Ballygar
Encyclopedia
Ballygar is a town
Town
A town is a human settlement larger than a village but smaller than a city. The size a settlement must be in order to be called a "town" varies considerably in different parts of the world, so that, for example, many American "small towns" seem to British people to be no more than villages, while...

 in County Galway
County Galway
County Galway is a county in Ireland. It is located in the West Region and is also part of the province of Connacht. It is named after the city of Galway. Galway County Council is the local authority for the county. There are several strongly Irish-speaking areas in the west of the county...

, Ireland
Republic of Ireland
Ireland , described as the Republic of Ireland , is a sovereign state in Europe occupying approximately five-sixths of the island of the same name. Its capital is Dublin. Ireland, which had a population of 4.58 million in 2011, is a constitutional republic governed as a parliamentary democracy,...

. It is 11.7 km from Roscommon
Roscommon
Roscommon is the county town of County Roscommon in Ireland. Its population at the 2006 census stood at 5,017 . The town is located near the junctions of the N60, N61 and N63 roads.-History:...

 town.

Ballygar - A timeline

The name Ballygar, historically Beallagarr, comes from . The town has been a meeting point and trading centre throughout the centuries, and was recorded as a townland
Townland
A townland or bally is a small geographical division of land used in Ireland. The townland system is of Gaelic origin—most townlands are believed to pre-date the Norman invasion and most have names derived from the Irish language...

 and farm as far back as 1585.

The 1820s

Although the townland and farm are recorded as far back as 1585, it was not until the 1820s that it became a centre of population. On the 6th August 1585 the Chieftains and Landowners of Galway and Roscommon were summoned to a meeting with the Lord Deputy, Sir John Perrot, in Galway City. The object of the meeting was to get the landowners and chieftains to surrender their lands to Elizabeth I and then receive them back from the Crown at a rent of one penny an acre. The landowners accepted the terms, and one of the signatories to that document of surrender was Francis Shane, gent, of Ballygar, and possibly the proprietor of Ballygar Castle at the time.

Ballygar Castle

The next mention of Ballygar is in the book of Survey Distribution; this shows out the Earl of St Albans as being the beneficial owner of the land of Bealagara in Killeroran Parish in 1641. He was dispossessed of this land and Ballygar Castle. It was subsequently granted to the Earl of Clanricarde. A garrison was stationed in Ballygar Castle during the rebellion of the 1640s. Ballygar Castle seems to have disappeared from the scene in the early 18th century. A document, dated 1704, shows the Clanricarde family as having leased Ballygar Farm plus parts of Drinaun and Killeroran, 800 acres (3.2 km²) in all, to Edward Donnellan of Streamstown, Co Westmeath, for two lives i.e. sixty two years at a rent of two shillings per acre per year. In 1820, a toll market was established near the main entrance to Castle Kelly by Denis Henry Kelly who owned 13500 acres (54.6 km²) of the surrounding countryside.

A Market Town - 1840

The market was a success from the beginning and around this the thriving market the town of Ballygar grew. By 1840 Ballygar market was said to be second only to Athlone market in volume of trade. According to the census of 1841, there was a population of 5,300 living on the Kelly estate. As the market grew, so did the demand for shops and dwellings. Denis had these built and leased them to suitable tenants. Twenty years after its foundation Ballygar had 52 houses and a population of 363. It is not known whether Denis was a teetotaller or not, but it is interesting to note that there were only two public houses in Ballygar in 1839. One of these was located near J. Curley’s shop, the other was situated where T. Hanley’s drapery shop is now. The town was planned in an orderly fashion, wide main street, market square, a diamond at the main entrance to his estate and two back streets to give access to the rear of all premises.

Denis believed in keeping his town tidy, and, to this end, he visited every house in town on the first day of the month. If the house or shop was being kept clean and tidy he issued the tenant with a cleanliness ticket, and at the end of the year the tenant with the most tickets received a prize of £1.10s; the next prize was 10s.6d. All the tenants who had received tickets were invited to have dinner with him in Castle Kelly

Another innovation introduced to Ballygar in 1835 was the Reproductive Loan Fund. This was a non-profit-making organisation, and tenants had access to the fund in times of hardship. It was run on much the same lines as the Credit Union. In 1844, £1,000 of the loan fund was in circulation in the locality. The loan office was situated on the Main Street where Clarke’s Hardware is now.

Killeroran Graveyard and other developments

The Great Famine, 1845–1850, with all its hardships, hunger and deprivation brought a halt to the rapid development of the town, but not for long. Griffith’s Valuation 1855 shows Ballygar as having 67 houses, Police Barracks, a Parochial School House, Dispensary and Protestant Church. The late 1850s saw further building development in the town and locality. A new Parochial School was built in the market square, a new Catholic Church a year later. About this time also the market house, a six-storey building of cut stone was erected on the market square. By the end of the decade a 93-foot stone tower was erected in Killeroran Graveyard, the Courthouse was built, also the Grand Bridge, a magnificent cut-stone structure which spans the river that flows through Castle Kelly. The construction of the bridge alone is said to have cost £1,000 in 1859.

The building programme mustn’t have been as rewarding as Denis Kelly expected, for in 1863 we find the entire Kelly estate being offered for sale by the courts, under the Encumbered Estates Act. Denis retired to Arathy Grange, a small estate he owned near Athleague. He died in 1877 and is buried in the old Church in Killeroran. The Kelly estate, 12000 acres (48.6 km²) complete with Castle and town, was bought by Christopher Neville Bagott for £105,000.

The Bagott Family

The Bagott family seemed to have played a very passive role in the life of the area, other than to collect rents due. The owner, Christopher, spent very little time on the estate, and left the management to his two brothers, Charlie and John. Christopher himself bought a house in a fashionable part of London, and entertained fairly lavishly. Through these parties he came to know a young society lady of great charm and beauty by the name of Alice Verner. Within a short time they were married – believed to be in 1874. In due course a son was born to them. Mrs Christopher Bagott continued to have a high life and relations between herself and her husband soon became strained. They returned to Castlekelly in 1876, and some time later he banished her and their young son from his home. He now drew up a will leaving his entire estate to his brother John Bagott. His health failed rapidly and he died in May 1877. Mrs Bagott contested the last will made by her husband, and a much-publicised trial ensued at the Probate Court in Dublin. The trial lasted for a month, and the courtfound in favour of Mrs Bagott and her son. The Court administered the estate on their behalf until the young heir came of age. The entire estate was offered for sale in 1903. The Land Commission was the purchaser, and later the Forestry Commission acquired Castlekelly and the 1600 acres (6.5 km²) surrounding it.

The Great Famine (An Gorta Mór)

The population structure of Ballygar Parish (Killeroran and Killian) has been like most other parts of rural Ireland being in steady decline, since the Great Famine of 1845. The Great Famine or An Gorta Mór as it has become known, of 1845 had a devastating effect on Ireland, and Ballygar didn’t escape the horror that resulted from the failure of the main food crop, the potato, throughout the years of 1845 to 1849. Few details survive of An Gorta Mór even though it is of relatively recent origin, one hundred and sixty years ago. For it would seem that the details were too horrific and painful for the local people to recall even in local folklore stories. The story of how hundreds of local people, mostly peasant rural dwellers, died of starvation, remain unrecorded. Probably the greatest tragedy of all surrounding An Gorta Mór was the sale by farming communities of large amounts of eggs and animals in order to pay rent to their local landlord, while they themselves, and their neighbours, were dying of starvation.

The Gorta Mór for the first time ever forced Ballygar people to think about large-scale emigration. Throughout the years 1845 to 1850, local farming communities started to emigrate en masse. It would seem that initially they left not just in ones and twos, but in large groups, mainly for America and Australia. It now seems that it must have been on a par with some of the emigration we see from famine torn-regions in Africa during the present time.

In a well researched piece on Trihill National School, Norma Hoilean records how the residents of one townland Bohill all emigrated on the same day. It must have been a horrific day in Bohill – with the entire community of old and young taking with them their meagre belongings and heading off to locate one of the coffin ships in Cobh or Galway. Unfortunately nobody has any idea of whatever happened to them, but it can only be assumed that some of them at least reached “the promised land”. As an illustration of this, it is recorded that thirteen entire families from Cork Unitarian Church left Cork on the same boat to Australia in 1847.

The exodus from the area to the U.S. continued throughout the latter part of the 19th century and indeed for much of the first part of the twentieth. It was this exodus of people from Ballygar, which resulted in virtually every family in the parish of today having a set of relatives in some part of America.

A feature of the Gorta Mór was that few people were prepared to talk about it afterwards, and few stories survive even in local folklore about the event. It would seem that the death of families or family members from starvation was associated with poverty that relatives refused to talk about afterwards. In a field owned by Martin “Prince” Kelly in the village of Ballinacor, there are five simple graves adjacent to a sandpit – one of the graves has a number of simple field stones surrounding it. It seems likely that famine victims were buried here without ceremony and possibly without a priest being present.

1860 to 1890

Practically no expansion took place in Ballygar town from 1860 to 1891. The census of 1891 shows it as having 69 houses and a population of 289. Then for some reason the first decade of this century saw a great increase in the population of the town, from 289 to 403, an increase of about 35%. Eleven houses were built in the town in that decade.

Modern Day Ballygar

The village is the home of many businesses in the line of shops- grocers, butchers, etc. One of these shops which has now been in existence for many generations is now the property of the Kilgarriff family. The shop was previously the property of the late Mrs. Kilgarriff's father Mr. John Martin and his wife Lizzie. The shop was a general store and meeting place in the village.

Many families can be traced back to have been living in the area as far back as 1749 (as far back as reliable records go). These families include the Thomas, Lohan, Martin, Egan, Finneran, Flynn, Galvin, Keane, Mulrey, Mulvey, Campbell, Geraghty, Healy, Nolan, Kelly, Fischer, Devine, Doyle, and Brannelly families.

In 2003 the village welcomed the Afghanistan
Afghanistan
Afghanistan , officially the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, is a landlocked country located in the centre of Asia, forming South Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East. With a population of about 29 million, it has an area of , making it the 42nd most populous and 41st largest nation in the world...

 Special Olympics team whilst they competed in the 2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games
2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games
The 2003 Special Olympics World Summer Games were hosted in Ireland, with participants staying in various host towns around the island in the lead up to the games before moving to Dublin for the events. Events were held from 21 June-29 June 2003 at many venues including Morton Stadium, the Royal...

.

Ballygar Carnival

Ballygar Carnival has been as annual event since 1945. It is a festival of entertainment for all ages. Events include, dancing, discos, funfair, street entertainment, fancy dress, country fair, pig races & sport tournaments.

Mucanagh

One of Ballygars's most famous townlands is Mucanagh (the ford of the pigs) on the Galway side of the River Suck. Well known across Europe, especially France for its coarse fishing and wildlife hunting, Sean Healy and Andy Connors are reliable guides who have both fished and hunted across the local bogs and rivers (Suck and Shiven) for the past sixty years. The Suck is the home to bream, perch and pike fishing while the faster moving Shiven is regarded for wild trout.

Murrays Timber

Established in 1977 Murray Timber Products Limited has grown to become one of the largest sawmills in Ireland.

Mattie McDonagh

It was also the home of famed Galway footballer, Mattie McDonagh
Mattie McDonagh
Matthew 'Mattie' McDonagh was an Irish sportsperson. He played Gaelic football with his local club Ballygar and was a member of the Galway senior inter-county team from 1956 until 1968. McDonagh later served as manager of the Galway team...

, the only Connacht man to win four All-Ireland Senior Football medals.Its also home to David Carty winner of a sigerson medal with Sligo IT. St. Brendans is the name of the local GAA club it is a combination of both Newbridge, Ballygar and Toghergar. It is called St. Brendans as St. Brendans is the name of a townland in the centre of the three parishs.

Patrick Sarsfield Gilmore

Wrote many songs, including When Johnny Comes Marching Home

Philip Pettit
Philip Pettit
Philip Noel Pettit is an Irish philosopher and political theorist. He is Laurence Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values at Princeton University...



Princeton University http://lapa.princeton.edu/peopledetail.php?ID=325

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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