The first evictions from the Luggacurran estates took place on
Tuesday 15th March 1887 when Denis Kilbride, a sub tenant of Lord
Lansdowne with a holding of 868 acres, was evicted. Just before the Bailiffs and the R.I.C. men
had completed their work under the supervision of the local sub sheriff,
William O’Brien M.P. arrived at the scene accompanied by Patrick Meehan of
Maryborough. As the policemen withdrew
following the completion of the eviction process, some to Luggacurran village
but the larger number to Athy, William O’Brien and Denis Kilbride addressed
their supporters. O’Brien encouraged the
Lansdowne tenants, most of whom were now under threat of eviction, to continue
with the Plan of Campaign and to withhold their rents until rent reductions
were granted by Lord Lansdowne.
Denis Kilbride who would be later elected Member of Parliament for
Kerry and subsequently for Kildare, was a local leader of the Plan of
Campaign. Lord Lansdowne who was then
acting as Governor General of Canada wrote to his mother on 23rd
July 1887: ‘Trench [Lansdowne’s agent] cables that he has just evicted our
ringleader at Luggacurran.’
John W. Dunne who leased 1305 acres from Lord Lansdowne was later
evicted from Raheenahone, together with his sub tenants. Amongst those evicted during 1887 was Michael
Kelly and his family. Kelly was the sub
tenant of 22½ acres of Lansdowne’s land for which he paid a yearly rent of fifteen
pounds five shillings. Michael Kelly’s
family were distinguished from the other Kelly families on the estate by the
name, ‘Kelly’s of the Hill’. Michael Kelly had married Ellen Kealy and
they had six sons and one daughter.
Sadly Ellen died in her forties when her daughter Margaret was just 8
years of age and the youngest son Tommy was only 5 or 6 years old.
The Kelly family following the eviction from Luggacurran went to
live in Wolfhill and it was from there that at least one of the Kelly sons
attended the Christian Brothers school in Athy.
He was Patrick Kelly who was just one year old when the family were
evicted. At 17 years of age he enlisted
in the Royal Artillery British Army and four years later emigrated to Canada
where he joined the Royal Canadian Artillery.
Patrick Kelly would go on to have a distinguished career in the Canadian
Army.
He transferred to the Canadian Army Pay Corps in Quebec in 1913 and
a year later arrived in England with the first Canadian troops sent overseas to
serve in the First World War. He was
commissioned as a Lieutenant in 1915 and the following year he was sent to
France where he was attached to the Canadian overseas base pay office. A year later he returned to England as
assistant head of the officers pay branch.
Promotion to the rank of Army Captain followed in April 1917 and following
the ceasefire of 11th November 1918 he returned to Canada. Appointed a member of the Pay and Allowance
Board he subsequently received various promotions and appointments, culminating
in his appointment as District Pay Master Military District No. 2 Toronto on
the outbreak of World War II.
The young man from Luggacurran was once again sent overseas in
October 1939 on promotion as Lieutenant Colonel and appointment as Senior
Officer Pay Services Canadian Military Headquarters. Further promotion followed a year later when
he was appointed Chief Pay Master of the Canadian Army overseas with the rank
of Colonel. Two and a half years later
the former Athy Christian Brothers school boy was promoted to the rank of
Brigadier and a year later he was awarded the CBE by King George VI in
recognition of his distinguished army service during both world wars. On his return to Canada in 1945 Patrick Kelly
was appointed Pay Master General of the Canadian Army from which position he
retired on 7th January 1947.
Brigadier Kelly was a frequent visitor to Athy during the 1950s and
1960s, always taking the opportunity to visit both Wolfhill and
Luggacurran. His Athy base was always
the Leinster Arms Hotel and he took enormous pleasure in meeting the people of
the area and especially the family members whose predecessors like the ‘Kellys of the Hill’ were evicted from
their small farm holdings on the Luggacurran estate during the War of
Campaign.
Patrick Kelly died in 1973 and is buried in Clopook cemetery. His only sister Margaret who had married
Patrick Burke of Clogh, Castlecomer, came to live with her daughter Stasia and
her son Eddie in McDonnell Driver after her husband died. Eddie Burke, grandson of the evicted sub
tenant Michael Kelly, had bought Carolan’s shop in Emily Square following the
sale of his father’s land holding in Clogh.
Athy and Luggacurran are interlinked by events and people connected
with the Plan of Campaign on the Lansdowne estate of the 1880s. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the extended
family of ‘Kelly’s of the Hill’ where
Kellys, Burkes and Kealys have been found and are still to be found in the
Anglo Norman town in the South of County Kildare.
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