Kildare County
Council recently launched the first ever Heritage Plan for the county. It’s a very welcome addition to the
literature on the shortgrass county and much of the praise for the booklet must
go to the Heritage Council of Ireland which initiated the project, as well as
funding the appointment of a Heritage Officer for the county.
“The aim of the County Kildare Heritage Plan is to identify,
preserve and conserve the built, natural and cultural heritage of the county”. So explains the introduction
to the plan in which the County Manger in his forward to the publication refers
to Kildare as a county rich in heritage “which
makes it unique” and defines “its
sense of place”. Continuing he
rightly states “some aspects of the
heritage of Kildare are important in their own locality and some are of
national or international importance.
Whatever their inherent importance, all aspects of heritage serve to
enhance the quality of life for all who live or are associated with the County
of Kildare.”
The Heritage Plan
is the outcome of almost two years deliberations by the County Heritage Forum
which was established in 2003. The group
comprised six public representatives, four officials of Kildare County Council,
six local development agencies, two government department representatives,
three members of what are euphemistically referred to as social partners and
three heritage group members. The
apparent imbalance in favour of non heritage groupings was addressed somewhat
in the setting up of three working groups where those working in or otherwise
associated with the natural, built or architectural heritage areas were
consulted by the Heritage Forum which ultimately decided the Heritage Plan.
The Plan is a
strategic policy document for the management and protection of the county’s
heritage over the next five years, and will I understand, be implemented by the
Heritage Forum with the support of the Heritage Council of Ireland and the
various local authorities in the county.
The four principle objectives of the plan are :-
1.
The collection and
dissemination of heritage information.
2.
The raising of public
awareness, understanding and appreciation of the county’s heritage.
3.
The promotion of best practice
in heritage conservation and management.
4.
Informing policy and providing
advice to local authorities in the county.
Under the first
objective a number of activities are recommended, some of which were of
particular interest to me. For example
the Plan recognised the value of collecting oral history and the expansion of
the county archive to include not only local authority records but also private
business records and school records.
Developing oral history projects throughout the county could lead to the
availability of extremely useful sources of material for local histories. I understand the Heritage Officer in County
Laois embarked on such a project last year and her initiative is one which
could and should be usefully followed in all other counties.
One surprising
omission from the list of potential donors of material for the county archive
was local clubs and associations. The
very nature of these voluntary associations where officers are elected each
year can and often does lead to the loss of club records and minute books. Club records are very important documentary
records of a community’s involvement in activities outside work and the home,
and the pity is that they are seldom preserved and maintained for research
purposes in later years. Lodging minute
books and club records with the county archive should, I suggest, be part of
objective one of the Heritage Plan which relates to the collection of heritage
information.
I was particularly
enthused by two courses of action suggested in the plan with regard to the
objective of promoting best practice in heritage conservation and
management. The first concerned the
development of an education programme for local authority staff and councillors
on all aspects of Kildare’s built, natural and archaeological heritage. Would it, I thought, be too much to hope that
somehow, at some time in the future, we could all collectively raise our heads
above the mundane public utility services normally associated with the County
Council and devote some time and a little of the public purse to the neglected
aspects of our often unappreciated heritage.
The other matter
which caught my attention was the proposal to establish a placename committee
for the county to re-examine existing policy on the naming of new developments
and new roads. This is badly needed,
especially where there are so many new housing developments taking place,
leading in some cases to excruciating place names which have no connection with
the area or indeed with the country.
The County
Heritage Plan is the first of its kind and as such offers a blueprint for
action over the next five years. As the
National Heritage Plan stated “the
protection of our heritage must begin at local level enabling everybody to
become actively involved in preserving and enhancing that which belongs to us”. Congratulations are due to Kildare County
Council and everyone involved with the document which was launched last week.
During the week I
had two callers looking for information, John Mee who now lives in Salthill in
Galway tells me that he was a young bank official in the Provincial Bank in
Duke Street between February 1950 and December 1951. He was looking for a photograph of the
Provincial Bank and of Duke Street as it was during the 1950’s. Can anyone help? I can arrange to copy any original photograph
and send it on to John who tells me that he was a member of the Social Club
Players and acted in “The White Headed
Boy”. I gather that the performance
was put on in October 1951 and followed the performance of the same play the
previous January with a different cast.
John lodged in Staffords of Duke Street and as the only lodger in that
house he must have been quite pampered.
If you remember John Mee and can help with his request for a photograph
I would like to hear from you.
The other caller
had the unusual surname of Gaffy. From
Australia, Michael Gaffy was looking for information on his Ballintubbert
ancestors. The McLoughlin family were
headed by Michael who died in 1862 and his wife Sarah, formerly Whelan, who
died in the 1870’s. They had a family of
two daughters and possibly two sons. The
daughters, Margaret and Judith, emigrated to Australia in or about 1862 and
Michael Gaffy is a descendant of Margaret McLoughlin. The sons [believed to be two whose names are
unknown] remained in Ballintubbert. Can
anyone help to identify their families or if there are any descendants in the
area or indeed elsewhere?
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