Reverend Thomas
Kelly of whom I have written in the past, having seceded from the Episcopal
Church founded his own sect, the Kellyites and established places of worship in
Athy, Portarlington, Dublin and elsewhere. His “Hymns on various Passages of Scripture”
first published in 1804 subsequently went through various editions and many of
the hymns he composed are still in common use.
A preacher of outstanding quality, he was also a prolific writer and
amongst his many publications was a pamphlet which went through many editions
under different titles. I have three
copies of the pamphlet on my desk, none of which are dated and all have
different titles. I cannot say what was
the title of the originally issued pamphlet.
The titles before me are “The True History of James Byrne a Young Weaver
in Ireland” and “The Irish Weaver” or “The History of James Byrne of Athy and
Ireland”. The third pamphlet being
number 126 in a series of evangelical pamphlets issued by Tilling and Hughes of
Chelsea in London had the title “The Advantage of reading the Scriptures as
exemplified in the history of James Byrne of Kilberry and Ireland”. The latter
two publications are apparently extended versions of “The true story of James
Byrne” with both carrying much additional material inserted at various points
throughout the pamphlet.
My interest in
Kelly’s pamphlets which incidentally do not give the authors name, stems from
the fact that it relates to the story of a weaver who was working in Athy. Another reference I found elsewhere in
relation to Thomas Kelly referred to the growing of flax in South Kildare.
For centuries,
flax was grown throughout Ireland and Irish produced linen was highly regarded
throughout the developed world. We
normally associate the Irish linen industry with Northern Ireland but on the
evidence of Thomas Kelly’s writing, there was also a linen industry in this part
of the country in the early 19th Century. How widespread that
industry was I don’t know but it must have been quite substantial to give an
area adjoining Athy town a name which remains with us to this day. “Bleach” or variations of the name is a townland
identified in the townlands book of Ireland as occurring in the counties of
Kildare, Waterford, Wexford, Westmeath
and Sligo.
The growing of
flax was not suitable for the good land which is generally to be found among the
farmlands of South Kildare. It grew
better on bog like land requiring as it did damp conditions throughout the
growing season. The bogs around Kilberry
offered such conditions and Kilberry may well have been the centre of the local
flax growing industry.
Flax growing was a
labour intensive activity. The growing season lasted about 100 days for if the
flax was allowed to grow any longer, it would produce a poorer quality product.
Once the flower appeared on the flax, it was pulled by hand, this required
a lot of labour for it had to be done within three days of the flower first
appearing otherwise the quality would further deteriorate.
The flax stalks
when pulled were gathered in bundles and stacked for a couple of weeks to help
them to dry out. The next step in the
process was separating the fibres from the rest of the plant and this was
usually done by submerging bundles of flax for up to two weeks in water. This was called “wretting” the flax and the
bog holes in the local bogs were ideal for this purpose. One can well see why the local flax industry
may have been centred in the areas around Kilberry. Once the fibres had been separated, they were
dried and stored in preparation for the next process called “flax dressing”
. This involved the breaking up of the
fibres usually by hand followed by “scutching” where the broken fibre was
removed using a scutching board.
The last process
in “flax dressing” was the “hackling” of the flax by passing the fibre bundles
through a series of combs to remove any remaining pieces of straw and to allign
the fibres. The fibres were then brought
to the spinning wheel to be spun into a fine smooth thread.
We are all
familiar with the pictures of spinning wheels which were a common feature of
life in rural Ireland in the 19th Century. Flax growing and the production of linen was
a common domestic occupation in rural Ireland especially after a Board of Trustees
was set up in Dublin in 1711 for the purpose of encouraging the industry. The Board provided grants to buy flax seeds,
to train women to spin yarn and to set up bleaching greens. Flax and linen production increased
substantially following the setting up of the Board and seems to have peaked
around 1770 with employment at weaving and spinning providing the Irish rural
population with a steady, if somewhat, poorly renumerated employment. John Byrne of Kilberry, the subject of Thomas
Kelly’s evangelical pamphlet, was a
weaver and he was perhaps one of the many of that occupation who lived in South
Kildare almost two hundred years ago.
Bleach yards were
to be found in flax growing areas and here in Athy, the areas still known as
“The Bleach” and “The Bleach Yard” were obviously areas where the linen
bleaching process was carried out. The
purpose of bleaching was to obtain an acceptable degree of whiteness in the
linen which was more desirable than coloured cloth. The bleaching process required the cloth to be
boiled in water before it was laid out in the fields exposed to air and
sun. While in the open, it was soaked in
a weak solution of acid to act as a form of neutraliser. Lime was also extensively used for bleaching
even though it was prohibited by law because if used improperly, the lime
damaged the cloth. The cloth was exposed
in the bleach fields or greens as they were called for up to fourteen days
where they were monitored day and night to prevent theft.
The bleach greens
identified around Athy are all located in the area where “the wild Irish” of
late medieval times were living. Every
Irish town had an English section and an Irish section referred to in
contemporary and later accounts as “Englishtown” and “Irishtown”. The name “Irishtown” remains today to be
found in many parts of Ireland while “Englishtown” has a less frequent
appearance in the townland index. Athy’s Irishtown was known as “Beggars End” throughout the 19th Century and later and unquestionably the concentration
of the bleaching process in the same area points to its importance as a home
industry for a population who for large parts of the year were unemployed.
The emergence of
cotton and man made fibres resulted in the rapid decline of the Irish linen
industry. The great famine which started
with the potato crop failure of 1845 finally silenced the weaving loom and the
spinning wheel. The growing of flax in
this part of County Kildare which had been
diminishing for years previously was effectively finished thereafter.
I had intended
last week to write of Mary Leadbetter and her diaries which were republished
and launched at Athy Heritage Centre on Tuesday, 31st March.
Unfortunately, I did not get around to
doing so but would encourage you to buy a copy of the “Leadbetter Papers” which
are now on sale in the local Heritage Centre, telephone number 059/8633075 at
€20 per copy. As an extremely important
social document of life in Ballytore and South Kildare in the late 18th
and early 19th Century, the Leadbetter book deserves a wide
readership.
No comments:
Post a Comment