BLACKRATH,
a parish, in the barony of GOWRAN, county of KILKENNY,
and province of LEINSTER, 2 miles (N. E. by E.) from Kilkenny
city; containing 730 inhabitants.
This parish
is situated on the mail coach road from Dublin to Cork,
and on the river Nore, on the banks of which there are two considerable
flour-mills; and within its limits are the marble works described in
the account of the city of Kilkenny.
Lyrath,
the seat of Sir J. D. W. Cuffe, Bart., is pleasantly situated
on an eminence commanding a fine view of that city.
It is
a rectory, in the diocese of Ossory,
forming the corps of the prebend of Blackrath in the cathedral
of St. Canice, Kilkenny, and in the patronage of the Bishop: the tithes
amount to £121. 1 shilling 7 and a half pence. There is neither
church nor glebe-house, but there is a glebe of eight acres attached
to the prebend.
In the
Roman Catholic divisions it forms part of the union or district
of Gowran.
There
is a private pay school, in which about 50 boys and 30 girls are taught.
Some remains of the old church yet exist.