set the standard in Russia for reporting on the high-wire drama of the country's booming but corrupt capitalist economy. His English-language newspaper, The Moscow Times, tapped into Russia's small but wealthy new community of expatriates. The paper became a training ground for some of the most prominent Russia experts in Western media, including Ellen Barry of The New York Times and David Filipov, a former Moscow bureau chief for The Boston Globe and The Washington Post. 'He brought Russia something they'd never seen, which was quality Western journalism,' Pjotr Sauer said. Derk Erik Sauer was born on Oct. 31, 1952, into a well-off Amsterdam family. His father, Hendrik Sauer, ran a large pension fund, and his mother, Evelien Tazelaar, was a stay-at-home parent. In media interviews, Derk Sauer said that he had rebelled against the social conventions imposed by his father, whom he described as a 'respectable man, incorruptible, exceptionally conscientious.' As a teenager, he joined the Netherlands' small communist party and protested against the war in Vietnam. 'I was a 14-year-old Maoist,' Mr. Sauer said in an interview with The Moscow Times in 2017. After graduating from high school, Mr. Sauer decided not to follow his two brothers to university. Instead, he reported for left-wing publications and campaigned for progressive causes. He briefly helped smuggle weapons for the Irish Republication Army, the paramilitary group that fought for the Irish republican cause in Northern Ireland. Advertisement His antiestablishment activities made him a target of surveillance by Dutch intelligence services for nearly 20 years, Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad reported in 2023. Mr. Sauer possessed unusually sharp business skills for a professed revolutionary. In the 1980s, he turned the Dutch magazine he was editing, Nieuwe Revu, into a household name with a business strategy that he described as 'sex, news and rock 'n' roll.' That reputation led to a job with the Dutch publishing house VNU, which in 1989 tapped him to start a glossy magazine in the Soviet Union. As the country's leader, Mikhail Gorbachev was relaxing the state's media monopoly under wide-ranging reforms that ended up collapsing the communist state. The initial Russian magazine venture did not flourish. When VNU called him home in the early '90s, Sauer and his business partner, Annemarie van Gaal, decided to stay. They started a new media company, Independent Media. Their big break came a few years later, when Hearst Magazines International gave them the license to publish Cosmopolitan in Russia. It took persistence to convince Hearst, a conservative American media conglomerate, to hand over its flagship title to 'two Dutch people without a headquarters or any experience abroad,' van Gaal said in a phone interview. Cosmopolitan became a major financial success in Russia, enabling van Gaal and Mr. Sauer to acquire local licenses for other publications, including Playboy, Good Housekeeping and Marie Claire. The revenue from these titles helped Mr. Sauer to finance journalism projects in Russia that focused more on public-service reporting. According to his associates, Mr. Sauer strongly believed in developing the skills of local journalists. He hoped to build in Russia an independent and financially successful media industry that would hold power to account, as it did in the Netherlands. Advertisement Mr. Sauer offered his employees business courses in publishing and promoted a Master of Business Administration course, said Elizaveta Osetinskaya, a prominent Russian business journalist who worked with Mr. Sauer at Vedomosti. 'It was this combination of journalism and business that really drew me in,' she said in a phone interview Friday. 'I was thinking, 'One day I will be like Derk.'' In 2014, Mr. Sauer took charge of another Russian business publication, RBC, just as Putin annexed Crimea and steered Russia decisively away from Western-style democracy. Mr. Sauer brought in experienced reporters and editors, including Osetinskaya, and tasked them with turning RBC into a Western-style financial daily. By 2016, the jig was up. Under pressure from the government, the paper's oligarch owner fired an RBC editor. The rest of the editorial team resigned in protest, and Mr. Sauer left soon after. 'Derk tried to sort it out, to protect his team and sail through the storm,' Osetinskaya said. 'But by then the country had changed. There was too much pressure.' After Putin invaded Ukraine, Mr. Sauer became one of the most prominent champions of independent Russian journalists who had fled the country to escape repression. He used his connections and influence in the Netherlands to help Russia's main independent news channel, TV Rain, relocate to Amsterdam in 2023. 'Right now, it's blacker than black,' Mr. Sauer told Dutch television program Buitenhof after the death of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny in prison last year. 'The rudeness, the cruelty, I just don't know what to do anymore,' he said. 'The repression and the fear are enormous.' Advertisement In addition to his wife and son, Mr. Sauer is survived by two other sons, Tom and Berend, and two granddaughters. This article originally appeared in


Boston Globe
14 hours ago
- Boston Globe
Today in History: Deadly Walmart shooting in El Paso
Advertisement In 1775, 250 years ago, General George Washington convened a war council with his top generals in Cambridge. Washington and the others were stunned to learn how desperate the rebel forces were for gunpowder. He had thought they had 450 or so casks; there were only about 38. 'The General was so struck, that he did not utter a word for half an hour,' General John Sullivan wrote to the New Hampshire Committee of Safety. In 1852, in America's first intercollegiate sporting event, Harvard rowed past Yale to win the first Harvard-Yale Regatta. In 1916, Irish-born British diplomat Roger Casement, a strong advocate of independence for Ireland, was hanged for treason. In 1936, Jesse Owens of the United States won the first of his four gold medals at the Berlin Olympics as he took the 100-meter sprint. Advertisement In 1972, the U.S. Senate ratified the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union. In 1977, the Tandy Corporation introduced the TRS-80, one of the first widely-available home computers. In 1981, U.S. air traffic controllers went on strike, seeking pay and workplace improvements (two days later, President Ronald Reagan fired the 11,345 striking union members and barred them from federal employment). In 2004, the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty opened to visitors for the first time since the 9/11 attacks. In 2018, Las Vegas police said they were closing their investigation into the Oct. 1, 2017, shooting that left 58 people dead at a country music festival without a definitive answer for why Stephen Paddock unleashed gunfire from a hotel suite onto the concert crowd. In 2019, a gunman opened fire at a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas, resulting in the deaths of 23 people; after surrendering, the gunman told detectives he targeted 'Mexicans' and had outlined the plot in a screed published online shortly before the attack. In 2021, New York's state attorney general said an investigation into Gov. Andrew Cuomo found that he had sexually harassed multiple current and former state government employees; the report brought increased pressure on Cuomo to resign, including pressure from President Joe Biden and other Democrats.


Boston Globe
3 days ago
- Boston Globe
Rose Leiman Goldemberg, 97, dies; her ‘Burning Bed' was a TV benchmark
Ms. Goldemberg was working as a playwright in the mid-1970s when she sent a few story outlines to an unusually receptive television producer. One of them, a drama about immigrants set on the Lower East Side of Manhattan in 1910, caught his interest. It became a television movie, 'The Land of Hope' (a title Ms. Goldemberg hated), which aired on CBS in 1976. It centered on a Jewish family and their Irish and Italian neighbors. There were labor organizers, gangsters, and musicians, and a rich uncle who wanted to adopt a child to say Kaddish for him when the time came. Such an ethnic stew was a stretch for the network, and critics loved it. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up 'A thoroughly charming surprise,' John O'Connor wrote in his review for The New York Times. Advertisement As a pilot for a series, 'The Land of Hope' went nowhere, but it made Ms. Goldemberg's reputation, and she began receiving stories to be turned into scripts. 'Where did you spring from?' one network executive asked her, she recalled in a 2011 interview for the nonprofit organization New York Women in Film & Television. 'As though I were a mushroom.' It was Arnold Shapiro, the veteran producer, writer and director behind 'Scared Straight!,' a well-received TV documentary about teenage delinquents being brought into contact with prison inmates, who sent Ms. Goldemberg 'The Burning Bed,' a 1980 book by The New Yorker writer Faith McNulty about the case of Francine Hughes. Advertisement Hughes's story was horrific. For 13 years, she had been terrorized by her alcoholic husband. One day in March 1977, after a brutal beating, she called the police in their Michigan town. Two officers responded and then left, saying there was nothing they could do because they hadn't witnessed the attacks. That night, the beating resumed, and Hughes's husband raped her. When he fell asleep, she doused the bed with gasoline, lit a match, and set the bed on fire. Then she put her children in the car and drove to the county jail to report what she had done. Her husband died that night, and Francine Hughes was charged with first-degree murder. Nine months later, a jury pronounced her not guilty by reason of temporary insanity. The verdict made national headlines. Fawcett, the pinup star of 'Charlie's Angels,' the frothy crime series, was already attached to the project; she had shown her dramatic chops in 'Extremities,' an off-Broadway production about a woman who exacts revenge on her rapist, and wanted to continue working in that vein. Yet the project was initially turned down by all three networks. When it was resurrected, by NBC, in one of those complicated scenarios particular to Hollywood, Shapiro was somehow left out of the production. The movie aired in October 1984, to mostly critical acclaim. (Paul Le Mat played the husband.) It was seen by tens of millions of viewers, and NBC's ratings soared, pulling the network out of third place and putting it on top for the first time in a decade. Fawcett, Ms. Goldemberg, the producers, and even the makeup artist were nominated for Emmy Awards, and the movie set off a national conversation about domestic abuse. Women's shelters, a rarity in those days, began opening all over the country; the film was shown in men's prisons; and Ms. Goldemberg was often asked to speak to women's groups. Advertisement Inevitably, as she recalled in 2011, 'someone would say, 'I couldn't talk about my own abuse until I saw the film.'' She added: 'It wasn't because of me. It was a wonderful performance by Farrah, and the timing was right. It was just a remarkable confluence of the right things happening at the right time.' Still, Ms. Goldemberg began fielding entreaties from other actresses who wanted her to write star vehicles for them, projects akin to 'The Burning Bed.' She did so for one of Fawcett's fellow angels, Jaclyn Smith, cowriting the TV movie 'Florence Nightingale' for her. Broadcast in April 1985, it did not have the same impact as 'The Burning Bed'; most critics found it soapy and forgettable. A Lucille Ball vehicle fared much better. Ball wanted a script about homelessness, and when she and Ms. Goldemberg met at her Beverly Hills house, Ball laid out her terms: She wanted to play a character with some of the personality traits of her grandmother, and named for her. Ms. Goldemberg came up with 'Stone Pillow,' a television film about a homeless woman named Florabelle. In his Times review, under the headline 'Lucille Ball Plays a Bag Lady on CBS,' O'Connor called the movie 'a carefully contrived concoction' but praised Ball 'as wily and irresistible as ever.' Advertisement Rose Marion Leiman was born on May 17, 1928, on Staten Island, N.Y. Her mother, Esther (Friedman) Leiman, oversaw the home until World War II, when she became an executive secretary at Bank of America; her father, Louis Leiman, owned a chain of dry-cleaning stores in New Jersey. Rose earned a bachelor's degree in 1949 from Brooklyn College, where she had enrolled at 16, and a Master of Arts in English from Ohio State University. She married Raymond Schiller, a composer who followed her from Brooklyn College to Ohio State, in 1949; he later became a computer systems designer. They divorced in 1968. Her marriage, in 1969, to Robert Goldemberg, a cosmetic chemist, ended in divorce in 1989. Her first television-related job was at TV Guide in the 1950s, writing reviews of shows airing on what was then a new medium. She eventually began writing plays. Ms. Goldemberg is survived by a son, Leiman Schiller, and three stepchildren, David Goldemberg, Kathy Holmes, and Sharanne Goldemberg. This article originally appeared in