Templemore

Templemore (Irish: An Teampall Mór, meaning "The Big Church") is a town in County Tipperary, Ireland. It is a civil parish in the historical barony of Eliogarty.[2] It is part of the parish of Templemore, Clonmore and Killea in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly.[3]

Templemore

An Teampall Mór
Town
Main Street and Town Hall, Templemore 2015
Templemore
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°48′N 7°50′W
CountryIreland
ProvinceMunster
CountyCounty Tipperary
Population
 (2016)[1]
  Total1,939
Time zoneUTC0 (WET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+1 (IST)
Eircode
E41
Area code0504
Irish Grid ReferenceS104720
Websitewww.templemore.ie

The 2011 Census results show that the town's population decreased by 13.8% from 2,255 in 2006 to 1,943 in 2011.

Location and access

Templemore is the eighth largest town in County Tipperary. The N62 national route connects the town to the main Dublin-Limerick motorway (M7 – Junction 22) and Roscrea north of the parish. Travelling south, the route connects to Thurles and then the main Dublin-Cork motorway (M8 – Junction 6 Horse and Jockey). The N62 originates in Athlone.

To the east, the R433 connects the town to the M8 at a more northerly point (Junction 3) via the villages of Clonmore, Errill and the town of Rathdowney in County Laois. Alternatively, the motorway may be accessed via the village of Templetuohy. To the west, the R501, tracking the Devil's Bit mountain range, goes to Borrisoleigh.

Templemore railway station is on the Dublin-Cork railway line operated by Iarnród Éireann. There are direct trains to and from stations like Dublin Heuston railway station (8 trains avg), Thurles (9 trains avg) Cork (4 trains avg) and Limerick (4 trains avg) daily[4]

History

Ancient history

The ancient territory of Éile obtained its name from pre-historic inhabitants called the Eli, about whom little is known beyond what may be gathered from legends and traditions. The extent of Éile varied throughout the centuries with the rise and fall of the tribes in occupation. Before the 5th century AD the details of its history which can be gleaned from surviving records and literature are exceedingly meagre, obscure and confusing. During this century however Éile appears to have reached its greatest extent, stretching from Croghan Bri Eli (Croghan Hill in Offaly) to just south of Cashel (in Corca Eathrach Eli). The southern part of this territory embraced the baronies of Eliogarty and Ikerrin, a great part of the modern barony of Middle Third, the territory of Ileagh (or Ileigh) and a portion of the present barony of Kilnamanagh Upper.

By the 8th century, the territory of Ancient Éile had broken up into a number of petty kingdoms: the O'Carroll occupied the northern portion, the O'Spillanes held Ileagh, the Eóganacht Chaisil had annexed Middle Third. The ancient name of the district on which the town now stands was Tuatha Corca Teine. Teine was supposed to have been the son of the King of Connacht, arriving in the district shortly after Saint Patrick. Monastic settlements were located at the site of Teine's fort, 'Land of the Monks' (Irish: Farran na Manna). A holy man named Silean (anglicised as Sheelan) is reputed to have accompanied St Patrick and to have established a monastery in the area. There is no townland called Templemore. The townland on which the town is built is Kiltillane (Irish: Cill tSilean), meaning Saint Sheelan's Church.

Feudal period

Knockagh Castle, near Drom
The Big Church or Templemore Abbey
West entrance. April 2011.

With the Norman invasion of Ireland in 1169, a powerful Norman family – the Butlers – became the new overlords. Early in the 14th century, they were raised to the Earldom of Ormond. As the holders of the County Palatine of Tipperary, they were entitled to appoint sheriffs and judges, and to gather certain classes of revenue that would normally have been due to the Crown. This privilege was withdrawn in 1715. The family donated a small piece of land to the Abbey of St Thomas in Dublin, and about 1200 a large Abbey was built with a moated graveyard, the remains of which are still to be seen in Templemore Demesne, commonly known as the "Town Park".

The Blackcastle, as it is locally known, was built in the Town Park in 1450 by James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormond.[5] This building and its manor lands were occupied by the Butlers and were later leased to the families of Purcell of Loughmore (Loughmoe) and Morris of Knockagh.[6]

The O′Fogarty clan held what is now the barony of Eliogarty, while to the north of them, at least some time later, were O'Meaghers of Ikerrin.[7] The River Nore, at its position between Roscrea and Templemore, although just a small stream at this point, is usually taken as the southern limit of Ely O'Carroll territory.

Carden family

Black Castle Town Park 2007

Around 1695 the Butlers sold extensive lands to an English family called Carden[8] from Cheshire, who settled in the area and also located at Barnane and Fishmoyne. Over the next 200 years, this family was to play a significant part in the development of the town and district which has the nickname of "Carden's Wild Demesne", after the popular 19th-century poem.

Templemore owes its improved state to the liberality and exertions of the John C. Carden, Bart. under whose auspices the public buildings were erected, and by whom the ground on which the town stands was granted at a nominal annual rent.[9]

Following the burning of the Blackcastle, Carden built a new estate. He built a mansion known as the Priory on the edge of the town. The architecture of the Priory was in the style of the Elizabethan era. The Priory was surrounded by a demesne which had a formal garden with paved paths around an artificial lake. Quoting from a contemporary newspaper commentary of 1861, when the Priory was still under construction:

The noble Gothic pile of finely chiselled limestone, with its battlements, turrets, buttresses and extensive façade, and spacious arched doorway; the architraves of grouped columns, retreating to the depth of several feet, convey to the mind an idea of architectural grandeur seldom associated with the country residences of our gentry.

There were extensive gardens and a lot of money was spent on them:

The house itself consists of sixty rooms, and the sum of, we understand £20,000 in round numbers, has been expended so far upon the building, – Upon entering the grand hall, through the massive oaken doorway, replete with medieval decorations, the visitor finds that ‘The Priory’ has been erected in a style of magnificence not very generally met with – it is floored en mosaique, in walnut and oak; the peculiar grotesque spirit of the Gothic style is not permitted to run riot through the rich oak carving, while that more beautiful element, tracery enters largely into the interior ornamentation – the oak painted ceiling richly stuccoed and the polished armour shields an banners that hang around with the erect figures in full suits of armour; the wide staircase in massive oak – the great doorways leading to the drawing–room at one side and to the library at the other – the rich and mellow light that comes through the beautiful stained glass window that forms the upper portion of the Gothic entrance, and through the lancet shaped sashes – all this bespeak a profuse liberality and taste of order.[10]

The Cardens kept the ruins of the old church and graveyard. At the entrance on the Borrisoleigh Road is the gatekeeper's lodge. After 1860, the Priory was renamed the Abbey.[11]

Lewis' directory of 1837 lists the principal landowners in the locality at the time:

Lloydsborough is the seat of J. Lloyd, Esq.; part of the demesne is in Killea, though the mansion is in the parish of Templemore; it is a handsome residence in a well-planted demesne. The other principal seats are Woodville Lodge, the residence of D. J. Webb, Esq.; Belleville, of the Hon. C.J.K. Monck; and Eastwood, of T. Bennett, Esq.[12]

McCan Barracks

McCan Barracks, originally called "Richmond barracks", was constructed in 1809 on the 17-acre (69,000 m2) site donated by the town's founder and largest landowner Sir John Carden, ancestor of Sir John Carden, 6th Baronet (1892-1935), who also donated the adjoining 40 acres (160,000 m2) for training and recreation. It replaced an earlier barracks located near the Ursuline convent. George Borrow resided there when he accompanied his father's regiment to Templemore in 1816. The new barracks consisted of 2 squares, surrounded by company lines, stores, married quarters, officer's mess, military prison, church and hospital. Completely surrounded by a high wall, with protective/defensive posts at each corner, it had accommodation for 25 officers, married quarters for 48 other ranks, and 767 unmarried personnel. A total of 36 hospital beds and 15 guardroom cells were located within the complex as well as stabling for 27 officers' horses. The surrounding area was quickly developed, with names such as Talavera Place, Vimeiro Mall and Regent Bridge,[13] reminders of the victories of the British in the Peninsular War taking place at the time of the construction of the barracks.[14]

In late summer 1920, Templemore was the site of alleged Marian apparitions.[15] The town briefly became a popular pilgrimage destination.[15] This took place during the War of Independence and also resulted in a brief truce between the IRA and Crown forces in the area.[15]

Since February 1964, the barracks has been the site of the Garda Síochána College, the centre for training Ireland's police force.[16]

Templemore today

The town council was abolished in 2014 following the enactment of the Local Government Reform Act 2014.

Main Street including Town Hall
Mary Street

Townlands in the civil parish

There are 38 townlands in the civil parish of Templemore.[17] The bulk of the town of Templemore lies in the townland of Kiltillane which has the River Suir as its eastern boundary. Townlands in the north-western parts of the parish are situated in the barony of Ikerrin. From north to south they are Killough, Clontaaffe, Craiguedarg, Curraduff and Graiguebeg.[18] The townland of Killawardy is mainly in the civil parish of Killea. Adjacent to it, but in the parish of Templemore and the barony of Eliogarty, is a townland of the same name.

Townland
(English)
Townland
(Irish)
AcresBaronyPoor Law Union
AdamstownBaile Ádaim289EliogartyThurles
BallycahillBaile Uí Chathail1,028EliogartyThurles
BallyheenBéal Átha Hín156EliogartyThurles
BarnalascawBearna Leathscátha18EliogartyThurles
BellevilleBelleville32EliogartyThurles
BorrisbegAn Bhuiríos Bheag488EliogartyThurles
ButlerslodgeLóiste an Bhuitléaraigh20EliogartyThurles
ClontaaffeCluain Tífe462IkerrinRoscrea
CraiguedargAn Ghráig Dhearg82IkerrinRoscrea
CulleenaghAn Choillíneach162EliogartyThurles
CurraduffAn Currach Dubh175IkerrinRoscrea
EastwoodAn Choill Thoir225EliogartyThurles
FarranacahillFearann Ó gCathail79EliogartyThurles
FarranaderryFearann Doire172EliogartyThurles
ForestAn Seisceann199EliogartyThurles
GraiguebegAn Ghráig Bheag37IkerrinRoscrea
GreenwoodAn Choill Ghlas40EliogartyThurles
IvyhallHalla an Eidhneáin74EliogartyThurles
JockeyhallHalla an Mharcaigh42EliogartyThurles
KilclareenCill Chléirín156EliogartyThurles
KillawardyCoill an Bhardaigh101IkerrinRoscrea
KilloughCill Eochaidh849IkerrinRoscrea
KiltillaneCill tSiolláin506EliogartyThurles
KiltillihaCill Tuilithe195EliogartyThurles
KnockanroeAn Cnocán Rua760EliogartyThurles
KylebegAn Choill Bheag17EliogartyThurles
Lisnaviddoge NorthLios na bhFeadóg Thuaidh89EliogartyThurles
Lisnaviddoge SouthLios na bhFeadóg Theas59EliogartyThurles
LloydsboroughGort Ruáin322EliogartyThurles
Manna NorthMana Thuaidh131EliogartyThurles
Manna SouthMana Theas225EliogartyThurles
OldtownAn Seanbhaile354EliogartyThurles
Priory DemesneDiméin na Prióireachta288EliogartyThurles
Rossnamanniff LowerRos na mBanbh Íochtarach55EliogartyThurles
Rossnamanniff UpperRos na mBanbh Uachtarach44EliogartyThurles
SandymountCnocán na Gainimhe50EliogartyThurles
Templemore DemesneDiméin an Teampaill Mhóir386EliogartyThurles
WoodvilleWoodville83EliogartyThurles

Amenities and features

The most notable landmark in the district is the Devil's Bit mountain range. It is an excursion point for people to visit 'the Rock' and cross at the summit. Following the War of Independence, the private demesne of the Carden family came into the ownership of the town's urban district council which handed it over to the citizens as the Town Park. The Park incorporates an outdoor Swimming Pool, GAA grounds (Páirc Shíleáin), Lakeside Pitch & Putt Course and an all-weather athletic track in the care of Templemore Athletic Club. The demesne's mature woodlands features walks, the ruin of the Black Castle on the western bank of the lake and the ruin of the eponymous big church. The main focus of attention is the man-made lake (7.5 acres) which is used for coarse fishing.

On the Roscrea road there is a cluster of buildings associated with the Church of Ireland community. Among these is St Mary's Church, which is the principal church serving the community in Templemore, Thurles and Kilfithmone.[19] The church originally stood in front of one of the entrances to the Abbey's parkland. When the estates locally known as The Park were built in the late 1950s, the entrance gates and avenue were removed by the town council. The church, along with St Mary's School, the Rectory, adjacent cottage and lodge, were built in 1789 on land donated by Sir John Craven Carden. It was consecrated by the Archbishop of Cashel, Charles Agar, in 1794. The clock tower was restored and floodlit as part of a millennium project.

The foundation stone for the parish church, the Church of the Sacred Heart, was laid on 1 January 1877. It stands on the site of the former residential Erasmus Smith school. At the nearby village of Loughmore is the historic Loughmoe Castle.

The market square with its Town Hall in the centre of the town is reputed locally to be the widest in either Ireland or Britain. It backs on to an extensive wooded town park and lake. The Georgian architecture (dating from the 19th century) with its three-storey houses on the main street, was directed by Sir John Carden (2nd Baronet, Templemore).

Education

Templemore was one of the first three locations selected by the trust of Erasmus Smith in the 17th century for his schools.[20] Today's schools include:

  • St. Colmcille's Primary School, under the ethos of the Catholic Church.
  • St. Joseph's Primary School, under the ethos of the Catholic Church.
  • St. Mary's National School, under the ethos of the Church of Ireland.
  • Our Lady's Secondary School (co-educational), under the ethos of the Catholic Church. It was formed when the Sisters of Mercy Convent (a day and boarding school) merged with the Christian Brothers secondary school in 1986.
  • Templemore College of Further Education, a QQI college of further education offering over a wide variety mainly vocational courses. It had been named St Sheelan's College, with second-level teaching until 2003. In 2012 it changed its name to Templemore College of Further Education.[21]
  • Garda Síochána College, the education and training college of the Garda Síochána (Irish police).

Sport

Gaelic games

Jk Brackens Logo.

The local Gaelic Athletic Association club is J.K. Bracken's GAC, formed in 1991 when clubs from Clonmore, Killea and Templemore merged. It is named for Joseph Kevin Bracken, one of the founders of the GAA,[22][23] who came from Templemore. His son, Brendan, who was a member of Winston Churchill's government in the United Kingdom during World War II, was born in Templemore.[24]

Golf

There is a nine-hole golf course located at close to the Garda Síochána College just off the Thurles road. The Lakeside Pitch-and-Putt club is located beside the lake in the Town Park. Its eighteen-hole course is affiliated to the Pitch and Putt Union of Ireland.

Angling

Coarse fishing is available in the lake in the town park. The lake was recently restored after a period of pollution and rising phosphates. It now has a stock of native fish, as well as a fountain.

Parkrun

A weekly free 5km Parkrun takes place in Templemore. [25]

International relations

Templemore is twinned with the community of Prémilhat in France and with the municipality of Potenza Picena in Italy.[26]

People

gollark: The number of required CB dragons increases by a factor of two with each generation. Unless you inbreed.
gollark: Ah. Well. I think my 72 quadrillion dragons figure applies to your plan, then.
gollark: So, this is a checker, and even gen, then? https://dragcave.net/lineage/BCx40
gollark: Ah. That may be a problem, then.
gollark: Explain this "even gen" thing.

See also

References

  1. "Census 2016 - Small Area Population Statistics (SAPMAP Area) - Settlements - Templemore". Census 2016. Central Statistics Office.
  2. Placenames Database of Ireland – Templemore civil parish.
  3. Archived 19 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  4. Irish Rail printable timetables. Irishrail.ie (20 January 2013).
  5. Lodge, John. The Peerage of Ireland or, A Genealogical History of the Present Nobility of That Kingdom, 1789, Vol IV, p 11.
  6. Archived 21 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Walsh, Paul P., History of Templemore and its Environs (1991 & 2006).
  8. Arthur E. Carden, Carden of Templemore, 2010.
  9. ′′Slater's Commercial Directory of Ireland 1846′′, p. 314
  10. Tipperary Advocate, 30 November 1861. Transcribed by Patrick Bracken. Archived 20 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  11. Archived 27 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  12. Lewis, Samuel, A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, 1837.
  13. Garda College Yearbook 2007, p. 16. Docstoc.com (5 December 2011)
  14. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 22 February 2008. Retrieved 9 February 2016.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. Reynolds, John (2016). 46 Men Dead: The Royal Irish Constabulary in County Tipperary, 1919-22. Gill & Macmillan Ltd. p. No page number given. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  16. History of Garda College on Garda website
  17. Placenames Database of Ireland: townlands in the civil parish. Logainm.ie.
  18. See the O.S.I.'s historical map of the barony
  19. Anglican diocese of Cashel & Ossory. Cashel.anglican.org.
  20. Wallace, W. J. R. (2004). Faithful to our trust: a history of the Erasmus Smith Trust and the High School, Dublin. Blackrock, Co. Dublin: Columba Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-85607-466-7.
  21. Templemore College of Further Education
  22. Archived 20 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  23. "GAA.ie". www.gaa.ie. Retrieved 21 November 2016.
  24. Brendan Bracken at Archived 5 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine, WinstonChurchill.org
  25. "Parkrun in Templemore".
  26. Archived 19 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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