Lusk, Dublin

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Lusk
Lusca
Village
Church of Ireland and round tower at Lusk
Church of Ireland and round tower at Lusk
Lusk is located in Ireland
Lusk
Lusk
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County Fingal
Elevation 25 m (82 ft)
Population (2011)[1]
 • Total 7,022
Irish Grid Reference R746888

Lusk (Irish: Lusca) is a small town in Ireland, 23 km (14 mi) north of Dublin city centre. The name "Lusk" is said to date back to Saint MacCullin, who founded a church there c. 450. Oral tradition suggests MacCullin may have either lived in or been buried in a cave and that the name "Lusk" derives from an old Irish word Lusca meaning 'cave' or 'underground chamber'. MacCullin died in c. 497 and his feast day was the 6th September.[2] The area was known as Bregia in pre-Christian times and is known to have been birthplace to Cú Chulainn's wife, Emer. Thus we find a 20th-century tradition among old Lusk families of naming daughters Emer.

In the 2000s, Lusk had an exploding population. The Central Statistical Office notes that 62% of all private dwellings in Lusk were built in the five years between 2001 and 2006. Census figures for the same period show a population boom from c. 2,500, to over 5,200. During most of the 20th century, the population remained fairly static. Census returns for 1901 and 1911 show a population boom from about 300 to 600. In the early 1950s, the Survey Gazetteer of The British Isles quotes a population of 513 for the village. Due to massive emigration in the 1950s and 1960s the later population actually declined. In the mid-1950s for instance, the total number of children in the old NS, boys and girls, hovered around 120. The present NS opened in 1956 with about that number.

The railway station of Rush & Lusk is about 1 mile east and is shared with the coastal settlement of Rush.

History

As mentioned above the settlement has been associated with St. MacCullin since c. AD 450. The place also had associations with St. Maur, who nowadays connects with Rush (RosEo). The ruins of St. Maur's original church, or more likely its later replacement, are at the top of Whitestown hill, firmly in the parish of Rush. Lusk was plundered and burned several times in the 8th and 9th centuries by marauding Vikings, who eventually built a permanent settlement at Dubh Linn now Dublin.

The only tangible remnant of the early Christian foundation at Lusk is the round tower. It stands 27 m high (originally some 32 m high) which retains its original conical cap or so it seems, as the modern trap-door onto the rooftop suggests otherwise. Inside are nine 'floors' including the basement, which are likely to be due to unrecorded 'improvements' in or after the Middle Ages. The flat-headed doorway, which originally would have been some 15 ft (4.6 m) above the ground is now less than 1 m above ground level. The tower either sunk or was buried some 4 m over the centuries. The Round Tower is adjacent to a Norman square tower built against it in the 15th century. This building has three matching towers at its corners and is beautifully represented by the 18th-century picture below. The square tower holds several medieval tombs including that of James Bermingham (1527) and the double-effigy tomb of Christopher Barnewall and his wife Marion Sherle (1589). The Church of Ireland church dates from 1847 by Joseph Welland, and was designed in an Early English Gothic style.[3]

Fingal is the name given to that part of present-day North County Dublin bounded by the Tolka River to the south and the Delvin River to the north. Fingal is considerably older than Dublin City, which was established by the Norsemen c. 900 AD around the 'dubh linn' or black pool. Before Christendom and St. MacCullin, the area was the Celtic "Bregia", birthplace of Cú Chullain's wife, Emer whose clan resided in or near what we now know as Lusk.

The round tower at Lusk was built by 9th-century Christians in an attempt to foil the Vikings, who were interested not only in the easy pickings but also the inhabitants themselves as a source of slave labour. As an interesting aside, a world-famous pipe band formed in 1910 and still as strong is named the Black Raven Pipe Band. The black raven was very special to the Vikings. [See Iceland Daughter of Fire; Katharine Scherman 1976]. The entrance door to Lusk Round Tower, as with all such towers, was originally 4–5 m above ground. Ladders were used to reach the entrance and then pulled up. (Refer to similar round towers at Glendalough, Ardmore, and Clonmacnoise.)

Lusca Irish Wine named after the Irish for Lusk, by Llewellyns Orchard,[4] is one of the few Irish Wine producer using grapes grown grapes in Ireland.

On 26 May 2005 there was an attempted armed robbery of Lusk Post office, Main St. During this attempted robbery two gang members were shot dead by Gardaí. The total incident lasted 21 seconds. In 2007 a third gang member was given a 10-year jail sentence for his role in the deadly raid www.independent.ie.

Civic elements

There are four national schools in the area: Lusk NS, Hedgestown NS, Corduff NS and Rush and Lusk "Educate Together".

Lusk is a village and a parish. The population of the village has quadrupled since the millennium and may continue to do so in spite of the current recession with new people from the EU, Africa, South America and many parts of Asia.

Lusk has always been an active village and the tradition not only persists but has added to its activity opportunities with a vengeance. The village accommodates a Soccer club (Lusk United AFC), a GAA club (Round Towers), a judo club, a motorcycle club, a pipe band (the Black Raven[5]), a ladies club (I.C.A.), kick-boxing club and card players (i.e. whist, bridge, and poker) and now an Athletics Club (Lusk AC) which is home to a very successful Fit4Life group. It goes on to include a farmers club, a heritage group, a historical society, a Tidy Towns group, a number of golf societies. Those interested in vintage cars, chess, tractors, scouts, machinery, photography, darts, pool, ballet dancing, ballroom dancing, Irish dancing and amateur dramatics are all catered for. Power Drama School opened in 2012 and provides weekly classes in Drama, Dance & Singing for children between the ages of 6-17 (www.powerdramaschool.com) .There is also a kennel club, huntsmen on horseback, a senior citizens group, horse and dog racing groups, St Vincent de Paul Society, Meals on Wheels.

Lusk Community Council Ltd (LCC) was set up to look after the village (as it was then) and liaise with local government and councillors. LCC is a voluntary organisation whose responsibility has been to manage the Carnegie Library hall and the Old Church hall by the round tower. They also run the St Patrick’s Day parade each year.

See also

References

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  2. Pàdraig Ó Riain, A Dictionary of Irish Saints (Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2011), p. 415.
  3. 1847 – Church and Tower, Lusk, Co. Dublin archiseek.com
  4. Lusca Irish Wine
  5. ["www.blackravenpipeband.net" Black Raven Pipe Band Website]

External links

Lusk is home to a number of very talented road motorbike racers in recent times. It was only natural that lusk would produce such road racing talent with annual motorcycle road races such as the Skerries 100 and Killalane in the area. Martin Finnegan and Noel Murphy, two very well known road racers had similar tragic accidents , both passing away doing what they loved and were born to do.

Such was the impact of the young racers on the village of lusk , a memorial of Martin Finnegan was dedicated to him close to the grounds of the parish[1] church.

  1. friends of the racers