Clonmore GFC is situated in the north-east of County Carlow close to the Wicklow border and draws its players and support from the parishes of Hacketstown and Clonmore.
Large parts of these parishes are in County Wicklow so Clonmore GFC draws on players living on the Carlow side of the border. Meanwhile, there are players from Hacketstown parish playing in Wicklow for Ballymanus, Knockananna and Kiltegan and players in Clonmore parish playing for Coolkenno.
Clonmore GFC, as we know it today, was founded in 1947
but there had been GAA clubs in the area going back as far as 1887. Hacketstown
had its own team then, campaigning under the name of "Mick McQuaid" in both
Carlow and Wicklow at different times. Clonmore also had its own team as
did Ballybrack in Wicklow. Success was hard to come by in those years, transport
was a problem especially when playing distant teams in Wicklow and all three
teams had a reputation for fighting especially when they met one another.
The report of a Championship match between Clonmore and Hacketstown played on 24 March 1889, stated
"Play was impossible from
the start. One highly excitable individual shouting after five minutes "there
are no bones broken, nor no man killed yet?". Match not finished, disorderly.
Both clubs were suspended at the following County Board meeting".
All three clubs fielded teams legal and illegal and
won and lost matches. Mick McQuaids reached a Junior Final in Carlow in
1921 while Ballybrack won a Wicklow Junior Championship in 1936. However,
by the mid 1940s all clubs in the area had faded. After a few years, people
began to take an interest in football again and in late 1947, a group of
men led by local publican and noted footballer Larry Kenny approached the
curate Fr Maher to reform the club. Fr Maher jumped at the idea but said
it would have to be a hurling club, to which Larry replied "if you put
hurleys in these boys hands, we won't have fifteen left for any sort of
team".
So began the story of Clonmore GFC, with the backing
of the clergy and the publican, and an enthusiast group including Dan and
Michael Donohue, Mick Connolly, Denis Cullen, JJ Doyle and Jim Keogh.
With the talent available in the area, Clonmore did
not have to wait long for success and in 1950, the club won it?s first honour,
a County Junior Championship against Bagenalstown, on an atrocious wet day
"when the only safe pair of hands were those of Paks Connolly". This
victory elevated Clonmore into Senior ranks and heralded a golden age for
the club with two Championships (55 & 56), two League titles (56 &
57) and a SFC Final appearance in 1958. The Clonmore team of the fifties
is generally regarded as one of the finest club teams ever to play in Carlow
and they defeated the best of surrounding counties in tournament games etc.
Unfortunately, there was no All-Ireland Club Championship in those years.
The full history of the club can be found in a book
entitled "Our Sporting Heritage", written by Jack Byrne and
Jim Doyle (Water Street) and published in 1981.