04/06/2026
MULLABODEN AGAIN AND LOST PLACENAMES
Just a quick follow up to yesterday's post on Mullaboden. Looking at Nobel & Keenan's (1752) and Taylor's (1783) maps of County Kildare (the former attached, courtesy of logainm.ie), there appears to be a big house at Mullaboden, while the NBHS's database dates the lodge only to the early-nineteenth century (https://www.buildingsofireland.ie/buildings-search/building/11902406/mullaboden-lodge-coghlanstown-west-co-kildare).
As Mullaboden was part of Coghlanstown (Cotlanstown / Ballycotelan and many variants) townland and parish, it was part of lands forfeit by Nicholas Eustace for his support of the Silken Thomas rebellion in 1534. The townland changed hands a few times before being owned by Sir John Hoey, the son of an Elizabethan administrator whose father has established the Hoey seat at Dunganstown in Wicklow, and who himself had acquired signficant amounts of land in Ballymore Eustace and Coghlanstown parishes. As Mullaboden and surrounds was already in Protestant hands before the 1640s, it was out of scope for the various confiscations and redistributions that took place in the later seventeenth century. For that reason, Coghlanstown (and Stonebrook, Mullaboden, Donode) were not mapped by Petty's surveyors in the 1650s.
Rolling the clock forward to the early eighteenth century, Mullaboden appears in some of the early memorials recorded in the newly-established Registry of Deeds.
- A 1721 deed records a twenty-one year lease from William Wolsley of Mount Arran in Carlow to Thomas Nugent of Ballymore Eustace 'the farm and lands commonly called or known by the names of Mullaghboden, Bannouggarrett together with a piece of ground adjoining thereto commonly known by the name of John Hughes meadow all which premises lying and being in the Parish of Coghlanstown'
- A 1733 marriage settlement where Thomas Nugent above, intending to marry the widowed Elizabeth Smith of Boystown, Wicklow (not the Highland Lady - she was 100+ years later), in return for a marriage portion of £300 granted unto John Smith of Baltyboys (presumably a father-in-law, brother-in-law or son of Elizabeth) his interests in the Red Lion House and the Brewhouse Stable with adjoining woods etc. in Ballymore Eustace, his interests in 27 acres in Newtown townland and his lease interests in Mullabowden & Bannogue Garrett together with Hughes Meadow, being part of Coghlanstown.
A few retired placenames there including Hughes Meadow and Bannogue Garrett - there is a Bawnoge about two miles north of Mullaboden but this would not have been in Coghlanstown parish. Any takers?