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Jun 20 2009, 7:36 PM EDT Belvedere 1 photo added, 1 photo deleted
Apr 27 2009, 7:25 PM EDT Beechwood 7 words added, 27 words deleted

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Sinéad on stage. Mullimgar Arts Centre May 2007Rochfortbridge Parish Hall - The cast of "Earl of Belvedere"Rochfortbridge. Ailish Jean and Friends. Mullingar Arts Centre, May 2007

Welcome to Rochfortbridge Community Website
Rochfortbridge, Co.Westmeath, Ireland.

Interactive website for the community of Rochfortbridge.

Several pages where you can post your news. Browse the navigation bar and click into the page you want to view or edit.

Most pages can be edited by clicking the "Easy Edit" button.
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Rochfortbridge, Co. Westmeath

Rochfortbridge Community Website.

Brief History of Rochfortbridge.

The village of Rochfortbridge lies on the “Slí Mór” on the northern side of the "Esker Riada", midway between Tara in Meath and Uisneach in Westmeath.
The pass of Kilbride as it was then known was heavily guarded in medieval times as the land on both sides of the village was impassable.
The first crossing of what is now the river Derry was beside the castle at Castlelost.
This crossing was a Ford crossing with no bridge.
Now don’t get confused by the word “Ford” it has nothing to do with the name of the village.

Fact vs Fable

The romantic fable that a dead beggar man was found at the crossing with enough money to build a bridge on his person etc. is just that, a fable that was told to newcomers to romanticise the village. There is absolutely no record of such a happening in any historical records. This story has been told and re-told and altered through time but the fact is that a beggar was employed by Robert Rochfort as he was the only qualified architect to be found in the area and his circumstances had demoted him to begging for a living. The "beggar" designed and oversaw the construction of the new bridge financed by Robert Rochfort, MP. the bridge was erected over the river Derry at Farthingstown. The facts have been altered from the original beggar man being paid handsomely to build the bridge to a beggar man having enough money to build the bridge through the passage of time and for the making of a better story. There are also romantic ramblings in some media that Robert Rochfort 1st Earl of Belvedere renamed the village from Beggars Bridge to Rochfortbridge in his own honour. Again untrue. The village was created by Robert Rochfort OK but it was the grandfather of the 1st Earl of Belvedere.

Birth of Rochfortbridge

The Village was set out in the year 1700 by Robert Rochfort, (1651 – 1727) MP for Westmeath. See the history of the Rochfort family to fill in the rest of his life. The wooden bridge at Farthingstown (already in place but in bad repair) was replaced by the newly designed "beggars bridge". The "new" bridge was called "beggars bridge" not the village (as there was no village as yet) and it was called thus as it was indeed designed and built by a beggar and the fact that it was also a toll bridge, with a toll of one farthing to cross either way imposed by Robert Rochfort. This toll also gave the town land of Farthingstown its name. The location of the first crossing at Farthingstown and the town land of Oldtown being the location of the first “transit” settlement was the first post Celtic settlement and thus the first "Village" in the area. The "New" bridge was nick-named “Beggars Bridge” as not only was it built by a beggar but beggars often gathered there to beg from the wealthy. (It was only the wealthy that used the bridge as the peasants crossed through the river with their wears in their bare feet.) Robert Rochfort, MP. built the first stone "permanent" dwellings in 1700 and designed the street scape to give the settlement "Village" status. unfortunately none of the original buildings remain intact as the street scape was re-designed in famine times to its present state. the transit settlement at Oldtown and the toll bridge were both replaced by Josias Cooper as famine relief projects in the late 1840's

Bear in mind that the river Derry didn’t flow on its present course in those days as it was not until 1846/7 that Lady Cooper of Dunboden re-routed the river and built the road from the village to Kilbride, all as famine relief work.

Rochfortbridge Today

At present the village has a growing young population with new housing developments bringing new residents out of the cities. The majority of the new housing estates are built to standard "Housing Estate" design. The Parish of Rochfortbridge consists of all the village of Rochfortbridge and its hinterland, The Village of MilltownPass and part of its hinterland and the Hamlet of Dalystown and the surrounding area. The Parish Roman Catholic Church is the Church of The Sacred Heart, Meedin, the village of Rochfortbridge and the village of MilltownPass each have a Roman Catholic Church. There are no other religious denonination churches/places of worship in use in the parish. The postal address for the village is Rochfortbridge, Mullingar, Co. Westmeath. The geographical address is, Village of Rochfortbridge in the town land of Rahanine/Castlelost in the barony of Fartullagh in the county Westmeath. The nearest major towns are Mullingar, Moate, Killbeggan, Tullamore(Offaly) and Edenderry (Offaly). The Village of Rochfortbridge has two national schools and one second level(secondary) school, MilltownPass has one national school and Dalystown has one national school, giving the parish a total of four national and one secondary schools. The villages of Rochfortbridge and MilltownPass are on the (old N6) while Dalystown is on the Mullingar - Tyrrellspass road.
Rochfortbridge village is one of the "newest" villages in the county, being pre-dated by its neighbours Tyrrellspass and Milltownpass, the village was established in 1700 by Robert Rochfort MP., to replace a shanty settlement that had developed around the river crossing.

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