Killeshandra





Town in Ulster, Ireland






































Killeshandra


Cill na Seanrátha

Town
Killashandra

Killeshandra, Main Street looking north (2011)
Killeshandra, Main Street looking north (2011)



Killeshandra is located in Ireland

Killeshandra

Killeshandra



Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 54°00′55″N 7°31′44″W / 54.01523°N 7.52894°W / 54.01523; -7.52894Coordinates: 54°00′55″N 7°31′44″W / 54.01523°N 7.52894°W / 54.01523; -7.52894
Country Ireland
Province Ulster
County County Cavan
Elevation

66 m (217 ft)
Population
(2011)[1][2]

 • Town 1,143
 • Urban

388
Irish Grid Reference H308074

Killeshandra or Killashandra - Irish place name Cill na Seanrátha meaning Church of the Old Rath (ringforts), population 1,143, is a small town in County Cavan, Ireland. It is 20 km (12 mi) northwest of Cavan town and central to County Cavan's lakeland and geopark region, in the unique Erne catchment environment of rivers, lakes, wetlands and woodland. Together with the Lough Oughter Special Protected Area (SPA), it has been recognised by the EU programme for wildlife Natura 2000 since 2010. Killeshandra is specially noted by Failte Ireland as an Angling Centre of Excellence, as well as a hub for the Cavan Walking Festival which takes place in May each year. There are several looped walking and cycling trails in Killykeen Forest Park. The town also has a prominent football club called the Killeshandra GFC, known locally as the Killeshandra Leaguers.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Population and economic changes


  • 3 Public transport


  • 4 Dairy industry


  • 5 People


  • 6 Killeshandra in popular culture


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References


  • 9 External links





History


Killeshandra owes its origins to the Ulster Plantation, when Sir Alexander Hamilton of Innerwick, Scotland was granted lands by the crown in July 1610 to build a castle and create a Protestant community around the barony of Tullyhunco. The 1641 rising and civil war was a particularly difficult period in Killeshandra's history, as the Hamiltons with their neighbours the Craigs were forced out of their settled lands by the O'Reillys. It was not until after the war, during the Restoration period, that Sir Francis Hamilton regained control of the area. He set about building a market town with Scottish planters and migrant Huguenot settlers who were especially noted for their industry and thrift. The new settlers and their families quickly adapted to the local conditions, beginning to grow flax and process linen in the Cavan region. The earliest papal records of a church building in the area date from the fourteenth century on the site of a former rath (fort), then a dependency of Drumlane priory referred to as the Church of the Rath. From the early 17th century the church was reformed for Protestant use and included the glebe lands allocated by the Hamiltons to the Anglican Kilmore diocese, for Scottish Episcopalian worship. Later in the century when peace was restored, the church was remodelled around 1688 (Jacobean Church) as a lasting memorial to departed members of the original Scottish Hamilton family. The remains of this church form part of a protected National Monument and can still be seen at the lower end of the town (opposite Lakeland Dairies). This church displays some unusual architectural characteristics; it is T-shaped, with a south-facing transept in the Renaissance neo-classical style, described in the Pevsner Guide to South Ulster as "arguably the finest Restoration building in Ulster, a handsome evocation of the improving architectural eloquence of the age". The east-facing window is in the more traditional Gothic style. Hamilton heraldic embellishment is visible on the south gable wall and gate pillars. When a new Anglican church was built (circa 1842) further up the main street, some of the earlier Hamilton family memorials attributed to well-known Irish sculptor William Kidwell were brought from the old church and placed inside the new building, where they can still be seen. The graveyard continued in "mixed" community use for well over a century after the church was closed; it is now also protected as a National Monument. This graveyard includes some interesting 19th-century mausoleums and heraldic memorials from families dating back to the early 18th century.


Linen production around Killeshandra grew considerably following an incentive in 1760 from the Linen Board. It was later described in Pigot's 1824 Directory as "[t]he greatest linen market in the county, and the inhabitants of the town and neighbourhood are principally employed in its manufacture". However, failure to capitalise on industrial methods of linen production when market sales approached their peak meant that Killeshandra would inevitably lose in the race to compete with the bigger linen-exporting towns further north, eventually causing hardship and destitution for many local flax growers and linen producers.



Population and economic changes


According to CSO 2016 census statistics, Killeshandra town population stands at 388 persons, an increase of 6.6% from the 2011 census which showed an 11% drop in population from the 2006 census. Compare population levels in 1911, when the town population was 566 persons (46% higher than present levels). However, in the electoral division, which includes the town and surrounding district, a slight increase in population up to 1,143 persons was recorded in 2011, denoting a marked preference for living outside the urban area. In previous centuries, when there were several thousand people living near Killeshandra, local industry and agriculture sustained the local population. Although the Killeshandra area is today regarded as an ideal place for retirement and leisure activity, what are the underlying causes for population decline compared with the rest of the county showing an overall increase in urban and rural population? Throughout the twentieth century, Killeshandra looked to its agriculture base to keep the wheels turning, while Killeshandra Creamery became one of Ireland's leading dairy and milk processing co-operatives. This too has seen significant rationalisation in recent years. At one time Killeshandra was the hub of industry in the region, with several flax and corn mills in addition to Fletcher's sawmill, which was built on the site of an earlier brewery. From the 1860s the town was serviced by a railway line to Crosdoney and Cavan. However the closure of the railway to goods and passengers in 1960 was the first significant result of population decline throughout the region. The eventual closure of Fletcher's sawmill and the demise of street market trading would also signal the end for Killeshandra's iconic linen market house, built around 1790 by then-landlord Robert H. Southwell. The market house fell into disrepair and was finally demolished in the late 1960s. Since this time, urban dilapidation and poor access roads are another notable factor affecting Killeshandra's potential for growth.


Today Killeshandra, in addition to being a base for the Lakeland Dairy Company, is noted as a significant County Cavan tourist destination for anglers, walkers and wildlife enthusiasts. The Lough Bawn Hotel is located in the middle of the village and there are several comfortable B&Bs located nearby. Killeshandra has an array of shops, two national schools, denominational churches, restaurant facilities and several pubs with regular traditional music sessions. A new Community Hall was completed in September 2013, replacing a hall built in the 1970s. The new hall has a large open space for indoor sporting events, as well as space for dancing, concerts and exhibitions. Killeshandra performs well at around 65% in the national Tidy Towns competition and is litter free in the county anti-litter league.



Public transport


From September 2018, Local Link Cavan Monagan route 929 will serve the town with four journeys in each direction, linking the town with Cavan, Newtowngore and Ballinamore. The town is also served by several Local Link Cavan Monaghan door-to-door routes.[3]


Bus Éireann serves the town once weekly on Tuesdays, with route 465 providing a return journey to Cavan via Arvagh and Ballinagh, and a one-way to journey to Carrigallen.[4]


Killeshandra was the once terminus of a short branch railway line between Cavan and Crossdoney on the Midland Great Western Railway line. Opened in 1886, the Killeshandra branch line, along with the Crossdoney to Cavan line, discontinued passenger service in 1947. The line remained open for goods traffic until 1959, then was closed completely in January 1960. Most of the rail infrastructure is now gone, but the station and a nearby goods shed still remain.



Dairy industry


What began as the Drummully Co-operative Society founded on 23rd September 1896 when the first ordinary business meeting of the Society took place. At that time 222 shares were issued with the vast majority of members taking just one share of £1 each. The milk from 987 cows had been promised by local farmers and a committee was tentatively decided upon to establish a creamery in Killeshaandra. Thus began an industry which grew to be recognised as a model for the rest of the country to follow. By March 1898 the new dairy business became known as the Killeshandra Co-operative Agricultural Society and was described as the best creamery of its time, winning prizes for butter and dairy products both at home and abroad. By the time of its centenary year Killeshandra Co-op was handling the milk from over 4,000 farmer suppliers. Today this co-op has transformed through mergers with other companies to form the internationally recognised Lakeland Dairies, the second largest dairy co-operative and third largest dairy processor in Ireland. The Co-op operates on a cross-border basis, employing over 800 people and has 2,400 dairy farmers supplying milk to the co-operative across 15 counties processing by 2017 year end 7.5 billion litres of milk annually into a range of value-added products and food ingredients which are exported worldwide.


One of Lakeland's most significant acquisitions took place in October 2013, when it purchased the former Ulster Bank premises in Killeshandra town next door to the company's headquarters.



People




  • Michael Donohoe (1864–1958), Philadelphia Democrat and U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania from 1911 to 1915, was born in Killeshandra.


  • Thomas Lough 1850-1922 of Killeshandra Drummully East, pioneer of Killeshanadra Co-operative Agricultural & Dairy Society. Was also a liberal MP for West Islington, London.


  • George Richardson (VC) (1831-1923) of Derrylane, Killeshandra.


  • John Joe O'Reilly (footballer) (1919–1952), former Cavan Gaelic football star.


  • Philip O'Reilly, former MP for Cavan and 1641 Rebellion leader.


  • Tom O'Reilly, former Cavan politician.

  • David Poe of Dring, Kildallon, grandfather of American writer Edgar Allan Poe.


  • William Farrell (architect), designer of the Killeshandra Church of Ireland building.


  • William Hales (1747-1831), author and for 43 years rector of Killeshandra.


  • Alan Boyle (actor), The Butcher Boy (film).


  • Eamonn Owens, The Butcher Boy (film).


  • Stephen King, former Cavan Gaelic football star.


  • Seamus Dolan (1914-2010), TD for Cavan/Monaghan constituency, Senator and Chairman of Senate. Member of Council of State.


  • Bernard Hands, merchant seaman of Killeshandra, fireman/stoker, died on RMS Titanic April 1912


  • Ross Farrelly, singer of Irish rhythm & blues group The Strypes



Killeshandra in popular culture



  • The Ohioan Irish Folk band Brady's Leap has released a CD entitled The Road to Killeshandra. William Greenway, poet and Professor of English at Youngstown State University, sings on the title track.


  • Dominic Behan's song Come Out Ye Black and Tans refers to the "green and lovely lanes of Killeshandra".

  • In the Irish Folk song Cavan Girl, the first-person narrator walks "the road from Killeshandra" that runs "twelve long miles around the lake to get to Cavan town".


  • Images and Echoes of Killeshandra 1899-1999. Killeshandra Community Council. 1999..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}, mostly community photographs spanning twentieth century.


  • Matty Gaffney (2009). Life Recorded. An excellent pictorial and personal account of a changing Killeshandra from the 1930s onwards.


  • Pevsner Architectural Guide to the Buildings of Ireland - South Ulster - Armagh, Cavan and Monaghan by Kevin V. Mulligan (2013) Includes several references to buildings in and around Killeshandra.


  • An Introduction to the Architectural Heritage of County Cavan - published by the Department of Arts Heritage and the Gaeltacht (2013). Part of the national architectural heritage survey which includes several references to buildings in and around Killeshandra.


  • The Ulster Plantation in Counties of Armagh and Cavan 1608-1641 by R.J. Hunter (2012) includes several historic references to Killeshandra.


  • Tomas O'Raghallaigh (2010). Turbulence in Tullyhunco (pdf). Book refers to Killeshandra area before, during and after the Ulster Plantation.


  • Tomas O'Raghallaigh (2016). Revolution in Tullyhunco. How tenants got back the land lost in the Ulster Plantation (1809-1903)


  • The Village Institute Killeshandra 1907-1957. Killeshandra Community Council. 2011.

  • Conservation and Management Plan of Jacobean Church, Killeshandra, Co.Cavan - June 2013 - published by Cavan County Council & The Heritage Council.

  • Killeshandra St.Brigid's School/Scoil Bhride Reunion "Legacy of Learning" June 3rd 2017



See also



  • List of towns and villages in Ireland

  • Market Houses in Ireland

  • Irish linen

  • Midland Great Western Railway

  • Killashandra railway station



References





  1. ^ "Census 2011 Preliminary Report. Population Classified by Area" (PDF). Central Statistics Office Ireland. April 2007. Retrieved 2012-12-22.


  2. ^ "Census 2016 SAPMAP Report". Central Statistics Office. 2016. Retrieved 2018-02-13.


  3. ^ "Timetable - Cavan Monaghan Transport Coordination Unit Ltd". www.cmtcu.ie. Retrieved 2018-08-21.


  4. ^ http://www.buseireann.ie/timetables/465-1516807896.pdf




External links







  • Killeshandra Tourism website

  • Killeshandra Main Street pic

  • History of the Hamiltons of Castle Hamilton doc

  • Killeshandra, Old 1688 Church pic

  • Killeshandra Parish Church, building & stainglass windows pics

  • Glencloy House B&B website

  • Killeshandra Loop Walk with downloadable map

  • Local Wildlife through the lens of Carl Morrow photography website

  • Lakeland Dairies website

  • Killeshandra Town Site

  • Origins of Killeshandra Holy Rosary Convent

  • Killeshandra 1845 Old News article


Genealogy:



  • GENUKI "UK & Ireland Genealogy": Killeshandra

  • Cavan Genealogist

  • Al Beagan's "Genealogy Notes" Killeshandra, County Cavan

  • Griffiths Valuations

  • Huguenot Settlement and references to Killeshandra










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