He avers that this
states, that “it was still fresh in the memories of some ancient
inhabitants of the town that in the year 1688 certain English soldiers, in
burying their dead, discovered in the south-east quarter of the Abbey, the
stumps of some trees of fine wood: and without regard to the place, rooted up
and converted them to several domestic utensils, the wood being red and bearing
a fine polish.”
Bradshaw
continues ..
‘This
Abbey was situated in Castle
Street, at the head of the street which is
opposite to the new church. Part of the
building still remains and is at present occupied as two dwelling-houses. The
walls are extremely thick and strong: and the alterations in the building which have been made in modern times
were attended with unusual difficulty and labour. Within the last sixty years (i.e. since c.
1760) there was a very massive stone staircase outside the building. It was no easy task to take this down, owing
to the extreme hardness and solidity of the work. It is said that the men employed found it
necessary to blow it up with gunpowder.’
[The Church is St Mary's COI and the 'street' was Hyde Market]
It
should be noted that the unnamed author of the earlier work had no compunction
about referring to ‘the Abbey’ some two centuries after its dissolution; nor
about censoring the English soldiers for not respecting it or the sanctity of
the surrounding burial site.
It was however for Newry, the worst of
times. Ireland was being used as a theatre
of war by opposing forces, some loyal to King James, some to William of
Orange. Indeed the town of Newry
suffered its worst ever devastation in the following year when ‘the Duke of
Berwick – illegitimate son of King James II - the better to secure his retreat
before the English forces under the command of the Duke of Schomberg’ set fire
to the town, destroying all but the castle and five or six houses.
So much for our heritage from the Bagenals - who were, within a generation to relinquish ownership of Newry and the former Abbey lands to their relatives, the Needhams [the Louth portion going to Edward Bayly].