The name Mansergh has nowadays come to be associated
almost exclusively with the man who gave up his position as a civil servant in
the Department of Foreign Affairs to become an adviser to Charles Haughey. Martin Mansergh is not only known for his
long association with Haughey but also for his pivotal role in the Northern
Ireland peace negotiations. Mansergh is
a family name with Athy associations going back over several centuries. I am reminded of George Mansergh who it is
claimed built Riversdale House on the banks of the River Barrow in a twelve
week period. That he chose to do so in
1780 in a field adjacent to George Dakers tannery might indicate that the
halcyon days of the tanning industry in Athy were even then coming to an
anticipated closure. Why else would
Mansergh choose to erect a country mansion alongside such a foul smelling
industry unless he was satisfied that Dakers had, or was shortly about to
close. In any event even Mansergh's
enjoyment of the fine mansion was relatively short lived for in the early years
of the 19th century the Dominicans purchased the property. The Black Friars had come to Athy in 1253, or
should that be 1257 (I have seen both dates mentioned as the foundation year)
and their friary was for the next 300 years to be found in the area now known
as “the Abbey” between Offaly Street and the River Barrow.
The friars were dispossessed of their holdings in
Athy in 1540 and thereafter they spent periods out of the town because of
religious prosecution. They finally made
a permanent return to the town in the early 1700's when it is believed they
located themselves in what is now Kirwan's Lane. Throughout the 18th century that
lane was called Convent Lane and appropriately when the Dominicans moved to
their present day location, Tanyard Lane which led to Riversdale House, was
re-named Convent Lane.
Brewing and distilling were substantial industries in
18th century Athy and the town at one time had no less than fourteen
working stills. In 1768 Dan Mansergh
operated a brewery at the rear of St. John's Street (as Duke Street was then
called) and it was still listed in a survey of 1831 with another unnamed
brewery which was to be found close to where Dakers Tanyard once stood. The Manserghs were apparently business people
of some substance and if my memory serves me right Greenhills House was home to
a Miss Mansergh before it was donated to the local Parish Priest, Monsignor
Quinn in the 1840's who in turn passed it on to the Sisters of Mercy. In time it became the Christian Brothers
Monastery and has now reverted back to being a private house.
The references to the Manserghs who once lived in
Athy is by way of an introduction to Senator Martin Mansergh who comes to Athy,
and more specifically Bert House, on Monday, 18th December to give a
talk on the history of the Fianna Fáil party.
Forever associated with Eamon de Valera, the Fianna Fáil party was
founded in May 1926 after de Valera broke his association with the Sinn Fein
party having walked out of the Sinn Fein Ard Fheis two months previously. One of the main sources of members for the
new party was the Sinn Fein party itself and the recruiting success of Fianna
Fáil in its first year was reflected in a reduction in Sinn Fein Cumanns from
275 to 173 in 1926. De Valera paid his
very first visit to Athy in November 1917, accompanied by Arthur Griffith, when
both men addressed a public meeting in Emily Square. The “Long Fellow” was presented with
an address of welcome by the Board of Guardians and by Athy Urban District
Council to mark his visit. Interestingly
the local R.I.C. Inspector reported to his superiors that “no clergy or
people of note attended” the meeting.
Indeed the decision of Athy Urban District Council to give an address of
welcome to the most senior officer to survive the 1916 rising was met with some
opposition within the local Council.
The Fianna Fáil party quickly gathered momentum and
the County Council elections of 1928 witnessed the election of two party
members for the Athy electoral area.
James Foley and J.J. Bergin were the successful Fianna Fáil
candidates. I have no information
concerning James Foley but J.J. Bergin of Maybrook was a man very involved in
the local community at the time and would later achieve national, indeed
international recognition, for his role in the founding of the Ploughing
Association. He had stood for the Dáil
in June 1922 as a Farmers Union candidate and narrowly missed out getting the
fifth seat which went to Robert Barton, one of the signatories of the Anglo
Irish Treaty. Bergin got almost 1,500
more votes than Erskine Childers who also stood as a candidate in the
Kildare/Wicklow constituency. J.J.
Bergin stood again as a Dáil candidate in the General Election of 1927, this
time as an Independent Farmers candidate, as did another local man, George
Henderson.
The 1934 County Council elections saw Miss Brigid
Darby of Leinster Street and Patrick Keane elected as Fianna Fáil councillors
for this area, with Darby, who was principal of Churchtown National School,
heading the poll. She retained her
County Council seat in the 1942 local elections as the only Fianna Fáil
Councillor for the Athy area. William
Mahon replaced her in the 1945 elections.
I believe he was the Chairman of Athy Gaelic Football Club and lived at
Prusselstown. William Miley of Fontstown
and M.G. Nolan of Duke Street, were Fianna Fáil County Councillors first
elected in 1950 and re-elected in 1955 and 1960, with M.G. Nolan continuing as
the lone Fianna Fáil representative on Kildare County Council following the
1967 local elections.
So far as I can find out J.J. Bergin and George
Henderson were the first Athy men to go forward as candidates in Dáil elections
and the first local to be elected to the Dáil was Captain Sydney Minch. He was elected as a Cumann na Gaedheal
candidate in 1932 when Fianna Fáil won the General Election and de Valera
succeeded W.T. Cosgrave. Minch would
retain his Dáil seat until June 1938. He
successfully stood for re-election in 1933 and 1937 and on both occasions he
defeated, amongst others, another Athy candidate Brigid Darby who again stood
for Fianna Fáil. Following Minch's
defeat in 1938 another ten years would pass before Athy was again represented
by a local candidate in a Dáil election.
M.G. Nolan for Fianna Fáil and Michael Cunningham for Fianna Gael
contested the 1948 General Election without success and M.G. Nolan returned to
the fray in the 1951 General Election, again being defeated. The 1954 General Election saw Paddy Dooley, a
local national school teacher contest his first Dáil election which saw the
re-election of Bill Norton, Gerry Sweetman and Tom Harris. Three years later Dooley became the second
Athy man to enter the Dáil, replacing his colleague Tom Harris as the Fianna
Fáil T.D. for Kildare. He retained his
seat in 1961 in an election which saw another local, Charles Chambers, stand
for Fine Gael. Paddy Dooley lost his
Dáil seat in the 1965 General Election which Chambers again contested.
Martin Mansergh, the English educated son of the
distinguished Anglo Irish historian Nicholas Mansergh, will no doubt deal with
the more recent history of the Fianna Fáil party in his talk on Monday. The setting for the talk is an interesting
one The former Burgh mansion was built
almost 300 years ago to the design of Thomas Burgh whose other buildings
include Trinity College Library, Dr. Steeven's Hospital and Collins Barracks,
all to be found in Dublin. Bert House
was built for his brother Captain William Burgh, who was Comptroller and
Accountant General for Ireland. William
Burgh's daughter Elizabeth married Chief Baron Anthony Foster and their son
John Foster was the last Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. Another parliamentary connection arose when
Ann Burgh married Walter Hussey who was regarded as the finest orator of his
day and who represented Athy Borough Council as a Member of Parliament in the
Irish House of Commons between 1769 and 1776.
The Burgh connection continued until 1909, even though from 1826 Bert
House was the home of Lord Downes, which title passed to Ulysses Burgh on the
death of his cousin, William Downes, the former Lord Chief Justice of
Ireland. On Lord Downes' death in 1863
Bert House passed to his eldest daughter who was married to Lord Seaton. In 1909 the Burgh connection with Bert House
ceased with the sale of the property to the Miss Geoghegans.
The present day parliamentarian, Senator Martin
Mansergh, will follow in the shadow of John Foster and Walter Hussey when he
addresses his audience in the house which those illustrious parliamentarians
often visited as members of the extended Burgh family.
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