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About us...........

Click
on Clubhouse pic for Club Logo
Saint
Brigid's G.A.A. Club is based
at Russell Park Navan Road ,
Blanchardstown Dublin 15 and serves the communities
of Blanchardstown ,
Castleknock Laurel Lodge , Corduff
and the Greater Dublin 15 area .
It's
main grounds are at Russell Park but
it also has grounds at Beech Park Castleknock
, Porterstown & Coolmine .
At
present the Club caters for 55 teams at all age levels from
nursery under 9 to Adult in Hurling , Football , Camogie, Ladies
Football & Handball.
The year
was 1929 and the month was November as a group of people set off
on their bicycles from Blanchardstown to Croke Park to witness
history being made. The first Blanchardstown person was about to
play a match on the hallowed green sod in Jones Road. His name was
Johnnie Steward and he was selected to play left full back for
O'Connell School against St. Mary's College , Dundalk in the
Leinster College Final .
It was at
O'Connell School that Johnnie started to play Gaelic Football and
in 1929 he reached his first major achievement in winning a
Leinster College medal . It was also the end of Johnnie's
schooldays. Back home in Blanchardstown G.A.A. had not spread to
the quiet village on the banks of the Tolka. Johnnie and his
friends spent the long hot Summer evenings sitting by the river
fishing with their homemade rods and lines and admiring Johnnie's
medal . These talks would turn to forming their own football team
and back again to Johnnie's medal and Croke Park .
On the
27th. of September 1931, still thinking and talking of setting up
their own team in Blanchardstown they set off once more to Croke
Park , this time to see the clash of Kerry and Kildare in the
All-Ireland Final. The Kingdom and the Lily Whites had held the
crown between them for the previous 5 years with Kerry winning
three. The mighty Con Brosnan leading out the Kingdom that day
looking for his fifth winners medal and the Lily White Captain
Mick Walsh chasing his third medal.
After the
match as Johnnie and his pals put on their bicycle clips at St.
Peter's Church in Phibsborough still talking about the six points
Kerry had to spare at the end of the match , they decided that the
very next week they would see about setting up their Club .
The
following week Johnnie got in touch with Bro. Gilroy at O'Connell
Schools and asked how to go about forming a Club. He was told to
go to the G.A.A. Headquarters at No. 9 Burgh Quay the following
night and get the forms and rules.
Saint
Brigid’s G.A.A. Club was founded in February 1932 when Johnnie
Steward, together with his brother Liam and Pat Anderson , Billy
McEntee Paddy Keane , Archie McEntee, Paddy Smith, Jeremy O'Neill,
Billy Monaghan and Jim Mansfield got together in a shed in the
parish field in Blanchardstown to form the Club .
The first
Committee was Chairman Jim Mansfield , Secretary Liam Steward ,
Co. Board Secretary Johnnie Steward .
Tom Russell
In 1934
the late Tom Russell N.T. was appointed Principal of
Blanchardstown School and he took an interest in the Club . He was
Chairman of Peadar Mackin G.A.A. Club , Westland Row and had a
great wealth of knowledge about Gaelic games . Tom resigned the
following year from the Peadar Mackin Club to join St. Brigid's .
He later served as Chairman of the Dublin County Board from 1947
to 1956 .
The Club
serves the communities of Blanchardstown, Castleknock, Clonsilla,
Corfuff and Laurel Lodge in the Dublin 15 area and has strong
links with all the local national and second level schools in
these areas.
The Club
caters for football, hurling, camogie, ladies football and
handball. At present the Club caters for 55 teams in all the
codes.
Players of
note in the past included Fr. Michael Cleary, Paddy Downey (All
-Ireland medal holder with Dublin), Mattie Keane (National league
medal 1964), former Dublin manager Dr. Pat O’ Neill played his
football in the Club up to Under 21.
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