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Written by Brother Mallon, Newry CBS
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Thursday, 25 October 2007 |
Newry
was always a ‘border’ town – at first as a monastic settlement ....

…
then under Bagenal on the border of the Gaelic chieftains’ territory. Thereafter it was on the border of the English
Pale – and in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, on the border with the
Irish Free State/Republic. In every
instance it was able to exact taxes – or customs – from its hinterland, its
imports and exports.
As
a consequence there were over time a variety of Customs buildings in different
locations. Some reflect the different
modes of transport over time.
The
oldest of living memory was the large Customs House on Kilmorey Street, below Quay Street – it later became the
Bridewell prison – that catered for goods carried by river. There was another on Merchants Quay for
goods carried by canal. In more recent
times there was a Customs Post at the border at Carrickcarnon. Later the huge facility at Carnbane was built
– quickly becoming redundant as the European Community harmonised tariffs. Today it is workplace for a small number of
VAT collectors.
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