Downpatrick Workhouse Exibition Opens At Museum

Downpatrick’s Difficult Past Explored Through A New Workhouse Exhibition at Down County Museum

A new exhibition at Down County Museum explores the complex history of Downpatrick Workhouse on Strangford Road, which closed 80 years ago this year.

The exhibition was opened from Friday 30 May and runs until the end of November and explores the harsh realities faced by residents who entered the doors of the Downpatrick workhouse through the artefacts and objects on display, including a famine pot, documents, architectural drawings and plans.

(l-r) Catriona Regan, NMD Council Head of Culture, Head of Arts, Heritage and Events in Newry Mourne and Down District Council; Cllr Gareth Sharvin, who brought forward a motion which led to the exhibition; Cllr Oonagh Hanlon who supported the motion; and Kris Reid, Curator of Down Country Museum. (Photos: Jim Masson/DownNews©).

The Downpatrick workhouse admitted the first paupers on 17th September 1842 and continued to operate until 1945.

Construction of the workshouse began in 1840 following the ‘Act for the More Effectual Relief of the Destitute Poor (1838)’, also known as the ‘Irish Poor Laws’. Outdoor relief such as soup kitchens stopped and the poor now only received support within the workhouse.

Newry Mourne and Down District Council outgoing Chairperson, Councillor Pete Byrne, said: “This exhibition is a powerful reminder of a harsher time in Downpatrick’s past and will be a valuable resource for those interested in the history and built heritage of our area”.

Kris Reid, Down County Museum Curator; Brigid Molloy, Museum Collections Officer, and Michael Arlow, Education and Outreach Officer,

Curator of the Down County Museum, Dr Kris Reid said: “The story of Downpatrick workhouse is one we are privileged to share at the Museum.

“We hope visitors will gain an insight into this particularly challenging period in our history and take the opportunity to see objects from the original workhouse complex.”

The design of the Irish workhouse aimed to discourage as many as possible from seeking refuge there. Nicholls’ 1838 report summed up the challenge, saying: “The standard of their mode of living is unhappily so low that the establishment of one still lower is difficult.

(l-r) The Rev Sabrina Cooke, Down Cathedral; Michael Arlow, Education and Outreach Officer; and Killyleagh-based local historian and writer, Clive Scoular.

All 130 workhouses built in Ireland followed a design by George Wilkinson, a 25-year-old English architect.

The brief for the workhouses required that they be, “of the cheapest description compatible with durability.” They were a third less expensive than English workhouses while still meeting the requirements for segregation by sex and age.

Admission to the exhibition is free at Down County Museum, which opens from Tuesday – Saturday, 10am-4.30pm throughout the summer.

Alan Scroggie, enjoying the exhibition, pictured with Baroness Margaret Ritchie look over a pot which may have been used in the Downpatrick workhouse to feed its residents and families.
Catriona Regan, Head of Culture, Arts, Heritage and Events in Newry Mourne and Down District Council with Stephen Magorrian, co-owner of the historic Denvirs Hotel in Downpatrick.

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