Calmore

Calmore
Irish transcription(s)
  Derivation: An Coll Mór
  Meaning: "The great/large hazel"
Calmore

Calmore shown within Northern Ireland

Coordinates: 54°48′14″N 6°42′47″W / 54.804°N 6.713°W / 54.804; -6.713Coordinates: 54°48′14″N 6°42′47″W / 54.804°N 6.713°W / 54.804; -6.713
Country Northern Ireland
County County Londonderry
Barony Loughinsholin
Civil parish Kilcronaghan
Plantation grant Drapers Company and Crown freeholds
First recorded 1609
Settlements Tobermore
Government
  Council Magherafelt District Council
  Ward Tobermore
Area[1]
  Total 112.90 ha (278.98 acres)
Irish grid ref H8295

Calmore (locally [ˌkalˈmoːr] and [ˌkɔlˈmoːr], from Irish: An Coll Mór, meaning "the great/large hazel"[2]) is a townland lying within the civil parish of Kilcronaghan, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. It lies in the north-west of the parish, and is bounded by the townlands of; Granny, Moneyshanere, Moyesset, and Tobermore. It was apportioned to the Drapers company as well as Crown freeholds.[3]

The townland is currently part of Tobermore electoral ward of Magherafelt District Council, however in 1926 it was part of Tobermore district electoral division as part of the Maghera division of Magherafelt Rural District.[4] It was also part of the historic barony of Loughinsholin.[3]

History

The townland of Calmore is named after a large ancient hazel tree that was said to have been used in pagan ceremonies.[5]

Calmore crannog

The townland of Calmore appears to have formerly been a place of some importance, attested by a crannog that once lay in an ancient lake in the townland.[2][5] This crannog is stated as having been of a tolerable large size and constructed of an oak frame, composed of large logs and planks bound together by wooden pins. This frame was enclosed by long poles, standing upright and fastened by mortices. In April 1835, at the crannog, a flat bottomed boat of oak was discovered, containing several oak boards that served as seats. This boat appeared to have had no nail or iron work, being completely hallowed out from the trunk of a tree. In the 1780s a smaller boat of similar construction had also been found, but had been scuttled and sunk several times. It is stated that these boats may have been either pleasure or fishing boats belonging to Calmore Castle.[5]

The crannog was dismantled in the early 19th century.[2]

Calmore castle

Calmore Castle was an ancient castle that once stood in the townland of Calmore. It has been formerly known as O'Hagan's Castle and Rowley's Castle.[2]

The O'Hagans of Ballinascreen when being questioned by John O'Donovan in 1821 as part of his letters pertaining to the antiquities of County Londonderry, claimed that Sir William O'Hagan built Calmore Castle. Local traditions however picked up by the Ordnance Survey Memoirs of 1836-37 state that it was his father, Shane More O'Hagan, who built it. Shane More O'Hagan is noted as being the proprietor of the Drapers Proportion in this area together with other tracts of land, including ten townlands in Ballynascreen and Lough Insholin [sic], the heart of a large territory of the same name.[5]

The Ordnance Survey Memoirs note that in neighbouring Moneyshanere, a battle was said to have been fought between the O'Hagans who are stated as ruling Tobermore and the O'Neills of Tyrone, who are said to have come rampaging down from Ballynascreen.[5] During its control by the O'Hagans, Calmore Castle was considered "once a place of very considerable strength, which commanded the mountain passes, and the fords of the Moyola".[6]

After Sir William O'Hagan, Calmore Castle was inhabited by Owen Roe O'Hagan, who after which it is said to have been burned down.[5] By 1619, a plantation house was built for William Rowley, which incorporated parts of Calmore Castle. Rowley was the brother of John Rowley, former chief agent of The Honourable The Irish Society, and later for the Drapers Company. Shortly after the 1641 rebellion, it fell back into Irish hands.[2] In 1689, it was burnt by a party of Irish,[5] who were part of the Irish army retreating from the Siege of Derry.[7]

A tradition is recorded claiming that two years after it was burnt down, the very person who led the party and was the first to throw a sheaf of burning straw into the rooms, came begging to the windows of the partly repaired building. When he was recognised he was immediately "stalled" by Rowley himself. The last inhabitant of the estate was Henry Rowley in 1814, but was still listed as "Rowley's Castle" in Civil Survey maps from 1850.[8] The Calmore Castle Plantation House no longer exists. The remains of the castle were carried off by a local tenant, John McKee, for building work.[2]

Townland statistics

The town of Tobermore lies partially in this townland, and those of Moneyshanere, Moyesset, and Tobermore.

Population
Year Pop.
1841 215 [9]
1851 185 [9]
1861 190 [9]
1871 169 [9]
1881 169 [9]
1911 342 a [4]
1926 98 [4]
a - along with townlands of Moneyshanere and Tobermore, population counted as part of total for Tobermore town[4]

Size (acres, roods, poles)
Year a, r, p
1851 283, 2, 10 [10]
1881 284, 1, 26[9]
1926 283, 0, 2 [4]

Earlier recorded forms[2][8]
Year Form
1609 Calemore (E.C.)
1613 Call Moore
1613 Culemoire (Charter)
1622 Coolmor
1645c san Chall M-r
1654 Kallmore
1659c Calmoore & Cloghfin
1663 Culmore
1767 Calmore
1834c Caul-more
(E.C.) - Escheated Counties Map 1609
(Charter) - Charter of Londonderry 1613

See also

References

  1. Northern Ireland Environment Agency. "NIEA Map Viewer". Retrieved 27 January 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Toner, Gregory: Place-Names of Northern Ireland, page 115-116. Queen's University of Belfast, 1996, ISBN 0-85389-613-5
  3. 1 2 Notes on the Place Names of the Parishes and Townlands of the County of Londonderry, 1925, Alfred Moore Munn, Clerk of the Crown and Peace of the City and County of Londonderry
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 HistPop; County and County Borough of Londonderry, 1926, page 27
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Ordnance Survey Memoirs for the Parishes of Desertmartin and Kilcronaghan, Ballinascreen Historical Society. Published 1986
  6. Statistical Reports of Six Derry Parishes 1821. Ballinascreen Historical Society, 1983.
  7. Statistical Reports of Six Derry Parishes 1821, John MacCloskey
  8. 1 2 Place Names NI - Calmore
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 HistPop; Area, population and number of houses, Vol. III, Ireland, 1881, page 698
  10. HistPop; County of Londonderry, 1851, page 241
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