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The history of
Glencolumkille spans some 5,000 years, back to the Stone Age when the first
farmers toiled the land here. The only traces of these early settlers are
from the Court Cairns, examples of which are found at Malinmore, Cloghanmore
and Farranmacbride. These Court Cairns were burial places and were built
with huge stones, forming a court area with burial chambers or galleries. A
later group of settlers in the Stone Age left the remains of their style of
tomb-building… the Portal Dolmens, which usually consist of several standing
stones surmounted by a capstone.
At Malinmore there is a group of six Portal
Dolmens, reputed to be the finest monument of its type in Ireland. The next
group of people to leave traces of their habitation were those of the Celtic
period, dating from of 300 B.C. onwards. Traces of their monuments, Dúns,
Raths or Liosanna… circular earth or stone works, can be seen above the
Silver Strand at Malinbeg and on the promontory of Doonalt.
With the coming Christianity to Ireland from the 5th century onwards,
tradition has it that Columba (521-597 A.D.), born into a leading Donegal
dynasty and who played a major part in the development of the Church in
Ireland, Scotland and the North of England, established a monastery here and
gave his name to the Glen. Most of the Standing Stones, many of them
Cross-inscribed form what is known as the Turas Cholmcille.
The Stones may
have had pre-Christian connotations but were adapted to Christian usage.
There are fifteen stations or stops in the Turas, which include Colmcille’s
Chapel, chair, bed, wishing stone and Holy Well at Beefan. The Turas is
performed each year on the 9th June, St Columba’s Day.
There are signs of other early Christian settlements, marked by the present
ruins of the Chruch of St Kevin at Malinbeg and that of Tearnpall na Manach
at Kilgoly. The Church of the Spaniard in Faugher was built in 1729. The
story is told that a shipwrecked Spanish sailor was given the Last Rites by
the local priest and that he gave the priest some gold coins and asked him
to build a church, hence the name Cill an Spainnigh. Another Spanish Church
was built in the 18th century just west of Kilcar.
The present Church of Ireland built in just North of the earlier one, had
its Colcktower erected in by Henry Musgrave, the only surviving member of
the Musgrave family, owners of the Glencolumbkille Estate since 1867. The
Church occupies a prominent position in the valley and around its site
traces of an early Christian settlement exist, notably in the souterrain or
underground refuge, beneath the Graveyard. Charles Inglis, first Anglican
Bishop of Nova Scotia, was born in Glencolumbkille in 1734, when his father
was Rector here. There is a tradition that Daniel MacGonagle, Bishop of
Raphoe (1562-1589), a native of Killybegs and one of the Irish Bishops to
attend the Council of Trent (1545-1563) is buried in the Churchyard.
However, it is considered that the tradition refers more correctly to Ronald
MacConghaile, Rector of Glencolumbkille in 1555, and reputed to be a brother
of the Bishop.
The Catholic Church in Cashel village was built in 1832 and the new Nave was
added in 1880. In the Churchyard is the grave of Canon Phil Boyle,
remembered especially for his great merciful work during a catastrophic ‘flu
epidemic which struck the area in 1918.
There can still be seen in Glencolumbkille examples of vernacular
architecture, notably in the surviving thatched cottages, with their
particular feature of the rounded roof, the thatch being held down by a
network of ropes (sugans) spaced over it and fastened to pins beneath the
eaves and on the gables. Built of local stone and whitewashed these
buildings harmonise with the landscape. Examples of industrial and
agricultural architecture survive in the byres and out-houses and in the
remains of lime kilns, mills and forge.
Visitors can re-live the past through the medium of the Folk Museum
complex., where there are replicas of buildings used by local people over
three centuries. This Museum Centre was founded in 1967 as part of the
cultural revival inspired by Farther James McDyer, who has been involved
since the 1950’s in co-operative endeavours and developmental projects in
Glencolumbkille.
Glencolumbkille is a place of colours and sounds and kindly people and has
attracted over the years painters, writers and composers. In his book
“Farewell My Youth”, Sir Arnold Bax (b. 1883), Master of the King’s Music,
penned the following lines:-
“I like to fancy that on my deathbed my last vision in this life will be the
scene from my window on the upper floor at Glencolumbkille, of the still,
brooding, dove-grey mystery of the Atlantic at twilight; the last glow of
sunset behind Glen Head… the calm slope of Scraig Beefan, its glittering
many-coloured surface of rock, bracken and heather, now one uniform purple
glow”.
The coastline of Glencolumbkille is varied and dramatic, embracing as it
does huge, sheer cliffs, sea-sculpted rocks and islets, tiny inlets where
local fishermen harbour their boats, and sandy, safe beaches. At Malinbeg,
with Rathlin o’Beirne Island a mile offshore, marking the Northen entrance
to Donegal Bay, we have one of the finest beaches in Ireland, the sandy
safe, Silver Strand, while at the North-Eastern extremity of our coast we
have Tormore, 482 feet, Ireland’s highest sea stack. In between and along an
indented coast lies Teelin (Malinmore) Head, the most Westerly point on the
Donegal coast, with Rossan Point close by at the entrance to Glen Bay. At
the head of this bay is a good, sandy beach, backed by dunes, with a Car
Park and the Folk Museum Centre adjacent. Glen Head rises to a height of 769
feet and is surmounted by its Watchtower. Just North of here is the Sturral,
a jagged, knife-edged promontory.
At Port an inlet some 1 ½ miles further
North-East, coopers lived in days gone by serving the fishermen along this
part of the Donegal coast. Beyond Port is Toralaydon Islet (319 feet) and an
awe-inspiring variety of rock shapes along the coast to the sea stack of
Tormore. Our coastline ends at the Claddagh Mor and Glenlough. Glenlough,
now deserted and with no access by road, is a valley of haunting beauty,
running down to the sea between Port Hil and the slopes of Slieve Tooey.
Coastal walks abound and, whilst caution must be exercised along cliff tops,
one is rewarded with breathtaking views… across Donegal Bay to the coasts of
Sligo and Mayo, with the mountains of Ben Bulben, Knocknarea and Nephin
prominent, and, on a clear day, the Stags of Broadhaven are visible at the
North-Western extremity of Co. Mayo. To the North-East are views of Aranmore
Island and the coastline of the Rosses.

The seas of the Western Approaches off our coast have seen and made history.
In Glencolumbkille we have touched on this history in peace as well as war.
From earliest times coastwise trading was a feature and early Christian
settlements, such as that on Rathlin O’Beirne island, were probably
established by seafaring monks. In the sixteenth century, the waters
witnessed vessels of the Spanish Armada being driven by contrary gales
towards the head of Donegal Bay and their eventual wreck; others managing to
make Killybegs to repair, victual and attempt an outward voyage to neutral
Scotland; others still attempting to keep to the West off our coast.
One
ship, which came dangerously close to our coast in those gales of 1588, was
the DUQUESA SANTA ANNA. She managed to clear Malinmore Head and Tormore but
was wrecked further North-East at Rosbeg in Loughros More Bay. Her Commander
and Company marched from there, through Ardara to Killybegs and joined
another Armada ship, the GIRONA, which was victualling there under the
protection of MacSweeney Bannagh, the local Chief.
In October 1588 the GIRONA sailed from Killybegs with 1300 on board. She laid her course further
to the West and cleared the entire coast of Donegal, only to be wrecked on
the Antrim coast with the loss of all but nine lives. In the folklore of
Glencolumbkille there is a story that Bonnie Prince Charlie was secreted in
Malinmore while ‘on the run’ after the defeat of his Highland Army at
Culloden and that he later embarked in a French frigate from Poll-an-Uisce,
near Glenlough.
The facts of history are otherwise (the Prince and his
retinue sailed from Loch-nan-Uamy in the West of Scotland on 20th September
1746 and laying course to the West of Ireland arrived at Roscoff nine days
later) but, nevertheless, the story must have some foundation and, in any
event, highlights the Irish support for the Jacobite Cause. This remains in
music and song, such as “Mo Ghile Mear” and, here in Glencolumbkille, in a
unique version of “The Bonnie Moor Hen”.
Across the expanse of Donegal Bay from Malinbeg, three frigates of the
French Navy, flying British colours and commanded by Admiral Savary, arrived
off Killala in August 1798. General Humbert and over one thousand troops
disembarked at Kilcummin, joined the Irish Revolutionaries, established the
Republic of Connaught and added a short but colourful page to Ireland’s
military history.
With the Act of Union in 1800 and the ongoing Napoleonic
threat, the Authorities built Watchtowers along the coast as part of the
North-West defences of Ireland. The towers at Malinbeg and Glen Head were
built in 1804 and are part of a chain of twelve such towers extending from
St. John’s Point, near Dunkineely, to Malin Head in the extreme North of
Donegal. These watchtowers were all in sight of each other and were manned
by a Naval reserve, known as the Sea Fencibles. If you stand at the tower in
Malinbeg, looking North-East you can see Glen Head Tower, while to the
South-East the Tower on Carrigan Head, near Teelin, is visible. Shipwrecks
frequently took place along this coast, leading, eventually to the
establishment of a lighthouse on Rathlin O’Beirne Island in 1864. Today, the
light is automatic, its red sector covering the Sound and adjacent dangers,
while the seaward light is white. The former ‘Dwellings’ of the Lighthouse
families are situated opposite the Post Office in Glencolumbkille.
The most
famous wreck on our coast, now enshrined in “Dhá Chead de Cheoltaibh Uladh”
(Enri O Muirgheasa), is that of the SYDNEY, a ship of 1,118 tons, built in
1860. She was on passage from Quebec to Greenock with a cargo of timber and
was driven off course in a North-Westerly storm. She was wrecked at Carnas
Binne, just North of Glen Head on the 16th October, 1870. Of her crew of
twenty-one, only two survived, making their way up the cliff face and down
into Glencolumbkille... “o nach iomadaigh arus agus roilig ghranna o sholus
Arann un a Chladaigh Mhoir”.

With the increase in road transport, coupled with the mining of Donegal Bay
during the First World War, maritime traffic decreased, although a fleet of
smacks was locally owned in nearby Teelin, together with a fine Trading
Ketch, the MILLBAY. Indeed, many of the smacks had been built locally at
Derrylahan. Today, inshore fishing is still a feature and the waters are
traversed by motor fishing vessels inward bound for Ireland’s premier
fishing port of Killybegs or outward bound for the fishing grounds. One can
still see merchant shipping in the short-sea trades and vessels of the Irish
Navy and Lighthouse Service plying the waters on the Bay. On Rossan Point is
the site of the old Semaphore Station used by the Coastguard in days gone
by. There also is the Look-Out post of the Coastwatching Service,
established during the Second World War…reminders of a history of war and
peace in these waters.
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