Droichead Nua, (Newbridge) is situated
on the River Liffey in County Kildare, Ireland. The town is a large industrial and commercial centre with a
rapidly growing population. Droichead Nua has seen much industrial growth in the
past sixty years.
The Irish Ropes factory has been producing carpets since September 25th, 1933.
It has made carpets for such famous places as Buckingham Palace, Liberty Hall,
and the University of Miami to name but a few. Newbridge Cutlery, Bord Na Mona,
Curragh Tintawn, Oral B and Wyeth Medica are also situated in our booming town.
Recently a massive new retail development the Whitewater Centre is under
construction which will be the largest retail centre outside of Dublin city.
Droichead Nua is home to Kildare’s only
greyhound racing track. There are first class golf courses in the area, water
sports, fishing and the Curragh Racecourse is within easy access. There is a
good selection of shops, coffee shops, restaurants, hotels and bars in the town.
How to get to Newbridge
Coming from Dublin, take the M50 southbound, turn at the motorway exit for
Droichead Nua. The town is approximately 6 miles from Naas and 4 miles from
Kildare. The Arrow train service stops at the Droichead Nua train station and
this takes approximately 30 minutes from Dublin city centre. There is also a
regular bus service to and from Dublin from the Main Street of Newbridge.
Local History
The present parish of Newbridge is made up of six ancient parishes and
portions of others. These are Ballymany, Carnalway, Great Connell, Killashee,
Morristown Billar and Old Connell.
Great Connell
Great Connell was the site of an Augustinian Priory dedicated to Our lady and
St. David, founded in 1202 by Myler Fitzhenry, a grandson of Henry I. In 1205
King John confirmed the grant made by Fitzhenry to the Abbey of Connell, a
sister house of the monastery of Lathony in Wales, from whence monks came to
Great Connell. This tradition became law in 1380 by an act of Richard II, when
like all monasteries in the Pale, it was forbidden "to admit mere Irishmen to
profession." However, this rule was not always adhered to, as Gaelic names
can be found amongst the canons of the 15th century.
Great Connell emerged as one of the most important Anglo-Norman monasteries and
its wealth was increased when, in 1455, the King granted the Prior the power to
acquire lands to a yearly value of £10. Consequently, the priory’s possessions
were quite extensive and included "the value of 6 parish churches, over 1,260 acres of land, a mill, 5 castles, a demesne of
131 acres, and many dwellings and out-buildings." The Prior was also made a
member of the Privy Council.
Great Connell’s most renowned Prior was Walter Wellesley, who was also Bishop of
Kildare, having been appointed to the See in 1529. He held these two positions
up to the time of his death in 1539. The monastery survived the Act of
Confiscation in 1537, when Wellesley asked that it not be suppressed, as it was
united to the Bishopric of Kildare. He also wrote to the Lord Privy Seal "that
to this day and hour, is no brother elected in the monastery unless he be of a
very English nation." In addition the Lord Deputy and Council petitioned the
King to have Great Connell and fifty other monasteries exempted "for in these
homes … in default of common inns, which are not in this island, the King’s
Deputy and all his Grace’s Council and officers … have been most commonly lodged
at the cost of the said Houses." They also stressed the importance of the
monasteries’ educational role.
However, Great Connell was eventually closed in April 1541, when the then Prior,
Robert Wesley "surrendered voluntarily and with the consent of the community,"
thus allowing the order to make terms and receive pensions. The priory was then
granted to Edward Randolph and later to Sir Edward Butler. According to the
Civil Survey of 1654, the parish of Great Connell was divided between two men,
Sir Nicholas White of Leixlip, and Sir Robert Meredith.
In the 18th century the monastery, according to a description by Archdall, who
visited it in 1781, was "so decayed that scarcely any descriptive account can be
given of its remaining ruins," though he did mention "two Gothic windows and
some pillars with curious capitals," and "the remains of some stalls in the
choir."
The Capella of Ballymany
Evidence that a church existed here at one time was re-inforced by the Kildare
Archaeological Society’s findings, which discovered evidence of a site at
Murphy’s farm at Ballymany. An article in their Journal of 1905 described the
existing ruins as "consisting of a foundation of an ancient edifice which
shows it to be 25ft. in length, 18ft. broad and the walls are 3ft. thick."
The article also reported that older people living in the area remembered the
ruins of an old church being in existence up to 50 years earlier (1855). No
remains of the walls or foundations are now visible, though the location of the
church corresponds roughly with the Ballymany church site referred to in
Taylor’s Map of 1783, between the main Newbridge-Kildare Road and the Green
Road. However, this is now though to have been a Protestant Church, which was
adjacent to the Catholic Chapel at the time the map was drawn.
This Protestant church may have originally been a Catholic Church as each of
Newbridge’s six ancient parochial districts would have had its own church; that
of Ballymany may have been abandoned during the confiscations of the 15th
century, or even during the Cromwellian or penal times. It was also not unusual
for abandoned Catholic churches to be converted for use as Protestant churches.
Further evidence of a Catholic church at Ballymany is also supported by John
Spring in a "Report on Popery in Ireland" anno 1731: "There is also a mass-house
in the former parish (Great Connell), erected near a year since, instead of the
one I had pulled down. This new one adjoins Newbridge and I believe hath been
built larger." This would suggest a church at Great Connell prior to 1730,
presumably built by Fr. James Eustace, parish priest of Old Connell, Killashee,
Ladytown and Morristown Billar during the early 18th century.
The Military Barracks
In the 17th century a bridge was built near Old Connell but this was destroyed
in 1798 by a flood. A new bridge was built in its place. The military barracks
was constructed over a number of years, on land purchased in 1822 by a Major
General, John Freeman. Completed in 1816, the site of the Barracks extended from
the present site of the Irish Ropes factory, to the site of the present Garda
Station, and as far back as the Athgarvan Road.
The barracks was occupied by the British Army until 1922. Many famous cavalry
regiments were stationed here and one of its most famous soldiers was Lord
Cardigan, who was stationed with the 15th Hussars in 1832. He later led the
charge of the Light Brigade in the Crimean War in October 1854. A description of
the town in 1837 said it "consisted of only one street, with a constabulary
police station, a dispensary, and an R.C. chapel with a friary, but it is yet in
its infancy and there is every prospect of its increase." The arrival of the
barracks heralded the growth and development of Newbridge. The demand for labour
during its construction led to population growth, while the maintenance of both
the barracks and its occupants ensured the prosperity of the townspeople.
Its importance in economic terms can be gauged from the following description in
Porter’s Post Office Guide & Directory for Counties Kildare and Carlow in 1910:
"The artillery barracks at Newbridge had a garrison of about 800 and stabling
for 536 horses. Supplies for the men and their mounts were purchased locally,
while hundreds found work in the army installations. In 1922 following the
Anglo-Irish Treaty, the British Army evacuated the barracks in Newbridge,
resulting in a decline in trade.
The Town Commissioners, anticipating an economic depression, petitioned the
Provisional Government for special consideration for the town. In 1923, they
approached the Minister for Defence for help, stating that the town’s population
of 3,000 was almost entirely dependent on the military, with "the army being
its sole means of subsistence". However, they met with little success. The
barracks was used as an internment camp by the national army during the Civil
War, and the damage done to the building by the internees was one of the reasons
given for it not being used by the Free State Army.
In 1925 it was handed over to the Board of Works, and in the following years
most of the buildings were demolished to make way for new factories such as
Irish Ropes. The church was maintained and was used as a library and then a Town
Hall. It now houses a FÁS Training Workshop. Part of the old wall of the
barracks can still be seen at the Athgarvan Road. The present town was built in
1934 and was named Newbridge (Droichead Nua).
Irish Ropes
1933 saw a revival in the town of Newbridge following the foundation of the
Irish Ropes factory on part of the site of the former cavalry barracks. It was
established by an Englishman, Eric Rigby Jones, whose family had traditionally
been involved in rope manufacture. It was founded primarily to manufacture
ropes, twines and harvest twines using such materials as sisal, manila and
polypropylene fibres for the home market, and in 1937 it extended its range of
products to include floor coverings made from sisal.
During the years of the Emergency, 1939-1945, the factory prospered as extra
tillage farming was undertaken during this period, leading to an increased
demand for its main product, binder twine. In 1946 the company had a workforce
of 300 and in the same year it entered the export market. By 1953 the workforce
had increased to 400 workers and an export market had been established in 24
countries.
The 1960s saw the company again extend its range of products to include
synthetic and wool carpets, bearing such well-known brand names as Tintawn,
Cushlawn and Curragh carpets. The workforce continued to rise and in 1969 it
reached a peak of 1035. However, the economic recession of the seventies took
its toll and by 1975 the workforce had been substantially reduced.
Things To Do
Riverbank Arts Centre
This is the County Council's Cultural Campus, built to provide better
library and arts facilities for the people of County kildare.
Genealogy
The County Library, Athgarvan Road, Newbridge, is the location for the Kildare
Heritage & Genealogy Company which provides a research service for those wishing
to trace their family histroy. The opening hours are 9am to 5pm Monday to
Thursdays and 9am to 1pm on Fridays, Lunch is from 1 to 2pm. Please telephone
for an appointment: (045) 433602
Greyhound Racing
This is the only Greyhound Track in County Kildare. Newbridge Dog Track
is at Hawkfield, only one mile from the town. Race meetings take place every
Monday and Friday at 8p.m. Unrecorded trials on Wednesdays from 7p.m. to 9p.m.,
and Saturdays from 10.30am -12.15pm. Car parking and tearoom facilities
available. Admission £3. Phone 045-434331.
Newbridge Silverware
Silverware has been crafted in Newbridge since 1934. The passage of half a
century has changed little. Craftsmen with a lifetime's experience fashion the
finest materials with traditional skills and loving care. This silver has
seduced sheikhs, served sultans, pampered princesses and reflected the gaze of
barons and bards. The extensive range of Newbridge Cutlery, Jewellery and other
Silverware can be seen at the Silverware Visitors Centre, just off the
industrial ring-road, which is open 7 days a week.
Father Moore’s Well
Father Moore’s Well is situated at Rathbride just off the Kildare/Milltown Road.
It has attracted pilgrims for over a hundred years. Although the well is named
after Fr. Moore, there are a number of different traditions associated with it,
and one reference suggests that it may have been regarded as a holy well before
his time. Fr. Moore was born in Rathbride in 1779 and appointed curate to Allen
Parish where he remained until his death in March 1826. He was said to have a
remarkable gift in curing ailments and to have blessed the well before his death
so that people might still be cured in years to come. The tradition of visiting
the well developed after that time and there are many local claims of cures
effected there.
Churches
St. Conleth’s Church
The present parish of Newbridge was built on a site provided by the Mansfield
family in the 1840s. It is made up of six ancient parishes and portions of
several others. Cill Mhuire Built in 1982. It is situated on the Standhouse
Road. St. Patrick’s Church The origin of this church is not known.
St. Eustace’s Dominican Church
The Dominicans first opened a church in Newbridge in 1819. In 1852 the boarding
school, Newbridge College, was opened. The present church was built in 1966.