BALLYMORE EUSTACE

'Ballymore Eustace' is a town in County Kildare in Ireland, near the border with County Wicklow, and part of County Dublin until 1836.
The town's name is sometimes abbreviated (in everyday usage) to "Ballymore" - even though there are several other towns in Ireland called Ballymore (from Irish: ''Baile Mór'', meaning "big town").

Contents
Location and access
History
Surroundings
See also
External links

Location and access


Ballymore Eustace is located at the junction of the R411 and R413 regional roads, on the River Liffey, over which the R411 is carried by a relatively rare seven arch bridge. It had a population of 786 at the 2002 census.

History


Modern plaque near Ballymore Eustace marks the end of the Pale

Ballymore Eustace in the 13th century - at the time simply known as Ballymore - was the site of a castle, which in 1244 was granted an eight day fair to be held on site by Henry III. The upkeep of the castle was given to Thomas Fitzoliver FitzEustace in 1373, whose family name came to be associated with the town, lending it its present name. It was a border town of "the Pale", giving it strategic importance in the area, but also leading to its raiding by local families.
The town and surrounding lands formed for centuries one of three detached portions of the barony of Uppercross, County Dublin. These lands, originally part of Dublin because they belonged to religious foundations there, were among the last such exclaves in Ireland, being merged into Kildare only in 1836.
In the 19th century, the town's largest source of employment was a cotton mill (owned by the Gallagher family), the ruins of which still stand by the river at a spot known as the "pike hole". This mill employed in the region of 700 people and a row of single-storey houses were built nearby to accommodate a number of their families - this terrace today known as "Weaver's row", running alongside and down the hill from the Catholic church.

Surroundings


Near the town are the Blessington Lakes which were created artificially in the 1940s by the damming of the river at Poulaphouca, or the "Devil's hole", which was done to generate electricity by the Electricity Supply Board (ESB), and the creation of a reservoir for the supply of water for the city of Dublin at the Water Treatment Works (at Ballymore Eustace). Activities such as fishing, sailing, canoeing and windsurfing are regularly seen on the waters. Also near is Russborough House, a fine example of Palladian architecture, which houses the Beit art collection, much of which was donated to the state by Alfred Beit, including works by Goya, Vermeer and Rubens.
On the other side of the town, towards Naas, is the Punchestown racecourse, the site of a well-known horse-racing festival, which takes place over three days every April.
Some of the battle scenes in Mel Gibson's (1995) film, Braveheart, were filmed around Ballymore Eustace. The recent film King Arthur was also partly shot in the village.

See also



List of towns in the Republic of Ireland

External links



Kildare Tourist Guide to Ballymore Eustace

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