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Cross reference to Family History Library microfilm (double-check with the Library)
THOMASTOWN
"Thomastown", an incorporated market and post-town,
(formerly a parliamentary borough), and a
parish, in the barony of Gowran, county
of Kilkenny, and province of Leinster, 21 miles (N.) from Waterford, and
59 (S.S.W.) from Dublin, on the mail coach road to Waterford; containing
3054 inhabitants. This place, situated on the river Nore, and on the
southern border of the county, was anciently called Grenan; it took its
present name from Thomas Fitz-Anthony Walsh, Seneschal of Leinster, one of
the earliest English proprietors in Ireland, who built a castle here, and
made the town a free borough. By the Irish it was called Bally-Mac-Andom,
signifying "Fitz-Anthony's town;" and from its situation at the head of the
navigable channel of the Nore, it became at an early period a place of
considerable trade and an important military station; it was surrounded
with walls, and most of its buildings were castellated. The present town,
in 1831, contained 527 houses, most of which are neatly built. Over the
river Nore is a handsome stone bridge of five arches, built in 1792, at
each end of which is an ancient square tower, formerly connected with the
fortifications by which the town was surrounded. The parish comprises
1719 statute acres, as applotted under the tithe act: the land is of good
quality and in a state of profitable cultivation. The principal seats are
Dangan Lodge, Coolmore, and Flood Hall. The living is a rectory and
vicarage, in the diocese of Ossory, united by act of council in 1803 to
the rectories and vicarages of Columbkill and Famagh-Church, and in the
patronage of the Bishop. The glebe-house was erected in 1806, and is a
neat building about a quarter of a mile from the church; the glebe
comprises 18 1/2 acres. In the R. C. divisions the parish is the head of a
union or district, comprising also the parishes of Church-Jerpoint,
West-Jerpoint, Columbkill, Kilfane, Tullowherin, and Killlarney, in which
union are four chapels; the chapel in the town is a handsome edifice with
a spire, and contains the great marble altar removed from the ruins of
Jerpoint abbey. About 80 children are taught in two public schools, of
which the parochial school is supported by the Earl of Carrick, who built
the school-house, and by the rector; and there are three private schools,
in which are about 230 children, two Sunday schools and a dispensary.
In the vicinity of the town are the remains of Grenan Castle; and on the
rover, a little below the town, are those of Dysett Castle, said to have
been the birthplace of Rev. George Berkeley, the learned Bishop of Clogher,
who was born in 1684. Lagan Castle, near the town, was the residence of the
last abot of Jerpoint: there are also some remains of the Dominican abbey.
[From A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (1837)]Church Records
Civil Parish: Thomastown. RC Parish: Thomastown and Tullaherin.
Earliest Records: b. Jun 1782; m. Jan 1786.
Civil Roman Catholic Time FHLC
parish parish period number
Thomastown Thomastown pt 1782-1833 0926202
1834-1880 0926203
Historical Geography
Townlands (1851)
Edited by Dennis Walsh, last updated 10 Apr 1999
Parish Townland Acres Diocese
Thomastown Burrellspark 24 Ossory
Thomastown Cloghabrody 375 Ossory
Thomastown Grenan 653 Ossory
Thomastown Newtown 500 Ossory
Thomastown Smithstown Lower 98 Ossory
Thomastown Smithstown Upper 358 Ossory
Thomastown Stampspark 16 Ossory
Thomastown Thomastown 16 Ossory
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