BALTINGLASS,
an ancient borough, market and post-town and a parish, in the barony
of UPPER TALBOTSTOWN, county of WICKLOW, and province
of LEINSTER, 32 miles (S.S.W.) from Dublin; containing with the town
of Stratford-on-Slayney, 4110 inhabitants, of which number, 1670
are in the town of Baltinglass.
This place,
according to most antiquaries, derives its name from Baal-Tin-Glas,
signifying, according to common acceptation the pure fire of
Baal, and is thence supposed to have been one of the principal
seats of druidical worship
At the
time of the English invasion, it formed part of the inheritance of the
Kings of Leinster; and about the year 1148 or 1151, Diarmit
Mac Murchad OCavanagh, the reigning monarch, founded here
a monastery for Cistercian monks, in the church of which he was afterwards
interred. Among the most distinguished benefactors to this establishment,
which became a mitred abbey, was John, Earl of Morton, afterwards
King of England; and among its abbots was Albin OMolloy,
one of the most zealous advocates of the Irish clergy, in opposition
to the overbearing allegations of Giraldus Cambrensis. The monastery
was frequently plundered by the mountain septs of the OByrnes
and the OTooles; and in 1314 the abbot obtained from the
English government permission to hold a conference with the chiefs of
those formidable septs, who in the deed for this purpose are designated
Irish Felons, in order to recover the goods
and chattels of which he has been robbed, or a full equivalent for the
same. The monastery was suppressed in 1537, and with its extensive
possessions, including the castle and manor of Baltinglass, was granted
in 1541, to Thomas Eustace, Lord Kilcullen, whom Hen VIII. Created
Viscount of Baltinglass. In the reign of Elizabeth a parliament
was held here, in which was passed an act rendering every kind of inheritance
forfeitable for high treason, emphatically called the statute of Baltinglass.
James the third Viscount Baltinglass, and his four brothers,
having joined the great Desmond insurrection, were convicted
of high treason ; and their estates being confiscated under this
statute, were granted by Queen Elizabeth to Sir John Harrington.
The manor is now the property of Henry Carroll, Esq., of Ballynure;
and the castle, with the town and other considerable property in the
neighbourhood, is in the possession of the Earl of Aldborough.
During the disturbances of 1798, the insurgents, after their defeat
in the county of Wexford, stationed themselves in the mountains
of this neighbourhood, and continued for some time to commit outrages
on the peaceable inhabitants of the surrounding county.
The town
is pleasantly situated in a romantic vale watered by the river Slaney,
over which is a stone bridge of three arches connecting those parts
of it which are on opposite banks of the river. It consists of four
principal streets, with two or three others of less importance, and
in 1831 contained 256 houses: it is amply supplied with water from springs
and from its situation on the great road from Dublin by Tullow
to Wexford, enjoys a considerable traffic.
There
are infantry barracks for one officer, and 25 non-commissioned officers
and privates: and a constabulary police and a peace preservation force
are situated in the tow. The manufacture of linen, woollen and diaper
was formerly carried on here extensively ; there are two bleach greens
in the town in full operation ; and an extensive flour mill. There are
also some extensive cotton and calico printing works at Stratford-on-Slaney.
A market and fairs were granted, in 1617, to Sir Thomas Wilmott,
by Jas. I. Chas., II, in 1663, granted by charter a market to be held
on Friday, and two fairs for three days each in May and September, to
Sir Maurice Eustace, with the tolls thereof ; and four more fairs
were granted, in 1763, to John, Lord Baltinglass, by a patent
which also contains a grant of a market on Tuesday, not held, and of
the tolls and customs of the markets and fairs to his lordship. The
market is on Friday ; and the fairs are held on Feb 2nd, March 17th,
May 12th, July 1st, Sept 12th, and Dec 8th. Until within the last few
years the tolls and customs were received by the corporation, but the
collecting of them has been discontinued.
The town
was incorporated by charter of Chas II in the 15th year of his reign
(1663), under the designation of the Sovereign, Burgesses, and
Free Commons of the Borough of Baltinglass. The corporation consists
of a sovereign, twelve burgesses, a recorder and a town clerk, a sergeant-at-mace,
and a clerk of the market. The sovereign is elected annually by and
from the burgesses, on the Monday next after the feast of St. John the
Baptist, and sworn into office on the Monday after Michael-mas day;
he has power to appoint a deputy from among the resident burgesses,
by consent of a majority of that body; the sovereign or deputy is a
justice of the peace within the borough during the year of office, and
the former for one year after; the sovereign is also coroner. Burgesses
are elected for life, but have no functions to perform. The power of
appointing the recorder and town clerk during pleasure, and also the
clerk of the market was vested by the charter in Sir Maurice Eustace,
his heirs and assigns; and the serjeant at mace is appointed by the
sovereign and burgesses. The freedom of the borough is obtained only
by gift of the corporation; the freemen are exempted from serving upon
juries without the limits of the borough, which, according to the charter,
extend beyond the town, and comprise 300 acres lying on the west and
south sides. The corporation had nearly become extinct, there being
only two burgesses and not one freeman in 1832, when ten burgesses were
chosen. The borough returned two members to the Irish parliament till
the Union when it was disfranchised, and the sum of £15,000 awarded
as compensation was paid to the trustees of the Earl of Aldborough :
the sovereign was the returning officer. The borough is included in
the Manor of Baltinglass, and the manor court was constituted
a court of record, in which the seneschal presided, with jurisdiction
to the amount of £10, but has long been discontinued. The quarter
sessions for the western division of the county are held here; as are
also the petty sessions for the upper division of the barony of Talbotstown,
every alternate Friday, before the county magistrates. The court-house
is situated at the extremity of the principal street, on the eastern
bank of the river. The district bridewell, situated in the town, contains
ten cells, three day-rooms, and three airing yards, in one of which
is a tread-wheel; and though badly planned and inconveniently situated,
it affords sufficient facility for the classification of the prisoners
usually confined within its walls.
The parish
comprises 11,691 statute acres, as applotted under the tithe act. The
lands are in a good state of cultivation; the soil is fertile, and the
system of agriculture is improved; there is very little bog or waste
land.
Stratford
Lodge, the seat of Lady Elizabeth Stratford, is a spacious
mansion pleasantly situated in a demesne of 100 acres tastefully laid
out and planted, ornamented with several sheets of water, and commanding
from the house some extensive views, including the town, the valley
and a magnificent range of mountain scenery. Saunders Grove,
the seat of R. F. Saunders, Esq., is a spacious and handsome
mansion of hewn stone lined with brick, beautifully situated in a rich
demesne adorned by the windings of the Slaney. Golden Fort, situated
on an eminence over the Slaney, opposite the demesne of Saunders Grove,
is the seat of Lieut.-Gen. Saunders, who has very much improved
the estate, by the introduction of an improved system of agriculture
and a superior breed of cattle. The lands of Golden Fort and
Rathbran, both in this parish, are subject to a charge of double
county cess, an error which will probably be rectified by the general
survey now in progress. Slaney Park, the residence of the Rev.
W. Grogan and Whitehall, that of R. Butler, Esq.,
are in the parish; and on the townland of Ladytown, which is
part of this parish, but detached and completely surrounded by the county
of Carlow, is Mount Lucas, the residence of Capt. Jackson,
commanding extensive mountain views and the scenery of the valley.
The living
is a rectory, annexed to that of Ballynure, in the diocese
of Leighlin, and in the patronage of Henry Carroll, Esq.:
the tithes amount to £618 9s. 2¾ d. The church, which occupies
the site of the chancel of the ancient abbey, was repaired, and a square
tower added to it, in 1815, at an expense of £500, and a grant
of £252 has been lately made by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners
for its further repair. The churchyard is the burial place of the Aldborough
family and over the remains of his deceased ancestors the present
Earl, in 1832, erected a massive mausoleum of granite, terminating in
a pyramidal spire. There is a chapel of ease in Stratford-on-Slaney.
In the
R.C. divisions, this parish is the head of a union or district,
which comprises also the parishes of Ballynure and those parts
of the parishes of Timolin and Moon which are in the county
of Wicklow, and that part of Kineagh which is in the county
of Kildare; the chapel near the town is a neat edifice with a
tower, and there is also a chapel at Stratford-on-Slaney.
In the
town of Baltinglass is a place of worship for Wesleyan Methodists, and
at Stratford is one for Presbyterians.
At Stratford
Lodge are two schools, one an infants school, and both supported by
Lady Elizabeth Stratford; and there are two other schools, together
affording instruction to about 260 boys and 1901 girls.
A second
infirmary for the county of Wicklow, containing four wards, in which
are 20 beds, with a dispensary annexed to it has been established in
the town; there is also a savings bank.
Within
the demesne of Stratford Lodge is a shop for supplying the poor with
goods at cost price.
There
are some considerable remains of the Cistercian Abbey, chiefly consisting
of a series of seven pointed arches springing from alternated round
and square pillars with curiously carved capitals, which formerly separated
the south aisle from the nave; the church appears to have been a spacious
cruciform structure, and the west end, which is still standing has the
remains of a lancet shaped window of three lights; the walls enclose
a large area, which appears to have been surrounded with monastic buildings.
Of the
ancient castle, now converted into a farm house, two Norman doorways
leading to a court yard are still remaining; and formerly many fragments
of stone highly wrought lay scattered in all directions.
Near the
town is a cromlech, and numerous other relics of antiquity are said
to have been lately existing there. On the eminence on which Golden
Fort is built are two circular entrenchments or raths, surrounded by
moats, in one of which the proprietor of the estate discovered, a few
years since, a number of gold coins, from which the circumstance of
the seat derived its name; and in the other, which is of larger dimensions
and in a much more perfect state, was found a kistvaen containing an
urn of rude pottery, in which were ashes, with a number of human bones
scattered around: in the same demesne is an ancient cemetery. Baltinglass
gives the title of Baron to the noble family of Stratford,
Earls of Aldborough.