Craigarogan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Craigarogan is a small village in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, south east of Roughfort, and about 6 km west of Glengormley. It has developed at the junction of the Bernice Road and the Clarke Lodge Road. In the 2001 Census it had a population of 69 people. It lies within the Newtownabbey Borough Council area.
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[edit] Places of interest
- Craigarogan chamber tomb or passage grave (in Irish: Carn Greine, ie Cairn of the Sun). Locally it is pronounced as Carngraney and as a result sometimes called Granny’s Grave (which is also a corruption of Grania's Grave). (OS map ref: J270842).
[edit] History
In the Irish Rebellion of 1798, Henry Joy McCracken raised the standard of rebellion on 6 June 1798 at Craigarogan rath, near Roughfort. Many Antrim men clearly were cautious because comparatively few United Irishmen assembled at Craigarogan. Singing the Marseillaise, they marched towards Antrim, only to be defeated in the Battle of Antrim the next day.
[edit] References
- NI Neighbourhood Information System
- Draft Belfast Metropolitan Area Plan 2015
- Irish megaliths - Craigarogan
- Irish megaliths
- Henry Joy McCracken