It
is difficult to comprehend why the compilers would overlook Dr John McCavitt
for this task (indeed, they asked John to write the entry for the Battle of the
Yellow Ford – and it is fair and accurate), or indeed Tony Canavan, author of
Frontier Town, and instead, turn to an Englishman who knows nothing about our
town!
It’s
enough to make your blood boil!
‘Newry’,
he asserts, ‘remained “a collection of mud cabbins’ until the early eighteenth
century’.
The
much-vaunted and highly expensive developments of the Bagenal century – then
just ending – are totally ignored. Indeed there exist a number of maps Proudfoot could have consulted to
disprove his stupid assertion!
Just
as stupidly and inaccurately, he asserts that Muireartach Mac Lochlainn
‘established’ the Cistercian abbey around which the town of Newry grew.
He
refers to .. ‘further improvements to the Newry Ship Canal in 1830-50’ when
everyone knows the Ship Canal didn’t exist before these dates, in order to be
‘improved'.
‘More
recently’, he asserts, ‘the town’s fortunes have depended on the state of
cross-border trade and the relative strength of the English and Irish
currencies’.
Wrong
twice over, professor! There are no
English or Irish currencies. The former
ought to say British, and the latter European.
Proudfoot
concludes:
‘In
recent years redevelopment and bomb damage
have significantly eroded the town’s built heritage.’
As
an implacable opponent of the recent ‘armed struggle’ campaign, I find myself
in an invidious position refuting the above assertion, but I for one have no
knowledge of any notable architecture in Newry Town that was destroyed by
bombs.
And, with the exception of the (officially sanctioned) North Street
demolition of half a century ago, I know of no redevelopment programme that has
failed to clean up and improve the town’s overall appearance.
There is little architectural merit - I agree - in the Buttercrane and Quays developments (but the Canal Court Hotel?) but these were derelict sites to begin with. To what can he possibly refer?
But
this is surely bound to spark some controversy on the Threads pages of this
web-site.
Go
ahead, folks, lay into me!