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Elderly Man Dies After Assault in Tipperary Town.

A man in his 80s has sadly died in hospital following a serious assault which occured in Tipperary Town on Friday night last.
The victim was attacked at his home on St Michael’s Avenue at around 9:35pm.

The alarm was raised when the elderly man was found on the ground outside his detached garage. He was taken by ambulance to Limerick University Hospital on Friday night and gardaí had described his condition as critical.
This morning, gardaí have announced that the elderly victim has passed away.

The local coroner and the Office of the State Pathologist have been notified and a post-mortem examination will be arranged. A man believed to be in his 30s was arrested on Saturday evening last and remains detained at a garda station in the county.

A senior garda investigating officer is leading the investigation with a family liaison officer providing support to the pensioner’s family.

Gardaí are appealing for witnesses to the incident to come forward, specifically anyone who was in the area of St Michael’s Avenue between 7pm and 10pm on Friday, and has video phone footage (including dash-cam).

Gardaí are calling on anyone with information to contact Tipperary Town Garda Station Tel: 062 80670, the Garda Confidential Line Tel: 1800 666 111, or indeed any garda station.

Update:
A 31-year-old man has appeared before Nenagh District Court in connection with the afore mentioned serious assault in Tipperary town on Friday night.

Mr Sean Harding, with an address at Marian Terrace, Tipperary town, to date is facing three counts of burglary and one count of assault causing harm.

Mr Harding replied “No” when the charges were put to him. Mr Harding has been granted free legal aid.


Where Can A Devils Mark To Be Viewed In Thurles, Co. Tipperary.


One such ‘Devils Mark’ or Ordnance Survey Benchmark can be found in Thurles on a pillar close to the road surface, at the entrance to St Bridget’s graveyard at an area formerly known as Garryvicleheen Street, better known today as Abbey Road, west of Thurles town.

Carved into buildings, Churches, bridges and old stone walls across Ireland are these small but remarkable relics of scientific history, known as Ordnance Survey Benchmarks.

One Ordnance Survey Benchmark (Devil’s Mark) in Thurles, Co. Tipperary.
Pic: G. Willoughby.

Though created for science and statecraft, they soon became part of Irish folklore. Particularly in the west of Ireland, where oral tradition recalls that some communities called them the “Devil’s marks,” believing the mysterious cuts were left by dark forces. Same were sometimes smashed in the belief that with these marks, once removed, would ensure that the Devil could not return.

These chiselled symbols, usually a simple crow’s foot cut beneath a horizontal line (view image above), once formed part of a vast system for measuring height above sea level. Known colloquially as “sappers’ marks,” the upward-pointing arrow same contain, was borrowed from the British Government’s ‘broad arrow’ emblem of ownership, repurposed by surveyors as a practical, durable and instantly recognisable tool. At one point the British government issued prison clothing which were stamped with this ‘broad arrow’ emblem, so that people in the towns and villages would know that these individuals were convicts.

The story of benchmarks begins with the Ordnance Survey of Ireland (OSI), established in 1824 under Lt.-Col. Thomas F. Colby. His team carried out the world’s first large-scale mapping of an entire country, culminating in the survey of 1834 and the levelling of Ireland between 1839 and 1843. By 1846, Colby’s monumental effort was complete, leaving behind not only the celebrated six-inch-to-the-mile maps but also a physical legacy inscribed into the landscape.

Each benchmark recorded a precise elevation point, forming a network that allowed engineers, builders, and cartographers to work from a common reference.

Today, a lot of benchmarks still survive as tangible links to Ireland’s first great scientific survey and the progress it represented. Yet they lack any protection status. Modern demolition, redevelopment, road surface levels rising and weathering have already erased from sight, and permanently eradicated many.

Sadly, without awareness and preservation, these modest but historic cuts in stone may in time vanish altogether, along with the stories and the knowledge that they carry.

Quick Quiz -Times They Are A Changing.

“Times They Are A Changing”.
(Extract from a song written and recorded by Bob Dylan back in 1964.)

“Come writers and critics, who prophesize with your pen,
And keep your eyes wide, the chance won’t come again,
And don’t speak too soon for the wheel’s still in spin.
And there’s no tellin’ who that it’s namin’,
For the loser now will be later to win,
For the times they are a-changin’.”

Quick Quiz: The above picture was taken possibly between the years 1870 and 1880.
We here at Thurles.Info know the area where it was taken, but can anyone of our viewers identify the location?

EPA Intervention Sparks Token Clean-Up Of River Suir In Thurles.

Residents shrug, visitors horrified, as Thurles river turns into an open sewer.

  • LAWPRO scientists warn Suir is ‘dying rapidly’ while Tipperary Council fails to act.
  • Twelve years of neglect and denial leave one of Ireland’s great rivers in crisis.
  • Officials accused of hiding 28 sewage outlets behind unchecked weed growth.

Yesterday afternoon, as a heavy downpour swept across Thurles Town, I took shelter beneath the trees on the banks of the River Suir and waited. As predicted at 3:00pm, as the bells from Thurles Cathedral struck the hour, the rain eased just long enough for me to capture a series of photographs and a short video, the evidence of which, now speaks for itself.

Video above shows sewage flowing openly in the River Suir, in Thurles Town centre.
The Fountain, once gifted to the Thurles Tidy Town Committee and stolen from the river Suir by council officials, with the knowledge of current serving local councillors, must now be returned.

What the footage show above is undeniable: Tipperary County Council officials, aided by Thurles Municipal District officials and supported by local councillors, are not only failing in their duty to protect the River Suir; they are directly contributing to its pollution and decline.

The reason the rampant weed growth along the riverbank is left uncontrolled is now obvious. These weeds serve as a natural curtain, concealing the 28 outlets discharging their contents directly into the river; a river which LAWPRO (Local Authority Waters Programme) scientists confirm is dying rapidly.

Yes, in response to an EPA memo last week, Council officials, who had deliberately ignored our warnings, made a token gesture. Two pallets, two plastic bollards, a pile of discarded clothing, and six supermarket trolleys were finally removed. But beyond that, little has changed. As my video above shows, bottles dumped into the river during this summer’s Town Park Music Festival still remain. The blame here cannot rest entirely with festival-goers; when public seating is installed by a river, litter bins must also be provided. Yet councillors and their officials continue to ignore this most basic of facts.

I spent over an hour yesterday in that putrid stretch of riverbank, speaking with those passing along the walkway near the Swinging Gates at the junction of Emmett Street and Thomond Road. After the downpour, one covered drain was spewing raw sewage; another carried foul runoff from the southern end of town. Spanish students and Ukrainian refugees were horrified by what they saw. Local residents, on the other hand, merely shrugged, “nothing new,” they said.
Even the ducks, same introduced years ago by the late Wilbert Houben, Thurles Gun Club and myself, paddled eagerly in the filth, feeding on its floating debris.

Meanwhile, on 11th September, (a full 13 days after I had contacted the EPA in Wexford), our local newspaper finally ran a piece on the issue. Disappointingly, the image used was a long outdated archive photo, showing a river that looked nothing like its current choked and dying state. The article itself read more like a promotion for a local politician, than an exposé of the environmental crisis being ignored for the past 12 years.

And so, the buck-passing continues. LAWPRO; Uisce Éireann; Inland Fisheries Ireland, etc. none are willing or able to take legal action against Tipperary County Council. Instead, information shuffles endlessly from one desk to another, while the river suffers in silence and our government runs around like a headless chicken, believing, like the two genetically enhanced mice, ‘Pinkey and the Brain’, that their hyper-intelligence is slowly taking over the world.

But let it be clear: as the video shows, this is ‘Not The End’.

Death Of Peggy Kennedy Formerly Of Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

It was with sadness that we learned of the death, today Saturday 13th September 2025, of Mrs Margaret (Peggy) Kennedy (née Gleeson) Milltown, Clonoulty, Cashel, Co. Tipperary and formerly of Holycross, Thurles, Co. Tipperary.

Pre-deceased by her son John, parents Con and Mary, sisters Maureen, Crissie and Kitty, brothers Timmy and Michael; Mrs Kennedy passed away peacefully at her place of ordinary residence, surrounded by her loving family.

Her passing is most deeply regretted, sadly missed and lovingly remembered by her sorrowing family; loving and devoted husband John, daughters Patricia (Keating) and Noreen (Keating), sons Jerry and Noel, grandchildren, great-grandchildren, sons-in-law Pat, Joe and Bharathi, daughters-in-law Catherine and Karen, nephews, nieces, sisters-in-law Mary, Sheila, Kitty and Maud, brother-in-law Denis, extended relatives, neighbours and friends.

Requiescat in Pace.

Funeral Arrangements.

The earthly remains of Mrs Kennedy will repose in Hayes Funeral Chapel, Clonoulty, Cashel on Monday afternoon, September 15th, from 5:00pm until 7:00pm same evening.
Her remains will be received into the nearby Church of St John the Baptist, 1-23, Church View, Clonoulty Curragh, Clonoulty, Co. Tipperary, (Eircode E25 CY91) on Tuesday morning, September 16th, to further repose for Requiem Mass at 11:30am, followed by interment, immediately afterwards, in Clonoulty cemetery.

For those persons who would wish to attend Requiem Mass for Mrs Kennedy, but for reasons cannot, same can be viewed streamed live online, HERE.

The extended Kennedy family wish to express their appreciation for your understanding at this difficult time, and have made arrangements for those persons wishing to send messages of condolence, to use the link shown HERE.

Note Please: Donations in lieu of flowers, if desired, to South Tipperary Hospice Movement in memory of Mrs Margaret Kennedy.