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Thurles – A Town Failed By Decades Of Lost Jobs, Weak Planning & A Hollowed-Out Liberty Square.

Thurles, Co. Tipperary did not decline overnight. It has been weakened over decades by the loss of major employers, the failure to replace them at scale, and town-centre decisions that have made Liberty Square less convenient for the very businesses it is supposed to support.

Over the past 50 years, Thurles, has lost some of the employers that once gave the town real economic strength. The Sugar Factory closure remains one of the deepest blows in local memory. Later came further losses: GMX, BSN Medical, Erin Foods and others. In the Seanad in 2007, the pattern was described clearly; since the loss of the Sugar Factory, Thurles had suffered repeated job losses in Barlow, BSN Medical, GMX and Erin Foods.

These were not minor losses. BSN Medical announced in 2006 that it would cease manufacturing in Thurles, with 80 jobs to go. Erin Foods, which had operated in Thurles for 46 years, was then marked for closure with the loss of 95 jobs. The closure of GMX / Moulinex had already removed around 230 jobs from the town. When these losses are added to the Sugar Factory and smaller vanished industries, the picture is obvious: Thurles lost a serious employment base and never got it back.

Yes, there have been minor replacements announced and some investment. Dew Valley Foods, Lidl, smaller enterprise supports, the university presence and the Thurles Shopping Centre have all brought activity. But they have not replaced the scale or quality of what was lost. A town cannot lose major factories and long-standing employers and then be told that scattered retail jobs, short-term construction work and small-scale schemes are the same thing. They are not.

[Song hereunder ,“Rust & Rain”, is AI-generated entirely by Dallas Ray Little (operating under the label Crusty Records)]

Even An Taoiseach Mr Micheál Martin appeared to acknowledge this failure in Dáil Éireann on June 10th 2026, when he said he had “often thought Thurles would have done better because of its location” and noted that not everywhere near the motorway had received the same degree of foreign direct investment. That single comment says a great deal. For decades, Thurles was told that its central location, rail access and proximity to major routes should be an advantage. Yet the town watched major employers disappear, while replacement investment went elsewhere. If even the Taoiseach is surprised that Thurles has not benefited properly from its location, then local people are entitled to ask why successive governments, state agencies and elected representatives allowed that failure to continue for so long.

Tipperary County Council’s own Thurles Local Area Plan confirms the weakness of the employment base. It states that Thurles has a relatively low jobs ratio of 1.01 compared with Clonmel at 1.39 and Nenagh at 1.22. It also records that just under half of resident workers are employed in Thurles, while many others work elsewhere in Tipperary or outside the county. That is not the profile of a town that has been properly protected or rebuilt after decades of industrial loss.

The same plan says Thurles is a “Key Town” and speaks of supporting employment, prosperity, regeneration and revitalisation. But people in Thurles have heard plans, strategies and promises for years. What they can see with their own eyes is different; empty premises, weakened footfall, businesses struggling, and employment lands that have not delivered the kind of jobs once provided by the town’s former industrial base.

Liberty Square is the clearest example of the problem. Tipperary County Council’s Phase 2 public realm proposal includes wider footpaths, raised crossings, road-layout changes, a one-way system on Cuchulain Road, and the relocation of 12 parking bays from the central island car park. The Council presents this as enhancement. Many traders see it differently. For a rural market town, convenient short-stay parking is not a luxury; it is part of how the town trades.

The long-awaited Thurles bypass is another example of how the town has been pushed down the road for decades. The need is obvious; heavy traffic and HGVs continue to pass through the heart of Thurles, including Liberty Square, while the town centre is simultaneously expected to become a more attractive public realm. Those two aims are in conflict. Press reported in November 2025 that the “long awaited and badly needed” bypass was back on the Government agenda, noting that it would ease congestion in the heart of the town where heavy goods vehicles regularly clog Liberty Square. Yet Tipperary County Council’s own 2026 budget material stated that while a route had been selected and a reserved corridor was in place, the Council would continue lobbying for the project to be included in the National Development Plan. By March 2026, the project had only received a €50,000 allocation to progress early design work with TII. After so many years, that is not delivery; it is another promise pushed into the future.

Long awaited Thurles bypass selected route/reserved corridor still only receives early-stage funding/progression in 2026

A town centre like Thurles depends on easy access. People call in to collect prescriptions, go to the post office, visit the butcher, chemist, café, solicitor, barber, newsagent or bank, and then move on. If parking is removed, made awkward, pushed away, or controlled in a way that does not suit shoppers, people change habits. They go where parking is free, plentiful and easy. In Thurles, that increasingly means the shopping centre or edge-of-town retail or indeed another nearby town.

The pull of the shopping centre is not imaginary. Thurles Shopping Centre is marketed as having more than 55,000 visitors per week and 550 free multi-storey parking spaces. That is a huge advantage over Liberty Square with its parking charges. When the Council reduces or reconfigures central parking while the shopping centre offers hundreds of free spaces, it should surprise nobody that trade drifts away from the historic core.

Parking charges resulted in the relocation of the post office, seen as yet another major blow. In 2019, An Post moved from Liberty Square to Thurles Shopping Centre. Local concern at the time was that the move would reduce footfall in the town centre. An Post said the old building was not viable and that the new location would provide improved services, but the result for Liberty Square was still the loss of a key daily footfall generator.

This is the core issue; decisions may be justified one by one, but their combined effect has damaged the heart of Thurles. One decision removes jobs, while another fails to replace them. Another moves a key service while another reduces convenient parking and then another produces a plan promising regeneration at some later date. Over time, the town centre is weakened not by one single act, but by a long chain of decisions that fail to protect how a real town works.

It would be unfair to claim that every closure was caused by councillors, the Council or TII. Companies close for many reasons: restructuring, costs, competition, building condition, online shopping and changing consumer behaviour. But it is entirely fair to say that successive politicians, councillors, agencies and planners have failed to secure a proper replacement employment base for Thurles and have failed to protect Liberty Square as a practical commercial centre.

The people of Thurles do not need more glossy language about regeneration. They need jobs, occupied buildings, realistic parking, fair access, active streets and a town centre that serves local traders as well as public-realm theory. A square can look tidier on a drawing and still fail commercially. A plan can sound modern and still damage small businesses. A town can be called a “Key Town” in official documents and still be treated like an afterthought in practice.

Thurles deserves better than managed decline. It deserves leadership that understands the town’s history, its losses, its trading patterns and its people. After 50 years of industrial closures, weak replacement employment and the hollowing-out of Liberty Square, the question is not whether Thurles has been let down. The question is who is finally going to take responsibility for reversing the damage.

A Small Stone Stile on the R659 – A Quiet Survivor of Rural Tipperary.

These photographs were taken on the R659, close to and north of Mid Tipperary Co Operative Livestock Mart at Ballycurrane, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Mid Tipp Mart describes itself as a farmer co-operative, “run by farmers for farmers,” and a major cattle-trading centre serving Tipperary and surrounding counties.

Built into this possibly early 19th-century roadside wall is what appears to be a stone stile; a simple arrangement of projecting stones that allowed a person to climb over a boundary without opening a gate. Such features were practical, durable and stock-proof. They belonged to a world of footpaths, fields, fairs, churchyards, wells and farm boundaries, where people moved on foot through a working rural landscape.

A stone stile near Mid Tipperary Co Operative Livestock Mart at Ballycurrane, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

The wall itself cannot be dated from the above photographs alone, but its rough stone construction, weathering, lichens and traces of whitewash suggest considerable age. The projecting step stones are the key detail. They were not decorative, but functional, forming a small built-in ladder through the boundary.

Stone stiles are recorded elsewhere in Tipperary’s architectural heritage. The National Inventory of Architectural Heritage records a double stile in the boundary wall at Ballingarry Church, dated 1855–1860, and also records a random stone boundary wall “with stile” at Castletown near Coolbaun. These examples show that such modest access points were once a recognised part of the county’s built landscape.

A sadly related loss should also be remembered. On Mill Road, Thurles, a stile confirmed locally to have been built in 1846, at the beginning of the Great Famine period of 1845–1849, once stood as part of the historic landscape associated with the Great Famine now eradicated “Double Ditch.” Local reports on Thurles.info recorded warnings about the need to retain this heritage feature and later reported the destruction of the Great Famine Double Ditch area by Tipperary County Council officials and and Thurles Municipal District elected Councillors. Its loss underlines why surviving small structures like this R659 stile deserve notice before they too are dismissed as ordinary roadside stonework.

No longer in existence, the once rare stone stile; despite numerous warnings, eradicated by Tipperary Co. Council, at the entrance to the now also demolished historic Great Famine Double Ditch.

These stiles also belong to the wider Irish tradition of stone walling. Teagasc notes that Ireland has an estimated 400,000 km of dry stone walls and 210,000 km of stone-earthen banks, while in 2024 Ireland’s dry stone construction tradition was officially inscribed by UNESCO on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

This little stile on the R659 is easy to pass without noticing. But it may mark an older line of movement: a field path, a local crossing point, or an access route used before cars, marts and modern road traffic changed the rhythm of the countryside. It is a modest feature, but a valuable one; a reminder that heritage is not only found in castles, churches and big houses, but also in the small, practical details built into ordinary walls.

Events In Cashel Library Next Week.

Ms Maura Barrett (Cashel Branch Librarian) Reports:-

Monday 6th July, at 11:00am, Comhrá sa Leabharlann – Bain triail as do chúpla focal sa leabharlann Chaiseal Mumhan. Tá fáilte roimh gach duine. [Translate: Conversation in the Library – Try out your Irish at Cashel Library. Everyone is welcome.]

Wednesday 8th July 10:00am to 12 noon. Craft Circle Join the Cashel Craft Circle every Wednesday from 10am-12pm for their social gathering. Bring along your own project to work, share ideas, patterns and enjoy a chat and cuppa with others. No need to book just come along.

Wednesday 8th July 2.30pm – 3:45pm Summer Movie Afternoon. This month we are screening the film “Rio”. When Blu, a domesticated macaw from small-town Minnesota, meets the fiercely independent Jewel, he takes off on an adventure to Rio de Janeiro with the bird of his dreams. Family Movie Suitable for ages 5+ children to be accompanied by an adult. Booking Essential to 062-63825.

Thursday 9th July 12:30pm – 1:30pm Circus Skills Workshop. Join Us in Cashel Library for Circus Skills Workshop. Try your hand at plate spinning and juggling with circus star Kate Mitchell!

Friday 10th July at 10:30am (45mins) Baby Sensory Workshop. Join us in Cashel Library for a Baby Sensory Workshop. Especially designed to help your little one explore the world through sight, sound, touch, and movement. musical instruments, singing, action songs, puppet shows, bubbles our absolutely favourite! Suitable for Ages 0 to 18 Months. BOOKING IS ESSENITAL to TEL: 062-63825.

People wishing to attend the above events can locate the Cashel Library building; situated on Friar Street, Lady’s Well, Cashel, Co. Tipperary, HERE. (Eircode E25 K798).

Food Alert.

FSAI warn of Recall of Tesco Finest Scottish Cherrywood Smoked Salmon due to the presence of Listeria monocytogenes.

Alert Summary Dated Saturday, July 04th 2026.

Category 1: For Action.
Alert Notification: 2024.42.
Product Identification: Tesco Finest Scottish Cherrywood Smoked Salmon; pack size: 100g.
Batch Code: Please see table below.
Country Of Origin: Ireland
.

Message: The below batches of Tesco Finest Scottish Cherrywood Smoked Salmon are being recalled due to the presence of Listeria monocytogenes. Recall notices will be displayed at point-of-sale in Tesco stores.

Product name.Pack size.Batch codes.Use-by dates.
Tesco Finest Scottish Cherrywood Smoked Salmon.100g6SHK6146S;
4SHK6146S;
5SHK6146S;
6SHK6146S;
2SHK6146S;
3SHK6146S;
4SHK6146S;
5SHK6146S;
6SHK6146S;
1SHK6146S;
2SHK6146S;
3SHK6146S;
4SHK6146S
02/07/2026;
05/07/2026;
06/07/2026;
09/07/2026;
10/07/2026;
11/07/2026;
12/07/2026;
13/07/2026;
16/07/2026;
16/07/2026;
17/07/2026;
18/07/2026;
19/07/2026

Nature Of Danger: In healthy people, symptoms of Listeria monocytogenes infection can include mild flu-like symptoms, or gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea. However, in people who are more vulnerable, the infection can be severe and can lead to serious complications. People who are more vulnerable to Listeria monocytogenes infections include pregnant women, infants, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems. The incubation period (time between initial infection and first symptoms appearing) is, on average, 3 weeks but can range between 3 and 70 days.

Action Required: Manufacturers, Wholesalers, Distributors, Caterers & Retailers:

Retailers: Same are requested to remove the implicated batches from sale and display recall notices at point-of-sale.
Consumers: Consumers are advised not to eat the implicated batches.

Irish Scientist’s Malaria Vaccine Award Highlights Ireland’s Medical Legacy.

Dublin-born scientist Sir Adrian Hill (KBE) has been honoured with the European Inventor Award 2026 in the Research category for his role in developing R21/Matrix-M, a malaria vaccine now offering new hope in the fight against one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases.

Professor Sir Adrian Hill, KBE.

Sir Adrian educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and director of Oxford University’s Jenner Institute, received the award from the European Patent Office in Berlin for work that has helped overcome a challenge scientists had pursued for more than a century. More than 150 malaria vaccine candidates entered human trials before recent breakthroughs finally succeeded. Hill’s team redesigned the vaccine to present key malaria-specific protein regions more effectively to the immune system, while removing elements that could weaken the response.

Clinical trials showed around 75–80 per cent protection, exceeding the World Health Organisation’s target for malaria vaccines. The vaccine can also be produced at large scale, costs less than €3 per dose, and remains stable for up to two years under standard refrigeration, making it especially valuable for countries where malaria remains endemic.

According to WHO, there were an estimated 282 million malaria cases and 610,000 deaths worldwide in 2024, with children under five accounting for about three-quarters of malaria deaths in the WHO African Region. R21/Matrix-M is now being integrated into routine immunisation programmes in more than 20 African countries.

As stated above, Hill studied medicine at Trinity College, Dublin, before completing a DPhil in human genetics at Oxford. He also contributed to the Oxford-AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, adding to a career focused on vaccines with global impact.

His achievement follows a long line of Irish men who have helped shape medicine. Donegal-born William C. Campbell shared the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work linked to avermectin, a discovery that transformed treatment for parasitic diseases such as river blindness and lymphatic filariasis. Dublin physicians William Stokes and Robert James Graves helped build the reputation of the Dublin School of Medicine, with their names still associated with major clinical conditions. Francis Rynd, a Dublin surgeon, was a pioneer of the hypodermic needle and injection.

Hill’s award therefore recognises not only one scientist’s breakthrough, but Ireland’s continuing contribution to medicine and global health.