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Cheese

* Mitchelstown is well known for its cheese production. It is the largest producer of cheese to the Irish market. Fair Play.

Co-Operative

Up to the 1980s, Mitchelstown was the headquarters for Mitchelstown Co-Operative Creameries, Ireland's then number one dairy processing business. This farmers "Co-Op" was founded in 1919 under the inspirational leadership of local land-owner Chairman Con O'Brien of Killickane, Mitchelstown. He was Chairman of the "Co-Op" for almost 50 years and then became Honorary Life President until his death in 1968. Between 1930 and 1985,a combination of strong farmer leadership, talented management, product innovation and a diligent workforce enabled Mitchelstown Co-Op Creameries to become the largest and most important Dairy Processing business in the island of Ireland. It became famous nationally for its processed cheese brands but was better known in overseas dairy industry circles for the high quality and large variety of its natural cheeses which were extensively exported around Europe and for which it earned many international prizes. In later years the site of Mitchelstown Castle was used to house an expansion of processing activities into milk powder, casein and chocolate crumb production. In the 1930s the Co-Op promoted the introduction of intensive pig production in the Mitchelstown area as another source of farm income. A noted agriculturalist, Sandy McGuckian from Masserene Park, Ballymena, County Antrim was engaged by the Co-Op to help train local people in modern intensive animal production methods. As a result, several of Ireland's largest Industrial Pig Production units are based in the Mitchelstown area to this day. McGuckians' sons (Alistair and Paddy) subsequently established Masstock International. Masstock became one of the pioneers of the establishment of a modern dairy industry in Saudi Arabia as a result of its minority shareholding (largely disposed of in 1991) in the Almarai Group, a joint venture with majority shareholder HH Prince Sultan Bin Mohamed Bin Saud Al Kabeer. The highly profitable Almarai Group was launched on the stock market in 2005 and is now the largest and best known vertically integrated dairy food business in the Middle East and also has the distinction of owning and operating the single largest herd of dairy cattle in the world. In the 1980s Mitchelstown Co-Operative merged with Ballyclough Co-Operative (based in Mallow, County Cork) to create an enlarged Dairygold Co-Operative. However the Dairygold Co-Op entity seems to have found it difficult to retain the leading competitive once position held by Mitchelstown Creameries and is no longer a premier national dairy food enterprise, having been overtaken by other Irish-based international food corporations such as Glanbia Plc (Kilkenny) and Kerry Group Plc (Tralee). In a recent restructuring, Dairygold Co-Op moved its headquarters out of Mitchelstown to the Cork city area breaking an important historical link first established over 87 years ago, in 1919. The first manager of Mitchelstown Co-Operative Creameries, recruited by Chairman Con O'Brien, was a creamery manager called Eamonn Roche. Roche was a Dairy Science Diploma graduate of the Albert College in Dublin (now called Dublin City University - DCU) who had been active in the Irish War of Independence from Britain between 1916–1921. Roche was also a close personal friend of Éamon de Valera who subsequently became leader of Fianna Fáil, Irish Prime Minister and later President of the Republic of Ireland.

Description

Population (2006) Mitchelstown (Irish: Baile Mhistéala), known before the Plantations of Ireland as Brigowan (Irish: Brí Gobann), is a small country town in County Cork in the south-west of Ireland. Mitchelstown nestles in the valley to the south of the Galtee Mountains close to the Mitchelstown Caves and is roughly 25 km from Cahir and roughly 36 km from Limerick. The town takes its present name from the Anglo-Norman Mitchel or Micheal family who established a settlement here in the 12th century. It is best known for its cheese production. The Gradog river runs by the town into the Funshion river, which in turn is a tributary of the nearby Blackwater river.

History

* Mitchelstown is believed to have been originally established and centred around a part of the town known as Brí Gobhann (anglicised Brigown) by Saint Fanahan in or around the 8th century. The town was subsequently redesigned and rebuilt by the Kingston family and today retains the basic layout constructed by them including several interesting stone buildings designed in a late Georgian style of architecture. The layout established by the Earl of Kingston between 1775 and 1820 was one of the earliest planned town layouts in Ireland. Mitchelstown Castle itself was modelled after 1798 Windsor. During the Irish Civil War in 1922 the castle was vandalised and burnt to the ground, ostensibly to prevent it from being used by the Irish Government and its Irish Free State Army. * In 1887, Irish Land League campaigners, including local man John Mandeville, helped organise a rent strike at the estate of Lady Kingston near Mitchelstown. On September 9, three estate tenants were shot dead and others wounded, by police at the town's courthouse where MP William O'Brien had been brought for trial for inciting non-payment of rent; this event became known as the Mitchelstown Massacre and is at least partly commemorated by a memorial to Mandeville unveiled in 1906 by O'Brien himself. In years to come the phrase "Remember Mitchelstown" was subsequently much bandied about in the British House of Commons when Irish affairs were under discussion.

Mitchelstown Caves

The Mitchelstown Caves are a local landmark and tourist destination with a number of caverns open to the public through a guided tour. Some of the geological formations are noteworthy including the Tower of Babel formation. Various other stalactites, stalagmites and rock formations are also named and famous for their unique and impressive structure. The acoustics of the largest cavern are impressive and the cave itself plays host to various musical events throughout the year including a recent performance by the Irish Tenors. There is no photography allowed in the caves by visitors due to copyright issues.

Music Festival

The Market square in Mitchelstown has seen many incarnations of the Mitchelstown Music Festival since its beginnings in the early 1990s. Originally an idea of local people over a few pints, it originally started out as "The Deer Festival" sponsored by a local businessman. The event was quickly titled "The Beer Festival" locally and became a staple event on the calendar taking place yearly on the August bank Holiday weekend. The four-day event saw numerous acts perform free gigs over the years including Boyzone, Samantha Mumba, Mary Black, Aslan, The Revs, The Proclaimers, Jerry Fish and many more. After some strange line-up choices, notably Dannii Minogue in 2003 and Eamon and Coolio in 2004, the then all-ticketed event fell into massive debt and the 2005 event was cancelled. With most of the organising committee leaving the event, a new crew took over and, in a short space of time, cleared most of the debt and the festival was reborn. In 2006, the Mitchelstown Music & Arts Festival came into being and produced Indie-pendence. A free weekend of indie and alternative music mixing the best of up-and-coming Irish talent and international acts. The 2006 event was a great success, with acts such as the Frank & Walters, the Chalets, the Sultans of Ping FC, Hybrasil, Lotus Lullaby, Roesy and many more taking to the stage. The event now seems to be going from strength to strength again and looks to have a bright future ahead of it. The 2007 Indie-pendence Festival saw performances from over 40 acts including Republic of Loose, the Chapters, the Sultans of Ping FC, Hooray for Humans, Ham Sandwich, Vesta Varro, Director, Delorentos, the Aftermath, Fight Like Apes and many more. Off-stage gigs included the likes of Ilya K, the Flaws, Crayonsmith and the Vital Spark. The 2008 Indie-pendence had performances from the Blizzards, Cathy Davey, Ham Sandwich, the Flaws, Fight Like Apes, the Chapters, Dirty Epics, Alphastates, Travega, Gemma Hayes, Giveamanankick, Sweet Jane, the Laundry Shop, Hope is Noise, Fred, the Kinetiks, the Aftermath, Vesta Varro, New Amusement, Rulers of the Planet, and Supermodel Twins.

NEW ATTRACTIONS

The Mulberry Tree is under new management as of the August weekend, 2009. Michael and Marie Mulcahy and their family have leased the premises from Densie Maher. Best of luck to Pat Drew who is leaving. Michael and Marie would like to invite all their customers for drinks, barbecue, music and lots of craic during Independence Music festival weekend 2009. Thanks lads.

People

* Liam Hamilton (born 1928), the son of a local Garda, was born in Church Street and was educated in Mitchelstown Christian Brothers School. Subsequently he qualified as a Barrister in the Kings Inns, Dublin, and after a long and successful advocacy career he became Chief Justice of Ireland. * Morgan Whelan aka The Big Cheese, is from Mitchelstown. * Lieutenant General Jim Parker, a local farmer's son, was born on 15th. April 1929 in Skeheen and was educated in Mitchelstown Christian Brothers School. He had a long and distinguished military career as an army officer in the Irish Army. He served as Chief of Staff of the Irish Army from 1989 until his retirement in 1992. * John Roach (originally Roche), emigrated as a semi-literate teenager to the United States in 1832 and rose to become the proprietor of America's largest postbellum shipbuilding empire, John Roach & Sons. * Eamonn Roche's son, Kevin Roche (born 1922), was educated in Mitchelstown Christian Brothers School and in Rockwell College, County Tipperary and then graduated as an Architect from University College Dublin in 1945. In 1948, Kevin Roche emigrated to the USA and eventually became a founding partner in Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates and established himself as one of North America's most celebrated architects of the twentieth century. Amongst many international honours, Roche was awarded Laureate of the 1982 Pritzker Prize. In 2005, Roche submitted a design for a new Irish National Conference Centre in Dublin commissioned by the Spencer Dock International Conference Centre Ltd., a consortium led by major Irish property company, Treasury Holdings Ltd. In a touch of irony, the Chief Executive of Treasury Holdings is John Ronan. Ronan's grandfather, also Johnny Ronan, started his business life as a pig trader in the early 1920s in the townland of Anglesboro, County Limerick, 5 km from Mitchelstown. * Well-known short story writer and novelist William Trevor was born in Upper Cork Street, Mitchelstown, on 24 May 1928. He has won every literary prize of note and has been nominated for the Booker Prize on four occasions. His father was a bank clerk in the local Branch of the Bank of Ireland then located at the top of Baldwin Street just around one corner from where the aunt of Elizabeth Bowen lived in Kingston College and around another corner from King's Square where Kevin Roche was brought up. William Trevor refers to the town's "great wide square and the Georgian elegance of a refuge for impecunious Protestants" [2]. A commemorative plaque indicating the house, in Upper Cork Street, where he was born was unveiled, by Louis McRedmond, on 23rd. May 2008, the eve of his 80th birthday.

Rail

Mitchelstown railway station opened on 23 March 1891, closed to passenger and goods traffic on 27 January 1947 and finally closed altogether on 1 December 1953.[1]

Retail

Mitchelstown has a wide variety of retail such as Tesco, Lidl, Aldi, Super Valu, Centra and Boots. Boots opened its Mitchelstown store in the Living Health centre in early 2009. Mitchelstown also has a wide variety of shops, including cafes, boutiques, restaurants and pharmacies.

Road

Road transport dominates in Mitchelstown. The town is situated close to the M8 Dublin to Cork motorway, which runs to the east of the settlement. A relief road located to the west of the town serves to filter N73-bound traffic towards Mallow and Limerick. The construction of the relief road to the west and north, and its connection to the M8 to the east of Mitchelstown means that the town has become the smallest in Ireland to have a full 360 degree ring road. Prior to the opening of the relief road in 2006, the N8 ran through Mitchelstown itself, seriously congesting the main street. The R665 road connects Mitchelstown to Clonmel, while the R639 provides an alternative link from Mitchelstown to Cork, Fermoy and Cahir. Bus Eireann runs frequent intercity services through the town.

See also

* List of towns and villages in Ireland * Market Houses in Ireland * William Trevor