‘I hate to see the town go
down’ sung by Dave Mallett is playing in the
background as I sit down to write this week’s Eye on the Past. The blank sheet which faced me as I put pen
to paper suddenly came to life with the very words ‘I hate to see this town go down’.
This town is Athy – the one time Anglo Norman village which over a
period of 800 years or so grew to a sizeable town. During its long life it has witnessed good
times and bad. Having survived several
destructive wars it faced into the relative calm of mid 18th century
Ireland, seeking to claim its share of the prosperity which came with
peace.
Its future as a thriving market town seemed assured when the Canal
company extended the Grand Canal to Athy in 1791. This gave direct access to the great
metropolis of Dublin, and courtesy of the navigable River Barrow, to the
seaports of Waterford and New Ross. What
more was needed to create the conditions necessary for the commercial and
economic wellbeing of an Irish town? Surely
Athy in the 1790s was on the cusp of a great drive forward which would bring
prosperity to one and all. It was not to
be for within just 7 years of the Canal opening murder and mayhem again raised
their heads with the events of 1798, creating and maintaining for perhaps
decades thereafter suspicion and unrest within the local community.
The opening of the railway line between Dublin and Carlow in August
1846 was the next great impetus for reviving and developing the commercial life
of Athy. By all accounts the opportunity
was seized on that occasion, not however without some criticism of the alleged
failure of the Duke of Leinster (who effectively owned and controlled the town
of Athy) in preventing the recently opened town jail and the Quarter Court
sessions being transferred to the county town of Naas. Both were a huge loss to the south Kildare
town, but that loss spurred and prompted the local business people to do
something about reviving the town’s fortunes.
It was soon thereafter that Athy came to be recognised as the best
market town in Leinster. Local
businesses prospered and the town’s markets and fairs flourished. It was a commercial town where businesses
were geared primarily to meet the needs of farmers within a 12 or 15 mile
radius of Athy. Men living in the lanes
and courtways of the town had little opportunity for fulltime employment. Industry was limited to the local brickyards,
the malting works and the experimental peat works at Kilberry. The town’s success in the second half of the
19th century was by and large enjoyed by the local shopkeepers, but
at least the trickledown effect gave much needed employment to some of the
local population. Unfortunately there
was not enough work to go around, but viewed against the situation then
prevailing in towns of similar size in Ireland of the day, Athy was doing well.
The modern industrialisation of Athy started with the I.V.I. Foundry
in the 1920s and received a tremendous boost with the opening of the Asbestos
Factory in 1936 and the Wallboard Factory in 1949. Only one of these factories now survives and
even that survival is based on an extremely small workforce. In the meantime our local shops have been hit
by the recession and more and more vacant shops are beginning to appear on the
local streets.
What can we do to stop the slide?
Is there in the long promised outer relief road something approaching
the Canal and the railway in terms of its beneficial impact on the commercial
life of the town? I believe so, indeed I
am firmly of the belief that the commercial revival of Athy cannot succeed
unless and until the outer relief road is in place. I am assured that funding for the road will
be made available within the lifetime of the present government, if so the Town
Council and local businesses should get together now and plan for the future
redevelopment of the town centre.
Does our future lie in large scale shopping centres on the edge of
town or in the development of independent retailing units in the town
centre? Is there a need to look at the
possibility of pedestrianising our main shopping streets to improve the town
centre shopping experience? These are
some of the questions which need to be addressed now by everyone concerned. Planning requires action today, not when the
outer relief road is in place.
Blame Dave Mallett for this digression or maybe subconsciously I was
influenced by my recent experience of city regeneration as practised by the
city fathers of Gloucester. I was
mightily impressed how the centre of that ancient city has been transformed
into a shopping friendly area by a pedestrianisation scheme facilitated by
sensible road traffic routing schemes.
The outer relief road presents us with the same opportunity. Let’s hope those in charge and those with the
opportunity to influence change can give us hope for reviving the town of Athy.
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