Doon Hill Explained

Doon Hill [1] is a volcanic plug in the townland of Bunowen More, in the barony of Ballynahinch, near Ballyconneely in County Galway, Ireland.[2] The hill, which is 67 m high, is a prominent landscape feature on the Errismore peninsula.[2] Fishermen use Doon Hill as a landmark to guide them into Bunowen Pier at Aillebrack. The Irish name for the hill, dún, means "fortress", possibly indicating an earlier fort on top of the hill.

At the top of Doon Hill are the ruins of a Napoleonic era signal tower (dating to) and a concrete watch post dating from the period of The Emergency (WWII).[3]

Nearby Bunowen Castle was built in the mid 1700s.[4] Built on lands originally associated the O'Flaherty family,[5] following the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, the lands at Bunowen were "transplanted" to Art Geoghegan, a landowner from County Westmeath.[6] [7] The Geoghegan family rebuilt and extended the original O'Flaherty castle, and remained in the castle until the mid-19th century. The castle was purchased by the Blake family in 1852, for use as a summer home.[5] The castle, now in ruin, is owned by the McDonagh family. Near the castle are the ruins of a medieval church, a cemetery and a garden.

References

53.4149°N -10.1152°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cnoc an Dúin / Doon Hill . Placenames Database of Ireland . logainm.ie . 19 February 2024 .
  2. Web site: Galway - County Geological Site Report - Doon Hill . gsi.geodata.gov.ie . 19 February 2024 .
  3. Web site: Bunowen Hill Signal Station, County Galway . Irish Signal Stations . 19 February 2024 .
  4. Web site: Bunowen Castle, Bunowen More, Galway . National Inventory of Architectural Heritage . buildingsofireland.ie . 19 February 2024 .
  5. Web site: Bunowen Castle . landedestates.ie . 19 February 2024 .
  6. The O'Flaherty Country . E. W. . Lynam . An Irish Quarterly Review . 3 . 10 . June 1914 . 13-40 . 30092464 . In 1656, the Castle of Bunowen and 900 acres were granted to Art Geoghegan, a transplanter from Westmeath, and his family held it for 200 years .
  7. Web site: The Ferocious O'Flahertys . theirishaesthete.com . 2016 .