9-9-1856 Clonmel Chronicle. On the 13th September 1854, an inquest was held before Thomas O'Meara, Esq. Coroner for the district of Tipperary, on the body of a man named Thomas Dwyer, of Refadda, who died in consequence of wounds received on the right side of the head, and which fractured his skull, on the 2nd of the same month, at Garryshane, in the south riding of this county. From the evidence adduced at the inquest, it appeared that the deceased was returning home after being paid some money, he was overtaken by two men named Thomas Dwyer, of Donaskea, and William Loughnane, alias Davern. They induced the unfortunate man to accompany them down a bye-road, and when he was next seen the men had fled, and Dwyer was found lying by the side of the road, bleeding profusely. The Coroner's jury returned as their verdict that "the deceased man received several blows of stones or other blunt instruments, of which injuries he lingered until he languished and died on Saturday, 9th Sept, 1854, and that said injuries were wilfully and maliciously inflicted by Thomas Dwyer, of Donaskea, aided and abetted by William Loughnane." As Sub-Constable John F. Noble, of the constabulary depot, Phoenix Park, and who was stationed in 1854 in the neighbourhood where the above murder was committed, was passing along the quays of Dublin he perceived a man whom he instantly recognised as the Thomas Dwyer named in the Coroner's warrant. The man was arrested, and has since been committed by Major Brownrigg, Inspector General of Prisons, to Clonmel gaol, where he now awaits his trial at the Spring assizes of 1857.