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Survey of County DonegalCounty Donegal from Samuel Lewis’ Topographical Dictionary surveyed 1830-31 Published by S. Lewis and Company 87 Aldersgate Street London 1834
The
County of DONEGAL a maritime county of the province of ULSTER, bounded on the
east and south-east by the counties of Londonderry, Tyrone, and Fermanagh, from
the first-named of which it is separated by Lough Foyle, on the south, by the
northern extremity of the county of Leitrim and by Donegal bay, and on the west
and north by the Atlantic ocean. It extends from 54° 28' to 55° 20' and from 6°
48' to 8° 40' comprising, according to the Ordnance survey, a surface area of
1,165,107 statute acres, of which 520,736 are cultivated land, and 644,371
unimproved mountain and bog. The population, in 1821, was 248,270 and in 1831,
291,104. The county afterwards formed the northern part of the district of Eircael or Eargal, which extended into the county of Fermanagh, and was known for several centuries as the country of the ancient and powerful sept of the ODonells/O'Donnells, descended, according to the several Irish historians, from Conall Golban, son of Naill of the Nine Hostages, King of Ireland, who granted to his son the region now forming the county of Donegal. Hence it acquired the name of Tyr-Conall, modernised into Tyrconnel or Tirconnel, "the land of Conall," which it retained till the reign of King James. I. The family was afterwards called Kinel Conall, or the descendants or tribe of Conall Fergus Ceanfadda, the son of the founder, had a numerous progeny, among whom were Sedna, ancestor of the O'Donells, and Felin, father of St. Cohunt. Cinfaeladh, fourth in descent from Ceanfadda, had three sons, one of whom was Muldoon, the more immediate ancestor of the O'Donells; and another, Fiamhan, from whom the O'Dohertys, lords of Innisoen (Inishowen or Enishowen), derive their descent. A second Cinfaeladh, eighth in descent from Fergus Ceanfadda, was father of Dalagh, from whom the O'Donells are sometimes styled by the Irish annalists Sioi na Dallagh, the sept of Daly, or the O'Dalys. Enoghaine, his eldest son, was father of Donell, from whom the ruling family took the surname it has borne ever since. His great grandson, Cathban, chief of the sept in the reign of Brian Boroimhe (Brian Boru), first assumed the name of O'Donnell as chief, which was adopted by all his subjects and followers. Besides the O'Dohertys, the septs of O'Boyle, Mac Sweeney, and several others were subordinate to the O'Donnells of Tyrconnel. The chiefaincy of Nial Garbh, who succeeded his father Turlogh an Fhiona in 1422, was the commencement of a sanguinary era of internal discord aggravated by external warfare. This chieftain, after having endured much opposition from his brother Neachtan, and maintained continual hostilities with the English, by whom he was at length taken prisoner, died in captivity.
This powerful toparch, at an early period of his government, marched into Tir-Owen {Tyrone}against Tirlogh Luineagh O'Neil, chief of the sept of the same name and a partizan of the English, whom O'Donnell, although he had recently entered into terms of amity with the Lord Justice of Ireland, expelled from his principality in 1593, forced him to resign the title of O'Neil in favour of Hugh, Earl of Tyrone, and afterwards compelled the whole province of Ulster to acknowledge his superiority and pay him tribute. He then
sent ambassadors to the King of Spain to aid him in the total expulsion of the
English, and having obtained a reinforcement of mercenaries from Scotland,
carried on a successful war far beyond the limits of his own territory. Having landed in Enishowen in the summer of 1600, they possessed themselves of the forts of Culmore, Dunnalong, and Derry. Each of these fortresses was immediately invested by O'Donnell, who, while his troops maintained the blockade, made two expeditions into Connaught and Munster. During his absence, his brother-in-law, Nial O'Donnel, and his brothers were prevailed upon to join the English, and to give them possession of Lifford, which they fortified. Here
also they were hemmed in by the Irish, as likewise at the monastery of Donegal,
which they had afterwards gained. The landing of the Spaniards in the south
caused a total suspension of arms in Ulster, and the subsequent defeat of the
invaders at Kinsale compelled O'Donnell to proceed to Spain in quest of further
aid, where he died in September, 1602, being the last chief of the sept
universally acknowledged as the O'Donnell. By the survey then taken, the whole county was found to contain 110,700 acres of cultivable, or, as it was styled, profitable land. Of these, the termon{Church} lands, containing 9160 acres, were assigned to the Bishoprick of Raphoe, to which they had previously belonged; 3680 acres were allotted for the bishop's mensal lands; 6600 acres for glebe to the incumbents/clergy of the 87 parishes into which the county was to be divided; 9824 acres of monastery lands to the college of Dublin (Trinity College); 300 acres in Culmore fort; 1000 acres to Ballyshannon, and 1024 acres, named the Inch, to Sir Ralph Bingley. The remainder, amounting to 79,074 acres, were to be divided among the settlers and adventurers or undertakers, as they were called, into 62 portions, 40 of 1000 acres, 13 of 1500, and 9 of 2000 each, with a certain portion of wood, bog, and mountain, to constitute a parish. Of these portions, 38 were to be granted to English and Scottish undertakers, 9 to servitors, and 15 to natives. The 2204
acres still undisposed of were to be given to corporate towns to be erected and
entitled to send burgesses to parliament, 800 to Derry, and 200 each to
Killybegs, Donegal, and Rath: Lifford had 500 acres previously assigned to it.
The residue of 604 acres was to be equally allotted to free schools at Derry
{later Foyle College}and Donegal{later Raphoe Royal}. All fisheries were
reserved to the Crown. The distributive portions thus assigned do not correspond
with the general total above stated, and the proposed provisions both as to
distribution and regulation were far from being rigidly observed in practice. Lifford, where the county gaol and court-house are situated, is the assize town; quarter sessions are held four times in the year at Donegal, twice at Letterkenny, and once at Lifford and Buncrana. There are bridewells at Letterkenny and Donegal, and session-houses at each of those places and at Buncrana. The local government is vested in a lieutenant, 19 deputy-lieutenants, and 66 other magistrates, with the usual county officers. The number of persons charged with criminal offences and committed, in 1835, was 472, and of civil bill commitments, 49. There are 29 constabulary police stations, having a force of one stipendiary magistrate, 7 chief and 30 subordinate constables and 116 men, with nine horses, the expense of whose maintenance is defrayed by equal Grand Jury presentments and by Government. The district lunatic asylum is in Londonderry and the county infirmary at Lifford. There are dispensaries at Lifford, Ballintra, Raphoe, Taughboyne, Killybegs, Moville, Clonmany, Killygarvan, Kilmacrenan, Kilcar, Letterkenny, Donegal, Muff, Culdaff, Stranorlar, Rutland, Donagh, Killygorden, Dunkaneely, Ramelton, Buncrana, Carygart, Ballyshannon, Dunfanaghy, and Mount-Charles, maintained by voluntary subscriptions and Grand Jury presentments in equal proportions. In the
military arrangement the county is in the northern district. There are infantry
barracks at Lifford and Ballyshannon, and artillery forts at Greencastle, Inch
Island, Rutland island, and at several places along the shores of Lough Swilly,
each of which, except Greencastle, is garrisoned by a single gunner. The most elevated mountains are Errigal, which, according to the Ordnance survey, rises 2463 feet above the level of the sea; Blue Stack, 2213 feet; Dooish West, 2143; Slieve Snaght, 2019; Silver Hill, 1967; Slieve League, 1964; and Aghla, 1958. There are also five others which have an elevation of more than 1500 feet, and twelve more exceeding 1000 feet in height. The most improved and populous district is that on the borders of the rivers Finn and Swilly, and the eastern confines near Lifford. In the western champaign district, between Ballintra and Ballyshannon, the surface is in many places moorish, heathy and rocky, particularly near the south-east, where at a distance of three of four miles from the sea it rises into a tract of mountains ten or twelve miles broad, which sweeps round by Pettigo, Lough Derg, and the confines of Fermanagh; from these a range extends westward by Killybegs to Tellen Head, whence a vast expanse stretches by Rutland, the Rosses, and the shores of the Atlantic, across Loughs Swilly and Foyle, into the counties of Londonderry and Antrim. From Barnsmore to Donegal and Ballintra, the country is composed of bleak hills, many of which, though high, are covered with a sweet and profitable vegetation, while several points in the ascent from Killybegs into the mountains of the north present fine views of the bay and harbour of that port. Even amidst the wilds of Boylagh and Bannagh are cultivated and well-peopled valleys, but the district of the Rosses presents mostly a desolate waste. On its western side is a region of scattered rocks and hills, some on the mainland, others insulated: the larger of these rocks are thinly covered with peat and moss; a few admit of some degree of cultivation, while almost all the innumerable smaller rocks are entirely bare. Collectively, this group is known by the name of the islands of the Rosses. Arranmore, the largest, containing about 600 acres, is about two miles from the mainland; on Innis Mac Durn is the little town of Rutland; the largest of the rest are Irvan, Inniskeera, Inisfree, Owey and Gruit. Northward of the Rosses lies the district of Cloghanealy, in Kilmacrenan, entirely composed of disjointed rocks and dark heath, except where, at a lesser elevation near the sea, a stunted sward appears. On the northern coast, about five miles from the shore, is the island of Tory. The peninsula of Rossuill, formed by the bays of Sheephaven and Mulroy, and that of Fannet by Mulroy and Lough Swilly, are of similar character, except that in the latter the mountains attain a greater altitude, are separated by larger and more fertile valleys, and command prospects of such extent and variety as to attract visitors from distant parts. Lough Swilly, an arm of the sea penetrating far into the land, and receiving at its southern extremity the river from which it derives its name, has on its western shores a tract of rich arable soil losing itself gradually in the mountains, while its eastern side presents a tract of similar character extending towards Derry, under the general denominations of Blanket-nook and Laggan. To the
north of the city of Londonderry lies the barony of Enishowen, a large peninsula
bounded on the east and west by Lough Foyle and Lough Swilly. It consists of a
central group of mountains with a border of cultivation verging to the water's
edge: in the mountains of Glentogher is an expanse of 4000 acres of peat and
heath. Besides the great inlets on the northern coast already noticed, the
shores and indented with numerous small recesses. The islands, except some of
those of the Rosses, are very small, the principal being Rockiburn island, off
Tellen Head; Inisbarnog, off Lochrusmore bay; Roanmish, off Iniskeel; Gold
island, Inismanan, Inis-Irhir, Inisbeg, Inisduh, and Inis-bofin, off Kilmacrenan
barony; and Seal island, Ennistrahull and the Garvilands, off Ennishowen. The
others are Loughs Finn and Mourne (the head waters of rivers of the same name),
Salt, Glen, Muck, Barra, Bee, Killeen, Broden, Veagh, Cartan, Dale, Kest, Fern,
Golagh, and Nuire, with several others round the base of Slieve Snaght mountain;
one near Dobeg, in Fannet; others in the Rosses, and others near Nairn, Ardara,
Glenona, Glenleaghan, Lettermacaward, Brown Hall, Ballyshannon and elsewhere. Near Leitrim county it is deep, coarse, and sometimes incumbered with rushes, but in the vicinity of Ballyshannon it assumes a richer character. The change arises from the subsoil, here limestone, the bed of which extends to the neighbourhood of Donegal, supporting a light, gravelly, brown soil; thence to the mountains of Boylagh and Bannagh the soil gradually deteriorates, having a brown clay and stoney substratum. From
Dunkanealy to Killybegs and to Tellen Head the soil of the cultivable glens is a
light gravelly till, resting on variously coloured earths and rocks; while that
of the mountain region, with the exception of a few green spots, consists of a
thin surface of peat on a substratum of coarse quartz gravel, under which are
found variously coloured clays, based for the most part upon granite. The soil
of the little dales in Fannet is a brown gravelly mould, or a kind of till based
on gravel, soft freestone or clay-slate of various colours: but both here and at
Horn head, to the west of Sheep Haven, the drifting sands, impelled by the gales
from the Atlantic, have covered much good land. The soil of the arable lands of
Ennishowen is mostly similar to that of those last described. Agriculture, as a system, however, is not much practised except among the resident gentry, by whom great improvements are annually made. They have formed and strenuously support farming societies, have awarded premiums, and recommended improved implements and a better rotation of crops. The effects of their exertions show themselves in a very striking manner in the baronies of Raphoe and Tyrhugh, in each of which there is a farming society, which has been attended with very beneficial effects; Wheat has been raised in both these baronies with the greatest success. Ballyshannon formerly imported flour to the amount of several thousand pounds annually; during the last two years, considerable quantities of wheat were exported. Turnips, vetches, mangel-wurzel and other green crops are common. In the two last-named baronies the fences, also, have been much improved: they are now generally formed of quickset hedges, while in most other parts, except the north of Ennishowen, they are ditches of dry stone walls. The iron plough is in general use among the gentry and larger farmers, but the old cumbrous wooden plough is still used in many parts. The angular barrow is becoming very general, and all other kinds of agricultural implements are gradually improving. A light one-horse cart, with iron-bound spoke wheels, has nearly superseded the old wooden wheel car, and the slide car is seldom seen out of the mountain districts, in which the implements are still rude in construction and few in number, consisting, on many farms, merely of the loy (a spade with a rest for the foot on one side only), the steveen (a pointed stake for setting potatoes), and the sickle. Good grasses of every species grow in the champaign tracts; but in the mountains they are coarse and bad. In Raphoe, irrigation is general. Besides the composts usually collected for manure, lime is in universal demand. In the maritime district from Ballyshannon to Killybegs, sea-weed and shelly sand are the chief manures; throughout the mountains, sea-corac alone, except on the grounds of a few gentlemen where lime is used. The character of the cattle has been much improved by the introduction of the English and Scotch breeds, particularly the Durham, Leicester, and Ayrshire. A cross between the Durham and old Irish produces an animal very superior in appearance, but not found to thrive. The favourite a present is a cross between the old Leicester and the Limerick, which, being again crossed by the North Devon, or Hereford, grows to a large size and fattens rapidly. The
breed of pigs has also been greatly improved; when fattened, they are by some
sent to market alive, by others slaughtered at home and the carcases carried to
Strabane or Londonderry for the provision merchants there. Fowl and eggs in
large quantities are transmitted to the sea-ports for exportation. On the eastern shore of Lough Swilly, and in some other parts of Ennishowen, is found a species of calcarous argillite, having the appearance of grey limestone, but containing too much silex to burn freely. Round Carndonagh, in the same barony, is a dark blue limestone of superior quality. Many species of valuable marble have been discovered. One of these, of a pure white, free from flaws or discolouration, and capable of being raised in blocks of any dimension at a trifling expense, has been found in the Rosses, but the lack of roads, though the quarries are at a short distance from the sea, prevents its exportation. Grey and black marble of very fine quality have also been found. Little advantage has hitherto been derived from any of the other mineral productions. Lead ore has been discovered in several places in the barony of Boylagh; in the river flowing from the mountain of Killybegs; on the surface near the western shore of Loughnabroden; at the foot of the Derryveagh mountains; in the Barra river; in Arran-more and other parts of the Rosses; and at Kildrum, in the barony of Kilmacrenan, where there is a considerable deposit of ore collected for a lead-work which was carried on a few years since, but discontinued as being unprofitable from the want of experienced miners. Copper ore and iron pyrites may be traced in Errigal and Muckish mountains, and detached masses are found in several of the mountain streams and near Ballyshannon. Both these ores are abundant; and in several other parts the numerous vitriolic springs indicate larger deposits. Iron ore abounds in several parts. As long as fuel could be procured from the forests of Donegal, Derryveagh, Slievedoon and Kilmacrenan, the mines were wrought and the ore smelted. The remains of bloomeries are often met with in the mountains and the foundations of forges near some of the rivers. Manganese is also abundant. Coal appears in a thin seam at Dromore, on the shore of Lough Swilly, and indications of it are frequent in Inishowen, but no attempts have yet been made to raise it. The same remark applies to soap-stone, here called "camstone," though found in abundance in all the mountains of Kilmacrenan and Bannagh: it is mostly of a bright sea-green colour. At Drumarda, on the shores of Lough Swilly, on Tory island, and in the Rosses, are extensive beds of potter's clay, which is used in a small degree in manufacturing coarse pottery. Pipe clay and other kinds of useful clays are found frequently, but little used. Silcious
sand of a very superior kind is abundant at Lough Salt, and in the Ards, whence
considerable quantities are exported for the manufacture of glass. Excellent
slates are raised near Letterkenny, Buncrana, and in some other places. The
white fishing for cod, ling, haddock, and glassen, and that of turbot and other
flat fish, all of which are in inexhaustible abundance, is little attended to
beyond the supply of the neighbourhood. The sun fish resorts hither and is
sometimes taken. Seals are caught in large numbers in Strabreagy by and near
Malin. There are several salmon fisheries: the principal is that on the Erne at
Ballyshannon; there are others in Loughs Foyle and Swilly and in some of the
smaller bays. Eel and trout abound in all the lakes and rivers. The Swilly rises in the mountains of Glendore, and passing by Letterkenny town forms a large estuary between Ramelton and Newtown-Conyngham, which at flood tide appears like a large arm of the sea, but at low water exhibits a dreary and muddy strand. Further on, and opposite to Rathmullen, is Inch island, beyond which the waters expand into a deep and spacious gulph, which was considered of such importance during the late war with France, as to be protected by numerous batteries and Martello towers. The
Erne, anciently called the Samaer, flows from Lough Erne, enters the county at
Belleek, and after a rapid course of four miles forms the harbour of
Ballyshannon, which, should a rail-road be formed between it and the Lough,
would acquire a large accession of trade, and by the union of Loughs Erne and
Neagh, so as to form a more speedy communication between the north and west of
Ireland, become an important harbour. The Burndale river rises in Lough Dale in
the mountains of Cark, and flowing eastward, joins the Foyle: it is navigable to
Ballindrait for vessels of 12 tons. The other rivers are the Esk, Inver,
Awen-Ea, Onea, Barra, Golanesk, Guidore, Clady, Hork, Awen-charry, Lenan,
Binnian, Awencranagh, Awenchillew, Sooley, and many smaller streams. Another,
consisting of a flag-stone raised 18 inches from the ground on other stones,
perfectly circular and regularly indented with holes half an inch deep and one
inch in diameter, is in the deer-park of Castleforward. The ruins of seven
religious houses still visible out of 41 are those of Astrath near Ballyshannon,
Bally Mac Swiney, Donegal, Kilmacrenan, Lough Derg, Tory island, and Rathmullen. In Drumkellin bog, in Inver parish, an ancient wooden house was found perfectly framed and fitted together, having a flat roof: its top was 16 feet below the present surface of the bog.
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