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Commerce/industry
Mergon International, a manufacturer of moulded parts, is one of the main businesses in the village. The village has a small retail base, consisting of a handful of small shops and a number of pubs.
Description
Population (2006) Castlepollard (Cionn Torc, "boars' hill", in Irish; also, Baile na gCros, "cross town") is a large village in north County Westmeath, Ireland. Located in the ancient Barony of Demifore, in the civil parish of Rathgraff, it lies west of Lough Lene and northeast of Lake Derraveragh and the county town of Mullingar.
History
Nicholas Pollard, from Devonshire, arrived in Ireland in 1597 with the army led by the Earl of Essex. After the campaign, Captain Pollard was settled on land in the Mayne area. Cionn Torc ( Kinturk ), a lush valley between the lakes, was given under a grant 'in capite' by Queen Elizabeth I to Captain Pollard. He built a small castle at Rathyoung which was called Castle Pollard. Walter Pollard, first son of Nicholas Pollard, married Ismay Nugent of Roscommon. He received a regrant of the desmene during the restoration period. The regrants followed the Civil War and Cromwellian confiscations. They were made by charter from King Charles II, and approved by the Irish Parliament. In addition, he was granted a permit for a weekly market and a fair which was held four times annually. The Pollard family was again reconfirmed in the manorial title by the edict of William and Mary, whom they supported. Serving as Commissioner for Supplies during the Williamite Wars, Pollard sat in the Irish Parliament, and became Lord High Sheriff of the county in 1692. The family gradually improved the residence and the desmene. They rebuilt the adjoining out buildings and developed the village of Castlepollard. They intermarried with the Dillon family of Ladyhill, the Packenhams, the Duttons, the Tuites, and other landed county families. The descendants of Nicholas Pollard lived here at Kinturk Desmene into the early twentieth century. The well preserved original village layout is landscaped, with a central triangular green which surrounded by buildings from the Georgian period. A sculpture on the square depicts a scene from the locally centred legend of the Children of Lir. A plaque outlines the famous story in several languages. The setting of the legend is the picturesque Lough Derravaragh. There are several ringforts on the surrounding high ground. Two ancient forts are of special archeological interest. Randoon is located in nearby Ranaghan, south west of Lough Lene. The second is on Turgesius Island, situated on Lough Lene. Turgesius was a Viking leader who sojourned here with a local lover on respite from his seafaring. He held sway in Danish Dublin (Dyflin) and Shannon Viking port near Clonmacnoise. Castlepollard has two churches which serve the Roman Catholic and Church of Ireland communities. Kinturk House, the Georgian period Pollard residence now serves as St. Peter's Centre. It was purchased by the Sacred Heart Sisters in 1935, who added a chapel wing. The sisters operated a Magdalen Asylum there for many years. In the early nineteenth century, William Pollard inherited the family properties. He began a major reconstruction program. The Kinturk Desmene residence and the adjacent town buildings were rebuilt in the classical Georgian style of the period. Some common lands were enclosed. William Pollard also commenced construction of a new Church of Ireland building in the Square. He later redesigned the main village area, and built the Market House. Located on the west side of the green, this was the village's major public building and landmark. The quarterly Court of Petty Sessions convened there. During the War of Independence the Irish Republican Army (IRA) burned the Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) barracks located on the Mullingar Road. The RIC then moved to the courthouse. In 1921, the IRA began a wave of burnings which targeted United Kingdom government offices throughout Ireland. This was a concerted effort to cripple the UK civil service in its day to day administration of the country. It was very successful. The Market House was also torched. Two sitting magistrates were kidnapped by the IRA on their way to the court. The men were held hostage locally, reportedly in a cow byre on the Hill of Moal. Happily, they were released unharmed after forty eight hours, and the village was spared reprisals. The Market House was rebuilt in 1926, and serves as the Town Fire Station.
Incident
In 1831 a fight broke out between a party of armed Irish Constabulary and a crowd at the Castlepollard Fair. A number of people were seriously injured, and some fatalities were reported. Local sources put the number of casualties as high as thirteen. This incident may have been related to the enforcement of collection orders during the Tithe War (1831-1836). Spasmodic violence broke out around this time (particularly in Kilkenny, Wexford, and Cork) when the police entered local fairgrounds to enforce seizure orders on cattle for non payment of tithes. Order was finally restored by rescinding seizure orders in 1836. The subsequent revision of the Tithe Act commuted the levy. The Church of Ireland was disestablished by the Gladstone government in 1869, and the tithe was abolished.
See also
* List of towns and villages in Ireland * Market Houses in Ireland
Sport
G.A.A. hurling is the major sporting activity here. Castlepollard has two local hurling clubs, Lough Lene Gaels and Ringtown, and one G.A.A.football club, Ballycomoyle. Castlepollard Celtic, a soccer club founded in 2004, currently uses the pitch at Castlepollard Community College for training and home games. The annual 'Mini World Cup' tournament is a popular event. The club fields two adult teams, and runs juniors from U8s to U16s for both boys and girls. The club has approximately 200 members, and is growing.