Brick Kiln, Knockanush, Co. Kerry
Co. Kerry |
Kilns
A brick kiln turning up in rural Kerry is quietly surprising.
Ireland's building traditions leaned heavily on stone, and brick manufacture never took hold here the way it did in parts of England or the industrial midlands of Scotland. To find a kiln dedicated to producing fired brick in a place like Knockanush, in the Kerry countryside, suggests a very particular local need at a very particular moment, perhaps tied to an estate, a drainage scheme, or some other improvement project that demanded materials the landscape could not otherwise supply. Brick kilns worked by stacking unfired clay bricks around a firebox, then maintaining intense heat long enough to vitrify the clay into something durable. The remains tend to be modest, a low mound of scorched earth and slag, easy to overlook.
Beyond its classification as a recorded monument in the Kerry landscape, the specific history of this kiln, who built it, when it was in use, and what it supplied, remains undocumented in the publicly available record. That absence is itself telling. Industrial features associated with landed estates or nineteenth-century land improvement often went unrecorded in the way that a ringfort or a church ruin would not, regarded at the time as purely functional and therefore beneath notice. Many such kilns fell out of use as imported brick became cheaper and more reliably available through expanding road and rail networks during the latter half of the 1800s.