Bansha
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Bansha An Bháinseach |
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Province: | Munster | |
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County: | County Tipperary | |
Population (2002) - Town: - Rural: |
300 1,200 |
Bansha (Irish: An Bháinseach, lit. a grassy place) is a village in south-west county Tipperary in the Republic of Ireland and forms part of the Roman Catholic parish of Bansha & Kilmoyler (united in 1858). Bansha is co-extensive with the pre-Reformation parish of Templeneiry of which the townland name of Templenahurney is thought to be a corruption. While the village is the focal point of the area, there is also an outlying hamlet in the parish, located at Rossadrehid where a rural creamery once serviced the flourishing dairy industry.
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[edit] Location
Bansha is located on the National Primary Route (N24) linking the cities of Limerick and Waterford and is eight kilometres south-east of Tipperary Town and thirteen kilometres north-west of Cahir. The village is strategically located on the eastern approaches to the Glen of Aherlow, which forms a large part of the parish as do the Galtee Mountains (spelt Galty Mountains on Ordnance Survey maps), which has the highest inland mountain peak in Ireland, Galteemore (919 metres, or 3,018 ft). The Roman Catholic Parish Church of the Annunciation, built in 1807, is centrally located in the village as is the Church of Ireland, for the parish of Templeneiry, known to be in use from 1718 but now closed as unviable because of a dwindling local congregation. However, the building which has an imposing spire, erected in 1814, is used for community purposes and the surrounding graveyard is still used for burials by the old families of the area. The river Ara flows by the village and the railway line from Limerick to Waterford also passes through, though the railway station which opened in 1852 was closed in 1963 as part of the rationalisation policy of the national railway company, Córas Iompair Éireann.
[edit] History
The names Bansha and Kilmoyler do not appear in ancient records but instead this area was divided into different ecclesiastical administrations. The modern parish of Bansha & Kilmoyler comprises the whole of the two Civil Parishes of Templeneiry and Clonbullogue, and also parts of the four parishes of Killardry, Relickmurry and Athassel, Kilshane and Cordangan. The Papal Taxation records of 1291 record Templeneiry and Clonbullogue as Nachrich and Clonhalke, Archbishop O'Hedian (1437) names them as Naryt and Clonbolygg. Bansha village is thought to be an ancient settlement and its main geographical features and landed gentry of the surrounding area were vividly described by Samuel Lewis in his Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, published in 1837. Historically, it was a small compact village comprising two streets and two lanes - Main Street and Barrack Street with adjacent Banner's Lane (named after the Rev. Benjamin Holford Banner, the Church of Ireland rector of the Parish of Templeneiry) and Cooke's Lane which was a small enclave off Main Street, named after a member of the Cooke Family of Cordangan Manor, who lived here. The Station Road from Bansha Bridge (over the River Ara) to Bansha railway station had a strategic importance for about a century as it was the commercial artery connecting the village to both the station and the creamery which was the centre of activity each morning as trains arrived on one side of the road and busy creamery activity on the other side gave a vibrancy that has now been lost with the closure of both. The village expanded towards the end of the 20th century when the "Galtee View" residential area was developed in the Glebe close to the old Village Mill.
[edit] Muintir na Tíre
Bansha came to national prominence in the middle of the 20th century when Very Rev. John Canon Hayes, founder of Muintir na Tíre was appointed parish priest of Bansha & Kilmoyler in 1946. Due largely to his endeavours, a factory - Bansha Rural Industries - was started and enjoyed some success producing preservatives for the Irish home market. At that time also, Bansha was to the forefront in developing many Muintir na Tíre initiatives and for a time in the 1950s enjoyed the soubriquet of The Model Parish. While Bansha still relies mainly on an agricultural economy where dairying is the main preoccupation, many of its residents are employed in industry and commerce in neighbouring towns such as Tipperary, Cahir, and Clonmel, to where they commute on a daily basis.
[edit] Parliamentary tradition
For its relative size, Bansha village has a proud and unique parliamentary tradition as two of its natives have represented County Tipperary in different parliaments. John Cullinane, a member of the National League and a Gaelic Athletic Association activist in its earliest years, was a Nationalist Member of Parliament at Westminster from 1900 until he bowed out at the famous election of 1918 when Sinn Féin defeated the Irish Parliamentary Party in most constituencies.
Michael Ferris was a Teachta Dála in Dáil Éireann from 1989 until his untimely death on parliamentary business in Lisbon on March 20, 2000 at the age of 69. Overall, he had over twenty years service in the Oireachtas (parliament), having been elected to Seanad Éireann for the first time on April 23, 1975. He was a member of the Labour Party and a prominent spokesman on agricultural matters and social affairs. As a public representative, he was following in the footsteps of his grand-father, Patrick Ferris, who was a member of Tipperary (S.R.) County Council in the early years of the 20th century.
Séamus Ryan, a native of Deerpark, in nearby Kilfeakle, was a member of the Irish Senate—Seanad Éireann—before his untimely death in 1933. Mr. Ryan and his wife, Agnes Harding of Solohead opened their first retail shop in Parnell Street, Dublin in 1918, known as the Monument Creamery. They specialised in the sale of dairy products and quickly developed their business to include a chain of over thirty restaurants and shops in Dublin over the next four decades. After Mr. Ryan's death, his widow carried on and indeed expanded the business. Their daughter was the Hollywood actress, Kathleen Ryan who starred in many movies in the 1940s and 1950s and their son John was an artist and man of letters who wrote a famous memoir of bohemian Dublin in the 1950s—Remembering How we Stood.
[edit] Darby Ryan, poet and patriot
Diarmuid O'Ríain (Darby Ryan) was born at Ashgrove, Bansha in 1777 and was a poet and patriot, his most famous composition was undoubtedly The Peeler and the Goat, a ballad or satire which was popularly sung across Ireland and was taken worldwide by emigrants. Copies of his Tipperary Minstrelsy are to be found in The British Museum and at The Royal Irish Academy. Ryan died in 1855 and is buried in the old graveyard in Bansha where his grave is marked, unusually, by a carved stone cross depicting a rope and anchor, suggestive of a maritime connection of which there was none.
[edit] Sir William and Lady Butler
Lieutenant-General Sir William Francis Butler PC, GCB (October 31, 1838 – June 7, 1910), a soldier, a writer, and an adventurer, lived in retirement at Bansha Castle from 1905 until his death in 1910. He was born a few miles distant at 'Suirville', Ballyslatteen. He took part in many colonial campaigns in Canada and India, but mainly in Africa, including the Ashanti wars and the Zulu War under General Wolseley. He was made commander-in-chief of the British Army in South Africa in 1898 where he was also High Commissioner for a short period. His views on colonialism were often controversial as he was sympathetic to the natives in many of the outposts of Empire in which he served. His wife, the famous battle artist, Elizabeth Thompson (1846-1933), known as Lady Butler, continued to live at the Castle until 1922 when she went to live at Gormanston Castle, Co. Meath with their youngest daughter, Eileen, who became Viscountess Gormanston (1873-1964) in 1911 on her marriage to Jenico Preston (1878-1925), 15th Lord Gormanston, the Premier Viscount of Ireland. Lady Butler died in 1933 in her 87th year and is buried at Stamullen graveyard in County Meath, just up the road from Gormanston. Among her many famous paintings is "The Roll Call" depicting a scene in the Crimean War. This painting was bought by Queen Victoria and forms part of the royal collection and is now in Buckingham Palace. Her daughter Eileen suffered great loss during the second World War when two of her three sons, Billy (16th Lord Gormanston) and Stephen were killed in action at Dunkirk (1940) and Anzio (1944) respectively. Both Billy and Stephen, together with their brother Bobby and sister Antoinette, spent many childhood days at Bansha Castle where they were once marooned during the civil war when Bansha and the surrounding area was the cockpit for fighting between the Free State forces and the local republicans. Descendants of Sir William and Lady Elizabeth include their Great-grandson Jenico Preston, 17th Viscount Gormanston of Kensington, London and his family.
[edit] The McCarthys of Springhouse
The McCarthy Reagh family of Carbery in west Cork were aristocrats of the old gaelic order (Lords and Princes of Carbery) and had their original base at Kilbrittain Castle. Denis McCarthy Reagh, Chief of the McCarthy Reaghs settled at Springhouse, near Bansha in the late 17th century where he built a mansion and had an estate of 9,000 acres, which in its day was considered to be the largest cultivated farm in Europe. Owing to the severity of the Penal Laws, his grandson, also named Denis went into exile in France where he died at Argenton, Berry in 1761. Justin McCarthy (1744-1811), son of the exiled Denis, realised his father's property and settled at Toulouse. He was an accomplished linguist and classical scholar. He cultivated the fine arts and possessed one of the finest libraries in France, rivalling the King's collection at Paris. Because of his illustrious Irish ancestry he was ennobled by King Louis XVI as Count of Toulouse in 1776 and was admitted to the honours of the French Royal Court in Paris. The McCarthy family were noted priest-protectors in penal times and Springhouse was considered a safe haven for priests on-the-run from persecution. A namesake, Donough McCarthy was consecrated Bishop of Cork & Cloyne on 16 Aug. 1713 in Villa Domus Fontis which was the latinised equivalent of Springhouse. Another member of the family of a later generation was Catherine McCarthy of Ballygurteen, Kilmoyler, who survived the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912. The family still survives in Ireland and also in France through the daughters of Count Justin of Toulouse who married into the French aristocracy. A family branch of recent memory lived at 'Coolavunga' in the townland of Barnlough during the 20th century and members of that family still reside in Tipperary Town. The family's great mansion was dismantled in the early 19th century with only a trace remaining near the lake shore in the grounds of Kilshane House which was built by the Lowes who replaced them in the 1820s and who also had an estate in Kenmare, Co. Kerry. The place was called Springhouse because there was a spring or well near a whitethorn tree close to the scullery at the rear of the mansion house and the townland assumed this name thereafter.
[edit] Contemporary scene
There is a vibrant contemporary scene in Bansha which is experiencing an unprecedented increase in population due to new housing developments. The Bansha Agricultural Show is held annually and in recent years, the social scene has been augmented by the festival week in late August. For recreation, game shooting and fishing in the rivers Suir, Ara and Aherlow are popular pastimes. For the more athletic, there are also a number of sporting clubs such as Bansha Athletic Club, Bansha Golf Society, Bansha Celtic F.C. which promotes Association football (soccer) and the Galtee Rovers GAA - Hurling & Gaelic Football Club (affiliated to the GAA, 1885). The latter two clubs enjoy a friendly co-existence as many of their football players are members of both clubs.
[edit] References
- Martin Ryan (2003) - Sir William Francis Butler, a life 1838-1910
- Eileen, Viscountess Gormanston (1953) - A Little Kept
- Charles Chevenix Trench (1997) - Grace's Card, Irish Catholic Landlords 1690 - 1800.
- Stephen Rynne (1960) - Father John Hayes, Muintir na Tíre, The People of the Land.
- Evelyn Bolster (1989) - A History of the Diocese of Cork from the Penal Era to the Famine.
- Rockwell College Annual (1935) p.34-40 and (1937) p.77-80
- Thomas Crofton Croker (1825) - Fairy Tales and Traditions of the South of Ireland - The Banshee of the MacCarthys
- Arthur Young (1780) - A tour in Ireland
- David J. Butler (2006) - South Tipperary 1570-1841, Religion, Land and Rivalry
- William Nolan & Thomas G. McGrath (1985) - Tipperary History & Society
- Thomas Campbell (London) (1777) - A Philosophical Survey of the South of Ireland.
- Renagh Holohan & Jeremy Williams (1989) - The Irish Chateau, In search of Descendants of the Wild Geese.
- Denis G. Marnane (1985) - A History of West Tipperary from 1660 - Land and Violence
- Senan Molony (2000) - The Irish aboard Titanic
- Randal McDonnell (2002) - The Lost Houses of Ireland, A chronicle of great houses and the families who lived there.
- Ernie Shepherd (2006) - The Waterford, Limerick & Western Railway
- Maureen Wall (1989) - Catholic Ireland in the Eighteenth Century (collected essays) - Ed. Gerard O'Brien
[edit] External links
- The Parish of Bansha & Kilmoyler
- Titanic Survivor - Bansha Lady's Escape - Cork Examiner Report
- The MacCarthy Dynasties of Munster
- Irish Pedigrees - MacCarthy Reagh of Springhouse & Counts of Toulouse, France - Library Ireland
- Obituary of Lady Elizabeth Butler (1846-1933) - The Times, London
- Houses of the Oireachtas - Parliamentary Debates 2000 - Tributes to Deputy Michael Ferris
- Samuel Lewis' Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, 1837 - Dr. Jane Lyons, Dublin
- Muintir na Tíre