Ford, Crohan, Co. Tipperary
Co. Tipperary |
Bridges & Crossings
Some historical sites announce themselves with stonework, earthworks, or at least a marker.
This crossing on the River Tar in County Tipperary offers none of that. There is no bridge, no causeway, no worn stepping stones. What survives is simply a place in the river, a point where the water runs roughly north to south and where, at the time it was inspected, the flow reached about 0.6 metres in depth and moved at a fair pace. The ford is classified and recorded, yet there is nothing physical left to see. That absence is, in its own quiet way, the interesting thing.
A ford, in this context, is simply a shallow stretch of river that could be crossed on foot, on horseback, or by cart without the need for a bridge. They were often among the most strategically important features in a landscape, determining where roads ran, where settlements grew, and where power consolidated. This particular crossing on the Tar is thought to have served the occupants of a castle in the neighbouring townland of Frehans. That castle, catalogued separately, would have depended on reliable access across the river, and a ford at this location would have provided exactly that. The connection between the two sites is likely rather than proven, but it is a plausible and instructive one, a reminder that medieval infrastructure was often a network of interdependent features rather than isolated monuments.
