- Source: Leixlip (civil parish)
Leixlip (Irish: Léim an Bhradáin, meaning 'Salmon's leap') is a civil parish and a townland located in the north-eastern corner of County Kildare, Ireland. The civil parish is mainly in the ancient barony of Salt North with a small part in the neighbouring barony of Newcastle. It is centred on the town of Leixlip. In geology, the parish rests on a substratum of limestone, and contains chalybeate springs. It lies at the confluence of the River Liffey and the Rye Water.
History
According to Lewis' Topography of Ireland (1837), the parish contained 1624 inhabitants, of which 1159 were in the town and it comprised 7974 statute acres. The soil was recorded as "good" with a considerable portion of the land being "in pasture for fattening stock for the Dublin, Liverpool, and Bristol markets, and the remainder is under tillage". Lewis recorded that the living was a rectory and vicarage in the patronage of the Archbishop. The tithes of the parish amounted to £600. The glebe house was built in 1822 by a loan of £562 from the Board of First Fruits. The building stills stands and the National Register notes that: "It is a fine and imposing house that, despite a subsequent change of ownership and use, retains most of its original form and character.".
The parish's eponymous "salmon leap" was a 5-metre waterfall on the Liffey, upstream from the village. In 1945, a hydroelectric dam was built on the site and its reservoir flooded the waterfall. The dam generates 4 Megawatts of electricity.
= Ecclesiastical parishes
=Like all civil parishes, this civil parish is derived from, and co-extensive with a pre-existing ecclesiastical parish of the same name, as used in the Church of Ireland. In the Archdiocese of Dublin, the parish is today united with Lucan in the "Leixlip Union of Parishes". St. Mary's church is located off the Main Street. The building - a listed national monument - was constructed between 1780 and 1820.
In the Catholic Church, the civil parish is divided between the ecclesiastical parishes of Leixlip and Confey in the Archdiocese of Dublin. The church building in Leixlip parish, "Our Lady's Nativity", is located on Pound Street, Old Hill. It was constructed between 1830 and 1840 and is named in honour of the Nativity of Our Lady. The church building in Confey parish, "St. Charles Borromeo", is located on "Captain's Hill". The parish was constituted in 1984 from Leixlip under the care of the Redemptorists and the church was named in honour of St. Charles Borromeo
Townlands
There are thirteen townlands in the parish. Six of these are located in the barony of Newcastle. While this barony is mostly situated in South Dublin, a small part north of the River Liffey lies in the modern county of Fingal. The remaining seven townlands are located in the barony of Salt North which is situated in County Kildare. For convenience, the table below groups the parish's townlands by barony. The barony also indicates the townlands' location in one of the modern local authority areas.
Note: There are three adjacent townlands of the same name - Saint Catherine's Park; two are located in Salt North (one in the parish of Leixlip and the other in the parish of Confey); the remaining townland is also in the parish of Leixlip but in the barony of Newcastle.
Features
The River Liffey, flowing from west to east, forms the southern boundary of the parish. From the north-western corner of the parish, the Rye Water flows in a south-easterly direction until its confluence with the Liffey at the western edge of the village's Main Street. Near Louisa Bridge railway station, the Rye Water receives water from the Leixlip Spa. It also receives an overflow from the Royal Canal. The Rye then flows under the canal, which is carried in the Leixlip aqueduct almost 100 feet (30m) above. The aqueduct, an earth embankment, took six years to construct in the 1790s. Before entering the village, in the 18th and 19th centuries the river powered some mills. In 1758, the site was used as a linen printing mill. Later it powered the Rye Vale Distillery which produced more than 20,000 gallons of whiskey in 1837.
Louisa Bridge is linked to a series of stations by the "Royal Canal Way" which is a 144-kilometre (89-mile) long-distance trail that follows the towpath of the canal from Ashtown, Dublin to Cloondara, County Longford. Two kilometres to the east of Louisa Bridge, the canal is crossed by Cope Bridge. In 1990, a new railway station - Leixlip Confey - was constructed here in the townland of Newtown.
In the most westerly townland of the parish - Collinstown - is found Deey Bridge and the 13th lock of the canal. Intel Ireland is located in a large industrial estate in the townland.
On a prominence above the Liffey / Rye confluence stands "Leixlip Castle", one of the oldest continuously inhabited castles in Ireland. It is downstream of the salmon leap waterfall, now flooded. The castle is currently the residence of members of the Guinness family.
References
From "List of Parishes of the Archdiocese of Dublin". Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin. Archdiocese of Dublin. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
From official parish websites
From "Buildings of Ireland". Search Building & Garden Surveys. National Inventory of Architectural Heritage. Retrieved 13 December 2020.
From "Placenames Database of Ireland". Logainm. Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht. Retrieved 15 March 2020.
Other sources
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Leixlip (civil parish)
- Leixlip
- Leixlip Louisa Bridge railway station
- Salt North
- Leixlip Confey railway station
- List of civil parishes of Ireland
- Clonsilla (civil parish)
- Newcastle (County Dublin barony)
- List of subdivisions of County Dublin
- Fingal