Antique veterinary objects go on display in Mayo

Veterinarian anaesthetic mask. Source: National Museum of Ireland
Veterinarian anaesthetic mask. Source: National Museum of Ireland

A unique display of antique veterinary objects has gone on display at the National Museum of Ireland in Turlough Park, Castlebar, Co. Mayo.

In the early 2000s, the National Museum of Ireland and the veterinary department of Mayo County Council formed a partnership to establish a collection of veterinary objects in the Irish Folklife Collection.

Cathal Walsh was veterinary officer with the council from 1991 until his retirement in 2005.

During his time working in Mayo, he and his colleagues in the vet department, Cathy Waddell and Cathy Gallagher, established a collection of antique objects dealing with animal husbandry and veterinary science.

Those objects were donated to the National Museum, and a selection are now on display.

Work of vets

The display provides visitors with a closer look at the work of vets in Ireland in times gone by.

The objects on display include a trephine, which was used to make circular openings in the lower part of a horse’s head to enable the sinuses to be flushed of pus.

Trephine used to make a circular opening in the lower part of a horse’s head to enable the sinuses to be flushed of pus. Source: National Museum of Ireland
Trephine used to make a circular opening in the lower part of a horse’s head to enable the sinuses to be flushed of pus. Source: National Museum of Ireland

Other items include an anaesthetic mask used on animals for the administration of chloroform prior to surgery, and a bone saw.

Noel Campbell, assistant keeper at the National Museum of Ireland at Turlough Park, said this is a "fascinating collection of objects, and we are delighted to exhibit a selection".

"We are grateful to the members of the veterinary department of Mayo County Council for establishing the collection which today presents us with some insight into the day-to-day practices and challenges of vets working across Ireland down through the last century," Campbell added.

To mark the opening of the new exhibition, the National Museum is hosting a talk with Dr. Michael Doherty at 3:00p.m on Saturday, February 7.

The talk will explore the history of animal care in Ireland and draw on Dr. Doherty’s recent research to present ‘The Folklore of Cattle and Sheep through an Ethnoveterinary Lens’.

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