Irish Agricultural Museum


The Irish Agricultural Museum is a museum dedicated to the history of Irish rural life. Housed in the farm buildings of Johnstown Castle, County Wexford, the collections represent all elements of rural life, including transport, crafts, farming activities and dwelling.

History

In the early 1970s Dr Austin O’Sullivan began collecting materials relating to farming and rural life in Ireland. In 1974 Dr Thomas Walsh, the Director of An Foras Talúntais, agreed to the foundation of an agricultural museum. From this, a group formed in 1976 with the aim of setting up a museum to house this collection, amongst others. The Museum, housed in the former farm buildings of Johnstown Castle Estate, was opened in 1979 by Irish President Patrick Hillery. Since the opening, the museum has expanded and now occupies 1,600 square metres of gallery space. The establishment and expansion of the Museum has led to the continuing restoration of the estate's farming buildings which date from 1810.

Contents

The main aim of the Museum's collections was to document the changes in farming life in the wake of the industrial revolution, in particular the move away from horse powered machinery to those powered by engines. The collections are organised by agricultural themes, such as dairy, the laundry, the kitchen, sugar beet farming and so on. The Museum also features an extensive exhibition on the history of the potato and the Irish Potato Famine mid 1800s. The collection contains number 96 in The Irish Times A History of Ireland in 100 Objects, a washing machine from the early 1950s. There are a number of full-scale replicas of workshops of a blacksmith, cooper, wheelwright, harness maker and basket maker.
The Museum won the Best Museum 2014, a competition organised by the Industrial Heritage Association of Ireland, in recognition of the role the Museum has played in the preservation and promotion of the material history relating to Irish rural life.

Gallery of exhibits