The Irish Potato Famine
Mon 6:57 pm +00:00, 9 Jun 2025 2
CONCEALING A GENOCIDE
The Pakenham-Mahon Big House in Strokestown, Co. Roscommon is Ireland’s “Famine Museum.”
© Chris Fogarty 2025
Ireland’s “Famine Museum” is the HQ of those concealing the 1845-1850 Holocaust by trying to revive the lie of “potato famine.” Tourists seeking to learn which British regiment starved their relatives, do not get answers. Instead, they are directed to admire the opulence of the residence and its furnishings. They are told that the Pakenham-Mahons and Ireland’s other landlords were Irish. The museum’s narrative is (at least was) expressed in a mural in the house beside its admission booth. It depicts what seems to be an Asian farm of field workers in conical hats. Its accompanying text claims that Ireland is one of a few nations that has committed national suicide by growing only one failure-prone crop.
The Packenham-Mahon estate of Strokestown and district comprised 26,980 acres, one of three Pakenham estates in Ireland. General Edward Pakenham, in January 1815, led British forces attacking America at the Battle of New Orleans where he was killed. A young subordinate survived New Orleans and went on to become General Sir Edward Blakeney, Britain’s Commandcr-in-Chief of its 1 845-1850 Holocaust of Ireland. (Mahon is an Irish name, but records show that the ancestor of the Strokestown Mahons came to Ireland with Cromwell.)……
Link to Rest of the Story:-
https://mega.nz/file/QRQS0QiB#RBYovtH2E0SG_1AtfifBMsjQ5gFT5Sv7gO98qjfKCJc













It’s a grim tale
Lord Longford of the Myra Hindley psyop fame was a Pakenham
“A member of an old, landed Anglo-Irish family, the Pakenhams (who became Earls of Longford), he was one of the few aristocratic hereditary peers ever to serve in a senior capacity within a Labour government”
and
In 1945 “he was created Baron Pakenham, of Cowley in the City of Oxford, in the Peerage of the United Kingdom,[16] by the Labour government of Clement Attlee, and took his seat in the House of Lords as one of the few Labour peers. He was immediately appointed a Lord-in-waiting by Attlee”
and
“In 1961, Pakenham inherited from his brother the earldom of Longford in the Peerage of Ireland and from then onward was generally known to the public as Lord Longford”
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Pakenham%2C_7th_Earl_of_Longford
Thanks for the interesting information and the link Pete. Its a amazing how the same families pop up again and again through history!