Carlow County - Ireland Genealogical Projects (IGP TM) Ballinabranna
Town |
Ballinabranna or Ballinabrannagh is a small village in County Carlow, Ireland. It is located approximately 8 kilometres south of Carlow and 5 kilometres from Junction 6 of the M9 motorway. It is within the townland of Ballinabrannagh, and is in the barony of Idrone West. in the parish of Cloydagh. As of the 2016 census, the population of the village was 466. History Traditionally a rural townland, it developed into a nucleated village due to its proximity to the M9 motorway. The Milford Park and Gort na Gréine housing developments, built in the late-2000s and 2010s respectively, significantly expanded the population of the area. It was first listed as a settlement by the CSO in 2011 (CSO Sapmaps 2016) and had a population of 389. The village has a church (St. Fintan's), a national school, a child daycare and a GAA club/gym. Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia St
Fintan’s Church, Ballinabranna, was
built circa 1820 on a site provided by the Alexander family
of Milford. The ruin of an earlier church is still visible
today in near-by Tomard that is dedicated to St. Brigid. St.
Fintan’s is a very fine example of a barn style church and it
was sympathetically reordered in the early 1980s.
Blessing
of St Fintans Church, Ballinabranna by Bishop Denis 17 February 2020
Introduction: The following are extracts from
Bishop Denis Blessing: We gather in the afternoon of the
Sixth Sunday in Ordinary Time to celebrate our Church, our
place of worship here in Ballinabranna. I thank Fr. Pat
Hennessy and the team here for the very kind invitation to
join you. St. Fintan’s Church has a huge resonance with many
generations, the foundation stone was laid in 1823; we will
mark the bicentenary in three years’ time.
Homily: St. Luke reminds us of the
importance of having good solid foundations, when setting out
on a building project. There is no mention of #Storm Dennis,
but we can be sure these more frequent storms, following
closely on #Storm Ciara will test the structure of many of
our buildings, not to mention trees that have stood in place
as long as Ballinabranna Church and forgotten Election
Posters precariously hanging onto polls with loose plastic
tying’s! Huge thanks at the outset must be
paid to Dr. Shay Kinsella for his excellent short history,
especially produced for today’s celebration. Most of what I
say this afternoon has been gleaned from Shay’s excellent
research and his passion for local history. I also commend
Martin Nevin’s research on Ballinabranna
A quote from Shay’s introduction
beautifully captures the scene for us all:
“those builders who laid its
first stones on 26 May 1823, had they raised their heads to
survey the surrounding countryside, would have seen little
beyond the odd thatched cottage, poor mud tracks for roads
and small fields of poorly-drained yet fertile land”[1].
Ballinabranna is a very different
place today. Raise your heads, look around you. Everything
outside has been built around this Church. Luke’s gospel comes to life in the
solid foundations of St. Fintan’s Church, Ballinabranna.
Without the Church, originally known as Milford Chapel, we
would probably today be at no more than a crossroads. But
this is a community, a faith-filled community. Much is made of the relationship of
Bishop JKL and the local landlord John Alexander of Milford
House and rightly so. John Alexander was a kind landlord who
saw education and practice of faith, important for his
Catholic tenants. It was as much about rights as it was about
a deep faith. John Alexander appreciated that the
cultural identity of Catholics needed acknowledgement and
recognition. The site for the chapel would be beside the
school-house, a site already given by him. Records suggest
there were 45 males and 23 females attending school there in
1824, 62 of them Roman Catholic. A footnote added “scripture
not read”[3]. Much is made at the moment of what
kind of education system we will have into the future. JKL
was a great proponent of rooting faith in the community, not
necessarily in the school. Other Protestant gentry were also
generous towards the building of Catholic places of worship,
I include Henry Bruen of Oak Park and John Staunton
Rochefort, Milford. It wasn’t all plain sailing as our
history will tell us. I love Shay Kinsella’s account of
how the church pew purchased by local Catholic Pat Neill was
singled out for vengeance when he voted for the Tories,
against the stated advice of the local PP of the time Fr.
Patrick Kehoe (1830-1858). Of course, Milford and the
Limeburner’s at Clogrennane were the great employers of their
day and so often locals were caught between a loyalty to
their employer, who was generally good to them and their
faith. Ballinabranna remains a protected
structure in Carlow County Council’s records. I am always
attracted to the simplicity of this church, no stained glass
for instance allows us to appreciate where we are: The God of
nature outside and the God we worship inside. Who knows what
the future holds for the 117 churches that are part of the
ecclesiastical landscape of our diocese? The bulk of those
churches are here in the Carlow area. What we clearly can say
is that people will always gather here, in appreciation of
St. Fintan of Clonenagh.
Intriguing it is that as Msgr.
Caoimhín O’Neill says in the article at the back of your Mass
Booklet: “twelve centuries
after the death of St. Gobban (the founder of the great
monastery at Old Leighlin), a church within hearing of the
bells of Old Leighlin, should be named after the patron saint
of the monastery where St. Gobban was buried”.
It links this area to the glorious period of early
monasticism and their values of hospitality and prayer.
ENDS
Source: The full transcript
can be read here:
https://www.kandle.ie/blessing-of-st-fintans-church-ballinabranna-by-bishop-denis/#_ftn2
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