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Written by Brother Mallon, CBS
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Tuesday, 30 October 2007 |
A
popular ‘photograph’ of Old Newry carries the image on women in 1828 washing
clothes in the Mill Race which continued past the site in Trevor Hill into Water Street to Mill Street and Seymour’s Green - a swamp
then.

The
original is actually a lithograph presently held in the Ulster Museum. Today the remains of that Mill Race empties
instead into the Clanrye River just beyond the Stone Bridge.
Newry’s
old market was of course open-air and in the Market Street/Market Square area, an area
which stretched from the bottom of High Street (named not for its appropriate
hill but after St Patrick’s High
Church at its summit) to Mill Street/Castle Street
and part of North Street. There was a ‘smoothing iron-shaped’ red-brick
building in its centre that was the Butter Market, until its demolition in the
1960s. It also traded in other farm
produce such as eggs and vegetables. This also was the vicinity for the quarterly ‘Hiring Fairs’ where poor
people hired out their sons and daughters for six months at a time to farmers
from a wide catchment area.
Our
neighbouring city of Armagh
still has an area known as The Shambles. Newry too had such a designated area, which was in the Castle Street area
near to McCann’s Bakery/Bagenal’s Castle. On the lower ground below that were many (10 in number listed in
Bassett’s Directory of 1886) tanneries stretching from Marcus Square to the beginning of Chapel Street.
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