Glenties

Glenties
Na Gleannta
Village

Glenties village, 2010.
Glenties

Location in Ireland

Coordinates: 54°47′51″N 8°16′57″W / 54.7975°N 8.2825°W / 54.7975; -8.2825Coordinates: 54°47′51″N 8°16′57″W / 54.7975°N 8.2825°W / 54.7975; -8.2825
Country Ireland
Province Ulster
County County Donegal
Government
  Dáil Éireann Donegal South-West
  EU Parliament North–West
Elevation 78 m (256 ft)
Population (2011)
  Urban 869
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
  Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)
Irish Grid Reference G818944

Glenties (Irish: Na Gleannta, meaning "the glens")[1] is a village in County Donegal, Ireland. It is situated where two glens meet, north-west of the Bluestack Mountains, near the confluence of two rivers. Glenties is the largest centre of population in the parish of Iniskeel. Glenties has won the Irish Tidy Towns Competition competition five times in 1958, 1959,1960, 1962 and 1995 and has won a medal many other times. The current population of Glenties is 869.[2]

History

Evidence of early settlement in the area is given by the many dolmens, standing stones and earthen ringforts dating from the Bronze Age. The area became part of the baronies of Boylagh and Bannagh in 1609, which was granted to Scottish undertakers as part of the Ulster Plantation.

Glenties was a regular stopping point on the road between the established towns of Ballybofey and Killybegs, and grew from this in the 17th and 18th centuries. The town was developed as a summer home for the Marquess Conyngham in the 1820s, because of its good hunting and fishing areas. The court house and market house were built in 1843. The Bank of Ireland building was completed in 1880.[3]

Famine in Glenties

Glenties main street.

A workhouse was built during the Famine at the site of the current Comprehensive School in 1846, serving the greater Inniskeel area. A 40-bed Fever Hospital was later added to care for the sick and dying. The landlord, the Marquis of Conyngham, decided to halve the population of the town in 1847, faced by the rising costs of the workhouse. Only those who could show title to their land as rentpayers were allowed to remain. The rest were given an option of going to America on a ship provided or entering the Workhouse in Glenties. Over 40,000 people died or emigrated from Co. Donegal between the years 1841 and 1851.[3]

20th century

The railway was completed in 1895 from Ballybofey. In 1903 a local water scheme was established, to be replaced in 1925 by the current Lough Anna supply. In 1932 electricity was first generated locally in the town. Rural electrification came in the 1950s.

Glenties R.I.C. barracks were attacked on numerous occasions during the War of Independence in 1920/1921. On 29 June 1921, a group of Black and Tans were ambushed on their way to Ardara at Kilraine by the insurgents, resulting in the death of a Constable Devine.

Two Free State soldiers were killed at Lacklea in 1922 by IRA forces, during the Civil War.

In January 1944 a British RAF Sunderland Mark III flying boat crashed in the Croaghs area of the Bluestack Mountains, outside of Glenties, killing seven of its 12-man crew.[3]

In April 2006, IRA informer Denis Donaldson was shot dead by the Real IRA at a remote cottage near Derryloaghan, 8 km from Glenties.

Bord na Móna

Bord na Móna bought 1,200 acres (490 ha) of bog in 1937 to be drained and cut for peat. By 1943 a railway had been extended from Kilraine across the Owenea River to the bogs at Tullyard. Machine cutting commenced in 1946, utilising German made cutting machines. The company employed 250 men in peak season and peak production was 22,000 tons in 1965. Operations ceased in the late 1990s and the railways and stock were lifted in 2006.[3]

Politics

Local

Glenties is a Municipal District, which returns six local residents to Donegal County Council. Currently there are two members each from Fianna Fáil and Sinn Féin, one from Fine Gael, and one independent.[4]

National

Glenites is part of the county-wide five-seat Donegal constituency. In the 2016 General Election, the constituency returned Charlie McConalogue (Fianna Fáil), Pearse Doherty (Sinn Féin), Pat the Cope Gallagher (Fianna Fáil), Joe McHugh (Fine Gael) and Thomas Pringle (Independent).

Around Glenties

Picture taken in Glenties

Glenties is situated at the meeting of two glens, and two rivers; the Owenea and Stranaglough.

One of its most striking buildings is its unusual church, St Connell's, which was built in 1974 to replace the old church. The building has a flat roof sloping to the ground at a sharp angle. The original bell from the first church is still used today in the newer church. St. Connell is the patron saint of the parish. Liam McCormack won a European Award for its design in 1974.

Tourism

The village has a reasonably large tourist trade and boasts a hotel (The Highlands) and a variety of lively pubs and the locally famous 'Limelight' night club which is one of the largest entertainment venues in the county. There are several guesthouses around the village. The majority of visitors come for the area's scenic beauty.

Patrick MacGill statue

A memorial to the 'Navvy Poet', Patrick MacGill, who was born in Glenties, is located on the bridge over the river in the center of town.

Image of Jim McGuinness

An image of Jim McGuinness has appeared on a rock outside the town.[5]

St. Connell's Museum

St. Connell's Museum

St. Connell's Museum and Heritage Center has a good collection of local history artefacts, including some from the famine. The museum is named after St. Connell Caol, who founded a monastic settlement on Inishkeel Island in the 6th century. The museum also has a display about Cardinal Patrick O'Donnell, mementos from the filming of Dancing at Lughnasa, and an extensive display about the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee. It also has a reading room with a good collection of local historic records.

Highlands Hotel

The Highlands Hotel has been run by the Boyle family for almost seventy years and is one of the few Irish Hotels still genuinely run by a family, with a Boyle family member always close at hand to welcome guests.

The hotel is known for its warm homely atmosphere, and family and staff members endeavor to make guests feel welcome and relaxed – nothing is too much trouble.

Rooms

The hotel boasts 24 well equipped bedrooms, all of which have been decorated to a very high standard, and a restful ambience has been created to ensure guests a peaceful stay.

To accommodate individual requirements, the Highlands Hotel offers smoking and non-smoking, family and interconnecting rooms, double, twin, or single rooms, all of which are en-suite.

MacGill Summer School

The Hotel plays host to the MacGill Summer School which was founded in 1981 in Glenties to celebrate the memory of local writer, Patrick MacGill. MacGill wrote in the early 20th century on the social conditions in Donegal, the plight of migrant workers in Britain and the horrors of the Great War in which he fought as a soldier of the London Irish Rifles. His books are still being published. The Summer School is a political and arts festival that attracts many people.

Refurbishment

The hotel is currently having a face-lift which will focus on the bar areas and some of the older, more out-dated rooms.

Sport

The local Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) club – Naomh Conaill; field teams at all age levels playing gaelic football predominantly.

Glenties was the model for Brian Friel's fictional village of Ballybeg, where several of his works were set. His play Dancing at Lughnasa was set in Ballybeg and was made into a film in 1994 starring Meryl Streep.

Transport

Fintown
Railway

Legend
Fintown
Fintown Lough
Glenties

Glenties railway station was on a branch line of the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee, a narrow gauge railway system. The Glenties branch was the first part of the County Donegal Railways to be closed; the railway station (and the branch line) opened on 3 June 1895 and finally closed on 15 December 1947.[6]

Bus transport is currently provided by Bus Éireann, operated by McGeehan's Coaches, which provides services to Letterkenny, Ballybofey, Dungloe, Ardara, Killybegs and Donegal Town.[7]

Tidy Towns

Glenties was the national winner of Ireland's Tidy Towns competition in 1958, 1959, 1960, 1962, and 1995. Other recent results include being a Gold Medal winner in 2004, 2005, and 2006 and a silver medal winner in 2003. Glenties received a Silver Medal in the European Entente Florale competition held in Győr, Hungary in 2005.

People

See also

References

  1. was turned into a city in the 1930s.Placenames (Ceantair Ghaeltachta) Order 2004
  2. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2009. Retrieved 30 June 2008.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Briody, Liam (1986). Glenties and Inniskeel – A Study of Glenties Town and Inniskeel Parish. Donegal Democrat Ltd.
  4. "Donegal County Council". donegalcoco.ie.
  5. Hannigan, Mary (1 September 2014). "Spillane ruined the moment by reminding Joe that 'Cuba never played Gaelic football'". The Irish Times. Retrieved 1 September 2014. On to Dublin v Donegal and you wondered if the men of Tir Conaill would even show up, the bookies having priced Dublin at 10-1 on. “I mean, that's like Arkle,” said Colm, but he wasn't entirely ruling out a Foinavon, and neither was Joe, mentioning the mural on the rock outside Glenties that depicts Jim McGuinness as Che Guevara.
  6. "Glenties station" (PDF). Railscot – Irish Railways. Retrieved 14 October 2007.
  7. "McGeehan's Coaches". Timetables and Contact details. Retrieved 24 March 2009.
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