Thirty three years ago a public meeting was held in the Courthouse,
Athy to consider the setting up of a local museum. Following that meeting and subsequent
meetings Athy Museum Society was founded.
Its purpose was to highlight the then largely unknown history of Athy
and its people. Within weeks of its
foundation the young society opened a museum room in Mount St. Marys every
Sunday afternoon displaying articles and material generously donated by local
people.
I recall manning the museum room every Sunday afternoon for upwards
of 3 years. The then County Manager
Gerry Ward subsequently allowed the use of a room in the Town Hall to house
what was the ever developing but still tiny local town museum. The room allocated was that which was
previously occupied by the Town Hall caretaker’s family.
Around the same time I prepared a detailed submission in relation to
the town’s history to support Athy Urban District Council’s application to Bord
Failte to have Athy designated as a Heritage Town. Steps were afoot for the local Fire Brigade,
which had been housed for years previously in the former butter market in the
Town Hall, to move to new premises in Woodstock Street. The successful application to Bord Failte resulted
in the award of substantial funding which enabled the Urban Council and the
Heritage Company which was then formed to refit the entire ground floor of the
Town Hall building as a Heritage Centre after it was vacated by the Fire
Brigade.
Fitting out the centre required a detailed re-examination of Athy’s
history and the identification of events and persons prominent in that
history. My research unearthed details
of interesting but hitherto unknown facts, events and persons such as Athy’s
participation in World War I and local involvement in the War of Independence
and the Civil War. The emergence of
Ernest Shackleton as a native of nearby Kilkea was a revelation, as up to then
I had accepted, as was invariably reported, that Shackleton was a native of
Kilkee, Co. Clare.
The Heritage Centre has developed over the years and the Shackleton
Autumn School has added enormously to its prestige. Indeed I have before me a letter from Michael
Smith, author and biographer of the Irish Polar explorers Tom Crean and Ernest
Shackleton which describes Athy’s Heritage Centre as ‘the most prestigious museum in the world dedicated to Ernest
Shackleton’.
The town’s library presently occupying the first floor of the Town
Hall will be re-located to the former Dominican Church as soon as refurbishment
work on the Church scheduled to commence within months is completed. Athy’s early 18th century Town
Hall will then be given over completely to the Museum. The plans are to gain maximum national and
international coverage for the Museum given its unique Shackleton connections
and exhibits, while at the same time celebrating the life of Athy stretching
back over 850 years. Shackleton is an
international brand and born as he was in nearby Kilkea it behoves us to reap
the benefits likely to be generated by visitors attracted to the only museum
dedicated to the world famous Polar explorer.
Kildare County Council conscious of the huge advantages which can
accrue to Athy by association with Shackleton recently commissioned a statue of
the Polar explorer to be erected in Athy.
This together with the future enlargement of the Museum to include
priceless artefacts relating to Shackleton’s Polar exploration presents a
unique opportunity to develop tourism as a secondary, if not a primary element,
in the regeneration of Athy.
Kildare County Council has now commenced a public consultation
process to determine where the Shackleton statue should be sited. Let your considered views be known to the
Council, bearing in mind that the proper positioning of the statue can help
highlight the town’s Shackleton Museum and significantly add to the tourism
attraction of the Shackleton theme.
I realise that some people on Facebook have questioned the
justification for a Shackleton statue.
Apart from the obvious marketing advantages in promoting a Shackleton
Museum, consider the following.
Shackleton was born in nearby Kilkea and always claimed to be
Irish. Indeed when signing onto the
Yelcho to rescue his men from Elephant Island Shackleton clearly stated his nationality
as Irish. Shackleton was described by
the geologist on the Nimrod expedition as ‘born
in Ireland, educated in England, worked in Scotland but from the top of his
head to the soles of his feet he was Irish’.
In a letter to the Times some months ago I claimed that public
monuments usually articulate a particular national identity, but that part of
our identity is not just Catholic, Gaelic and nationalistic but also includes
many other diverse elements. We have
commemorated in recent times the men and women of ’98 and those young men from
the town of Athy whose lives were destroyed during World War I. For his achievements in Polar exploration,
Ernest Shackleton is a worthy subject for a statue to be erected close to the
Shackleton Museum.
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