Kilmacthomas

Kilmacthomas
Coill Mhic Thomáisín
Town
Kilmacthomas

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 52°12′25″N 7°25′21″W / 52.206816°N 7.422491°W / 52.206816; -7.422491Coordinates: 52°12′25″N 7°25′21″W / 52.206816°N 7.422491°W / 52.206816; -7.422491
Country  Ireland
Province Munster
County County Waterford
Elevation 50 m (160 ft)
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
  Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)
Irish Grid Reference S392060

Kilmacthomas or Kilmactomas (Irish: Coill Mhic Thomáisín),[1] often referred to locally as "Kilmac", is a town on the River Mahon in County Waterford, Ireland. It lies on the R677 immediately north of the N25 national primary road from Dungarvan to Waterford.

The town has a population of some 1768 people. The chief tourist attraction of the locality are the Mahon Falls.

Kilmacthomas Railway Viaduct
Coill Mhic Thomáisín (Kilmacthomas), Railway viaduct - geograph.org.uk - 261327

History

During the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, in December, 1649, Oliver Cromwell, marched from Waterford to Kilmacthomas during the Siege of Waterford. The weather was wet and stormy and the river was in flood, so the army couldn't cross. Two nights were spent in the field that is now the public park. Cromwell was said to have described Waterford county on his march from Waterford to Kilmacthomas in the winter of 1649 as being a craggy and desolate place.

Daniel O'Connell passed through Kilmac' on a campaign trail and he wrote:[2]

We breakfasted at Kilmacthomas, a town belonging to the Beresfords but the people belong to us. They came out to meet us with green boughs and such shouting you can have no idea of. I harangued them from the window of the inn, and we had a good deal of laughing at the bloody Beresfords. Judge what the popular feeling must be when in this, a Beresford town, every man their tenant, we had such a reception.

In the early 1870s the influence of the industrial revolution reached Kilmacthomas when the Waterford to Mallow railroad came to town. There is an example of a stone viaduct in the town spanning the Mahon River.Although the last passenger services ceased in the late 1960s the railway continued to operate with the haulage of oil and magnesite for another couple of decades. This railway is now disused. The viaduct at Kilmacthomas has been preserved.

Geography

The village is situated on the River Mahon, the eastbank is known as Kilmacthomas and the westbank as Gruaigeshuneen. The postal area of Kilmacthomas can include Newtown, Ballylaneen, Lemybrien, Kill, Mahon Bridge, The Nire, and Kilrossanty. The N25 bridge over the River Mahon is named after local sporting hero Percy Kirwan.

The Mahon River has a stock of wild brown trout. The salmon run mostly in the autumn and winter, but start running from the end of June. Salmon trout (know locally as "Pale") are also found in the river. Sea trout run in late July and August. There has been a collapse in fish stocks in the 1980s and 1990s but stocks are on the rise once more since a moratorium on netting has been emplaced.

Geologically Kilmacthomas gives its name to the "Kilmacthomas Formation", which is composed of Palaeozoic deep marine metasediments and metavolcanics. Evidence of manganese nodules have been noted in the new bypass cutting recently constructed near the village.

Kilmac' is located halfway between Waterford City and the county capital; Dungarvan. West of the village are the foothills of the Comeragh mountains, while five miles to the south is the 'Copper Coast' with the beach of Bonmahon / Bunmahon(Bún Machan).

Economy

Education

There are 4 schools in Kilmacthomas. St Declan's Community College is the largest second level school in the county area, with in excess of 500 pupils. The (Kilmac') Convent Primary school caters for the younger children,newtown which is a mile away and has 100 students, while the pre-school boys and girls attend the Naíonra on the High Road. There are 16 different schools within 15 km of Kilmacthomas.

Bars

Pubs in the town include: Powers, Dannys (Kirwans), Kielys, Keatings/Lynns (Main Street), Philomena Flynns (Newtown), Morrisseys (the Square), Lenihans (Newtown), Harleys Bar (River Street), and Kierseys Bar & Restaurant (Main Street).

Sports clubs

Gaelic Athletic Association Clubs:

People

See also


References

  1. "Placenames Database of Ireland". Dublin City University. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  2. Source. Letter from Daniel O’Connell to his wife about campaigning in Co Waterford, 19 June 1826, Irish Monthly 12 (1884) 216.
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