Murrintown

Village in County Wexford, Ireland From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Murrintown (Irish: Baile Mhúráin),[2] also spelled Murntown, is a small village in the southeast of County Wexford, Ireland, close to Wexford town. It is part of the ecclesiastical parish of Piercestown and lies in the civil parish of Kildavin.[3]

Quick facts Irish: Baile Mhúráin, Country ...
Murrintown
Irish: Baile Mhúráin
Village
Murrintown post office
Murrintown post office
Murrintown is located in Ireland
Murrintown
Murrintown
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°16′52″N 6°31′12″W
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyWexford
Population
  Total
342
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
  Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Area code053 91
Close

The village contains a pub, primary school, Roman Catholic church, a large community centre, a shop and a childcare centre. A new cemetery opened in February 2018.

History and development

The village and its environs contain a number of buildings dating from the 18th century, several of which are farmhouses. Murrintown House is now a dwelling but in the past has been both a hostelry and a shop. As a hostelry, it was frequented by soldiers during the 1798 rebellion. Beechwood is a Georgian-era estate house sitting on 50 acres of woodland, with various farm buildings. This too played a role in 1798. After having been unoccupied for several years, it was sold in 2017 and the new owners have embarked on a restoration programme.

Johnstown Castle

The village is bordered by the Johnstown Castle estate, containing a large Victorian revival castle built for the Grogan-Morgan family in the early 19th century. It contains a mature woodland and three lakes, the largest covering approximately 14 acres (57,000 m2). The property was presented as a gift to the Irish state in 1945 and was later occupied by the Department of Agriculture who established an agricultural institute here and undertook to maintain, but not to alter, the ornamental grounds. Teagasc is now responsible for the overall running of the estate. The grounds house the headquarters buildings of both the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine. The early 19th century farm buildings house the Irish Agricultural Museum.[4]

Sport

The village is home to Forth Celtic Football Club, and the Piercestown village hosts Johnstown Castle Football Club and St. Martin's GAA club.

Transport

The Wexford Bus route from Kilmore Quay to Wexford serves the village several times a day from Monday to Sunday. Bus Éireann also operated route 383 between these locations on Saturdays and Tuesdays (via route 381) to Carrick-on-Bannow but the Bus Eireann services were cut in 2026. [5]

References

See also

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI