Fethard, County Tipperary

Fethard
Fiodh Ard
Town

Fethard town centre
Fethard

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 52°27′54″N 7°41′46″W / 52.465°N 7.696°W / 52.465; -7.696Coordinates: 52°27′54″N 7°41′46″W / 52.465°N 7.696°W / 52.465; -7.696
Country Ireland
Province Munster
County County Tipperary
Area
  Total 2.21 km2 (0.85 sq mi)
Elevation 69 m (226 ft)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 1,541
Irish Grid Reference S207355

Fethard (Irish: Fiodh Ard, meaning "high wood")[3][4] is a small town in County Tipperary, Ireland. It is located 16 km (9.9 mi) east of Cashel on the Clashawley River where the R692, R689 and R706 regional roads intersect. It is a civil parish in the barony of Middle Third. It is part of the ecclesiastical parish of "Fethard and Killusty" in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly. In 2006, its population was 1,374.[1]

Public transport

Bus

The Thurles-Clonmel route operated by Bernard Kavanagh & Sons/The Shamrock Bus Company serves Fethard several times a day. There is no Sunday service.[5]

Rail

The nearest station is Clonmel railway station, approximately 13 kilometres distant.

Features

The town is remarkable for having been heavily fortified and completely surrounded by town walls as part of Edward I's policy of establishing fortified market towns. The town walls rise to a height of 25 feet (7.6 m) and can still be seen today. Most of the circuit survives, making Fethard the most complete medieval circuit in Ireland. Knockelly Castle, a well-fortified tower house, is one of many historical buildings in the area. The town is also internationally known in the thoroughbred horse racing industry as the home of Coolmore Stud. There are also a number of horse-training stables in Fethard, notably that of Michael "Mouse" Morris, at Everardsgrange. McCarthy's Hotel is noted as a place to meet celebrities associated with the racing industry. This was the home of Dick McCarthy, noted professional jockey of the early 20th century, who finished third in the Grand National at Aintree in 1929.

History

Fethard's village walls with mural tower house (at left) and church tower (at right).

The story of Fethard begins in earnest with the coming of the Anglo-Normans to Ireland eight centuries ago. The low hill on which the town is sited may have been crowned by a church in the pre-Norman period, but there is no certain evidence that it was a place of settlement until around 1200 when it was chosen as the location of a major settlement by a Norman lord, almost certainly William de Braose who had been installed by King John in 1201 as the chief tenant of a very substantial territory encompassing most of the modern County Tipperary.

Fethard did not evolve slowly into a town in the aftermath of the Norman arrival; rather, it began its life as one. It was laid out systematically, with a clearly demarcated market area, a conveniently located church and graveyard, and a regular pattern of streets. Its economy was nourished by the rich farmland in its vicinity; indeed, approaching the town today from Mullinahone, Moyglass, Cashel, Clonmel or Kilsheelan, one travels along roads that twist around fields which have been ploughed and grazed many times but which have hardly changed shape since the Middle Ages.

In addition to providing an infrastructure which would serve the town well, Fethard's founder acquired for it a charter bestowing on it the status of borough and endowing it with a constitution under the terms of which the town's people, or burgesses, enjoyed such privileges as fixed annual rents, access to their own court, and set fines for all but the most serious of offences. The granting of charters was to some extent incidental to the economic health of the settlements, but the entitlements that went with the charters enticed rural folk from England and Wales to settle in Ireland, and thus the boroughs played a crucial role in the plantation of Anglo-Norman families in Ireland. There is no doubt that Fethard's medieval population was largely made up of people of rural origin from across the Irish Sea. Many of the town people may originally have come from William de Braose's vast estates in Wales.

The North Gate.

Settlements with borough status were not guaranteed survival, not to mention prosperity. Disadvantageous sites, competition from larger and older settlements, and a failure to attract people in sufficient numbers contributed to the early stagnation of a number of boroughs. The foundation of Fethard proved to be a successful venture, thanks in part perhaps to William de Braose's energetic promotion of it, but other settlements in the area with borough status - Kiltinan and Lisronagh, for example - struggled to survive and are now places of comparatively little significance.

The town and lands of Fethard passed out of William de Braose's hands in 1208 following a dispute he had with King John. In 1215 the Crown granted Fethard to the archbishops of Cashel, and it remained part of the archiepiscopal estates until the 16th century when the townspeople stopped paying rents to Cashel. By the time the archbishops inherited Fethard the town's great parish church had been built, and William, following the custom of the day, had granted the revenue which was owed to the church from the surrounding lands to a religious house, in this case the Hospital of St. John the Baptist in Dublin. The Hospital seems to have held this revenue until the early 14th century when it was passed on by the Prior to the archbishops of Cashel.

The 13th century was a period of prosperity for Fethard, as indeed it was for other towns in Anglo-Norman Ireland. Goods sold in Fethard around the end of the 13th century included silk, wine skins, sea-fish, coal, nails, timbers and salt. The Augustinian Friars came to Fethard at the start of the following century and established a monastery outside the town on one and a half acres of land; the Friars had actually acquired this land without the king's permission, but following an investigation they were formally pardoned by the king for their breach of procedure.

Life within and beside the town may have been comparatively stress-free in the 13th century, but the town's rural hinterland was not entirely safe for travellers. In the middle of the century, for example, the woods of Thomas de St Aubin, located nearby, needed to be cleared because merchants on their journey to Fethard had been robbed and even killed.

One effect of the increasing lawlessness of the Norman colony in Ireland towards the end of the 13th century - a well-documented phenomenon that owed much to the aggression of the native Irish - was the building of Town Walls at places like Fethard.

Wall-building required finance, and this was usually generated by taxes. A Town Wall had, therefore, an impact on the lives of townspeople beyond simply providing security for their settlement. Whatever the means of raising money, the imposition of taxes or tolls for the purpose of walling needed approval from the king (or, later in the Middle Ages, from parliament), and a limit was put to the time in which money could be collected for the task.

The first reference to the walling of Fethard comes in 1292 when the king allows money levied over seven years from items sold in the town to be used by the burgesses for "the inclosing of their vill and the greater security of Ireland". A record of money still being collected in the early 14th century suggests a further grant after the expiry of that of 1292, but details of that have not survived.

Rarely in medieval Ireland was a single murage grant sufficient to fully enclose a town. In 1375-6 another grant, this time for ten years, was issued for Fethard, and this time stone walls were specified, which may suggest that the earlier town defences were walls of earth and timber, not of stone. Further murage grants - two, possibly three - are known from the 15th century.

village wall along the northern bank of the Clashawley River.

When money was first made available for the walling of Fethard the town was probably somewhat smaller than the walled town we know today. Study of the town plan and close examination of the fabric of some of the buildings reveals the probable outline of the settlement founded by William de Braose. Clearly much of the land on the north and west sides of the present walled area was only taken into the town at the time of the 15th century murage grants.

Extensive building activity inside the town shows that Fethard was a strong and fairly prosperous place in the late Middle Ages. Its strategic importance is perhaps reflected in the fact that from the late 15th century Earls of Ormond were attending courts held in Fethard, and many Ormond ordinances were issued from here.

The town received a royal charter from Edward VI in 1552-3, allowing it a corporation in perpetuity, composed of one Sovereign, one Provost, Burgesses and inhabitants. The sovereign and provost, elected annually, were empowered to deal with all matters of law within the town. The freedom to pursue its own affairs without fear of interference from the Crown came with an annual rent of 11 marks to the king. That the corporation successfully ran the town for the following half-century is indicated in the next royal charter, issued in 1608.

The key figure in the attainment of this second charter was Sir John Everard.[6] In the 15th century the Everard family came to real prominence in Fethard's history, and documents record the extent of the family's property in the town during the 15th, 16th and 17th centuries. John Everard, Sir John from 1605, was educated as a lawyer, and for a time he served the Butler clan and even the Earl of Ormond. His performances as a justice in the Earl's liberty of Tipperary were rewarded with an appointment by Elizabeth I as Second Justice of the Court of King's Bench (Ireland) in 1602.[7] Although the Everards were Catholic, and remained so, Sir John pledged allegiance to the Crown, and when he surrendered all his property to the Crown in 1607, it was immediately granted back to him. Sir John's good favour with the Crown was instrumental in securing the new charter for Fethard in 1608. In this charter the town was described as "a place of strength surrounded with a fair strong wall," and under its terms the Corporation was renewed and enlarged, and was endowed with such liberties and privileges as were needed to draw more people to the town and to increase its trade and commerce.

Fethard Town Hall, built as an almshouse c.1600

The Corporation was directed to build "a Tholsel (common Hall) for assemblies". The foundations of this building lie under the main street. In 1612 James I sanctioned the building by Sir John of two almshouses, one to the north of the church for men, and one outside the town wall to the south for women.[8] The Everard family also erected a substantial house for itself in the town centre. Improvements to the town were not confined to individual buildings: the north side of the Main Street was rebuilt during this period, and the market place was thus widened.

A few decades after the charter had brought so many positive changes, Fethard came face-to-face with two of the 17th century's most destructive agencies, the armies of Lord Inchiquin and Oliver Cromwell. Inchiquin had already attacked Cashel with relentless ferocity, and when news of that bloodbath reached Fethard its citizens submitted to him. Three years later, in 1650, Cromwell marched on Fethard on his way to take Kilkenny, and, in a letter to the Speaker of the House of Commons in London, he described the town "as having a very good wall with round and square bulwarks, after the old manner of fortification". He further commented that he stationed his troops "in an old abbey in the suburbs", which is the Augustinian Friary. Terms of surrender were agreed.

The town may have survived the crises of the mid-17th century, but it entered the 18th century in a state of decay, and visitors invariably described it as run-down. The Corporation Books tell us that in 1718 no less than 56 persons had houses with dangerous chimneys.[9] It was during this period that the Everard family's close involvement with Fethard came to a rather tame end. The last Baronet, Sir Redmond Everard, who lived in France, mismanaged the estate. In 1752 the old Everard properties in Fethard were sold to a Mr Barton, a wine merchant from Bordeaux, and he set about replacing the old Everard mansion with a new house, which in turn became a military barracks early in the 19th century. The present Catholic church in Fethard, built in 1818-19, also occupies a site formerly owned by the Barton family.

Destruction of the medieval fabric of the town was an unfortunate feature of the 19th century. By the start of the present century all but one of the town gates had been demolished, while the Augustinian Friary, in private ownership between the late 16th century and the mid-1820s, had its west tower removed in 1835.

Famous People

John Magnier owns the world-famous Coolmore Stud based in Fethard. Michael 'Mouse' Morris is an Irish racehorse trainer whose attributes include Buck House in the 1983 Supreme Novices' Hurdle and the 1986 Queen Mother Champion Chase; and War Of Attrition in the 2006 Cheltenham Gold Cup. Eoghan O'Neill, bass guitarist with Irish Celtic/Jazz band, Moving Hearts, is from Fethard. Archbishop John J. Cantwell attended the Patrician Brothers Monastery National School, and the nearby Classical Academy.[10] John Butler, 12th Baron Dunboyne was buried in the Augustinian friary in Fethard.

Sport

Culture

The Fethard Medieval Festival, recreating the era in which Fethard was founded, takes place annually in August. A parade runs through the main street that culminates in Valley Park centred on the River Clashawley, next to the town wall. Activities include re-enactments, workshops, craft demonstrations, archery, live music, and food stalls.[12]

In 2010, Fethard was used as a location for the film Stella Days, based on a book by Michael Doorley about life in Borrisokane during the 1950s.[13][14]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Census 2006 – Volume 1 – Population Classified by Area" (PDF). Central Statistics Office Census 2006 Reports. Central Statistics Office Ireland. April 2007. Retrieved 2011-06-19.
  2. http://www.cso.ie/census and www.histpop.org. Figures include environs of Fethard. For a discussion on the accuracy of pre-famine census returns see JJ Lee “On the accuracy of the pre-famine Irish censuses” in Irish Population, Economy and Society edited by JM Goldstrom and LA Clarkson (1981) p54, and also “tNew 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 (Nov., 1984), pp. 473-488.
  3. A. D. Mills, 2003, A Dictionary of British Place-Names, Oxford University Press
  4. "Fiodh Ard/Fethard". Placenames Database of Ireland. Government of Ireland. Retrieved 20 June 2011. (archival records)
  5. http://www.bkavcoaches.com/html/timetable.html
  6. Ball, F. Elrington The Judges in Ireland 1221-1921 John Murray London 1926 pp.227-8
  7. Ball p,227
  8. Ball p.227
  9. Michael O'Donnell, Tipperary Historical Journal (1988), pp. 22-38.
  10. http://www.cshm.org/jjcantwell.html
  11. Kenny, Joe. "Fethard GAA Club". Fethard At Your Fingertips. Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  12. Kenny, Joe. "Medieval Festival". Fethard News. Fethard News. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  13. http://www.irishcentral.com/ent/Martin-Sheen-set-to-film-Stella-Days-in-Tipperary-106505908.html
  14. Butler, Tony. "South Tipp Today". South Tipp Today. South Tipp Today. Retrieved 20 March 2012.

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