In this, the one thousandth Eye on the Past, I want to take time out
to reflect on the scenes behind the series which started out in September
1992. It has been a journey of
exploration in many ways, one in which I have been helped along the way by many
kind and generous folk. To the knowledge
I have acquired over years spent researching the history of Athy has now been
added an enormous amount of local information gleaned from interviews held and
letters received over the past 19 years.
Thanks to modern technology I’m as likely to get a response from
Australia or America as I am from Kildare County to any of the articles
appearing in the Kildare Nationalist.
There is an ever growing interest in local history and family
history, something to which I alluded in my first article. My reference then to the ‘growing interest in local history and the awakening of interest in our
own place amongst school children’ seems ever more true today. I committed myself in that first article to deal
each week ‘with a topic of interest from
the history of South Kildare’ and to ‘delve
into the rich vein of local history which remains to be discovered and related
in future articles.’
Not everyone has agreed with what I have written. Sometimes errors appear, generally of a minor
nature, but I still remember the occasion an Athy woman, now long dead, tackled
me over a piece I had written about the location of the town’s Quaker Meeting
House. I had identified the building’s
precise site following research in the Valuation Office Dublin and after
examining Clarges Greene’s map of Athy in 1825.
The good lady would not accept that the Meeting House which gave its
name to Meeting Lane was where I claimed it to be because her mother had once
told her it was somewhere else. I was
wrong and nothing I could say or write on the subject was likely to change her
mind. It showed how errors can so easily
become part of a town’s story and over time and with retelling become a ‘historical’ fact.
I can recall only two occasions on which my request for an interview
were refused. Both parties, elderly at
the time, are now dead. The first
refusal stemmed from a lack of desire to discuss what my potential interviewee
described as ‘those bad times’. I understood his reasons, for over the years
I have heard many times of the deprivation and suffering which so many local persons
had experienced in their lives. Because
of this I have had to omit many interesting details and stories from articles
written in order to protect the interests of my interviewees. There has never been any question of causing
hurt or embarrassment to any of the good people who shared past experiences
with me. They trusted me with
information which at times was very personal and which given to me in
confidence has always been respected.
The second occasion on which I was refused an interview was when my
repeated requests through family members for an interview were refused on the
grounds that something I had written in a previous article was deemed to be
somewhat disparaging of another family.
Unfortunately the lady in question was not to know that the story which
she found objectionable was included in the article with the approval and
knowledge of my interviewee.
The co-operation given to me freely and generously by members of our
local community has been quite extraordinary.
I can recall with enormous satisfaction how the local Freemasons many
years ago allowed me access to their records.
The article I subsequently wrote included some details which had never
before appeared in public, yet did not in any way compromise any member of that
society. The editor of another newspaper
phoned me after the article appeared asking me in a somewhat forceful manner to
disclose more information than that contained in my article. The disappointed editor did not get his
story.
Many things have changed in Athy since 1992. Undoubtedly there is greater interest than
ever before in the history of our ancient town and greater appreciation and
understanding of what has gone before. I
am particularly pleased that hitherto forgotten or overlooked elements of the
town’s history such as World War I, the Great Famine and the 1798 Rebellion
have now become not only familiar but also merited remembrance celebrations in
recent years. The local men and women
involved in the Irish War of Independence were also remembered and honoured on
the 90th anniversary of the Easter Rebellion. Indeed the opening of the local Heritage
Centre in 1998 was another positive indication of the growing awareness of
Athy’s place in the history of this country.
The series to date spawned three books, all bearing the title ‘Eye on Athy’s Past’. The articles which have so far appeared in
book form account for only the first 349 articles written, so beware, when the
day job goes I will have plenty of material to fall back on for another few
books.
I am very grateful to the many people who have over the years helped
me to bring this series on the history of Athy and district and its people to
the public. My thanks to the Kildare
Nationalist and to its current editor Barbara Sheridan who asked me almost two
decades ago to pen a few lines each week for a local history article.
My thanks also to my Secretary Eithne Wall who has typed more words
about the history of Athy than anyone else on this planet and to my bookkeeper
Noreen Day whose proof reading has saved me from many embarrassing mistakes
over the last 19 years.
There is now a growing pride in our place, noticeable in Athy people
who not only share experiences going back several decades, but also share knowledge
of a common past which binds them as members of the local community. It is a pleasure to be a part of that
emerging awareness and understanding of what we are.
No comments:
Post a Comment