Brick Pit, Esker, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Mining
On the first edition of the Ordnance Survey six-inch map, a small feature near Esker in County Galway is marked and named with unusual directness: Brick Pit.
It is not a ruin, not a monument, not a holy well. It is simply a hole in the ground where someone, at some point after 1700, dug clay to make bricks. That plainness is part of what makes it worth noticing. Brick-making was once a localised, practical industry, dependent on finding suitable clay deposits close to where building materials were needed, and the pits left behind were often modest enough to vanish quietly into the landscape.
The fact that the pit was considered significant enough to name on the earliest large-scale mapping of Ireland suggests it was a recognised feature of the local landscape when the Ordnance Survey teams passed through in the nineteenth century. The OS six-inch maps, surveyed from the 1830s onwards, captured Ireland in exceptional detail, recording field boundaries, mills, kilns, and small industrial workings that later maps often omitted or reclassified. A named brick pit implies some degree of local importance, or at least local memory, attached to the site. Beyond that, the record is silent on who operated it, how long it was worked, or what was built with whatever came out of it.
