The
Nationalist and Leinster Times of Saturday, 30th December 1899
priced at 2 pence carried a front page notice proudly boasting that it
comprised 12 pages. The front page was
devoted to advertisements, with most space devoted to Carlow and Kildare
Auctioneers, including P.J. Corcoran of Athy and Deegan & Sons of Leinster
Street. Miss L. Browne, ‘manageress for the late Mr. C. Timmons’,
informed the public of the opening of her boot and leather warehouse in Duke
Street, while the Athy Tile & Brick Co. Ltd. had available for sale their
new make of full size red bricks 9ins. x 4½ins. x 3ins.
The
Evicted Tenants Restoration Fund advertised a meeting scheduled for the Town
Hall Carlow on Tuesday 9th January for the purpose of organising a
county collection. ‘All sympathisers with the wounded soldiers of the land war are invited
to attend – God Save Ireland’.
Inside the news coverage disclosed that after protracted negotiations
extending over at least two years the Clongorey Evicted Tenants Dispute was at
last settled. The evictions took place
12 years previously. The earlier
evictions at Luggacurran had not been the subject of a settlement, but the
paper reported the prospect of one as the landlord, Lord Landsdowne, has been
induced to consent to negotiate with the representatives of the tenants.
The
Athy notes recorded the death of Henry J. O’Neill of Geraldine House, brother
of Dr. Jeremiah O’Neill, and the death of ‘a
young man named Flynn’ killed the previous week during the course of the
Boer War. I’ve been unable to identify
the Flynn man in question but he was just one of the many men from Athy who
served in Irish Regiments in Africa during the Boer War. Recruiting was still taking place in December
1899 as the following week’s paper reported that ‘amongst the volunteers for South Africa are Mr. Butler of Ballybar and
Mr. Telford, son of Mr. S. Telford of Barrowford, Athy’.
The
Boer War was the subject of several other news items in the last newspaper of
the 19th century. The
position of the garrison under siege in Ladysmith was reported as very
serious. From a list compiled by the
Press Association it was reported that British losses in the war amounted to
nearly 7,000 killed, wounded or missing.
One of those reported as wounded was Billy Nicholson, an athlete
particularly well known to the people of Athy where the paper reported ‘his frank and jovial manner made him a
great favourite.’
The
Boer War was also prominent in a prank played in Athy on Christmas Eve by
practical jokers. The Nationalist and
Leinster Times reported ‘that the lads of
sweet Athy are famed for fun and frivolity and this year the pranksters decided
to float a war flag from the highest point of the Town Hall. How the feat was accomplished is a mystery,
nor is it known how the perpetrators of the joke got access to the
building. Although used as a Town Hall
and for the meetings of the Town Commissioners, the building is the private
property of the Duke of Leinster. It is
in charge of a very vigilant custodian, William McCleary, who hails from north
of the Boyne and is as shrewd as men from the Northern Province usually
are. On Christmas Eve between 7 and 8
o’clock a fireworks and cracker display was noted about the Town Hall. The police were quickly on the scene but the
organisers of the display seemed to be quite as mobile as the Boers and on the
approach of the officers of the law they retired. In the morning as soon as the first streaks
of dawn appeared a grand green flag floated from the pinnacle which surmounts
the Town Hall. William McCleary, the
Town Hall caretaker, volunteered to remove the flag and at about 3 o’clock he
ascended to the roof of the building. He
had armed himself with a fishing rod, to the end of which he had tied a knife. He cut through the strands of rope which held
the standard in position and after some exertion the cords were cut through and
the emblem of Krugerdom collapsed.
William handed the flag over to the police who are actively engaged in
investigating the matter.
The flag incident has
occasioned a great deal of talk about Athy and there is much conjecture as to
the individuality of the daring crew who seized on the principal building of
the town in this way. Accounts brought
by native runners from Dunbrinn direction disclose the fact that after
dispersion by the police the band retired to a lonely kopje overhanging the Barrow
and called Coneyboro. Here they made a
bonfire and when it was in full blaze they threw in a shell in the shape of a
gallon of paraffin. The fluid exploded
with a report so loud that it awakened sleepers in distant Grangemellon.’
Hopefully
the descendants of the Boer War pranksters and the Grangemellon sleepers will
note that the Medieval Festival takes place in and around the Heritage Centre
on Sunday, 24th August commencing at 12 noon. On Wednesday, 20th August a walk
along the line of the medieval wall of Athy will start at the Heritage Centre
at 7.15 p.m. Under the title ‘All Along the Watch Towers’ the walkers
will be given a commentary as they take a leisurely walk through the town. This is a Heritage Week event for which there
is no charge.
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