James Fitzgerald, 20th
Earl of Kildare and later 1st Duke of Leinster, commissioned the
Anglo French cartographer John Rocques to survey his estates in County Kildare soon
after Rocques came to Dublin in 1754. Rocques
had worked in England for 20 years during which time he prepared plans for
various important country estates. On
arrival in Dublin he published proposals for a detailed survey of the city
which appeared two years later engraved on four sheets. He also published a town plan of Thurles in
1755 before he embarked on the Kildare estates survey.
The Earl of Kildare’s estates were
mapped by Rocques in nearly 170 individual maps which were bound in eight
oblong volumes covering approximately 68,000 acres. Rocques helped by surveyors using theodolite
and chain triangulation produced maps of unprecedented accuracy and
detail.
The first maps produced in 1756 were
of the Manors of Athy and Woodstock, followed a year later by the Manors of
Kildare and Maynooth. The Athy Manor
survey consisted of 20 maps, while that of Woodstock comprised 8 maps. The Earl’s estates in Castledermot and Graney
were mapped in 1758 and two years later maps were presented for the Manors of
Kilkea and Rathangan. The Manor maps
were bound in red goatskin, with the title of each Manor surrounded by a
decorative border tooled in gold on the upper cover.
Six of the eight Manor folios were
put up for auction by Sothebys of London in 1963. It was then that Trinity College Dublin
purchased the Manor maps for Athy and Kildare, while the Castledermot Folio
went to the National Library Dublin. The
Woodstock Manor maps were purchased by the British Library, while Cambridge
University acquired the Maynooth Manor Folio.
The Graney Manor Folio was purchased by Yale University. The missing folios relating to the Manors of
Kilkea and Rathangan remained undiscovered for many years until the Kilkea
Folio was put up for sale by a London Auction House in 2003. The Rathangan Manor Folio still remains untraced
to this day.
The original eight volumes were
housed in the Duke of Leinster’s Library in Carton House Maynooth until 1849
when the library was sold. They were
then removed to Kilkea Castle where they remained until they were sold
privately to a dealer. It was that
dealer, whose identity remains unknown, who put six of the folios up for
auction in Sothebys of London in 1963.
Rocques maps of Athy are the earliest maps we have of the town and give
a wealth of detail about the town at a time when it was emerging from the
medieval past.
Interestingly the Lordship of St.
John’s, that is Athy west of the River Barrow, was mapped for the Earl of
Kildare by Bernard Scale in 1768. In the
early maps prepared by Rocques the main street of Athy running from the edge of
the town on the Kilkenny side to the Dublin side of the town was called St.
John’s Street and High Street. The
Bridge at White’s Castle separated the two streets, with High Street the name
assigned to the town’s principal shopping street lying on the east side of the
river. Over the bridge was St. John’s
Street, obviously a name harping back to the monastery which in the 13th
and 14th centuries occupied a site adjacent to the present St.
John’s Cemetery. We still retain the
name St. John’s Lane for the laneway which runs at the side of that cemetery,
but St. John’s Street has long been renamed Duke Street. It was the second Duke of Leinster, William
Robert Fitzgerald whose name is recalled in the town street names which
replaced the original medieval street names in the last decade of the 18th
century.
On Thursday, 20th
November at 7.30 p.m., Castledermot born writer John MacKenna will have his
latest novel launched by radio presenter Joe Duffy. The launch takes place in the Arboretum,
Carlow and promises to be an interesting and entertaining evening with Joe
Duffy who presents every afternoon on RTE a programme which has been
controversially described as a ‘whingers forum’. In truth however a more reasoned view would
regard his programme as a major contribution to public broadcasting in
Ireland. His programme allows the
general public access to the airwaves at a time, insofar as rural Ireland is
concerned, when the same airwaves seem almost exclusively serviced by and for
those living within the Dublin Pale. Joe
Duffy has recently made a very real contribution to Irish historical studies
with his unique compilation of the names of the young children killed during
the 1916 Rising. I understand an open
invitation is extended to everybody to attend the book launch in the Arboretum
on the 20th and I am sure the author John MacKenna would appreciate
support on the night.
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