New Inn, County Tipperary

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New Inn
Loch Cheann
Location
centerMap highlighting New Inn
Statistics
Province: Munster
County: County Tipperary
Population ( )
 - Town:
 - Rural:
 
c.250 
c.1000

New Inn (Irish: Loch Cheann) is a village in County Tipperary, in the Republic of Ireland. It is located midway between the market and tourist towns of Cahir and Cashel on the N8, the main road in Ireland which links the cities of Cork and Dublin.

A small community, New Inn has three pubs, two schools, one shop, one petrol station, a convent and Church, and a GAA pitch, which is home to Rockwell Rovers GAA Club. To the south of the village is Outrath Co-op, which serves the large agricultural hinterland of the village. Rockwell College, a prestigious private secondary school run by the Holy Ghost Fathers, is situated 3km from the centre of the village.

A local legend holds that the gaelic version of the name, Loch Cheann (which translates literally as 'the lake of heads'), pertains to a great battle fought in the area in antiquity, or during the early medieval period. According to this tale, the heads of the vanquished warriors were severed by the winners, and cast into a lake.

New Inn
New Inn

[edit] Knockgraffon

The parish of New Inn also includes Knockgraffon, home to a ruined medieval church and graveyard, as well as the remains of a Motte, which is thought to date from the 1200s. Knockgraffon was also the centre of the O'Sullivan clan's ancestral lands, until that family was displaced by the Normans in the early thirteenth century. In 1998, the Knockgraffon Motte was purchased by an O'Sullivan (Gary Brian Sullivan of Statesboro, Georgia, U.S.A.) from its Norman-Irish owner (Donal Keating of Cahir, Ireland). It is the first time that Knockgraffon has been back in O'Sullivan possession for nearly 800 years. Other townlands include: Ardneasa, Boytonrath, Chamberlainstown, Derryclooney, Garrandea, Garranlea, Lagganstown, Lough Kent, Masterstown, Marlhill, Outrath.

[edit] New Inn 1940

In November 1940 a local woman, Moll MacArthy, was murdered in field at Marlhill. An unmarried mother of seven, MacArthy was shot in the face at close range. Her neighbour, a man named Harry Gleeson, was arrested, charged, and convicted of her murder. He was hanged in Dublin. The Murder of Marlhill, as the event has become known, continues to spark controversy in the local community, with many maintaining Gleeson's innocence. A book and two RTE television programes have documented the event.