Location | |
---|---|
Location | Manor Kilbride, Blessington, County Wicklow |
Country | Republic of Ireland |
Coordinates | 53°11′53″N6°28′44″W / 53.1980°N 6.4788°W |
Production | |
Products | Granite |
History | |
Opened | 1740[1] | approximately
Closed | 1820-50 (exhausted) |
Golden Hill quarry, is a former granite quarry on Golden Hill, adjacent to the village of Manor Kilbride, County Wicklow, Ireland. [2] [3] Its exact coordinates are unknown.
Dr. Patrick Wyse Jackson, curator of the Geological Museum at Trinity College Dublin, hypothesised that the Golden Hill granite was so named due to it having been partially weathered in situ , with the result that the "slightly altered feldspars" gave the rock "a brownish hue". [4]
When the quarry was exhausted sometime between 1820 and 1850, the associated workers moved to Ballyknockan a short distance away where a complex of granite quarries were founded. [2] [5]
The granite in the Wicklow Mountains, wherein Golden Hill sits, is of Devonian age dating to around 400 million years ago [6] and is part of what is known as the 'Leinster granite batholith' which stretches from Killiney Hill in Dublin southwards to County Carlow. [7] Granite has also been exploited on the island of Ireland in counties Galway, Donegal and Down. [8] The wider Dublin area was exploited for its granite for centuries, and it is known that granite quarrying took place at Dalkey quarry, close to Dublin city, from 1680. [9] Granite was commonly known as "firestone" until the late eighteenth century; [10] not from its classification as an igneous rock (which at this stage was still unknown), but rather from its initial usage as a material from which to make fire grates and chimney pieces owing to its heat-resistant properties. [10]
Prior to 1720, calp limestone was the main stone building material used in Dublin, and was quarried locally in the suburbs of Palmerstown, Kimmage, Rathgar [11] and Donnybrook (where a Dublin Bus depot exists today). [12] [13] [14] After this date, imported limestones, sandstones and granites began to replace the calp as they became more popular. [11] The nearest granite sources to Dublin were the quarries of south County Dublin and north-west County Wicklow. [15]
The eighteenth century, "probably Dublin's most prosperous period" according to Wyse Jackson, saw the erection of many of Dublin's most important public buildings which were built of calp limestone rubble walls and "faced with either Leinster granite or Portland stone" imported from England. [14] During this period the quarry was owned by the prominent Darley building family. [16]
Granite from the Wicklow and Dublin Mountains, and limestone from the immediate hinterland, came to be the primary stones used in the construction of Dublin city, and became recognised as being "characteristic to Dublin" in the same way that basalt from Antrim and granite from the Mourne Mountains came to typify Belfast's urban landscape. [8]
Blessington is the largest town in the vicinity of Golden Hill, lying approximately 5km away (as the crow flies), and became the administrative centre for much of the surrounding countryside after the formation of the Blessington Estate in 1667. [17] According to Wyse Jackson and Caulfield:
"Granite was reportedly first quarried in west Wicklow in the early 1700s from several openings at Baltyboys near Blessington, and from 1740 in more significant volumes at Woodend and Threecastles nearby and then from Golden Hill. The Baltyboys stone may have been the source of the granite used in the central 'piazza' at the Parliament House, where contemporary documents show that William Borrowdale was paid £6-16s-2d for 'mountain stone' on 24 December 1729." [1]
Starting from the year 1700, a "string" of granite quarries opened in the Blessington area, each lasting "anywhere from 40 to 150 years", according to John Hussey, an academic and engineer. [18] : 12:07 Hussey noted that the granite pieces were cut, either onsite or at the building site, into what were known as "wallers" - conveniently-sized pieces with which to wall the side of a building. [18] : 13:45 Five wallers weighed approximately a tonne, whereas the smallest individual sections of Portland stone used had a weight of about five tonnes apiece. [18] : 15:28 It was possible to transport these large sections of Portland stone from Dorset by sea right up to the quays of Dublin, whereas each piece of granite had to come from west Wicklow on horse and cart via roads that were in a bad condition. [18] : 14:19 In 1981, the TV series Hands filmed stoneworkers replacing some of the wallers of the Parliament House (Bank of Ireland) which was being renovated at the time.
In 1720, Trinity College Dublin accounts show that one John Bawnan was paid £11-10s-7d for "Blessington Stones delivered for work on the new kitchen". [15] "Blessington Stones" were once again mentioned in a Trinity receipt from 1721, and again in 1726 when a "Mr Whinery" was paid for "a Cornish of Blessington Stone for the new building adjoining the laboratory"; a Cornish presumably indicating a unit of measurement. [10] The Trinity records are useful not only in identifying the area from which the granite was sourced at that time, but also for listing the individual names of the suppliers of the stone, and of the stonecutters. The names include William Reily, Robert Smith and Nathan Hall, whose surnames all appear in the parish registers of St Mary's church in Blessington, with some entries going back to the late 1600s (shortly after the church was built). [10]
Parliament House, built between 1729 and 1739 is noteworthy for among other things its decorations, some of which, unusually, were carved from granite as opposed to the more malleable Portland stone used for much of the building. Wyse Jackson notes that "they would have been difficult to produce, on account of the coarse texture of the rock, and so they reflect the considerable skills of the stonemasons. It is unusual to find granite so delicately carved". [19]
A detailed map of the Blessington area surveyed by Jacob Neville dating from 1760 shows two unnamed granite quarries in the locality of the town, identified more explicitly by Hussey as those at Woodend and Threecastles, where "faint traces" of quarries could still be seen as of 2014. [20] It is likely that one of either of these were the source of the 'Blessington Stone' supplied to Trinity College in 1721. [20]
Hussey notes that the quarries at Woodend and Threecastles would have supported a significant industrial settlement at Oldcourt, a crossroads village situated between the two, where perhaps "over 100 men" were employed. [20] These workmen were typically drawn from the Catholic population, whereas the quarry-owners were usually Church of Ireland. [20] According to Wyse Jackson and Caulfield, the ability to quarry granite in considerable volume was delayed in Ireland until the mid-1700s due to technological constraints. [1]
In the 1770s, the Commissioners for Paving the Streets of Dublin, commonly known as the Dublin Paving Board, adopted "wholesale" the use of granite for their paving in the city, replacing the use of calp limestone which had been the case since medieval times. [1]
According to Wyse Jackson and Caulfield:
"Within the Leinster granite batholith... a number of plutons, or individual masses of granite, formed and each has a distinctive textural characteristic. The granites that were quarried at Baltyboys, Blessington, Woodend, Threecastles and Golden Hill in west County Wicklow, as well as those from Glencree, consist of crystals that were of smaller size having been formed at the same time, whereas granite from Three Rock Mountain and Glencullen contained conspicious crystals of mica up to half an inch (12 mm) wide..." [7]
Owing to the recognisability of the different granite types, Wyse Jackson and Caulfield contend that granite quarried from the western edge of the batholith were used in the construction of the West Front of Trinity College (built early 1700s), the Parliament House (built 1729-39), Russborough House (built 1741-55), [21] and the GPO (built 1814-18). [7] In 1993, Wyse Jackson simply stated that the side wings of the GPO were in "Leinster granite", but did not specify an exact source. [22]
Conversely, the Glencree variety from the eastern side of the batholith were used by Viscount Powerscourt in the construction of his Powerscourt Estate (built 1731-41) and Powerscourt House (built 1771-74) on South William Street. [7] According to Hayes, other granite quarries in the vicinity of Powerscourt included Toneygarrow, Lough Bray and Ballybrew. [23] [24] Other granite quarries in the wider Dublin hinterland included Kilgobbin, Golden Ball and Barnacullia quarries. [25]
In 1976, the old Parliament House in Dublin began undergoing a period of restoration, having been subjected to the elements for 250 years. Speaking on RTÉ Radio 1, Jim Murphy, the contractor responsible for supplying the replacement granite, noted that he had already seen four distinct granite types represented in the fabric of the building; namely those from Dalkey, Barnacullia, Glencullen, and "an awful lot" from the Ballyknockan area. [26] : 36:47 Murphy was able to distinguish between the different granites by the appearance of their surfaces, and "big scale" of mica present in some stones versus others. [26] : 37:24 Stonecutters from Ballyknockan and Barnacullia were employed in the restoration works that year.
In his book "The Building Stones of Dublin: A Walking Guide", published in 1993, Wyse Jackson noted the use of Golden Hill granite in a number of city centre buildings and locations:
During the construction of Leinster House from 1745 to 1748, the side that faces Merrion Street was built using granite from Golden Hill. [31] When the Office of Public Works undertook restoration works on the building from 2017 to 2019, they chose to use Ballyknockan granite as the nearest substitute owing to the fact that Golden Hill was exhausted by 1850. [31]
In the early 19th century, the quarry at Golden Hill began to yield less, and "most likely" those associated with the quarrying works there moved to Ballyknockan, according to the County Wicklow Heritage page. [2] A 2015 article in The Wicklow People states that a man "called Olligan (or Halligan) led 400 men from Manor Kilbride, on an exodus of near biblical proportions" to Ballyknockan. [5]
A second "great wave" of public building had begun in Dublin in the second quarter of the 19th century, [2] which necessitated continued granite from sources local to Dublin. According to a County Geological Site Report by the Geological Survey of Ireland, the first Ballyknockan quarry was opened in 1824, [6] although other sources say 1820.
By the 1860s, there were numerous granite quarries in Ballyknockan [32] and the site became "probably the most important area for supplying cut stone blocks of granite for the construction of many of Dublin city's major public buildings". [6]
A museum entitled the 'Ballyknockan Quarries Heritage Museum' opened onsite in May 2024. [33]
Leinster House is the seat of the Oireachtas, the parliament of Ireland. Originally, it was the ducal palace of the Dukes of Leinster.
Parliament House in Dublin, Ireland, was home to the Parliament of Ireland, and since 1803 has housed the Bank of Ireland. It was the world's first purpose-built bicameral parliament house. It is located at College Green.
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The Wicklow Mountains form the largest continuous upland area in Ireland. They occupy the whole centre of County Wicklow and stretch outside its borders into the counties of Dublin, Wexford and Carlow. Where the mountains extend into County Dublin, they are known locally as the Dublin Mountains. The highest peak is Lugnaquilla at 925 metres.
The National Library of Ireland is Ireland's national library located in Dublin, in a building designed by Thomas Newenham Deane. The mission of the National Library of Ireland is "To collect, preserve, promote and make accessible the documentary and intellectual record of the life of Ireland and to contribute to the provision of access to the larger universe of recorded knowledge."
Blessington, historically known as Ballycomeen, is a town on the River Liffey in County Wicklow, Ireland, near the border with County Kildare. It is around 25 km south-west of Dublin, and is situated on the N81 road, which connects Dublin to Tullow. The town is in a townland and civil parish of the same name.
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The Library of Trinity College Dublin serves Trinity College. It is a legal deposit or "copyright library", which means publishers in Ireland must deposit a copy of all their publications there without charge. It is the only Irish library to hold such rights for works published in the United Kingdom.
Valleymount is a small village in western County Wicklow, Ireland. The name 'Valleymount' does not appear before 1839. Previously, the village was known as 'the Cross of Ballymore' or simply 'the Cross', with 'cross' referring to land belonging to the church.
Ballyknockan or Ballynockan is a village and townland in County Wicklow, Ireland.
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Kilbride, or Manor Kilbride, is a village, civil parish and electoral division in County Wicklow, Ireland, located at the western edge of the Wicklow Mountains in the barony of Talbotstown Lower.
Threecastles Castle is a three-storey tower house situated near Blessington, County Wicklow, Ireland. It is protected as a national monument.
Rath Turtle Moat is a ringwork and National Monument located in County Wicklow, Ireland.
St. Mary's Church is a Church of Ireland church located in Blessington, County Wicklow, Ireland. The church was built by Michael Boyle, Archbishop of Armagh in the 1670s and 1680s, and dedicated on 17 September 1683. The clock tower houses the oldest surviving set of bells in Ireland, the original bells used since its foundation, cast in 1682 by Bartlett bellfounders of London. The tower is also notable for possessing what has been described as the oldest public clock in Ireland, and/or the oldest working turret clock in Ireland.
The Barnacullia quarries are a number of former, and current, granite quarries in the townland of Barnacullia on the north-eastern slopes of Three Rock Mountain in the county of Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown, Ireland. According to a Historic Landscape Character Assessment (HLCA) conducted in 2006, the area was at one point "an important source of granite for the buildings of nearby Dublin".
Ballyknockan quarry, or more correctly Ballyknockan quarries, are a collection of disused granite quarries in the village of Ballyknockan, County Wicklow, Ireland. From the early 19th century onward, the site was "probably the most important area for supplying cut stone blocks of granite for the construction of many of Dublin city's major public buildings", according to a report by the Geological Survey of Ireland. At its height, from approximately the 1840s to 1870s, there would have been "hundreds of workers" active in various trades in the quarries, which lie some 15 miles south-west of Dublin city. Transportation of the materials alone to the city by horse and cart required considerable logistical effort.