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Ballinakill,
Dysartgallen Civil Parish, County Laois, Ireland
BALLINAKILL,
a market and post-town (formerly a parliamentary borough), in the
parish of DYSARTGALLEN, barony
of CULLINAGH, QUEEN'S county,
and province of LEINSTER, 10 miles (S.S.E.) from Maryborough
(Portlaoise), and 50 miles (S.W.) from Dublin city; containing
1927 inhabitants.
This
is a place of some antiquity, but was not made a market-town till
the year 1606, when a grant of a market and fair was made to Sir
T. Coatch, proprietor of the manor of Galline. In 1612
it was incorporated by Jas. I., and was invested with considerable
privileges, to foster the plantation made here by Sir. T. Ridgway,
Bart. The castle, of which there are still some remains, fell
into the possession of the R.C. party during the insurrection of
1641, and when Cromwell's troops overran the island, being bravely
defended by its garrison, it was cannonaded from the Warren-Hill,
adjoining Heywood demesne, by Gen. Fairfax, and the
garrison was at length compelled to surrender.
The
town is situated in a fertile district, the soil of which is principally
composed of a deep clay adapted both for the dairy and for tillage.
To the east is Heywood, the seat of the Trench family,
in a richly varied demesne ornamented with plantations and artificial
sheets of water. The manufacture of woollen stuffs, formerly more
extensive, is still carried on to a limited degree, and there is
a brewery. The market is on Saturday, and has somewhat declined
since the establishment of a market on the same day at Abbeyleix,
a few years since: the market-house is kept in repair by Earl
Stanhope, the lord of the manor. Fairs are held on the 16th
of Jan. and Feb., 22nd of March and April, 13th of May, first Thursday
after Whit-Sunday, 13th of June and July, 12th of Aug., and 16th
of Sept., Oct., Nov., and Dec.; that in Nov. is a large fair for
bullocks. Here is a station of the constabulary police.
Under
the charter of Jas. I. the corporation was styled "The Sovereign,
Burgesses, and Freemen of the Borough of Ballinakill;" and
consisted of a sovereign, twelve burgesses, and an unlimited number
of freemen, but is now extinct. The corporation returned two members
to the Irish parliament until the Union, when the £15,000
awarded as compensation for the loss of that privilege was paid
to Charles, Marquess of Drogheda. Quarter and petty
sessions were formerly held in the town, but have been removed to
Abbeyleix, about three miles distant.
The
parish church, a handsome edifice with a tower and spire, is situated
in the town; and there is a Roman Catholic chapel.
Here
is a national school, in which about 330 boys and 350 girls are
taught; also a dispensary. The R.C. poor of the town derive benefit
from a bequest of £500 by a Mr. Dillon.
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