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Our Locality

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Pigeon House. Glasson. The Old School House. Bethlehem. Goldsmith. Lissoy. The Pinnacle ... Pigeon House. The Pigeon House on the Waterstown Estate supplied ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Our Locality


1
Our Locality
Tubberclare / Glasson
2
(No Transcript)
3
Index
  • Map
  • Early Occupation
  • Early Christianity
  • The Normans
  • Waterstown House
  • Waterstown Ruins
  • Pigeon House
  • Glasson
  • The Old School House
  • Bethlehem
  • Goldsmith
  • Lissoy
  • The Pinnacle
  • Killinure
  • Tubberclair
  • Modern Glasson
  • Lough Ree
  • Bibliography

4
Early Occupation
  • People lived in this area as far back as the
    Stone Age.
  • A stone axehead, stone arrowheads and a stone jar
    were found.

During the Bronze Age people lived in crannógs in
Doonis Lough and in Lake Makeegan (Auburn Lough).
  • Many townlands take their names from the
    homesteads of the Celts who live here Lios,
    Rath, Lisakilleen, Lisnascreen.

5
Early Christianity
  • St. Patrick is said to have come to this area,
    but after a poor reception from the people of
    Calry, he fled over the Breensford River leaving
    the imprint of his knees near Annagh Crossroads,
    giving the the name Patricks Knees.
  • St. Canice founded a monastery in
    Kilkenny West about 550 A.D.
  • St. Kieran founded a monastery on Hare Island
    before moving to Clonmacnoise.
  • Later, abbeys and churches were built on Islands
    in Lough Ree - Inchmore, Inchturk Nuns Island
    and Inisboffin.

6
The Normans
  • The Normans came to Ireland at the request of
    King Henry 11.
  • In 1185 all land of Tubberclair was granted to
    the Norman Dillon family.
  • Area became known as the Barony of Kilkenny West.
  • The Dillons built 7 castles - Kilfaughney,
    Ballinakill, Ballinacliffey, Killinure, Kilkenny
    West, Waterstown and Portlick.
  • Only Portlick remains.

7
Waterstown House
  • Land granted to William
  • Hancock during the Cromwellian plantation.
  • House built in late 1600s on the site of the
    Dillon castle which had been destroyed.
  • Designed by Richard Castle (Designer of Leinster
    House, Westport House, Powerscourt House, Rotunda
    Hospital).
  • Became Known as the Hancock Temple Estate the
    following century.
  • Later became the Harris Temple Estate.

8
Waterstown Ruins
  • Waterstown House is now in ruins.
  • It was dismantled in the early twentieth century
    and parts of it are to be seen in different parts
    of the country the main gates are at Longford
    Cathedral.

9
Pigeon House
  • The Pigeon House on the Waterstown Estate
    supplied meat for the residents during the Winter.

10
Glasson
  • Glasson takes its name from the Irish word
    Glasan which means a streamlet.
  • The village was built by the owners of Waterstown
    for its workers,
  • An underground tunnel ran from the village to the
    estate.

11
The Old School House
  • Built in 1844.
  • Funded by Isabella Harris Temple of Waterstown
    House.
  • Provided a free school for the children of
    Glasson.
  • Remained open until 1897.
  • Reopened in 1905 and continued as an Infant
    School until 1962.
  • Became a Heritage Centre in 1998.

12
Bethlehem
  • Poor Clare Nuns fled from Dublin after their
    convent was suppressed in 1630.
  • Nuns given protection by their relatives the
    Dillons.
  • Convent built on the shore of Lough Ree in
    1631and called Bethlehem.
  • Mother Cecily Dillon was the first Abbess.
  • In 1642 the convent was destroyed by English
    soldiers.
  • Nuns fled to Nuns Island in Lough Ree.
  • The soldiers were all murdered at Ballinacliffy
    Castle.
  • The nuns went to Galway city where they founded a
    monastery at Nuns Island.

13
Goldsmith
  • Oliver Goldsmith - poet, playwright and novelist,
    was born at Pallas in Co. Longford, in 1728.
  • His father was a parson who moved to this area 2
    years later.

14
Lissoy
  • Lissoy Parsonage was Goldsmiths home from the
    age of two until he went to university.
  • His childhood haunts inspired much of his
    writing.
  • In The Deserted Village he wrote
    Near yonder copse, where once the
    garden smiled And still
    where many a garden-flower grows wild
    There where a few torn shrubs the place
    disclose, The village
    preachers modest mansion rose.

15
The Pinnacle
  • A signalling tower.
  • Built by a local landlord, Nathaniel Lowe, in
    1769.
  • He lived 25 miles away in Galway.
  • His herdsman communicated with him from the
    Pinnacle, using flag signals.

16
Killinure
  • Glasson Golf Country Club was, up to recent
    times, known as Killinure House.
  • It was built about 1780 and restored at the end
    of the 19th century.
  • The Reid Family converted it to a luxurious
    clubhouse in the 1990s.

17
Tubberclare
  • Tubberclair gets its name from the Irish Tobar
    cláir .the water of the plain.
  • This beautiful garden is opposite the Roman
    Catholic Church.
  • The Church of Our Lady of the Immaculate
    Conception was built during Penal Times.

18
Modern Glasson
  • The Health Centre
  • The Post Office
  • The Village Restaurant

19
Lough Ree
  • Situated in the middle of Ireland - the middle
    lake on the River Shannon.
  • Many islands, including Nuns Island and Hare
    Island, a former home of St. Kieran.
  • Raided by Vikings in the 8th and 9th centuries.
    Viking treasure discovered there in 1802.
  • Lord Castlemaine built a summer residence there
    in the 19th century.
  • Famous for fishing .
  • Boats may be hired for angling.

20
Bibliography
  • The Glasson Trail - Westmeath Tourism
  • The Spring Wells - Fr. Seamus Mulvany
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