Kilbarrack
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Kilbarrack (Irish: Cill Bharróg - Church of young Barra or St. Berach) is a residential area of Dublin, Ireland, running inwards from the coast, about 8km (5 miles) from the city's centre. Modern-day Kilbarrack is within the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council, with part of its old lands now in Donaghmede, and part in Bayside under Fingal County Council jurisdiction.
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[edit] Location and access
Kilbarrack is situated on an excellent location in the Northside of the city, between the suburbs of Raheny, Sutton, Donaghmede and Bayside (the latter was formed from its old core). Its coastal area faces North Bull Island across the water known as Raheny Lake or Crab Water.
Kilbarrack is accessible from the Coast Road, Howth Road and the Tonlegee Road, by its own station on the (DART) Dublin Area Rapid Transit suburban rail system (as well as from Raheny and Howth Junction stations) and by Dublin Bus (in 2007, routes 17A, to Finglas, and 31/a/b and 32/a/b, from the city centre to remoter suburbs). Kilbarrack railway station opened on 1 June 1969.[1]
[edit] History
Kilbarrack, which is crossed by one of Dublin's small waterways, the Kilbarrack Stream, is an old district, whose name can be found on maps and sea charts, many held at Dublin City Archive, going back several hundred years. It was historically a large area of fields, many being "grange" lands held by Dublin church establishments, with small settlements. Over time, two hamlets emerged, Kilbarrack proper, near the seafront, close to the still-extant Kilbarrack Church and Graveyard complex (illustrated below), and Little Kilbarrack, on the road inland (now Tonlegee Road).
The coastal church ("mapped as Kilbarrack Church, in ruins") and surrounding graveyard, which includes the grave of the "Sham Squire", were a point of call for mariners, and the church is noted in some records as the Chapel of Mone. At one time, ships entering Dublin Bay paid monies to the city authorities towards the upkeep of the chapel.
The site of Kilbarrack hamlet, and the part of the district bounding Sutton and Baldoyle, are now known as Bayside (from inside Kilbarrack Road to Baldoyle Road), while today's Kilbarrack, and the Greendale shopping and civic complex, are close to where Little Kilbarrack stood. The Tesco-led shopping centre is near the site of the former "big house" of the area, Kilbarrack House.
[edit] Amenities
Kilbarrack has a local office of Dublin City Council, two shopping precincts (Greendale, with a large Centra, and Kilbarrack, dominated by Tesco, which has renovated it twice over the last decade) and a range of shops and pubs. There is a major Health Services Executive centre, and, at the boundary with Raheny and Donaghmede, a Municipal Fire Station and practice yard.
Kilbarrack has three primary schools, Scoil Eoin, the Educate Together North Bay School, and Gaelscoil Mide, previously of Donaghmede.
Kilbarrack is also well-known for its sporting clubs and teams, which include Naomh Barrog GAA Club, Kilbarrack United FC, who play in the top Division of the AUL, and Kilmount Boys FC (Currently Amateur Football League Champions 2007-8)
The modern Parish Church (Roman Catholic) serves Kilbarrack and part of Raheny (Parish of Kilbarrack-Foxfield); some locals attend St. Benedict's Church in Grange Park Parish, which also serves some in Raheny.
[edit] Points of Note
Local author, Booker Prize winner and former teacher at Greendale Community School in Kilbarrack Roddy Doyle is seen by many as having captured the atmosphere and spirit of Kilbarrack, thinly disguised as Barrytown, in a series of popular fiction works.
Several-times Irish minister Michael Woods (politician) lives on Kilbarrack Road near where the district meets Bayside.
Margaret Harford (nee Fox) occupied the cemetery cottage, managed the cemetery and was the District Registrar of Births and Deaths for Howth District for most of the 1930s, 40s and part of the 50s.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Kilbarrack station. Railscot - Irish Railways. Retrieved on 2007-09-03.
- ^ Personal information from grandson, Martin Connolly, Sydney, Feb 2008