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Carrickmacross
Lace
A Brief History
All Irish laces began as Imitations of continental
European techniques and, side by side with bobbin lace, the technique of
working with the point of the needle, 'needlepoint', also developed in
Irish centres during the nineteenth century.
When people talk about Irish lace today, they usually
mean crochet lace, Limerick lace or Carrickmacross lace. Limerick and
Carrickmacross have certain similarities in basic technique, both being
worked over a base of machine-made net. Carrickmacross is made by applying
fine cambric or muslin to a net base. the design being outlined with a
thick thread and the surplus fabric cut away to form the pattern on the
net base.
Carrickmacross lace originated in the early 1820's and
its style was inspired by some examples of appliqué lace collected by
Mrs. Grey Porter, wife of the rector of Donaghmoyne, a village some
two-and-a-half miles north east of the town of Carrickmacross in County
Monaghan, on her honeymoon in Italy in 1816. Mrs. Grey Porter, like other
ladies of her class, saw in the craft a way to provide much needed
employment for young women in rural Ireland. She and her maid Ann
Steadman, learned the appliqué technique by copying the Italian work and
in about 1820, they established an appliqué lace-making class which soon
attracted a number of young women to learn this potentially remunerative
craft.
Mrs. Grey Porter and her family continued to live in the
Carrickmacross area for almost three decades after her introduction of the
lace-making craft there, through the period of the first flowering of the
craft and its decline in the 1840's due to overproduction. But the real
impetus to the development of appliqué making in the area came from a
neighbour, Miss Read, the unmarried sister of the owner of the Rahans
estate nearby. Miss Read, with her sister Dora, was so distressed to see
young girls in that area of the Monaghan - Armagh border country doing
heavy field work that they decided to open a lace making class on the
family estate. This they established in an outhouse at first, with the
classes confined to tenants on the estate. They used copies of Mrs. Grey
Porter's patterns for the classes and, as the venture proved successful
and profitable, they eventually had a special building erected for the
lace-making class at Cullaville, nearby. Even though the numbers attending
the Read school always seem to have been small, the classes continued to
the end of the century.
A more important undertaking was the Bath and Shirley
Lace Schools, established In 1846 by Tristram Kennedy, who managed the
Carrickmacross estate of the Marquis of Bath. He obtained a Privy Council
grant of one hundred pounds to assist In building seven lace-making
schools on the estate. To help organise this work, Captain Morant, agent
of the nearby Shirley Estate, gave the use of a vacant house In
Carrickmacross town as a central school from which designs, Instructions
and orders for work were sent out to the other seven schools. The period
was that of the Great Famine in Ireland, when the potato crop failed and
thousands died from starvation and fever. The Monaghan area around
Carrickmacross was particularly badly affected by the Famine and relief
schemes were few, so that the lace-making schools made a great
contribution to the survival of many families.
By the last years of the nineteenth century It is
possible that lace-making would have died out in the whole Monaghan and
Armagh area as patronage ended and the commercial demand for lace declined
were it not for the interest taken In the craft by the Sisters of the
Order of St. Louis. When the St. Louis Convent was founded In
Carrickmacross in the 1890's the sisters, alongside their primary school,
set up a school of lace-making. The beauty of the fine quality of
Carrickmacross lace, even though it was not by any means inexpensive,
attracted purchasers, and the first ten years of the St. Louis school saw
a return to prosperity among the lace workers of the district, when among
them they earned £20,000.
The great era of Irish, as of European lace-making,
ended with the outbreak of the World War in 1914. Carrickmacross lace
continues to be made and is used today by fashion designer Pat Crowley.
The lace is still associated with wedding dresses, for Instance, that worn
by Princess Diana which had its sleeves trimmed with Carrickmacross lace.
An extract from ‘Carrickmacross Lace’
By kind permission of the author Nellie O’ Cléirigh.
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