Tales from the Glens

IT’S STORY TIME

Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

Sidney J Lyle

The house is now gone, lying in hardfill somewhere on the north coast of Ireland after being demolished in 2020 to make way for the new £35million shared education facility that is to be built in its former grounds. But for many of us here in Ballycastle it will be our memories. My own memory of it is the red roof tiles and a lot of glass that was included in the building. It is of course Derganagh House. Another house in Ballycastle that had many stories to tell. The grounds of the house bordered much of the town of

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

William Henry Belford

Almost a forgotten family now in Ballycastle, the Belford’s were prominent characters in the civic life of the town. Their home and adjoining property still stands along the Quay Road of Ballycastle. [kmg1]  The most prominent family member in Ballycastle was William Henry Belford, with the family hailing from Co Cavan and a background in the Royal Irish Constabulary. The Belford family had roots in Ballyhaise, Co Cavan. Ballyhaise was a plantation that had been handed out through the Ulster Plantations to John Taylor of Cambridge.  It would even be what could be described as an estate village, where the

Read More »
General
Kevin McGowan

EMIGRATION OF JOHN BUTLER FROM CULFEIGHTRIN TO THE GOLD FIELDS OF NEW ZEALAND 

by Frances McMichael and Shona Young BEGINNINGS  Countless people left Culfeightrin in the last few centuries. This is just one story of many. John Butler was born around 1843 in the townland of Cross (on the iconic headland of Fair Head), in the shadow of the fort, Dun Mór. He was the son of John Butler and Sally McDonnell and the grandson of John Butler and Nancy McCormick. He was born at the time of the Famine (or Great Hunger) and life was very tough. Food and money were scarce and there was much pressure to leave. Many from Cross,

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

Stephen Clarke

Stephen Clarke was born in Torglass to Daniel Clarke and Anne Mc Neill. He was one of at least four children, Hugh, Daniel, Mary, and Stephen. In my opinion there are more than these four as there are 16 years between Hugh and Stephen. Hugh would join the RIC which would be a common practice for young catholic men. By 1913, 86% of recruits were from the Catholic faith. In many large Catholic families of the time, it would not be unusual for some of the sons to join the police force or indeed the priesthood. The fact that Hugh

Read More »

DAN MCALEESE – FROM LOUGHGUILE TO NEBRASKA

By Frances McMichael INTRODUCTION Dan was born in 1847, the second of ten children of Patrick McAleese and his wife Mary McAuley from Magherahoney. Nine of the ten children (and also their parents) would emigrate to America, most of them in the 1880s. Dan was the first to leave in 1865 and by 1877 he was living in Sidney, Nebraska, which had the dubious nicknames of “Sinful Sidney”, “Wicked Burgh” and “Toughest Town on the Tracks”. The Gold Rush (1876-1881) in the Blackhills of Dakota was at its height. Dan was to play a prominent role in the life of

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

Sad Fatality in the Griffin mine

On Saturday 17th July 1917, Ballycastle was in war time mode. The war was in its third year at this stage and a sense of apathy was setting in around the country. That July would see the return to the town of Lance Corporal Samuel Hutcheson of the 12th Irish Rifles. His father, also Samuel, would live on Station Row now where the Ballycastle Cooperative now stands and would be renowned in the town as an Orangemen and an active member of the Ballycastle UVF. Three years previous he was subject to an attack on the Chapel Brae by members

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

The Falcon 1867

As the Taymouth Castle was sinking to her final resting place beneath the cliffs of Torr, it would soon become apparent that this wouldn’t be the last of the bad news hitting the broadsheets in the days after the storm. Across the water two young Campbell brothers that were living on the Kildalton estate on Islay were looking out to sea and surveying the damage done by the storm the night before. On the horizon they would see a boat being violently thrown about by the breakers and the strong winds. The lads rushed to the shoreline and boarded a

Read More »
General
Kevin McGowan

The Taymouth Castle and Torr

Cut and run, Wring it and hide, There will be plenty more, That comes in on the tide. The words of a local sea shanty that would have echoed around streets of Ballycastle in the 19th Century. The poem would make reference to the large bales of material that would occasionally make their way through the Rathlin Sound. One such time would have been January 1867, only on this occasion more than bales would make their way into the bays of the coastline. On the weekend 6th January 1867, a strong storm would blow over the north coast of Ireland,

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

Frances Sarah O’Connor

Cut and run, Wring it and hide, There will be plenty more, That comes in on the tide These were the memories in 1941 of a 95-year-old woman referring to the many ships that washed up around the shoreline of Ballycastle during her youth. She remembered a very different Ballycastle from the one that she found herself living in. In 1941 Ballycastle was at the height of war in the fight against Nazi Germany. It was in Ballycastle that a reporter from the Ballymena Weekly Telegraph was sent to record the memories of small lady who was an important figure

Read More »

The Big Snow of ‘47

While storms across this island come and go, there are some exceptional storms that are imprinted in the human conscious for years, decades even with stories handed down through generations from family to family. Oíche na Gaoithe Móire or ‘night of the big wind’ would go down in legend across Ireland. On 6th January 1839 this strong wind hit the Island becoming part of Irish folklore. It was so written into our narrative that when the ‘Old Age Pension’ was introduced in Ireland many people had no birth certificate and one of the questions that was asked was “does the

Read More »
Ballycastle
Kevin McGowan

The Crest in the Car Park

Just over twelve years ago on the 25th August 2012, a major discovery made headlines across the world. Richard the Third, the last English King killed in battle was found buried underneath a Leicester carpark. How could it be that one of England’s most famous kings would lie buried underneath the tarmac of a council carpark? Historical research and scientific testing would later confirm that the skeletal remains found were those of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester. These remains would then eventually be laid to rest in Leicester Cathedral.  The find and subsequent reburial was covered recently in a brilliant

Read More »
General
Kevin McGowan

Michael J Murphy 1913 – 1996

In the Antrim Glens After the last two-part Ballycastle Biography on that fantastic stalwart and collector of folklore Seamus O’deleurgai.  I have decided to continue on with that particular story and genre. Storytelling and folklore, Piseog(superstition) is an integral part of the Irish identity. Our ancient people use to sit around the fire and tell stories, they painted pictures on cave wall and carved stones. They told Stories!  This way of life continued into recent times, and even yet we still love the storyteller down the pub or out on guided walks or bus tours. It adds to the fabric

Read More »