Ballinalee Explained

Ballinalee
Native Name:Irish: Béal Átha na Lao
Native Name Lang:ga
Settlement Type:Village
Pushpin Map:Ireland
Pushpin Label Position:right
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Ireland
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Ireland
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Leinster
Subdivision Type3:County
Subdivision Name3:County Longford
Unit Pref:Metric
Population As Of:2016
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population:347
Population Density Km2:auto
Coordinates:53.7667°N -45°W

Ballinalee,[2] sometimes known as Saint Johnstown, is a village in north County Longford, Ireland. It is situated on the River Camlin, and falls within the civil parish of Clonbroney. As of the 2016 census, the village had a population of 347 people.[1]

Name

The village name in Irish, Béal Átha na Lao or Béal Átha na Laogh, (anglicised as Ballinalee) may be translated as "mouth of the ford of the calves".[3] The village is also sometimes known as Saint Johnstown,[3] a name associated with the local Church of Ireland church of St John.

History

To the south of Ballinalee is Currygrane Lough, which spans the townlands of Drummeel and Currygrane, and contains several possible crannog sites.[4] Another lake, Gurteen Lake or Gorteen Lough, is also situated near the village.[3] [5]

Within the surrounding parish is the ruins of Old Clonbroney; The convent built here was reputedly the first such convent in Ireland.[3] It is traditionally associated with St Patrick and Guasacht (Bishop of Granard) and was founded AD.

Henry Hughes Wilson was born in the area in 1864, and would become the British Chief of the Imperial General Staff before his assassination by Irish Republicans. He was born in Currygrane near the village.

The St Johnstown borough constituency in the Irish House of Commons was nominally representative of the town.[6] In 1833, the Commissioners appointed by the UK Parliament to inquire into municipal corporations in Ireland reported that the corporation of the borough was "virtually extinct".[7] The 1846 Parliamentary Gazetteer records:

In 1798, the town was the scene of numerous summary executions of United Irish prisoners of war after the Battle of Ballinamuck in a field now called "Bully's Acre".[3] [8]

A poem by Antoine Ó Raifteiri (1779–1835), titled "The Lass From Bally-na-Lee", references the town.[9]

During the Irish War of Independence (1919–1921), the town was the scene of the Battle of Ballinalee, where IRA leader Sean Mac Eoin (sometimes known as the Blacksmith of Ballinalee) was the leader of a well-equipped flying column known as the North Longford Flying Column. They defeated 100 members of the Black and Tans and the Auxiliary Division in Ballinalee on 4 November 1920.[10] It was the only successful defence of a town by the IRA against Crown forces during the entire conflict.

Between 30 and 31 January 1953, a riot took place at the post office.[11] The position of postmistress was re-appointed due to unscrupulous business activities. Sean Mac Eoin TD Fine Gael supported the position of the former post mistress. A riot ensued also in support, causing damage and assault to the family and home of the newly appointed post mistress.[12] [13]

Amenities

The local Church of Ireland church is dedicated to St. John. This church was built to designs by the Cork-born architect John Hargrave and was completed in 1825.[14]

There are two Roman Catholic churches in the parish; the Church of the Holy Trinity in the village and the Church of St James in Clonbroney. Ballinalee was the site of the first convent in Ireland at Old Clonbroney. Its remains are still to be seen.

The parochial hall on the Granard road, was opened in 1939 and is dedicated to the memory of Thomas Ashe, the Irish patriot. The local national school is adjacent to the hall and is named after Saint Samhthann.

Rose Cottage, the building from which Mac Eoin coordinated IRA forces during the Battle of Ballinalee, was opened to the public as an exhibition centre in 2023.[15]

Transport

Donnelly's Pioneer Bus Service, a local bus company based in Granard, operate a route from Granard to Longford via Ballinalee. There are three journeys each way daily (no Sunday service) [16]

Sport

The village's Gaelic Athletic Association team, Sean Connollys GAA Club, primarily plays Gaelic football. The club is named after Sean Connolly, the former IRA member who was born in 1890 near the club's grounds and died in the Selton Hill ambush in 1921.

The club's grounds, located on France Road, also has an 18-hole pitch-and-putt course (known as "The Acres"), a basketball and tennis court, concrete walkway, a gymnasium and a meeting room. The underage section of the club goes under the name of the parish, Clonbroney. The club won the Senior Football Championship for the only time in 1919 as Clonbroney Camlin Rovers (later renamed Seán Connollys).[17]

Community Games and soccer are also participated in at parish level.

Notable people

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sapmap Area - Settlements - Ballinalee . Central Statistics Office . Census 2016 . April 2016 . 31 January 2020 .
  2. Web site: Ballinalee or Saintjohnstown. Placenames Database of Ireland. 1 August 2013.
  3. Web site: Ballinalee . longford.ie . Longford County Council . 12 November 2023 .
  4. Book: Record of Monuments and Places - County Longford . National Monuments and Historic Properties Service . 1996 . LF009-032 [..] LF009-033 [..] LF009-034 [..] Currygrane [..] Crannog Possible .
  5. Web site: Archives and Local Studies - Placenames - Clonbroney/Gorteen . longfordlibrary.ie . 12 November 2023 .
  6. Web site: Constituencies: St Johnstown (Co. Longford). History of the Irish Parliament. Ulster Historical Foundation. 1 August 2013.
  7. Book: Commissioners on Municipal Corporations in Ireland . First Report: Appendix . https://books.google.com/books?id=ZUcxAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1287 . Report on the Borough of St. Johnstowne (Longford) . 1287–93 . 31 July 2013 . Command papers . 1835 . XXVIII (8) . .
  8. News: Ballinamuck Visitor Centre. 2013-04-08. Longford Tourism. 2017-08-30. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20180828134311/http://www.longfordtourism.ie/heritage/visitor-centres/ballinamuck-visitor-centre/. dead. 28 August 2018.
  9. Web site: Antoin Ó Raifteirí: Máire Ní Eidhin (The Lass from Bally-na-Lee) . 20 April 2009 . Love poems & quotes: German, French, Italian, Russian etc. . 14 June 2020.
  10. Web site: The Burning of Granard by the Tans and Lancers and legendary defence of Ballinalee by the IRA . Longford Leader . longfordleader.ie . Seán . Ó Súilleabháin . 2 November 2020 . 14 November 2022 .
  11. "Baton charge at Ballinalee Post Office". "Gardai, Civilians Injured in Melee" (The Irish Press).
  12. Erskine Childers Minister of Posts and Telegraphs Fianna Fail v Sean Mac Eoin TD Fine Gael. Dail questions and answers Feb 1953.
  13. Web site: Oireachtas Debates . MacEoin, General Seán - Thursday, 5 February 1953 - Dáil Éireann Debate - Vol. 136 Nbr. 2 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170118061741/http://oireachtasdebates.oireachtas.ie/debates%20authoring/debateswebpack.nsf/zoomin?readform&chamber=dail&memberid=666&pid=GenSeanMacEoin&year=1953&month=02&day=05 . 18 January 2017 . 1953 .
  14. Web site: St. John's Church of Ireland Church, Ballinalee, Longford . National Inventory of Architectural Heritage . buildingsofireland.ie . 1 March 2021 .
  15. Web site: Historic MacEoin cottage in Longford to open to public . rte.ie . RTÉ News . 12 November 2023 . 12 November 2023 .
  16. http://www.journeyplanner.transportforireland.ie/nta/TTB/EFA03__00004495_TP.pdf{{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
  17. Web site: Club SFC . Longford Gaelic Stats.
  18. Web site: 'Neighbour from hell' is jailed for harassment of Ballinalee family. longfordleader.ie . Liam . Cosgrove . 2019 .
  19. Book: O'Farrell, Padraic . The Blacksmith of Ballinalee . 1993 . 0951078321 . Uisneach Press .
  20. Web site: Wilson, Sir Henry Hughes . Dictionary of Irish Biography . Royal Irish Academy . Keith . Jeffery . 2009 . 12 November 2023 . 10.3318/dib.009074.v1 .