Mucklagh

Mucklagh

Mucklagh is a townland in the Parish of Tomregan, Barony of Tullyhaw, County Cavan, Ireland. The townland name is an anglicisation of the Gaelic placename “Muc Lach” which means ‘A place where pigs feed’. The oldest surviving mention of the name is in the 1609 Ulster Plantation map where it is spelled ‘Mucklogh’. In the 17th century it was split into two townlands, Mucklagh and Skeagh (which is Gaelic for “The Whitethorn Bush”) but Skeagh was later subsumed into Mucklagh.

It is bounded on the north by Aughrim townland, on the east by Gortawee & Rakeelan townlands, on the south by Doon townland and on the west by Gortoorlan & Snugborough townlands. Its chief geographical features are some mountain streams, forestry plantations and Slieve Rushen mountain, on whose south-eastern slope it lies, reaching an altitude of 980 feet above sea-level.

The townland is traversed by Mucklagh Lane.

Mucklagh covers an area of 322 statute acres. It formed part of the Manor of Calva which was granted to Walter Talbot in 1610 as part of the Plantation of Ulster. The Hearth Money Rolls of 1664 list the occupiers of Mucklagh as Donell McDonoghie, Phelemy McDonoghie, Knoghor McDonoghie and Donell Oge McDonoghie. Griffith's Valuation of 1857 lists the landlords of the townland as the Annesley Estate and Latimer & the tenants as Cosgrove, McTeague, Curry, Drum, Latimer, Hewitt, Lawrence, McCaffrey, McKenna, Kane, Fitzpatrick, McMullen and Seaton. The 1841 Census of Ireland gives a population of 95 in Mucklagh, of which 56 were males and 39 were females, with 13 houses. The 1851 Census of Ireland gives a population of 71, a decrease of 24 on the 1841 figure, due to the intervening Irish Famine of 1845–47, of which 37 were males and 34 were females, with 15 houses, of which one was uninhabited. The decrease was largely in the male population who had probably left the townland to look for work. In the 1911 census of Ireland, there are thirteen families listed in the townland.[1]

The historic sites in the townland are an old limestone quarry and Mountview House.

References

  1. ^ [1]. Census of Ireland 1911.

External links


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