It’s a strange
coincidence that the Clanard Court Hotel opens as the Leinster Arms Hotel is
about to close its doors after more than 200 years in business. The old gives way to the new and the elegance
of the new hotel with 38 bedrooms surrounded by eight acres of landscaped
gardens replaces the one time coaching inn located in the very centre of the
town.
The 12th
century settlement on the banks of the river Barrow was from its very early
years providing comfort and refreshments for the medieval traveller in the
local monastery of St. John’s. Attached
to the Monastery was a hospital or hostel which catered for the needs of the
travellers who passed this way using the river crossing at the Ford of Ae.
The advent of the
turnpike roads from Kilcullen to Athy and onwards to Castlecomer in the 18th
century prompted the setting up of an inn in the main street of the town where
weary travellers could rest and feed their horses while they themselves enjoyed
the overnight comforts of the local hostelry.
The Leinster Arms was from an early age the principal inn in the town of
Athy and directly opposite it on the far side of Leinster Street were located
the coach houses and stables which with the advent of mechanised travel later
became garages.
It was from the
Leinster Arms Hotel that the Liberator from Derrynane, Daniel O’Connell, set
out on the last leg of his journey to the Monster meeting in Mullaghmast on 1st
October 1843. Many are the visitors who
over the years passed through Athy, some of whom later provided a written
account of what they found. The exiled
French Chevalier de Latocnaye toured Ireland in 1796/’97 and arriving in Carlow
he decided to walk to Athy to see the new canal system which had reached the
town four years previously. He referred
to Athy as a village, at the entrance to which “I was stopped by four or five persons who asked for charity - they
explained it was to be used to give a decent burial to a poor wretch who had
died of hunger”.
Just fifteen years
into the new century in 1815 another traveller by name Atkinson, wrote of Athy
which he visited the previous year.
“For the quality and quantity of its wheat,
the Athy Market is deservedly celebrated.
In the town however there is no manufactory of note save that of two
establishments for the distillation of malt into ale and whiskey …… the town
has a respectable appearance, the footpaths are neatly paved and in winter the
streets are lighted up an accommodation rather unusual in country towns.”
In 1844, the year
before the Irish potato crops failed James Fraser, a landscape gardener,
published a Handbook for Travellers in Ireland.
On visiting Athy he found the town “a
place of little trade”, despite being surrounded by tillage country. In the local inn breakfast cost 1/6, dinner
2s., tea 1s. and a bed for the night
cost 1/6.
Just a few years
after the Great Famine Thomas Lacy made a tour of the country during which he
visited Athy. Lacy, who published in
1863 an account of his journeys through Ireland under the title “Sights and Scene in our Fatherland”, gave what was up to then the most
comprehensive description of the town of Athy.
It ran to almost six closely printed pages and he declared himself
impressed with Athy which he described as “a
handsome regular town and for its size a very prosperous and flourishing
one”.
In 1860 Blacks
Guide Book for Tourists appeared in its third edition and in it Athy was
described as “the largest town in the
county”, which was apparently of interest to the tourist only because of its proximity to
Mullaghmast and to the Moate of Ardscull.
Murray’s Hand Book for Travellers in Ireland published in 1878 described
Athy as “a well built little place” and
listed the Leinster Arms as the only hotel in the town. In the 1902 edition of the same guide three
local hotels were listed, the Leinster Arms, the Hibernian Hotel and Shiels
Hotel. All three hotels were located in
Leinster Street, but the leading establishment was still the Leinster Arms
which by then was more than 100 years in business.
An English
publishing company produced in 1904 a book titled “How and where to Fish in Ireland” in which pike fishing on the
River Barrow between Athy and Monasterevin was highly recommended during the
winter months. Athy was described as
having “a fairly good hotel” and
while it was not named I would assume that the reference was to the Leinster
Arms Hotel.
Travel books and
guide books generally have dealt with Athy, which is in a non-tourist part of
the country, in a perfunctory manner, but it was Richard Hayward’s book on
Leinster in the “This is Ireland” series
published in 1949 which for the first time contained a pictorial image of the
town. The pencil sketch by Raymond Piper
is of the back square looking across as one stands on the footpath outside what
is now Finnan’s house. Its a beautiful
sketch of an important part of Athy’s civic centre and the original drawing by
Piper is on display in the local Heritage Centre.
The Leinster Arms
Hotel has provided many visitors with food and shelter since it first opened
its doors back in the 18th century.
In the intervening years it has passed from one owner to another and to
Gerry Griffin will fall the task of turning the key in the hotel’s main door
for the last time when the business closes later in the summer. In the meantime the Clanard Court has opened
its doors and the large crowd of well wishers who turned up for the opening
last Thursday night no doubt came away impressed, as I did, at the range of
facilities which awaits guests at Athy’s new hotel.
Athy’s links with
the Earls of Kildare and the Fitzgerald’s is highlighted in the names given to
various function rooms in the Clanard Court.
Lord Edward Fitzgerald and his mother Emily are recalled, as well as the
Duke of Leinster, the Earls of Kildare and Woodstock, all names given to suites
in the Clanard Court Hotel.
The Clanard Court
is the first purpose built hotel to open in Athy and represents a vote of
confidence in the business life of a town which up to thirty years ago was the
leading industrial centre in the county of Kildare. Best wishes are extended to the Fennin family
for a successful venture and one which is assured the support of the people of
Athy and district.
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