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Portarlington, County Laois

Portarlington, historically called Cooletoodera[2] (from Irish: Cúil an tSúdaire, meaning "nook of the tanner"), is a town on the border of County Laois and County Offaly, Ireland. The River Barrow forms the border. Portarlington is around 70 kilometres (43 mi) west of Dublin. The town was recorded in the 2022 census as having a population of 9,288.[1]

Portarlington
Cúil an tSúdaire
Town
St Paul's Church is on French Church Street off Portarlington's market square
Portarlington
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°09′36″N 7°11′24″W / 53.160°N 7.190°W / 53.160; -7.190
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyCounty Laois & County Offaly
Elevation
66 m (217 ft)
Population
 • Urban
9,288
Time zoneUTC±0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (IST)
Eircode routing key
R32
Telephone area code+353(0)57
Irish Grid ReferenceN540125
Island of Irish Rail 1906

History edit

 
Blackhall Bridge

Portarlington was founded in 1666, by Sir Henry Bennet, who had been Southern Secretary to Charles II and to whom that King, on his restoration, had made a grant of the extensive estates of Ó Díomasaigh, Viscount Clanmalier, confiscated after the Irish Rebellion of 1641. After some difficulties, the grant passed to Sir Henry Bennet of all the Ó Díomasaigh lands in the King's and Queen's Counties, and on 14 April 1664 he was created Baron Arlington of Harlington in the County of Middlesex. So great was the anxiety of these new settlers to efface all ancient recollections in Ireland, that the Parliament of Orrery and Ormond enacted that the governor and council should be able to give new English names instead of the Irish names of places; and that after a time such new names should be the only ones known or allowed in the country. In accordance with this enactment the borough created in Cooletoodera (Cúil an tSúdaire), received the name of Port-Arlington, or Arlington's Fort.[3]

Huguenot settlement 1694 edit

Following the failure of Henry Bennet's English colony, Port Arlington was re-established with the settlement of Huguenot refugees following the Treaty of Limerick:

Unique among the French Protestant colonies established or augmented in Ireland following the Treaty of Limerick (1691), the Portarlington settlement was planted on the ashes of an abortive English colony.[9]

Fifteen or more Huguenot families who were driven from France as religious refugees settled on the ashes of Bennet's colony, and the settlement was unique among the Huguenot settlements in Ireland in that the French language survived, being used in church services till the 1820s and continuing to be taught in the town school.

... and till within the last twenty years divine service was performed in the French language. In the RC divisions Portarlington is the head of a union or district, called Portarlington, Emo and Killinard ...[10]

The Church of Ireland Bishop of Kildare came to Portarlington to consecrate the new French Church, 1694.[11] The present-day Church of Ireland church sits on one of the town's main thoroughfares, still named 'French Church Street', with the original French church (1694) situated just off the market square.[12][13]

The relationship to the French influence with Portarlington is celebrated every July with the Festival Français de Portarlington.

Lea Castle edit

On the outskirts of the parish lies Lea Castle. The remnants of a Norman castle built in 1260 by William de Vesey. It changed hands many times during its history. For example, it was burned by Fionn Ó Díomasaigh's men in 1284, rebuilt by de Vesey and given to the king, burned along with its town by the Scots army in 1315, burned by the O'Moores in 1346, captured by the O'Dempseys in 1422 and then lost to the Earl of Ormond in 1452, used by Silken Thomas Fitzgerald as a refuge in 1535, mortgaged to Sir Maurice Fitzgerald in 1556, and leased to Robert Bath in 1618. It was used by the confederates as a mint in the 1640s rebellion until Cromwellians blew up the fortifications by stuffing the stairways with explosives. The castle was never used as a fortification again.

Treascon Mass Rock lies just outside the town in an area known as Treascon. This mass rock (Carraig an Aifrinn in Irish) is located within a wooded area, and is a large stone used in mid-seventeenth century Ireland as a location for Catholic worship. Isolated locations were sought to hold religious ceremony, as Catholic mass was a matter of difficulty and danger at the time as a result of both Cromwell's campaign against the Irish, and the Penal Laws of 1695, whereby discrimination and violence against Catholics was legal.

The rebellion of 1798 resulted in several local men from Lea castle being apprehended and subsequently put to death by hanging in the town's market square. A memorial in the shape of a Celtic cross with the rebels' details was commissioned and erected in 1976. The memorial stands close to the perimeter wall of the French church in the market square.

Rotten borough edit

The Portarlington constituency returned two MPs to the Irish House of Commons until 1801, after which it was reconstituted as a UK Parliament constituency returning one MP. Two borough minute books have survived in the National Library of Ireland: Ms 90 for 1727–1777 and Ms 5095 for 1777–1841. They reveal the limitation of freemen and increasing control by the Dawson–Damer family, the Earls of Portarlington.[14] The politics of the Protestant Ascendancy were responsible for turning Portarlington into a perfectly rotten borough. The reason was to preserve the planters' positions politically and economically. This extract shows that a corporation of 15 people was responsible for the re-election of nominees of the Dawson family to parliament, many of whom were non-resident, to represent the town of 2,800 people:

Prior to the legislative Union between Great Britain and Ireland, this borough sent two Members to the Irish Parliament; since 1800 it has returned one to the Imperial Parliament, and so close has been this corporation, that for 50 years previous to the last general election, the nominee of the Dawson family, commonly a total stranger to the borough, was always returned without a contest. According to the Parliamentary Returns of May 1829 and June 1830, the number of electors, resident and non-resident, was 15; that is, all the members of the corporation.[15]

Geography edit

 
The Spire is a folly on nearby Corrig/Carrick hill

Portarlington is split by the River Barrow, with County Offaly on the north bank and County Laois on the south Bank; the town is mostly flat, with some slight street undulations. The town was partially built on the river's flood plain. More recent drainage improvements has resulted in fewer floodings to areas close to the town.[citation needed]

Crossing the river into County Offaly, the land becomes marshy and wet with extensive peat bogs. These peat bogs are broken by some glacial hills, one such hill is called Derryvilla Hill; these hills have been used for gravel and sand production.[citation needed]

The southern end of the town is dominated visually by another glacial hill, know locally as Corrig (or Carrick) hill.[16] This hill is topped by a stone structure or spire. This spire was built the latter half of the 19th century. Next to the spire is the town's water supply reservoir. The reservoir uses the gravity afforded by the hill to supply water to the town below.[citation needed]

Demographics edit

County Laois suffered during the Great Famine (1845–1847), and the county's population dropped from over 153,000 in 1841 to just over 73,000 by 1881.[17] Famine graveyards are known locally.[18]

The population of Portarlington itself doubled between the 2002 and 2016 census (from 4,001 to 8,368 people),[19][20] reaching 9,288 in 2022.[1] According to the 2022 census, 79.2% of inhabitants were born in Ireland, with Poland (5%), the UK (4.4%), and elsewhere in the EU (4.8%) representing other places of birth of the population.[1] Reflecting the development of new housing in the early 21st century, the same census suggested that a majority of residents (59.81%) were living in private homes built after 2001.[1]

Transport edit

 
Portarlington Railway station

Portarlington is a focal point of the Irish railway network, being situated on the junction for services to the west (Galway and County Mayo), the south (Cork, Limerick, Tralee) and the east (Dublin, Kildare). Portarlington halt opened on 26 June 1847.[21]

Public transport by road includes, as of January 2017, one intercity bus service which operates direct to Dublin. It is operated by JJ Kavanagh and Sons, and serves UCD once a day up and return.[citation needed] There is a local-link town service operated by Slieve Bloom Coaches linking Portarlington with Portlaoise and also with Tullamore.[22]

An additional private operator, Dublin Coach (known locally as 'the green bus' due its livery), operates an hourly service to Kildare Village Outlet via Monasterevin.[citation needed] A weekday service by JJ Kavanagh and Sons to NUI Maynooth University and Institute of Technology, Carlow operates during the college term.[citation needed]

Education edit

Coláiste Íosagáin is the main secondary school in Portarlington.[23] The school, which is located on the Offaly side of the border, runs Transition Year, Leaving Cert Applied, and Leaving Cert Vocational programmes.

There are three primary schools, all located on the Laois side of the border.[citation needed]

There is also a third level education college providing courses for post-secondary pupils as well as adult education courses.[24]

In media edit

In 2012, RTÉ filmed in Portarlington for the TV show Dirty Old Towns over a number of weeks. The show, which was presented by Dermot Gavin and ran for 6 weeks, showed local people making improvements to the town. One of the additions was on the banks of the River Barrow, where large red-painted letters spelling "L I F E" were erected. The original spelling was "L I V E", however when travelling from the Offaly side of the town it looked like the word "E V I L". Other developments included the addition of two all-weather soccer pitches,[citation needed] and improvements to the People's Park. Old shops have been redecorated and closed premises repainted. The old French School, on the banks of the river and neglected for many years, was given a "facelift" by the local Lions Club.[citation needed]

Events and culture edit

Culture edit

The People's Museum, situated within the Catholic Club on Main Street in Portarlington is small but holds many different exhibits ranging from local memorabilia to a Bronze Age Celtic dagger.

Portarlington, its Savoy cinema (now closed) and the nearby Lea Castle appeared in the 1993 Irish film Into the West. The town is also mentioned in Christy Moore's song "Welcome to the Cabaret", featured on his 1994 album Live at the Point.

Outdoor pursuits of angling and hunting are available.

French Festival edit

A French festival, sometimes known as the Festival Français de Portarlington, has historically been held in the summer.[25] The festival has typically run over a weekend, with live music, dance, sport, history, food and a parade. Portarlington's French influence and "Huguenot connections" are celebrated with street entertainers as well as French musicians playing on the opening day. No event was held in 2018.[26]

Sport edit

Sports clubs in the area include the Gaelic Athletic Association clubs of Portarlington GAA (based at McCann Park and founded 1893), O'Dempseys GAA (based in Killenard and founded 1951) and Gracefield GAA (based at Gracefield and founded in 1920).[citation needed]

Portarlington RFC is the local rugby union club. It was founded in 1974 and competes in the Leinster League.

Association football (soccer) clubs include Gracefield FC, Arlington AFC, and Portarlington Town FC, each of which competes in the Combined Counties Football League of the Leinster Football Association.[citation needed]

Other sporting clubs in the area include Portarlington Kestrels Basketball Club, Portarlington Lawn Tennis Club, Portarlington Taekwondo and Portarlington Golf Club.[citation needed]

Notable people edit

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Dempsey, Karen (2017), "Lea Castle, Co. Laois: the story so far", The Castle Studies Group Journal, 30: 237–252  
  • Goode, P.J (2008). O'Dempsey Chronicles. Cloneygowan Press. ISBN 9780955914003.
  • Le Fanu, Thomas Philip, ed. (1908). Registers of the French Church of Portarlington, Ireland. Vol. 19. Huguenot Society of London.
  • Mathews, Ronnie (1999). Portarlington, the inside story. ISBN 0863350275.
  • Powell, John Stocks (1994). Huguenots planters Portarlington. Frenchchurch Press. ISBN 0951629921.
  • Powell, John Stocks (2012). Portarlington 1800–1850 the combined registers of Portarlington. Frenchchurch Press. ISBN 9780953801091.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Interactive Data Visualisations: Towns: Portarlington". Census 2022. Central Statistics Office. Retrieved 30 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Portarlington / Cúil an tSúdaire". logainm.ie. Placenames Database of Ireland. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  3. ^ Rev. M. Comerford Collections relating to the Dioceses of Kildare and Leighlin Vol 2 (1883).
  4. ^ "Census for post 1821 figures". from the original on 20 September 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2009.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 May 2016. Retrieved 9 May 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 February 2012. Retrieved 24 August 2013.
  7. ^ Lee, JJ (1981). "On the accuracy of the Pre-famine Irish censuses". In Goldstrom, J. M.; Clarkson, L. A. (eds.). Irish Population, Economy, and Society: Essays in Honour of the Late K. H. Connell. Oxford, England: Clarendon Press.
  8. ^ Mokyr, Joel; O Grada, Cormac (November 1984). "New Developments in Irish Population History, 1700–1850". The Economic History Review. 37 (4): 473–488. doi:10.1111/j.1468-0289.1984.tb00344.x. hdl:10197/1406. Archived from the original on 4 December 2012.
  9. ^ Hylton, Raymond Pierre (1987), "The Huguenot settlement at Portarlington, 1692–1771", in Caldicott, C.E.J.; Gough, Hugh; Pittion, Jean-Paul (eds.), The Huguenots and Ireland: anatomy of an emigration : [proceedings of the Dublin Colloquium on the Huguenot Refuge in Ireland 1685–1985, 9th–12th April, 1985, Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin], Dun Laoghaire: Glendale Press, pp. 297–315
  10. ^ A Topographical dictionary of Ireland Page 465 Samuel Lewis – 1837
  11. ^ Raymond Hylton Ireland's Huguenots and their refuge, 1662–1745: an unlikely haven Page 194 2005 "The Bishop of Kildare did come to Portarlington to consecrate the churches, backed by two prominent Huguenot Deans of ... Moreton held every advantage and for most of the Portarlington Huguenots there could be no option but acceptance ...
  12. ^ Grace Lawless Lee The Huguenot Settlements in Ireland 2009 Page 169
  13. ^ Raymond P. "The Huguenot Settlement at Portarlington, ...
  14. ^ See also John S. Powell, The Portarlington maces and its borough history 1669–1841 2011
  15. ^ Inquiry held 21, 23, and 24 September 1833, before John Colhoun and Henry Baldwin
  16. ^ "Carrick Wood". coillte.ie. Coillte. from the original on 28 January 2020. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
  17. ^ "Tracing stories of the Famine". Leinster Express. 2013. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  18. ^ "Laois Burial Grounds Survey 2011" (PDF). Laois County Council. 2011. Retrieved 18 September 2023.
  19. ^ (PDF). Offaly County Council Development Plan 2009 – 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 October 2008. Retrieved 28 June 2008.
  20. ^ . Census 2016. Central Statistics Office Ireland. 2016. Archived from the original on 12 January 2018. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
  21. ^ "Portarlington station" (PDF). Railscot – Irish Railways. (PDF) from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved 5 September 2007.
  22. ^ "Portarlington". Slievebloomcoaches.ie. from the original on 6 March 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  23. ^ "Coláiste Íosagáin - Secondary School in Portarlington, Co. Laois, Ireland". www.colaisteiosagainport.ie. from the original on 1 December 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2016.
  24. ^ "Home - Portarlington Further Education & Training Centre".
  25. ^ "The French Festival". Portarlington Community Development Association. from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  26. ^ "Portarlington French Festival organisers CANCEL this year's event". laoistoday.ie. 17 April 2018. from the original on 3 September 2021. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  27. ^ "The house that begat Gulliver's Travels is not for the little people". independent.ie. Independent News & Media. 8 July 2007. from the original on 30 October 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
  28. ^ "Jonathan Swift's Works - Gulliver's Travels". Mygullivertravels.com. 16 December 2010. from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 17 June 2019.

External links edit

  • Portarlington Community Website

portarlington, county, laois, portarlington, historically, called, cooletoodera, from, irish, cúil, tsúdaire, meaning, nook, tanner, town, border, county, laois, county, offaly, ireland, river, barrow, forms, border, portarlington, around, kilometres, west, du. Portarlington historically called Cooletoodera 2 from Irish Cuil an tSudaire meaning nook of the tanner is a town on the border of County Laois and County Offaly Ireland The River Barrow forms the border Portarlington is around 70 kilometres 43 mi west of Dublin The town was recorded in the 2022 census as having a population of 9 288 1 Portarlington Cuil an tSudaireTownSt Paul s Church is on French Church Street off Portarlington s market squarePortarlingtonLocation in IrelandCoordinates 53 09 36 N 7 11 24 W 53 160 N 7 190 W 53 160 7 190CountryIrelandProvinceLeinsterCountyCounty Laois amp County OffalyElevation66 m 217 ft Population 2022 1 Urban9 288Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST Eircode routing keyR32Telephone area code 353 0 57Irish Grid ReferenceN540125Island of Irish Rail 1906 Contents 1 History 1 1 Huguenot settlement 1694 1 2 Lea Castle 1 3 Rotten borough 2 Geography 3 Demographics 4 Transport 5 Education 6 In media 7 Events and culture 7 1 Culture 7 2 French Festival 8 Sport 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 Further reading 12 References 13 External linksHistory edit nbsp Blackhall BridgePortarlington was founded in 1666 by Sir Henry Bennet who had been Southern Secretary to Charles II and to whom that King on his restoration had made a grant of the extensive estates of o Diomasaigh Viscount Clanmalier confiscated after the Irish Rebellion of 1641 After some difficulties the grant passed to Sir Henry Bennet of all the o Diomasaigh lands in the King s and Queen s Counties and on 14 April 1664 he was created Baron Arlington of Harlington in the County of Middlesex So great was the anxiety of these new settlers to efface all ancient recollections in Ireland that the Parliament of Orrery and Ormond enacted that the governor and council should be able to give new English names instead of the Irish names of places and that after a time such new names should be the only ones known or allowed in the country In accordance with this enactment the borough created in Cooletoodera Cuil an tSudaire received the name of Port Arlington or Arlington s Fort 3 Historical populationYearPop 18212 877 18313 091 7 4 18413 106 0 5 18512 730 12 1 18612 581 5 5 18712 424 6 1 18812 357 2 8 18912 021 14 3 19011 943 3 9 19112 012 3 6 19261 954 2 9 19361 851 5 3 19462 092 13 0 19512 246 7 4 19562 720 21 1 19612 846 4 6 19662 804 1 5 19713 117 11 2 19813 386 8 6 19863 295 2 7 19913 211 2 5 19963 320 3 4 20024 001 20 5 20066 004 50 1 20117 788 29 7 20168 368 7 4 20229 288 11 0 4 5 6 7 8 1 Huguenot settlement 1694 edit Following the failure of Henry Bennet s English colony Port Arlington was re established with the settlement of Huguenot refugees following the Treaty of Limerick Unique among the French Protestant colonies established or augmented in Ireland following the Treaty of Limerick 1691 the Portarlington settlement was planted on the ashes of an abortive Englishcolony 9 Fifteen or more Huguenot families who were driven from France as religious refugees settled on the ashes of Bennet s colony and the settlement was unique among the Huguenot settlements in Ireland in that the French language survived being used in church services till the 1820s and continuing to be taught in the town school and till within the last twenty years divine service was performed in the French language In the RC divisions Portarlington is the head of a union or district called Portarlington Emo and Killinard 10 The Church of Ireland Bishop of Kildare came to Portarlington to consecrate the new French Church 1694 11 The present day Church of Ireland church sits on one of the town s main thoroughfares still named French Church Street with the original French church 1694 situated just off the market square 12 13 The relationship to the French influence with Portarlington is celebrated every July with the Festival Francais de Portarlington Lea Castle edit On the outskirts of the parish lies Lea Castle The remnants of a Norman castle built in 1260 by William de Vesey It changed hands many times during its history For example it was burned by Fionn o Diomasaigh s men in 1284 rebuilt by de Vesey and given to the king burned along with its town by the Scots army in 1315 burned by the O Moores in 1346 captured by the O Dempseys in 1422 and then lost to the Earl of Ormond in 1452 used by Silken Thomas Fitzgerald as a refuge in 1535 mortgaged to Sir Maurice Fitzgerald in 1556 and leased to Robert Bath in 1618 It was used by the confederates as a mint in the 1640s rebellion until Cromwellians blew up the fortifications by stuffing the stairways with explosives The castle was never used as a fortification again Treascon Mass Rock lies just outside the town in an area known as Treascon This mass rock Carraig an Aifrinn in Irish is located within a wooded area and is a large stone used in mid seventeenth century Ireland as a location for Catholic worship Isolated locations were sought to hold religious ceremony as Catholic mass was a matter of difficulty and danger at the time as a result of both Cromwell s campaign against the Irish and the Penal Laws of 1695 whereby discrimination and violence against Catholics was legal The rebellion of 1798 resulted in several local men from Lea castle being apprehended and subsequently put to death by hanging in the town s market square A memorial in the shape of a Celtic cross with the rebels details was commissioned and erected in 1976 The memorial stands close to the perimeter wall of the French church in the market square Rotten borough edit The Portarlington constituency returned two MPs to the Irish House of Commons until 1801 after which it was reconstituted as a UK Parliament constituency returning one MP Two borough minute books have survived in the National Library of Ireland Ms 90 for 1727 1777 and Ms 5095 for 1777 1841 They reveal the limitation of freemen and increasing control by the Dawson Damer family the Earls of Portarlington 14 The politics of the Protestant Ascendancy were responsible for turning Portarlington into a perfectly rotten borough The reason was to preserve the planters positions politically and economically This extract shows that a corporation of 15 people was responsible for the re election of nominees of the Dawson family to parliament many of whom were non resident to represent the town of 2 800 people Prior to the legislative Union between Great Britain and Ireland this borough sent two Members to the Irish Parliament since 1800 it has returned one to the Imperial Parliament and so close has been this corporation that for 50 years previous to the last general election the nominee of the Dawson family commonly a total stranger to the borough was always returned without a contest According to the Parliamentary Returns of May 1829 and June 1830 the number of electors resident and non resident was 15 that is all the members of the corporation 15 Geography edit nbsp The Spire is a folly on nearby Corrig Carrick hillPortarlington is split by the River Barrow with County Offaly on the north bank and County Laois on the south Bank the town is mostly flat with some slight street undulations The town was partially built on the river s flood plain More recent drainage improvements has resulted in fewer floodings to areas close to the town citation needed Crossing the river into County Offaly the land becomes marshy and wet with extensive peat bogs These peat bogs are broken by some glacial hills one such hill is called Derryvilla Hill these hills have been used for gravel and sand production citation needed The southern end of the town is dominated visually by another glacial hill know locally as Corrig or Carrick hill 16 This hill is topped by a stone structure or spire This spire was built the latter half of the 19th century Next to the spire is the town s water supply reservoir The reservoir uses the gravity afforded by the hill to supply water to the town below citation needed Demographics editCounty Laois suffered during the Great Famine 1845 1847 and the county s population dropped from over 153 000 in 1841 to just over 73 000 by 1881 17 Famine graveyards are known locally 18 The population of Portarlington itself doubled between the 2002 and 2016 census from 4 001 to 8 368 people 19 20 reaching 9 288 in 2022 1 According to the 2022 census 79 2 of inhabitants were born in Ireland with Poland 5 the UK 4 4 and elsewhere in the EU 4 8 representing other places of birth of the population 1 Reflecting the development of new housing in the early 21st century the same census suggested that a majority of residents 59 81 were living in private homes built after 2001 1 Transport edit nbsp Portarlington Railway stationPortarlington is a focal point of the Irish railway network being situated on the junction for services to the west Galway and County Mayo the south Cork Limerick Tralee and the east Dublin Kildare Portarlington halt opened on 26 June 1847 21 Public transport by road includes as of January 2017 one intercity bus service which operates direct to Dublin It is operated by JJ Kavanagh and Sons and serves UCD once a day up and return citation needed There is a local link town service operated by Slieve Bloom Coaches linking Portarlington with Portlaoise and also with Tullamore 22 An additional private operator Dublin Coach known locally as the green bus due its livery operates an hourly service to Kildare Village Outlet via Monasterevin citation needed A weekday service by JJ Kavanagh and Sons to NUI Maynooth University and Institute of Technology Carlow operates during the college term citation needed Education editColaiste Iosagain is the main secondary school in Portarlington 23 The school which is located on the Offaly side of the border runs Transition Year Leaving Cert Applied and Leaving Cert Vocational programmes There are three primary schools all located on the Laois side of the border citation needed There is also a third level education college providing courses for post secondary pupils as well as adult education courses 24 In media editIn 2012 RTE filmed in Portarlington for the TV show Dirty Old Towns over a number of weeks The show which was presented by Dermot Gavin and ran for 6 weeks showed local people making improvements to the town One of the additions was on the banks of the River Barrow where large red painted letters spelling L I F E were erected The original spelling was L I V E however when travelling from the Offaly side of the town it looked like the word E V I L Other developments included the addition of two all weather soccer pitches citation needed and improvements to the People s Park Old shops have been redecorated and closed premises repainted The old French School on the banks of the river and neglected for many years was given a facelift by the local Lions Club citation needed Events and culture editCulture edit The People s Museum situated within the Catholic Club on Main Street in Portarlington is small but holds many different exhibits ranging from local memorabilia to a Bronze Age Celtic dagger Portarlington its Savoy cinema now closed and the nearby Lea Castle appeared in the 1993 Irish film Into the West The town is also mentioned in Christy Moore s song Welcome to the Cabaret featured on his 1994 album Live at the Point Outdoor pursuits of angling and hunting are available French Festival edit A French festival sometimes known as the Festival Francais de Portarlington has historically been held in the summer 25 The festival has typically run over a weekend with live music dance sport history food and a parade Portarlington s French influence and Huguenot connections are celebrated with street entertainers as well as French musicians playing on the opening day No event was held in 2018 26 Sport editSports clubs in the area include the Gaelic Athletic Association clubs of Portarlington GAA based at McCann Park and founded 1893 O Dempseys GAA based in Killenard and founded 1951 and Gracefield GAA based at Gracefield and founded in 1920 citation needed Portarlington RFC is the local rugby union club It was founded in 1974 and competes in the Leinster League Association football soccer clubs include Gracefield FC Arlington AFC and Portarlington Town FC each of which competes in the Combined Counties Football League of the Leinster Football Association citation needed Other sporting clubs in the area include Portarlington Kestrels Basketball Club Portarlington Lawn Tennis Club Portarlington Taekwondo and Portarlington Golf Club citation needed Notable people editPeter Burrowes 1753 1841 Irish barrister and politician Richard Pennefather 1773 1859 leading Irish judge went to school in Portarlington Edward Carson Baron Carson 1854 1935 Irish barrister politician and judge went to school in Portarlington John Wilson Croker 1780 1857 politician and essayist creator of the term Conservative for the British political party went to school in Portarlington Feargus O Connor 1794 1855 Chartist leader went to Thomas Willis s school in Portarlington and attempted to elope with the headmaster s daughter Jonathan Swift 1667 1745 prolific writer and satirist wrote large part of his famous work Gulliver s Travels in Woodbrook House in Portarlington 27 28 Hugh Emerson former footballer with Laois and Portarlington GAA citation needed Lily Champ a gardener and writer from the town citation needed Cathal Berry TD for Kildare South and Portarlington resident See also editList of towns and villages in Ireland Market Houses in IrelandFurther reading editDempsey Karen 2017 Lea Castle Co Laois the story so far The Castle Studies Group Journal 30 237 252 nbsp Goode P J 2008 O Dempsey Chronicles Cloneygowan Press ISBN 9780955914003 Le Fanu Thomas Philip ed 1908 Registers of the French Church of Portarlington Ireland Vol 19 Huguenot Society of London Mathews Ronnie 1999 Portarlington the inside story ISBN 0863350275 Powell John Stocks 1994 Huguenots planters Portarlington Frenchchurch Press ISBN 0951629921 Powell John Stocks 2012 Portarlington 1800 1850 the combined registers of Portarlington Frenchchurch Press ISBN 9780953801091 References edit a b c d e f Interactive Data Visualisations Towns Portarlington Census 2022 Central Statistics Office Retrieved 30 September 2023 Portarlington Cuil an tSudaire logainm ie Placenames Database of Ireland Retrieved 17 June 2019 Rev M Comerford Collections relating to the Dioceses of Kildare and Leighlin Vol 2 1883 Census for post 1821 figures Archived from the original on 20 September 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2009 Archived copy Archived from the original on 7 May 2016 Retrieved 9 May 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Northern Ireland Census of Population Archived from the original on 17 February 2012 Retrieved 24 August 2013 Lee JJ 1981 On the accuracy of the Pre famine Irish censuses In Goldstrom J M Clarkson L A eds Irish Population Economy and Society Essays in Honour of the Late K H Connell Oxford England Clarendon Press Mokyr Joel O Grada Cormac November 1984 New Developments in Irish Population History 1700 1850 The Economic History Review 37 4 473 488 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0289 1984 tb00344 x hdl 10197 1406 Archived from the original on 4 December 2012 Hylton Raymond Pierre 1987 The Huguenot settlement at Portarlington 1692 1771 in Caldicott C E J Gough Hugh Pittion Jean Paul eds The Huguenots and Ireland anatomy of an emigration proceedings of the Dublin Colloquium on the Huguenot Refuge in Ireland 1685 1985 9th 12th April 1985 Trinity College Dublin University College Dublin Dun Laoghaire Glendale Press pp 297 315 A Topographical dictionary of Ireland Page 465 Samuel Lewis 1837 Raymond Hylton Ireland s Huguenots and their refuge 1662 1745 an unlikely haven Page 194 2005 The Bishop of Kildare did come to Portarlington to consecrate the churches backed by two prominent Huguenot Deans of Moreton held every advantage and for most of the Portarlington Huguenots there could be no option but acceptance Grace Lawless Lee The Huguenot Settlements in Ireland 2009 Page 169 Raymond P The Huguenot Settlement at Portarlington See also John S Powell The Portarlington maces and its borough history 1669 1841 2011 Inquiry held 21 23 and 24 September 1833 before John Colhoun and Henry Baldwin Carrick Wood coillte ie Coillte Archived from the original on 28 January 2020 Retrieved 28 January 2020 Tracing stories of the Famine Leinster Express 2013 Retrieved 18 September 2023 Laois Burial Grounds Survey 2011 PDF Laois County Council 2011 Retrieved 18 September 2023 Demographic context PDF Offaly County Council Development Plan 2009 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 30 October 2008 Retrieved 28 June 2008 Sapmap Area Settlements Portarlington Census 2016 Central Statistics Office Ireland 2016 Archived from the original on 12 January 2018 Retrieved 11 January 2018 Portarlington station PDF Railscot Irish Railways Archived PDF from the original on 2 March 2011 Retrieved 5 September 2007 Portarlington Slievebloomcoaches ie Archived from the original on 6 March 2014 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Colaiste Iosagain Secondary School in Portarlington Co Laois Ireland www colaisteiosagainport ie Archived from the original on 1 December 2016 Retrieved 30 November 2016 Home Portarlington Further Education amp Training Centre The French Festival Portarlington Community Development Association Archived from the original on 3 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2021 Portarlington French Festival organisers CANCEL this year s event laoistoday ie 17 April 2018 Archived from the original on 3 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2021 The house that begat Gulliver s Travels is not for the little people independent ie Independent News amp Media 8 July 2007 Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Jonathan Swift s Works Gulliver s Travels Mygullivertravels com 16 December 2010 Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 17 June 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Portarlington County Laois Portarlington Community Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Portarlington County Laois amp oldid 1184108632 Sport, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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