The weekend celebrations for the 50th anniversary of the
opening of the present Scoil Mhichil Naofa school building prompted me to
search through the photographic archives.
I was looking for some old school photographs and came across the two
photos which are shown this week. One is
of the gated entrance to the Convent of Mercy and on the left St. Joseph’s
School which infant boys from Athy attended for the first three years of their
school life. It was demolished in 1960
to accommodate the construction of the present St. Michael’s Parish
Church. The earlier Parish Church can be
seen in the background to the right. It
was built in 1808 on what was described as swampy ground adjoining Clonmullin
Commons.
The second photograph is of the same area, just slightly to the
right of that captured in the other photo.
Indeed the Convent gates and St. Joseph’s School can be seen to the left
of what in my young days was the C.Y.M.S. premises. The building, or an earlier version of it,
had served as a school house and that part of the building further up Stanhope
Place housed the first Technical School in Athy which opened in the early part
of the 20th century. The
C.Y.M.S. took over the premises after a new Technical School was built on the
Carlow Road in 1930 and it provided a wonderful social outlet for local men,
young and old, for many years. The
society moved out of this premises in 1960 to facilitate the construction of
the new Parish Church and transferred to the former Old Comrades Hall, later
the home of the Social Club in St. John’s Lane. Later still the C.Y.M.S. relocated to part
of the Primary School building on the mount which had been built by Dan Carbery
Senior and opened in 1893 by Archbishop Walsh of Dublin. That was the last premises occupied by the
C.Y.M.S. which ceased to function some years ago.
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