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Our Locality Tubberclare / Glasson

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Glasson/Tubberclare Local History

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Page 1: Our locality

Our Locality

Tubberclare / Glasson

Page 2: Our locality
Page 3: Our locality

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

Page 4: Our locality

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.

Page 5: Our locality

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 Patrick’s 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 Nun’s Island and Inisboffin.

Page 6: Our locality

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.

Page 7: Our locality

Waterstown

House

• 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.

•Land granted to William

Hancock during the Cromwellian plantation.

Page 8: Our locality

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.

Page 9: Our locality

Pigeon House

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

Page 10: Our locality

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.

Page 11: Our locality

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.

Page 12: Our locality

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 Nun’s Island in Lough Ree.• The soldiers were all murdered at Ballinacliffy Castle.• The nuns went to Galway city where they founded a

monastery at Nun’s Island.

Page 13: Our locality

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.

Page 14: Our locality

Lissoy

• Lissoy Parsonage was Goldsmith’s 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 preacher’s modest mansion rose.

Page 15: Our locality

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.

Page 16: Our locality

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.

Page 17: Our locality

Tubberclare

• The Church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception was built during Penal Times.

•Tubberclair gets its name from the Irish “Tobar cláir” ….the water of the plain.

•This beautiful garden is opposite the Roman Catholic Church.

Page 18: Our locality

Modern Glasson

• The Post Office

•The Village Restaurant

•The Health Centre

Page 19: Our locality

Lough Ree•Situated in the middle of Ireland - the middle lake on the River Shannon.

•Many islands, including Nun’s 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.

Page 20: Our locality

Bibliography

• The Glasson Trail - Westmeath Tourism

• The Spring Wells - Fr. Seamus Mulvany