When I wrote some weeks ago inviting the readers to suggest 25
objects through which the history of Athy could be explained I little expected
the arguments it would raise. Using the
dictionary definition of an object as ‘a
material thing that can be seen or touched’ I had included in my possible
25 objects local buildings such as the Town Hall and Whites Castle and other
historically important local buildings.
One of my correspondents felt that this was inappropriate on the grounds
that the objects chosen should be portable and capable of being displayed in
our local Heritage Centre.
Another reader, unconscientiously perhaps, lent weight to that
argument when she sent me a copy of a small booklet produced by Cornwall’s
Museum Development Team. It was called ‘A History of Cornwall in 100 Objects’,
being an exploration of Cornwall’s heritage through objects housed in the
county’s museums, heritage sites, art galleries and historic houses. No buildings were included amongst the 100 Cornish
objects, although a mine engine from Levant Mine near Pendeer was gazetted as
the oldest mine engine in existence.
To highlight the history of Athy in 25 portable objects makes my
task extremely difficult as I must find replacements for such history
highlighting elements such as the local castles of Woodstock and Whites.
The story of the pre settlement years of the future South Kildare
area when it was a 2nd century battlefield for the warring
Munstermen and the men of Leinster must inevitably be told by reference to the
ancient swords found in the bed of the River Barrow during the Barrow Drainage
Scheme of the 1920s. The items found are
in the National Museum in Dublin.
Another 800 years or so were to pass before there was any further
reference in Irish history to the South Kildare area and again it was the warring
factions of Munster and Leinster which came to be recorded. The Munster men returning from the Battle of
Clontarf fell foul of the Leinster men and the waters of the River Barrow flowed
crimson with the blood of wounded warriors.
The artefacts dredged from the river bed almost 90 years ago probably
bear witness to that conflict and bring us to the founding and early
development of the town we call Athy.
As I embark on the town’s history trail which starts at the end of
the 12th century I find it difficult to identify an object which can
be verifiably associated with the town’s foundation. We know that the Anglo Norman village of Athy
was the location of two monasteries very soon after the first settlers came
here. The Dominicans arrived in 1257,
some years after the founding of the Monastery of St. Thomas and the Hospital
of St. Johns. It was this latter
religious settlement, established near to the first castle structure erected at
Woodstock, which gave its name in later years to St. John’s Lane and nearby St.
John’s Street. There is in the local
Heritage Centre a carved head of a monk discovered more than 100 years ago in
the grounds of St. John’s House which adjoins St. John’s Cemetery. Was this carving a relic of the monastic
settlement of St. Thomas which was disbanded even before the Reformation closed
the nearby Friary of St. Dominic’s. I
cannot be sure of this but even if it is not contemporary with the Monastery of
St. Thomas, the rough carving is sufficiently associated with that ancient site
to warrant inclusion as our third object.
To illustrate the Confederate Wars of the 1640s we have the
fireplace pieces taken from Woodstock Castle and now presently in the local Heritage
Centre. The castle, the walls of which
are still standing, was not the first fortified building erected on the site by
the Anglo Norman settlements. It was
more than likely preceded by a wooden structure which served as a defensive
fortress against the marauding Irish who constantly attacked the settlement
during the 13th and 14th centuries. The present stone building is believed to be
of the 14th century and figured prominently in the Confederate Wars,
as did the nearby Whites Castle.
The 5th object to be chosen must be the 8 page pamphlet
printed in London in 1641 with the title ‘Treason
in Ireland’, with several subtitles including ‘With a plot discovered at Athigh’.
It gives an account of Ireland’s involvement in the English Civil War
and is particularly important for the pictorial depiction of the mid 17th
century town shown surrounded by town walls.
The pamphlet was printed for Mr. Hierone ‘Minister of God’s Word at Athigh in Ireland’.
TO BE CONTINUED ..............................
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