Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Heuston Station / Remembering Eamon Walsh / Noel and Carmel Reddy
I don’t know how many times I have passed through Heuston Station, Dublin but as I exited the station last week I noticed for perhaps the first time on the top of the Corinthian pillars the lettering ‘Vic vii ….. 1844’. This referred to Queen Victoria, then in the eight year of her reign, and the date 1844 I presume refers to what was the expected date of completion of work on the railway station. The building was not however completed until November 1848 due to a stonemason strike.
The Great Southern and Western railway line to Athy and to Carlow was opened on 3rd August 1846 during the second year of the Great Famine. Not many, if any, of the 1,200 or so poor unfortunates who died in Athy’s Workhouse during the Famine ever had the means to travel by rail to Dublin. Railway travel was extremely expensive in those early rail days, even if the rail companies sought to engage with the poor by providing third class carriages which were open to the elements. In those days few from Athy and south Kildare ever got the opportunity to see the splendid new railway station which has been described as having the appearance of a great Renaissance House.
Every time we pass through what was once called Kingsbridge Station, we can treasure the thought that the great figures of Irish history were frequent users of that same station. Charles Stewart Parnell set out from Kingsbridge Station for that fateful open-air meeting in Creggs, Co. Roscommon in September 1891 which was his last public appearance in Ireland. He would die on 3rd October after returning home to Brighton following that meeting which he had attended despite his doctor’s warning that he was not fit to travel. Padraig Pearse used the same station on many occasions when travelling to Rossmuc, Connemara where his holiday cottage was located.
Reflecting on the 1844 date made me realise what great advances were in hand in Ireland at that time as various railway companies pressed on with their plans to extend railway lines across the Irish countryside. But if there were advances there was also great hardship endured on a regular basis by a majority of the people of Ireland. That same year the Athy Workhouse was opened on 9th January and the first inmates include 6 men, 15 women, 13 boys, 5 girls and 2 infants. The workhouse and the two ancillary workhouses which were opened during the height of the Great Famine would at one time in 1848 accommodate 1,254 impoverished men, women and children.
It was almost three years since I wrote to the then Chairman of Kildare County Council, Councillor Mark Stafford, asking for the Council to erect a memorial to Athy’s famine dead who were buried in unmarked graves at St. Mary’s cemetery just across the road from the former Workhouse. Mark very kindly agreed to put the request to the Council and I believe the Council agreed to erect a memorial. Subsequent correspondence passed between the County Council and the HSE regarding ownership of the cemetery. Imagine my surprise to read recently that the promised memorial is now being mentioned as a memorial for the mothers and babies who died in the County Home. The County Home which was not a mother and babies home but primarily a place for the elderly and the infirm, is now being regarded as part of the Mother and Babies Home regime. It was never that and the County Council should not lose sight of the famine dead from Athy and the surrounding areas whose sad lives ended in a workhouse and whose remains were left in the ground at St. Mary’s without any recognition or identification. We need to remember our famine dead, and I hope Kildare County Council will do that by erecting a suitable famine memorial in St. Mary’s before too long.
During the last few days the town lost two of its well loved and highly regarded members with the passing of Noel Reddy and Eamonn Walsh. By a strange coincidence both Noel and Eamonn were porters in the Bank of Ireland and the Allied Irish Bank respectively and both came from families with generational old connections with Athy and south Kildare. Indeed, Eamonn’s father Eddie Walsh was the porter in the Provincial Bank for 41 years and on his retirement was replaced by Eamonn who served in the same position for 34 years. Noel was an ever-optimistic supporter of Kildare in the county’s quest for an All-Ireland senior football title, while Eamonn was a musician who graced the musical scene for many decades as a member of the Spotlights and other groups with which he was associated over the years. Eamonn was the subject of an Eye on the Past No. 549.
Noel’s death followed the death of his wife Carmel just a few weeks earlier. Carmel was an energetic and valuable contributor to many community-based activities, and I will remember the important role she played as secretary of Athy’s Development Group in furthering the call for an outer relief road instead of the inner relief road planned by Kildare County Council. It’s sad that she did not live to see the opening of the new road which she and many other local men and women campaigned for over many years.
Like the forgotten famine dead, the true record of more recent events such as the campaign for the outer relief road and the famine memorial fade from memory as new narratives tend to give us a different and not necessarily true account of the past.
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