Bunclody
Bunclody
Bun Clóidí | |
---|---|
Town | |
Coordinates: 52°39′18″N 6°39′04″W / 52.655°N 6.651°W | |
Country | Ireland |
Province | Leinster |
County | Wexford |
Elevation | 52 m (171 ft) |
Population | 2,053 |
Irish Grid Reference | S909569 |
Bunclody (Irish: Bun Clóidí, meaning 'bottom of the (river) Clody'), formerly Newtownbarry (until 1950), is a small town on the River Slaney in Wexford, Ireland. It is located near the foot of Mount Leinster. Most of the town is in County Wexford; a small area at the north end of town is in County Carlow. Bunclody has received a number of high scores in the Tidy Towns competition. The town is known for the "Streams of Bunclody Festival" held during the month of July.[citation needed]
Bunclody is 20 km by road north of Enniscorthy. The R746 road intersects the N80 road in the town.
Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1821 | 1,095 | — |
1831 | 1,430 | 30.6% |
1841 | 1,437 | 0.5% |
1851 | 1,307 | −9.0% |
1861 | 1,097 | −16.1% |
1871 | 1,014 | −7.6% |
1881 | 960 | −5.3% |
1891 | 909 | −5.3% |
1901 | 890 | −2.1% |
1911 | 884 | −0.7% |
1926 | 709 | −19.8% |
1936 | 684 | −3.5% |
1946 | 699 | 2.2% |
1951 | 805 | 15.2% |
1956 | 976 | 21.2% |
1961 | 891 | −8.7% |
1966 | 940 | 5.5% |
1971 | 929 | −1.2% |
1981 | 1,467 | 57.9% |
1986 | 1,423 | −3.0% |
1991 | 1,316 | −7.5% |
1996 | 1,241 | −5.7% |
2002 | 1,361 | 9.7% |
2006 | 1,863 | 36.9% |
2011 | 2,012 | 8.0% |
2016 | 1,984 | −1.4% |
2022 | 2,053 | 3.5% |
[2][3] |
Name
[edit]During the 17th century, the name of the town was changed from Bunclody to Newtownbarry, but was reverted to its original name in the 20th century, following Irish independence. The change was made official by a local government order in 1950.[4]
History
[edit]Although a hamlet already existed here, Bunclody was raised to the status of a post town in 1577 by alderman James Barry, sheriff of Dublin.[5][6]
The town was the scene of the Battle of Bunclody during the 1798 rebellion.[7]
In the 19th century, a small canal was made, drawing water from the Clody river, to provide drinking water for the town.[8] The canal still flows along the middle of the town's main street. During the Tithe War, 1830–1836, 'Newtownbarry' was the scene of a clash between locals and the officials of the Crown. Locals had become enraged by the seizure of property by the police and army to pay for the Protestant Episcopal polity. According to James Connolly, "twelve peasants were shot and twenty fatally wounded".[9]
In 1884, a metal bridge was built across the River Slaney upstream from today's bridge. It was built of iron from New Ross, and assembled in the bridge meadow beside where the bridge stood. This bridge was washed away in 1965 by a flood. The remains of the bridge were visible from the bank of the river for some years, until it was removed in 2007, during the building of Bunclody Golf and Fishing Club beside the River Slaney.[citation needed]
Among the amenities of the town there are number of GAA and association football pitches, an outdoor swimming pool (open 2½ months of the year), an aparta-hotel, and two primary and two post-primary schools and an Adult Education & Training Centre.[citation needed]
Notable residents included the travel writer Mabel Hall-Dare (1847–1929), who grew up in the town before her marriage, in 1877, to the explorer J. Theodore Bent (1852–1897).[10] At nearby Ballyrankin House lived the mother and daughter writers Moira O'Neill (1864–1955) and Molly Keane (1904–1996).[11]
Civil War events
[edit]The town was a site of three fatalities during the Irish Civil War.
The first was James Roche, a member of the Anti-Treaty IRA, who died in a car crash on 4 July 1922.[12]
The second person killed was Lieutenant Ignatius "Nacey" Redmond, a local member of Sinn Féin, who held the post of secretary. He had overseen pro-treaty meetings in Easter 1922 in the town, in opposition to the position of his comrades, and resigned his post in Sinn Féin in August 1922 before joining the pro-treaty Free State army. On 2 October 1922, he was killed approximately two and a half miles from Bunclody on the old Bunclody-Kiltealy road.[13][12]
The third was 29 year old Thomas Doyle, a World War I veteran from Enniscorthy, who later worked as a clerical officer with the Free State army. He was shot dead at Ryland's Cross outside the town when a Free State army vehicle was ambushed on 1 December 1922.[12]
Demography
[edit]Bunclody–Carrickduff is a census town split between County Carlow and County Wexford. It comprises the town of Bunclody and the adjoining village of Carrigduff, and had a population of 2,053 at the 2022 census, an increase from 1,984 at the 2016 census.[3][14]
Demographically, a number of nationalities are represented, with approximately 13% of its population being of Polish nationality,[15] and approximately 8.7% Irish Traveller.[16]
Schools
[edit]The town has two primary schools: Bunclody National School and Carrigduff National School. There are two secondary schools. The FCJ Secondary School and Bunclody Vocational College. The FCJ (Faithful Companions of Jesus) school was founded by a French order of nuns in 1861, and was a boarding school for girls throughout the 20th century.[17] The all-girls school provided education for day pupils and accepted male day pupils from the late 1960s when the school became co-educational. The old boarding school was demolished in 2002.[18]
Tourism and culture
[edit]Bunclody featured in the 2018 Venice Architectural Biennale, alongside nine other Irish market towns.[19] A volunteer-led tourist office is open in the town.[20]
The Bunclody Adventure Hub at Ryland Road allows access to water sports on the River Slaney.[21] There are also a number of walking trails along the Clody Valley and off-road trails at Coolmeelagh and Kilbranish. It is a point on the Columban Way, which runs from Bangor, County Down through Bunclody and on through mainland Europe to Bobbio in Italy – following the life journey of Saint Columbanus.[22]
A folk song about Bunclody, titled Streams of Bunclody and written by a local emigrant,[23] was reputedly one of Luke Kelly's favourite ballads.[24]
Transport
[edit]The town is approximately 25 km from the M9 motorway and 20 km from the M11. Bunclody is served by Local Link bus routes 368 (Bunclody to Enniscorthy) and 369 (New Ross to Tullow via Bunclody).[25] Bus Éireann operates route 132 from the town to Dublin. Wexford Bus also provides a scheduled service from Wexford to Carlow via Bunclody on route 376.[26] While Bunclody was never served by rail, early 19th century proposals called for two railway lines to serve the area; these plans never progressed.[27] The nearest station is Enniscorthy railway station approximately 23 kilometres away.
Sport
[edit]Bunclody Golf and Fishing Club was officially opened in early 2009. The course is on the Carlow side of the town. The 18-hole course is set on 300 acres (1.2 km2) beside the river Slaney, and is home to Ireland's first on-course elevator, which links the 17th green to the 18th tee. The great spotted woodpecker, Ireland's newest breeding bird, was spotted there in 2013.[28] Bunclody Golf and Fishing Club hosted the Irish PGA in August 2019.[29]
The local Gaelic Athletic Association club, Halfway House Bunclody (sometimes abbreviated to HWH-Bunclody),[30] won the Wexford Intermediate Hurling Championship in 2010.[31] The club also fields Gaelic football teams, in the Enniscorthy District,[32] and won the Wexford Senior Football Championship in 1985.[33]
A local association football club, Bunclody AFC, was founded in 1969 and fields teams in the Wexford Football League Premier Division.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "Census 2022 | Profile 1 - Population Distribution and Movement | F1015 - Population". Census 2022. Central Statistics Office Ireland. September 2022. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
- ^ www.cso.ie/census and www.histpop.org Archived 2016-05-07 at the Wayback Machine. Figures post 1951 are for Bunclody-Carrigduff, a conurbation that straddles the Wexford-Carlow borders. For a discussion on the accuracy of pre-famine census returns see J. J. Lee "On the accuracy of the pre-famine Irish censuses" in Irish Population, Economy and Society edited by J.M. Goldstrom and L.A. Clarkson (1981) p54, and also "New Developments in Irish Population History, 1700-1850" by Joel Mokyr and Cormac Ó Gráda in The Economic History Review, New Series, Vol. 37, No. 4 (November 1984), pp. 473–488.
- ^ a b "Bunclody (Ireland) Census Town". citypopulation.de. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
- ^ "S.I. No. 281/1950 — Local Government (Change of Name of Non-Municipal Town) Order, 1950". irishstatutebook.ie. 1950.
- ^ Hayward, Richard (1949). Leinster and the City of Dublin. Barker. p. 108.
- ^ Brewer, J. N. (1825). The Beauties of Ireland: Being Original Delineations, Topographical, Historical, and Biographical, of Each County. Sherwood: Jones, & Co. p. 378.
- ^ DeVal, Seamus. "A History of Bunclody, Wexford, Ireland".
- ^ Bassett, George Henry (1991). Wexford County Guide and Directory. Hibernian Imprints. pp. 343–347. ISBN 1-874238-00-6.(original publication 1885)
- ^ "Labour In Irish History". marxists.org. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
- ^ "Obituaries: Nature 124, 1929". The Times. 4 July 1929. p. 65.
- ^ "Burning of Ballyrankin House by IRA may have been an act of reprisal". New Ross Standard. Independent News & Media. 20 March 2021.
- ^ a b c "Fatalities". Brigade Activity. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
- ^ "Lieutenant Ignatius Redmond". www.bunclody.net. Retrieved 3 October 2022.
- ^ "Sapmap Area - Settlements - Bunclody-Carrickduff". Census 2016. Central Statistics Office Ireland. April 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
- ^ "CENSUS 2016 -NON-IRISH NATIONALITIES LIVING IN IRELAND / POLISH". Central Statistics Office, Dublin.
- ^ Needs analysis of Traveller community in Co. Wexford (PDF) (Report). Wexford County Council. 7 November 2018. p. 8.
- ^ "History - FCJ Secondary School". FCJ Secondary School.
- ^ Sr. Madeleine Ryan FCJ (2009). "F.C.J. Secondary School Bunclody - History (1861 – 2009)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 September 2020.
- ^ "Irish architecture hits Venice - a Biennale Diary". RTÉ. 22 May 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Bunclody Tourism". Bunclody Business. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "Bunclody Adventure Hub". Shielbaggan Outdoor Education Centre. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "The Columban Way". Carlow Tourism. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
- ^ "RTÉ Archives - Singing Folk Trio Emmet Spiceland - 1968". rte.ie. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
'By the Streams of Bunclody' is said to have been written by a homesick Wexford emigrant
- ^ "FBI agent sings about Bunclody". Enniscorthy Guardian. 1 September 2000.
It has often been reported that the late Luke Kelly of the Dubliners included `Streams of Bunclody' among his favourite ballads
- ^ "Timetables". locallinkwexford.ie.
- ^ "Route 376 March 2017" (PDF). wexfordbus.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 November 2017. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
- ^ "Railways and County Carlow". rootsweb.ancestry.com. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016.[better source needed]
- ^ "Great Spotted Woodpecker (Dendrocopos major) - Irish Birding". www.irishbirding.com. Retrieved 5 April 2018.
- ^ "RTÉ Sport - McGrane secures Irish PGA Championship in Bunclody". rte.ie. 22 August 2019.
- ^ "Clubs | HWH-Bunclody". wexfordgaa.ie. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
- ^ "Bunclody bounce back". Wexford People. 12 October 2010. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
- ^ "Aidan Nolan on point as Bunclody recover to pip Sarsfields in Wexford Senior football championship". Wexford People. 11 September 2023. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
- ^ "G.A.A. Facts". Evening Press. 21 October 1985. p. 14.