SHILLELAGH STICKS

Open : June-August; Mon.- Sat. 10a.m.
to 5p.m. Sun.2p.m. to 6p.m.
Remainder of year by appointment.
Experience the ancient craft of Shillelagh stick making
in the ancestral home of this renouned Irish icon.
Learn its history and folklore and perhaps the secrets
of what makes a real Shillelagh, while exploring the
stickmakers yard.
The Shillelagh Stick
In the first millennium, the warrior stick fighters of
the Shillelagh territories were so renowned for their
martial arts skills and ferocity that their tribal name
became synonymous with the weapon that they were so
adept with . This ethnic people had survived the
invasive influences of the Celts, Vikings, Danes and
Normans until their last refuge, the great oak forests
of Shillelagh, were finally felled in the 18th century.
The subsequent dispersal of these people throughout
Ireland and onward on the famine ships brought the
fearsome weapon of their ancestors to the greater Irish
Diaspora.
The name originated from a king or
clan chieftain, Ealach Mac Faelchon , who lived in the
7th Century A.D. , and who resisted the influences of
other clans who were becoming too Celtic in their ways.
His followers were known as the ’Siol Ealaigh’ meaning
the seed ( or descendants ) of Ealach . Countless modern
Irish family names such as Kelly, Kealy, Kiely,
Kelleher, Callaghan , and variations of these, owe their
origins to Ealach.
Over the generations the style of the
‘Shillelagh’ changed with the needs of its users. Battle
clubs, walking sticks, cudgels, message sticks and good
luck charms are some of the devices covered by the name
‘Shillelagh’, which were made from Blackthorn as only
its unique properties deliver the correct blend of
lightness and hardness which following a process of
cutting, seasoning, fashioning and sealing, taking up to
three years, produces high quality pieces which will
last for generations.
Blackthorn was sacred in pagan
traditions and its’ impenetrable thickets, which helped
to protect the territories of the Siol Ealaigh from
infiltration, led to the belief that the ‘Little People’
resided within. Thus originated the association of the
blackthorn Shillelagh with the ‘Fairies and
Leprechauns’.
Liam Kealy (Liam O’Caidhla) is the
definitive Shillelagh stick maker, being born and raised
in the area. He is a member of the Craft Council of
Ireland and carries on a family tradition of quality
Shillelagh Stick craftsmanship at his premises in
Shillelagh village.
From ornamental keepsakes to walking
sticks and lethal fighting weapons, which can also be
personalised with ‘loaded’ heads and inscriptions, he
now supplies enthusiasts the world over.
Discover the latent power within a
‘real’ Shillelagh, having gone through three years and
17 different processes in the making, yielding a
lifelong companion and an heirloom for future
generations.
Callers are always welcome to our store in Shillelagh
village. Advance booking is recommended for talks,
tours, etc
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