Piltown

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Piltown
Irish: Baile an Phoill
County Kilkenny

Sham Castle, Piltown
Location
Grid reference: S456226
Location: 52°21’0"N, 7°19’60"W
Data
Population: 1,220
Local Government
Dáil
constituency:
Carlow–Kilkenny
Website: kilkennycoco.ie

Piltown is a village in County Kilkenny, three miles east of Carrick-on-Suir, on the R698 road and near the N24 primary road. The village is historically known as Ballyfoyle, form the Irish Baile an Phoill.[1]

Approaching Piltown from Carrick-on-Suir in the west is the landmark of "the Tower" (Sham Castle) which forms a roundabout in the road. This monument, dedicated to the son of a local landowner, dates back to the Napoleonic era. The son was enlisted in the War. During this time he went missing and he was presumed dead. His father instructed the tower be built in his honour. It was never completed as the son returned during construction. Today its upper section serves as a water tower.

Piltown is also home to Ireland's largest horticultural and agricultural college, Kildalton College. The college hosts a fair called the Iverk Show,[2] named after the Barony of Iverk,[3] on the fourth Saturday in August each year.

History

Bessborough House (1818) by John Preston Neale

Piltown also has a unique place in English history as it was the only place on the island of Ireland to see a battle in the Wars of the Roses. In the Battle of Piltown (1462) Thomas FitzGerald, 7th Earl of Desmond, on the side of the House of York, defeated the Butlers of Kilkenny, fighting for the House of Lancaster, resulting in more than 400 casualties for the Butlers.[4] Local folklore claims that the battle was so violent that the local river ran red with blood, hence the names Pill River and Piltown (Baile an Phuill - Town of the blood).

From the early eighteenth century up until the late 1930s, the main landlords in Piltown and its surrounding area were the Ponsonby dynasty, Earls of Bessborough. The family seat was Bessborough House, just outside Piltown, built in the 1740s for the 1st Earl. The house was gutted by fire in February 1923, during the Irish Civil War. However, it was rebuilt in the late 1920s for The 9th Earl of Bessborough, who served as the 14th Governor General of Canada in the early 1930s. The 9th Lord Bessborough sold the house in the late 1930s. Bessborough House now forms the main part of Kildalton Agricultural College.

Culture

Host to Ireland's longest running agricultural show, called the Iverk Show,[5] on the fourth Saturday in August each year. The Iverk Agricultural Show, started in 1826, was founded by a member of the Bessborough family. The family resided at Bessborough House, which is now Kildalton Agricultural College. This show has grown to become one of Ireland's largest one day Agricultural and Family shows.

Sport

  • Football: Piltown AFC
  • Gaelic sport: Piltown GAA, formed in 1887 and reformed in 1953
  • Carnogie: Piltown Camogie Club

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Piltown)

References