Part of Athy’s developing cultural
heritage is the Heritage Centre located on the ground floor of the town’s 18th
century market house. Of course that
building is no longer used for the purposes for which it was erected in the
1720s for butter markets and egg markets, once the mainstay of the local
farming economy, have now long disappeared.
Today the supermarkets have taken the place of the enclosed and open
markets for which Athy was famous during the 18th and 19th
centuries. It was a time when the
Shambles leading off the market square was the only place licensed for the sale
of meat. Now the Shambles remains in
name only, the narrow passageway which led to the mill race running from the
eastern side of White’s Castle having long succumbed to development. The entrance to the Shambles is all that now
remains of Athy’s historic meat market.
The 1820s saw the abandonment of the
mill race which when filled in gave us, with the subsequent demolition of St.
Michael’s Church, a through road leading from Emily Row to Crom a Boo
bridge. The subsequent reshaping of the
town centre and the development of Athy’s quay walls brought a lot of commercial
activity with boats docking to unload their cargos at what was previously the slob
lands of the medieval town of Athy.
The old market house, now known as
the Town Hall, is quite a magnificent building, providing a picturesque backdrop
to Emily Square. The large open space backed
by the attractive early 18th century building provides Athy with a
very handsome town centre. There are
very few comparable town centres in any provincial town in Ireland and locating
the Heritage Centre in the Town Hall was, and continues to be, a wonderful
addition to the urban landscape of the town.
The Heritage Centre is but one of
several important elements of the cultural and social life of the town. Its importance to our understanding of Athy’s
past cannot be overestimated. Nor should
we ignore the relevance of seeing the cultural development of our community in
terms of what has occurred in the past.
We must learn to appreciate what has been done by those who have gone
before us and to understand that every generation makes a contribution to the
wellbeing of the community. The Heritage Centre stands as the focal point
for our looking back at past generations.
In doing so we can acknowledge and understand the contribution that those
generations have made and hopefully we will learn from what has gone before.
The Heritage centre which has been
operating for the past 14 years relies financially for the most part on public
contributions made through Athy Town Council and Kildare County Council. I saw public contributions because the
funding for both Councils comes from the public purse, largely by way of rates
and taxes. The other source of funding
for the Heritage Centre is from visitor’s admission fees and over the years we
have witnessed an increasing number of visitors, including many overseas
visitors, stopping off in Athy to visit the Heritage Centre.
In recent times a Friends of Athy
Heritage Centre group was set up to help raise funds to facilitate the purchase
of historical artefacts and material for the centre. The Friends group is quite separate from the
Heritage Centre itself and is specifically intended to help the centre to
enhance and add to the exhibitions relating to the history of Athy and district.
Over the years the Centre has been a
recipient of many generous donations, all of which have added to our knowledge
and understanding of the town’s history.
Sometimes it is necessary and indeed desirable to supplement that
material with items made available for purchase and hence the necessity for a
group such as the Friends of the Heritage Centre.
Membership of the Friends of the
Centre gives unlimited access to the Heritage Centre and each Friend receives a
quarterly newsletter outlining news of the Centre and events scheduled to take
place. Corporate as well as individual
membership is available and details can be had by contacting the Heritage
Centre on (059) 8633075.
Last week I mentioned the need for a
history of Athy G.A.A. Club and days later I was in the local history department
of Newbridge Library looking for press reports on the death of John ‘Skurt’ Doyle. ‘Skurt’
who was a superb sportsman played for Athy G.A.A. club as well as the county
senior team and in later years played rugby for Athy. He died aged 68 years on 18th July
1953. A very popular and well known man
in Athy, ‘Skurt’s’ passing received,
to my surprise, scant coverage in the local newspapers. I’d like to hear from anyone who may have
photographs or background knowledge of John ‘Skurt’
Doyle, as his many sporting achievements deserve to be recorded. Let me know if you can help.
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