Crossmolina
Crossmolina Crois Uí Mhaoilíona | |
---|---|
Town | |
Crossmolina Location in Ireland | |
Coordinates: 54°06′00″N 9°19′00″W / 54.1°N 9.3167°WCoordinates: 54°06′00″N 9°19′00″W / 54.1°N 9.3167°W | |
Country | Ireland |
Province | Connacht |
County | County Mayo |
Elevation | 24 m (79 ft) |
Population (2011) | |
• Urban | 1,069 |
Time zone | WET (UTC+0) |
• Summer (DST) | IST (WEST) (UTC-1) |
Irish Grid Reference | WGS84 |
Website |
www |
Crossmolina or Crosmolina[1][2] (Irish: Crois Uí Mhaoilíona, meaning "Cross of Mullany") is a town in the Barony of Tyrawley in County Mayo, Ireland, as well as the name of the parish in which Crossmolina is situated. The town sits on the River Deel near the northern shore of Lough Conn. Crossmolina is about 9 km west of Ballina, on the N59 Road as it travels west through Erris to Bellacorick and Bangor Erris Glencastle, Belmullet and the Mullet peninsula.
Foundation
The abbey of Crossmolina was founded by a member of the landowning De Barry family. Little remains of this foundation today. In 1306, three Normans were indicted for robbery from the abbot. During the 15th century, Crossmolina passed into Bourke Family. In 1526 O'Donnell of Tir Conaill (Co. Donegal) invaded Tirawley and demolished Crossmolina castle.
The abbey was dissolved in the 1537. Around 1630 the abbey and its lands came into the possession of Sir Richard Blake. The dissolution deprived the people of a centre of hospitality, culture and education.
Chronology
- 6000 B.C.: First settlers arrived in Ireland
- 600 B.C.: Arrival of the Celts, who brought a new language and the use of iron
- 400 B.C.: Flowering of the Celtic social structure and the division of land by family. The Hy-Fiachra became controllers of the plain of Catree and Glen Nephin. The names of the two chiefs were O'Maolina and O'Gavechan.
- 441 A.D.: Saint Patrick arrived in Mayo. Errew Friary founded in the 7th century according to tradition by St. Tiernan. The monastery was originally called Mainishir Taobh Thiar do Shruth.
- 1152: Synod of Kells: Killala diocese sanctioned.
- 1306: Three Normans, John, son of William of Ratheogan, Walter de Usser, and Walter de Cogan, were indicted for robbing the Abbot of Crossmolina.
- 1631: In the 1630s Crossmolina Abbey and its lands came into the possession of Sir Richard Blake.
- 1693: Test Acts enacted followed by further severe penal laws
- 1795: Ulster Migration to Mayo. 4,000 Catholics flee to Mayo after the "Battle of the Diamond". Crossmolina area.
- 1798: The United Ireland Rising
- 1800: Act of Union passed
- 1806: A new Catholic Church costing 200 built (now part of the Parochial Hall)
- 1810: 7 years of potato crop failure
- 1829: Catholic Emancipation throughout the U.K.
- 1831: Crossmolina Relief Committee formed in March 1831
- 1839: Night of the Big Wind
- 1845: 45/49 The Great Famine begins
- 1860: St. Tieman's Church built
- 1869: Anglican (Protestant) Church disestablished in Ireland
- 1878: The Mayo Telegraph purchased by James Daly of Boughadoon[3] and its name changed to the Connaught Telegraph[4]
- 1879: Mayo League founded on October 21. Claims of apparition at Knock on August 21.
- 1880-84: The Crossmolina Conspiracy
- 1884: G.A.A. founded
- 1887: Crossmolina branch of the G.A.A. founded, known as Crossmolina Dr. Crokes
- 1891: Congested Districts Board established
- 1892: Crossmolina Church repaired at a cost of 1,100. New altar 200. First mass by Bishop Conmy on Christmas Day
- 1893: The bridge at Crossmolina was erected at a cost of £3,500, and opened for traffic on November 2
- 1895: Boys School built. Sappers (Royal English) came to Crossmolina in September.
- 1898: Local Government Act. Mayo County Council established.
- 1912: Home Rule Crisis 1912-1914.
- 1913: Crossmolina Town Hall opened on Sunday April 11
- 1914: The Great War begins
- 1916: Easter Rising in Dublin
- 1918: The Armistice
- 1957: Crossmolina Vocational School St. Tiernan's College opened
- 1992: Crossmolina A.F.C. soccer club is formed
- 2001: Crossmolina Deel Rovers become the first Mayo GAA club to win the All-Ireland Senior Club Football Championship on Easter Monday.
- 2006: Crossmolina Development Plan Launched
- 2006: Crossmolina Festival re-established after 20 years
People
- Marc Roberts, singer, represented Ireland in the 1997 Eurovision Song Contest
- Ciaran McDonald, Gaelic footballer
See also
References
Sources
- Lynott, J. (1980). "A Guide to History and Antiquities West of Killala Bay"
External links
- Crossmolina homepage
- Crossmolina Community Festival
- deelrovers.com - Crossmolina GAA official website
- Crossmolina AFC homepage