Tinahely

Tinahely
Tigh na hÉille
Town

Dwyer Square
Former Market House, at left, is now a public library
Tinahely

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 52°48′00″N 6°28′00″W / 52.800000°N 6.466667°W / 52.800000; -6.466667Coordinates: 52°48′00″N 6°28′00″W / 52.800000°N 6.466667°W / 52.800000; -6.466667
Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County County Wicklow
Elevation 116 m (381 ft)
Population (2011)[1]
  Urban 970
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
  Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)
Irish Grid Reference T033731
St. Kevin's Church, Kilavaney

Tinahely (Irish: Tigh na hÉille, meaning "House of Éille") is a village in County Wicklow in Ireland. It is a market town in the valley of the Derry River, a tributary of the River Slaney.

Location and access

It is located on the R747 road which links the west Wicklow town of Baltinglass with Arklow on the east coast. The village is situated near the southern point of the Wicklow Way which winds through the Wicklow Mountains. The River Derry runs through the village. In the census of 2011, the population was recorded at 970, although there were 1537 people in the Tinahely electoral division.

History

Most of the village dates from the early part of the 19th century as it was rebuilt by Lord Fitzwilliam after it was burnt during the 1798 rebellion. The Fiztwilliam family lived in nearby Coolattin House. The Coollattin estate once comprised 88,000 acres (360 km2), had 20,000 tenants and occupied almost a quarter of County Wicklow.[2]

Parish church

Tinahely is unusual in that there is no Church in the village. St. Kevin's church lies 2 km to the east of the village in the townland of Kilaveny overlooking the valley of the Derry stream. The church was erected in 1843 when it replaced another structure located in the adjacent townland of Whitefield which had been burned down on November 11, 1798 by Yeomen soldiers in reprisal for local activity during the 1798 Rebellion. The Whitefield church was replaced by a temporary wooden structure until the erection of St. Kevin's church. The original structure had been erected during the Penal Laws in 1700 and was cruciform in style with two trancepts and a nave. Nothing now remains of the original church except for the cemetery that was attached to it. No burials have taken place in the cemetery since the mid 1900s. In the Jubilee Year 2000, parishioners erected a carved commemorative limestone marker on the site of the original church, in the present Whitefield Cemetery, setting out the above history.

Marker to Whitefield Cemetery,
Kilaveny parish.
Commemorative marker, Whitefield cemetery with carved history of the original parish church.

Tinahely today

Amenities and facilities

Sport

Tinahely GAA club was established in 1886. The club plays in St Kevin's Park which opened in May 1978. The club colours are red and white. In 1984 the club became the first club from Wicklow to reach the final of the Leinster Senior Club Football Championship but was beaten by St Vincents GAA.[3]

The local Triathlon club run a Duathlon every year on the Sunday of the May Bank Holiday.

Motor Club

Classic and Vintage Motor enthusiasts are catered for by the recently set up West Wicklow Classic & Vintage Vehicles Club ( www.westwicklowclassics.com ) which boasts a number of members in the area.

Transport

Rail transport

Bus transport

The Wicklow Way bus service serves Tinahely on a daily basis (must be booked in advance) and links with Dublin trains at Rathdrum railway station.[5] Bus Éireann route 132 (Rosslare Europort - Dublin serves Tinahely on Thursdays once in each direction linking to Baltinglass, Tallaght, Carnew and Wexford.[6]

People

See also

References

  1. "Tinahely Legal Town Results". Central Statistics Office. 2011.
  2. Keenan, Mark (01-06-2003). "Ireland: Tunnel vision brings history to life". The Times. Retrieved 2010-06-09. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. Club Website
  4. "Tinahely station" (PDF). Railscot - Irish Railways. Retrieved 2007-11-24.
  5. http://wicklowwaybus.com/
  6. http://buseireann.ie/pdf/1268411487-132.pdf
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