Monthly Archives: March 2016

Crazy for You Musical

   Cork City Musical Society to present award winning musical Crazy for You in Firkin Crane

   Cork City Musical Society is preparing for its second musical outing. This time they take on Crazy for You from 29 April to 1 May in Firkin Crane, four performances (three evening shows and a matinee).

  The show for all the family is being directed by Cllr Kieran McCarthy, has a cast of 30 and a 7-piece band, with musical direction by Michael Young and choreography by Aisling Byrne Gaughan.

 Founder of the society Cllr McCarthy noted “We are delighted to present our musical to the public. Our cast of 30 have worked very hard on this production to bring a toe-tapping, sing-along and funny musical, which will leave a smile on the faces of the audience. Amateur musical societies are multiple in nature up and down the country. All bring their local communities together under a volunteer and charity umbrella – collaborating and bringing people together to create an outlet for people and to put drama, music and all ultimately form a key cultural vein within towns and villages. It’s important that a city such as Cork has a musical society to promote the inherent love for musical theatre”.

  Crazy for You is a romantic love musical with lyrics by Ira Gershwin, and music by George Gershwin. Billed as “The New Gershwin Musical Comedy”, it is largely based on the song writing team’s 1930 musical, Girl Crazy, but incorporates songs from several other productions as well.

   Crazy for You won the 1992 Tony Award for Best Musical. Memorable Gershwin tunes include I Can’t Be Bothered Now, Bidin’ My Time, I Got Rhythm, Naughty Baby, They Can’t Take That Away from Me, But Not for Me, Nice Work if You Can Get It, Embraceable You and Someone to Watch Over Me. It’s a high energy comedy which includes mistaken identity, plot twists, fabulous dance numbers and classic Gershwin music.

Tickets are e.20 online at www.firkincrane.ie or from the box office at 021 4507487. There is a special deal of four tickets for e.70.

CRAZY FOR YOU ®
THE NEW GERSHWIN ® MUSICAL
Music and Lyrics by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin
Book by Ken Ludwig
Co-Conception by Ken Ludwig and Mike Ockrent
Inspired by Material by Guy Bolton and John McGowan
Originally produced on Broadway by Roger Horchow and Elizabeth Williams

Kieran’s Our CIty, Our Town, 31 March 2016

837a. Oliver Cromwell by Samuel Cooper 1656

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town,

Cork Independent,  31 March 2016

Cork Harbour Memories (Part 54)

Cromwell Comes to Cork

On 30 January 1649, the parliament in England arranged the beheading of Charles I and plans were made to restore the throne to parliament itself through the proclamation of a new king, Charles II (continued from last week). To suppress any royalist support in Ireland, a new army was established under the leadership of the new Lord Lieutenant in Ireland, Oliver Cromwell. Cromwell landed in Drogheda on 15 August 1649 and swiftly took the town for the new parliament. The town’s defenders did not surrender and the town was besieged accordingly. Stories relate that three thousand combatants lay dead on the streets of Drogheda, following Cromwell’s attack.
Cromwell proceeded to Ross and sent out small contingents into the Munster countryside to take note of royalist military activities. Cromwell’s next major town for taking was that of Wexford which comprised a large amount of Royalist Protestant inhabitants. Soon after Waterford, Duncannon, Clonmel, Limerick, Galway and Kilkenny fell. The New Model Army met its only serious opposition at the Siege of Clonmel, where its attacks on the town walls were repelled at a cost of up to 2,000 men. The town nevertheless eventually surrendered.

    In Cork, the principal plotter and commander of Cromwell’s forces in Munster was Richard Townsend (later landowner of the Castletownsend region in West Cork). On the night of 16 October 1649, Townsend put plans into operation to take Elizabeth Fort off Barrack Street in Cork for Parliament. The choice of this night was due to the fact that the Royalist captain, Muschamp was away and the fort with its thirty-five men on duty that night was easily secured for parliament. Soldiers are also recorded as marching on the main guard at North Gate Drawbridge and forcing their way into the town. Seven days after the takeover of the walled town, a letter was sent to Cromwell informing him of the position. Shortly after, the anti-parliament Protestant army in Munster surrendered and an agreement was drawn up, which was signed by each member of the army itself submitting themselves to the parliament in England and the Lord Lieutenant, Cromwell.

   In the case of events that happened in Cork City in 1639, two urban folklore stories are prominent in the old antiquarian books. Tuckey’s Cork Rembrancer (1837) records that on the night of 16 October 1649 the taking of the town came as a surprise to the governor, Sir Robert Starling who did envisage losing his authority in the walled town of Cork. A second story told is recounted in the Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society in 1905 by Mr Moore. It that tells of the escape of the wife of an officer named Lady Fanshawe from Red Abbey, the site of an old Augustinian Abbey, the tower of which still stands off Douglas Street. Her husband had previously been in the service of Charles I and she is said to have detailed an account to her son. A few days after her escape to Kinsale, her husband was given orders from the self-appointed new King in England, the son of Charles I, Charles II to go to Spain. To get to the continent, they had to travel to Galway in order to take a ship. It is detailed that they sailed from Galway in early February in a ship named Amsterdam bound for Malaga, Spain at which they are said to have arrived at in early March.

In the case of the Royalist supporters inhabiting the walled town, suburbs and liberties of Cork apart from signing an agreement to succumb to Cromwell, a further agreement was offered to them if they aided Cromwell in his military attacks on other Royalist garrisons throughout Munster. Throughout Cork County, there are many other stories relating to Cromwell and the devastation and his model army. The majority involve arson or the burning down of minor and major castles owned by Irish Lords or Royalists and Catholic Abbeys.

   By December 1649, Cromwell had seized control most of both the eastern and southern coasts from Belfast to Cork except for garrisons at Duncannon and Waterford City itself. The harshness of the ensuing winter weather forced Cromwell to fall back to Youghal and set up his headquarters there for the remainder of the winter period. Both Waterford and Duncannon were eventually taken but after Cromwell had departed Ireland in 1650. Urban folklore abounds about how Cromwell spent Christmas in 1649. One story relates that by mid December, Cromwell visited the walled town of Cork and is reputed to have spent Christmas in the company of a Mr Coppinger who occupied a house on South Main Street. Contradicting this evidence is another story, which relates that Cromwell spent his Christmas in the Ballyvolane area, in a house now known as Ellis House or The College. Whether or which, Cromwell is said have used the immediate area of the walled town as a headquarters in order to visit nearby garrisons at Kinsale and Bandon, both walled towns. He is also said to have ordered the rebuilding of Elizabeth Fort, which was damaged when it was taken in the previous October for Parliament by Cromwellian soldiers.

To be continued…

Captions:

836a. Oliver Cromwell by artist Samuel Cooper c.1656 (National Portrait Gallery, London)
836b. Red Abbey, present day (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

 

837b. Red Abbey, Present Day

Kieran’s Talks, Lifelong Learning Festival Week 2016

 

   For the forthcoming Lifelong Learning Festival Week, Douglas Road Cllr Kieran McCarthy will give a talk on some of the histories of West Cork through old postcards at the meeting room of the Church of the Real Presence, Curaheen on Wednesday 13 April, 10.30am. Based on his book, West Cork Through Time, Cllr McCarthy noted: “The talk focuses on in selective detail postcards from Cork City museum of the region of West Cork from one hundred years ago. It takes the reader from Bandon to Castletownbere through the changing landscapes and seascapes. This region is a striking section of Ireland’s coastline, over 320 kilometres in length, encompassing a raw coastal wilderness with expansive inlets eroded away by the Atlantic Ocean. The old postcards represent many memories of the landscape, sold to visitors and locals a century ago. There are places that charm, catch and challenge the eye. West Cork in itself is a way of life where individuals and communities have etched out their lives. It is a place of discovery, of inspiration, a place of peace and contemplation, and a place to find oneself in the world”.

    Cllr McCarthy will also give a talk on Cork and daily life in 1916 in the Cork City and County Archives in Blackpool at 11am on Saturday 16 April (all free, all welcome). It will form part of the half day seminar entitled Cork and the Easter Rising. Kieran is currently working on a book that takes the year 1916 from the point of view that there were multiple conversations to be heard during the year – a kaleidoscope of ideas which provided the context and framework for revolution – everyday life being one – some led Cork citizens to connect with the Republican mantra at the time and others to just maintain existence, survive and struggle with the bleakness of a national and local economy. Cllr McCarthy noted: “Entering the Cork Examiner on 1 January and progressing page by page one discovers key nuggets about the nature of Cork society, the soul of Ireland’s southern capital, the ongoing conversations about maintaining a contemporary status of being one of Ireland‘s distinguished port cities, and all the advantages and problems that run with that”.

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 24 March 2016

836a. Ballyphehane GAA group participating at the recent Cork City St Patrick’s Day Parade, March 2016

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town

Cork Independent,  24 March 2016 

Centenary Programmes: Reflecting 1916-2016

 

    For a century, the stories of the Easter Rising and the Irish Citizen Army have morphed into powerful national metaphors for Irish identity. The events are written and spoken about in almost mythic and romanticised terms, encoded and re-encoded, distilled and re-distilled into key events and moments in the Easter period of 1916 and onwards into subsequent years – the idealism of democracy, the Rising, the Rebellion, the Volunteers, the reading of the Proclamation, the Irish Citizen Army, the standing down of those ready to fight outside of Dublin, the role of the GPO and its shelling by British forces, the violence, the surrender, the executed leaders, the sorrow, the questions of clemency, the morality, the internment camps, the beginning of the war of Independence, the role of objects of nostalgic currency such as participation medals, copies of the actual proclamation, the citizen army flag, letters and documentation.

   In Cork many hundreds of Cork men and women mobilised (c.180 alone in the Cork City Battalion). An anxious standoff took place at the Volunteer Hall on Sheares Street between the Irish Volunteers who had gathered there and the British Forces. The intervention of the Lord Mayor and the Bishop of the day led to a peaceful outcome and no bloodshed.  However these aspects and above and much more are all stitched into a national history framework – a cultural consciousness – a continuous conversation about Irish heritage by successful Irish governments and by civil society on what the building blocks of a national nostalgic and a national collective memory should be and their meaning, relevancy, value and connection to today’s world.

    The Ireland 2016 Centenary Programme, under the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, is a year-long programme of activity to commemorate the events of the 1916 Rising, to reflect on challenges and achievements over the last 100 years and to look towards Ireland’s future. The 31 local and community plans are a core element of the Community Participation strand of Ireland 2016, one of the seven programme strands alongside State Ceremonial, Historical Reflection, An Teanga Bheo – the Living Language, Youth and Imagination, Cultural Expression and Global and Diaspora.  Over 2,000 events will take place in 2016 as part of the Ireland 2016 Centenary Programme. The 31 Local Authority Programmes for Ireland 2016 represent the outcome of many hundreds of hours of reflection, consultation and discussion involving thousands of people all over Ireland.  Cork city and county, under the efforts of both local authorities, will have the biggest percentage of events in the country.

   The Cork City programme is the outcome of consultations with interested local groups, organisations and individuals. Led by Cork City Council, the programme comprises events and initiatives ranging across all seven strands of the Ireland 2016 programme.

  • Easter Monday Commemorative Ceremony to mark the 100th anniversary of the Rising in conjunction with Cork County Council. Events will be held at St. Francis Hall on Sheares Street, the home of the Cork Volunteers, and at the National Monument on Grand Parade. A synchronised wreath laying ceremony will be held at 1.15 p.m. – the time that the first shots of the 1916 Rising were fired.
  • Sacrifice at Easter: Corcadorca Theatre Company will stage Sacrifice at Easter by Pat McCabe at Elizabeth Fort in June 2016. Written in response to the 1916 centenary, Sacrifice at Easter is a creative collaboration between director Pat Kiernan, writer Pat McCabe and renowned composer Mel Mercier.
  • Exhibition: Perceptions 2016, the Art of Citizenship: Part of a series of exhibitions and events the Crawford Art Gallery will host in response to the 1916 Centenary, Perceptions 2016 is an exhibition, seminar and public engagement workshops and events that expand the range of voices, visions, perceptions and approaches to creativity that the public engage with. This will be held in cultural venues throughout the City including Crawford Art Gallery, Wandesford Quay Gallery, City Hall Atrium and a number of satellite venues around Cork.
  • Exhibition on the 1916 rising and its connection to Cork City: Illustrating people, places and events connected to Easter Week in Cork at Cork Public Museum.
  • Centre of Commemoration at St. Peter’s Church, North Main Street: Cork City Council will manage a year round venue based programme in St Peter’s Church on North Main Street. The centre will be called ‘The Centre of Commemoration’ and will host a range of exhibitions, talks, readings, music and community events. All national themes relating to Remember, Reconcile, Imagine, Present And Celebrate will be programmed, supported and presented into this venue.
  • Ballyphehane 1916-2016 programme: Ballyphehane’s main roads are named after the seven signatories of the 1916 Proclamation. See their facebook page for more.
  • Upstairs at The Oliver Plunkett, Revolution is a dramatic, specially commissioned series of plays, written and directed by Eoin Hally, which bring the events of 1916 to life. The series features six different plays, including the following: The Women of the Rising, O’Donovan Rossa Connection, WWI Roger Casement, The Lockout 1913, Connolly and The finale play – The Preparation and The Rising. Tickets are available to buy online at www.theoliverplunkett.com or at the bar.

For City City commemorative events,

see http://corkcity1916.ie/clar.pdf

and for the County Programme

see http://www.ireland.ie/sites/default/files/cork_county.pdf

 

 Captions:

 836a. Ballyphehane GAA group participating at the recent Cork City St Patrick’s Day Parade commemorating Ballyphehane’s historic roads named after the signatories of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

 836b. Large scale banner of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic, Cork City St Patrick’s Day Parade 2016 (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

 

836b. Large scale banner of the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic, Cork City St Patrick’s Day Parade 2016

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 17 March 2016

835a. Historical plaque marking the site of the Battle of Knocknanuss 1647

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent,  17 March 2016

Cork Harbour Memories (Part 53)

Cessations, Confederates and Crown Supporters

 

   During the Confederate wars of the 1640s, one leading crown supporter in Munster was the prominent military commander and fifth Lord Inchiquin, Murrough O’ Brien. He ruthlessly kept control of south-western Ireland until the Cessation of Arms was signed between the Confederates and the King’s representative, the Marquis of Ormond, in September 1643. Then Inchiquin’s concerns began over his future as lord in the province and he defected to the side of the anti-crown supporters or the anti-royalist side. The religious policies of Charles I, united with his marriage to a Roman Catholic, produced the antipathy and mistrust of reformed groups such as the Puritans and Calvinists, who perceived his views too Catholic.

    Inchiquin was civil and military governor of Munster and held command by royal and parliamentary commissions but was highly ambitious. After his father-in-law, Sir William St Ledger, who held the presidential office in Munster died, he thought that he would receive the title. During the Cessation of Arms, Inchiquin sent five Irish regiments to reinforce the King’s army in England in the expectation that he would be granted the presidency of Munster. However, the position was left vacant and Inchiquin only became the acting president for several months. When it came to the securing of the post of President of Munster in February 1644 in Oxford with Charles I, he failed to acquire it.

   Inchiquin also had a fear of losing his land. When in September 1643, a truce regarding the hostilities between the crown, Charles I and the Irish Confederates was drawn up, Inchiquin and his companions were not too pleased. During the war with the Irish Catholics, finance for the English crown’s armies in Ireland was achieved through contributions from several baronies and towns and also through the raiding of monies belonging to Irish Catholics. However during the cessation of hostilities, commanders like Inchiquin were not willing to take the full burden of the expenses. He worried that through lack of finance his army would have to be disbanded and that towns and garrisons would return to Irish possession. Subsequently Inchiquin defected to the side of Parliament or to the growing anti-crown or anti-royalist side. To parliament he argued that his defection was due to the undermining plans for the English crown by the Irish Catholics. He demonstrated this by expelling hundreds of Irish people from their homes in Cork, Kinsale and Youghal in July 1644.

    The civil war in England between anti-crown Protestants and Charles Is’ supporters escalated quickly. Inchiquin after his defection received his title of President of Munster and used his position to upset the King’s peace covenant, primarily conducted by the King’s Lord Lieutenant in Ireland, Ormond. Inchiquin introduced a new oath which would maintain and defend the Protestant religion. Inchiquin remained on the defensive against the Confederates.

  Twelve months after the expulsion of the Irish, Inchiquin realised that parliament had no intention of sending soldiers to Munster and were content with the peace treaty in place. He appealed on the grounds of political and religious reasons but his undermining of Parliamentary power was clear and culminated in several Munster Parliamentarians calling for him to be impeached before the Commons in England. However, these claims were dismissed due to the Commons’ own problems with the parliament and king.

   During the summer and autumn of 1647, Inchiquin decided to assert his authority in Munster by mounting a major military offensive against the Confederates. He stormed and captured Dungarvan, Cappoquin and other garrisons. In the post cessation of arms period, the Confederates sent Viscount Taaffe of Corran, Co. Sligo and Sir Alasdair MacDonald of Colonsay, Scotland into County Cork with 8,200 troops. Although heavily outnumbered, Inchiquin with his 5,200 troops inflicted a decisive defeat on the confederates at the battle of Knocknanuss four miles east of Kanturk in November 1647. Approximately 3,500 men were killed, making the battle the bloodiest of the Confederate and the extended English Civil War. Inchiquin won, was praised by parliament but afterwards, it was discovered that there were several allegations made against Inchiquin concerning the fact that he had enlisted royalist soldiers and gave high positions in his army to ill fit men. He denied the allegations, escaped impeachment again. He still requested more soldiers to come to Munster to suppress the Irish.

  Inchiquin’s fear of the Irish retaking the land nearly became reality after Knocknanuss when royalist forces secretly blocked forces and supplies to Munster. As a result, parliamentary commissioners were sent to Munster, what Inchiquin had demanded since his first day as President of Munster. Unfortunately, by the time the Commissioners, arrived in Munster, Inchiquin had amassed a small army with his own loyal officers to deal with his fear of the Irish confederates himself. The Parliamentary Commissioners were called back to England and Inchiquin was declared a traitor and all honours bestowed on him were taken away.

   On 30 January 1649, the parliament in England arranged the beheading of Charles I and plans were made to restore the throne to parliament itself through the proclamation of a new king, Charles II. To suppress any royalist support in Ireland, a new army was established under the leadership of the new Lord Lieutenant in Ireland, Oliver Cromwell.

 To be continued…

 Captions: 

835a. Historical plaque marking the site of the Battle of Knocknanuss 1647 (source: Cork City Library)

835b. Historical plaque marking the site of the Battle of Knocknanuss 1647 (source: Cork City Library)

835b. Historical plaque marking the site of the Battle of Knocknanuss 1647

Kieran’s Question and Motion, Cork City Council, 14 March 2016

Kieran’s Question to the City Manager/ CE, Cork City Council Meeting, 14 March 2016

To ask the CE on how many sites across the city are awaiting tree pruning; how many sites were executed last year? When will the trees which flank the access road to the Trabeg housing scheme, Ashdene, Riverway, Nemo Rangers GAA club, etc. off South Douglas Road be pruned? (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

 

Motion:

That the City Council in partnership with the Cork Sports Partnership create events in early September to mark European Week of Sport (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 10 March 2016

834a. A description of the Cittie of Cork Plan of Cork, circa 1602 by George Carew

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 10 March 2016

 Cork Harbour Memories (Part 52)

A Besieged Cork 1642

 

   The defence of County Cork from the Confederate army rested with the Lord President of Munster, Sir William St Leger (1586 –1642). Very little is compiled in a general sense of what happened in the wars around the walled town of Cork. I came across an interesting and old article on the Siege of Cork in 1642 by James Buckley in the “Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society” from 1916. In an attempt to reconstruct a balanced point of view, he draws from seventeenth century manuscripts, letters and House of Commons speeches. He denotes that in the year leading up to Liscarroll and West Cork battles in 1642 (see previous articles), St Leger frequently requested for men of war and munitions from Dublin.

  In February 1642 St Leger resolved on abandoning the open country of County Cork in an effort to keep a few ports open and to keep open his sea communication with Dublin. St Leger evacuated his home at Doneraile and withdrew to the walled town of Cork. The exact troop of force that retreated with him is not definitely known but there is an estimate of 2,000 foot soldiers and two complete troops of horse. A considerable number of English settlers in County Tipperary and other parts of Munster also withdrew to Cork and Youghal for protection. In addition to the retreating forces the walled town of Cork probably possessed a number of sympathisers capable of bearing arms. The batteries at Elizabeth Fort and Shandon Castle (now the site of Firkin Crane) were manned, and it is estimated that St Leger then had close on 3,000 effective foot soldiers at his command.

   On St Leger securing himself within the gates of the walled town of Cork, the Irish Army approached the settlement and they blocaded the town preventing the landing of fresh troops. The army divided into two sections, one of which was under the command of Jeremy Long, the High Sheriff of the County, and Barry Óg. They were quartered at Belgooly, three miles to the north of Kinsale; the other commanded by General Barry, was encamped at Rochfordstown, three miles to the south of the town. These forces had participated in other battles as well in County Cork – comprising an estimate of some 3,000 foot soldiers. They were afterwards reinforced from West Cork and Kerry, but their combined number is quite uncertain, and probably fluctuated from 4,000 to 6,000 foot soldiers with perhaps a hundred horse.

   One event that affected both sides was the landing of English commander Sir Charles Vavasour at Youghal on 20 February 1642, with 1,000 foot soldiers. He relieved the town that was then closely besieged by the Confederates. He then pushed his army into County Waterford. He provided hope of breaking Irish lines and kept the sea link open between Youghal and Cork. Meanwhile reinforcements still kept pouring into the walled town of Cork. On 18 March, Lord Inchiquin, a son-in-law of St Leger, landed at Youghal from Minehead, and on 20 March put to sea for Cork. Captain Pigott arrived from Dublin about the same time with fifty of St Leger’s old company. Captain William Jephson, with two troops of horse, 100 in each troop, one for himself and the other for Lord Inchiquin, landed at Youghal on the 19 March, and brought over a quantity of powder and ammunition, and reached Mallow with both troops about 25 March.

  The walled town was besieged on the north side by Lord Muskerry, MacCarthy Reagh, and many of the chieftains of the western districts. St Leger heard that Lord Roche, Lord Ikerrin, Lord Dunboyne, the Baron of Loghmoe, Richard Butler, brother to the Earl of Ormond, and all the Tipperary forces were drawing together with the object of beleaguering him on the south side. In the first week of April 1642, he ordered the two troops of horse recently landed to create a diversion in north-east Cork under the command of Lord Inchiquin and Captain Jephson. This movement resulted in guerrilla warfare with some minor success. They relieved Rathgogan Castle (in present day Charleville), Ballyhay Castle and re-established a garrison at Doneraile. The two captains then withdrew to the city.

  On 5 April 1642 the Irish forces at Belgooly struck camp and joined the main body near Cork. Owing to an absence of cannon, muskets and ammunition, the Irish confederates were unable to storm the walled town. This position continued till 13 April when an incident occurred. On the morning of that day a party from the Cork garrison was out on a scouting and foraging expedition. They encountered a detachment of the Irish a mile or so from the city, who drove them back to the suburbs. The English captains came forth with four troops of horse and 600 musketeers. They drove back the Irish and attacked a party then in ambush. Support from the Irish lines came forward, but all were pushed back in disorder. The English then rushed forward and took the main body by surprise. The cavalry broke in and disordered the lines and a general retreat was called. The Irish then scattered, many advancing into County Limerick to help with the Confederate war there.

To be continued…

 Captions:

834a. A description of the Cittie of Cork/ Plan of Cork, circa 1602 by George Carew, showing Elizabeth Fort on the left and Shandon Castle on the right (source: Hardiman Atlas, Library of Trinity College Dublin)

834b. Section of Down survey map of Cork City, c.1655/56 (source: Cork City Library)

834b. Section of Down survey map of Cork City, c.1655

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 3 March 2016

833a. Mallow Castle, c.1900

 

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent,  3 March 2016

 Cork Harbour Memories (Part 51)

Confederate Bloodbaths

 

  At the Battle of Liscarroll in September 1642, over 600 confederate Irish Catholics were killed including a high proportion of officers (see last week). The local Catholic gentry were decimated by the battle. The Fitzgerald family of the house of Desmond lost 18 members. English commander Lord Inchiquin executed 50 officers whom he had taken prisoner, hanging them subsequently.

  It is difficult to research and unravel many of the local histories across County Cork from this era. I draw below from several local historical works. Earlier in the year of 1642 on 11 February, the confederate forces under Lord Mountgarret entered Mallow. On this occasion Captain Jephson entrusted the strong castle of Mallow to the custody of Arthur Bettesworth. Arthur possessed a garrison of 200 men and an abundant supply of arms and ammunition, and three pieces of ordnance. Mallow’s Short Castle was defended by Lieutenant Richard Williamson. After sustaining repeated assaults, he lost most of his men. Several breaches were made and he agreed to surrender upon terms. After he left the fortress, Lieutenant Williamson with the rest of his party fought his way through the confederate ranks and retired into Mallow Castle. The confederates, during their nearby stay, chose as their commander Garret Barry and he and a party of soldiers attacked the fortified mansion of Mr Clayton, in the immediate vicinity. Two hundred lay dead by the time they took the house. Mallow Castle was assaulted and taken by the confederate military commander, James Touchet, Earl of Castlehaven (in West Cork), in 1645.

  In other areas of North Cork surrounding places such as what is now present day Mitchelstown were also under pressure by confederate advances. Back over 400 years ago it formed part of the extensive possessions of the Clongibbon family. The so called White Knight of Clongibbon was descended by a second marriage from John Fitzgerald, ancestor of the illustrious houses of Kildare and Desmond. The Clongibbons had a castle in what is now Mitchelstown, which was reduced by the confederates in 1641. It was consequently retaken by the English, and was afterwards besieged by the Earl of Castlehaven, to whom it was surrendered to in 1645. Margaret Fitzgerald, who was sole heiress of the Clongibbon White Knight, married Sir William Fenton, and their only daughter conveyed this portion of the estates by marriage to Sir John King, who was created Baron Kingston by Charles II, in 1660. Hence the Kingston line began in the region.

   Battles such as Liscarroll and at places such as Mallow and Mitchelstown meant North Cork would be an English Protestant stronghold for the rest of the confederate war. After the battle most of the lands in north Munster were granted to English settlers in return for cash. The monies were used by the parliamentarian army to fund their activities in the English civil war. Much of the land was returned to the original owners after the restoration of Charles II to the throne of England during the 1660s.

  Lewis Boyle, second son of Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork, was killed at the Battle of Liscarroll. Aged twenty-three, his peerage, Viscount Boyle of Kinalmeaky, was succeeded by his elder brother Richard, who the following year also succeeded his father as second Earl of Cork. Lewis played a part in suppressing rebellions in West Cork in the year leading up to the North Cork battles. At the commencement of the confederate war in 1641, Bandontown was placed under the government of Lewis Boyle, Lord Kinalmeaky, who took possession of it in January 1642. He mustered all the inhabitants to put it into a state of defence. As it was the only walled town in this part of the country, it became an asylum for the English of the surrounding district. By its own resources it maintained four companies of foot, raised a corps of volunteers, and made preparations both for offensive and defensive warfare.

   On 18 February 1641 a party of Irish under McCarty Reagh approached. Lord Kinalmeaky sent out 200 foot and 60 horse and a severe conflict ensued and several were killed. In a short time they took several ringforts in the adjacent territory which had been held by the Irish. The impressive castle of Downdaniel, at the confluence of the Brinny and Bandon rivers, built by Barry Óg in 1476, and the castle of Carriganass, built by the McCarthys, were both besieged and taken by the garrison of Bandon.

   On the breaking out of the war in 1641, the English settlers in Clonakilty were compelled to flee for refuge to Bandon. In the following year, Alexander Forbes, 10th Lord Forbes (of Aberdeenshire) with his English regiment from Kinsale and some companies from Bandon, arrived here. He left two companies of Scottish troops and one of the Bandon companies to secure the place till his return, and proceeded on his expedition towards the west. This force was, soon after his departure, attacked by multitudes on all sides. The Scottish troops refusing to retreat were cut to pieces. The Bandon company defended themselves in an old ringfort on the road to Ross, till a reinforcement came to their relief. United they attacked the confederates, and forced them into the island of Inchidoney, when, the tide coming in, upwards of 600 of them were drowned. The troops then returned to Bandon.

To be continued…

Captions:

833a. Mallow Castle, c.1900 (source: Cork City Museum)

833b. Carriganass Castle, Keimaneigh (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

833c. Summer sunny days at Inchidoney beach, West Cork (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

 

833b. Carriganass Castle, Keimaneigh

833c. Summer sunny days at Inchidoney beach, West Cork

 

 

McCarthy: Recognition of informal and non-formal education is a must for the EU

  Cllr Kieran McCarthy speaking at the February EU Committee of the Regions at the European Parliament The recent EU Committee of the Regions Plenary Session welcomed Mr Tibor Navracsics Commissioner for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport to debate many challenges which have to be tackled in the field of education, in order to achieve the ambitious objectives of the Europe 2020 strategy.

   Cllr Kieran McCarthy, an Irish delegate addressing the Commissioner in the European Parliament, said that the education process is the most important way of introducing into civic life values of a social and culture nature. “Successful education is not possible without encouraging an appropriate level of commitment, enthusiasm and skills amongst politicians, teachers and training staff. Successful education must also include a wider introduction of Culture and citizenship education to school curricula, with a view to raising society’s awareness and level of concern”, he said.

  Cllr McCarthy called for learners to be put at the heart of lifelong learning policies. He underlined: “Coming from my home city of Cork, which is a Unesco Learning City, the principle of lifelong learning currently must form the cornerstone of Europe’s policy for education and employment and is therefore key to inclusion. The recognition and validation of competences and knowledge acquired through non-formal and informal education is one of the key tenets of this approach.

   Cllr McCarthy continued; “Quality and equivalence of validation procedures are needed in order to ensure that certificates obtained through the validation process are mutually recognisable throughout the EU. I would like to highlight a strong need to create a pan-European strategy with a view to establishing a common framework for recognition of informal and non-formal education/learning. All could lead to more flexible education processes, in turn leading to greater mobility among the labour force and enhanced employability, not least of young people, and a re-think of the idea of education in general”. The EU’s Committee of the Regions in Brussels represents local authorities across Europe and gives opinions to the European Parliament on local and regional issues. The committee meets several times a year over two days.