- Knockmoyle
Knockmoyle (Irish: "An Cnoc Maol" ) is a small
hamlet situated in a picturesque valley approximately 8 kilometres north-west ofOmagh in Co.Tyrone . In the 2001 census the Knockmoyle area had a population of 329 with a total number of households of 141. 130 of these dwellings are detached houses or bungalows. Facilities in the hamlet include apost office , church (est. 1800) andpub . The nearby River Strule is well known for itstrout fishing . Other attractions nearby include theGortin Glens Forest Park and theUlster American Folk Park . TheUlster Way walking route passes through Knockmoyle.Origin of name
The name Knockmoyle is an anglicised version of Cnoc Maol taken from the
Irish language which translates as Bald Hill.Trivia
Omagh United Football Club, formed in the summer of 2007 from an amalgamation of three Omagh
soccer clubs, currently plays its home matches at the Athletic Park in Knockmoyle. The club competes in theFermanagh and Western Amateur Football League .Knockmoyle Shamrocks was one of the founding
Gaelic football clubs ofTyrone . In September 1919 the club competed in the inaugural West Tyrone league along with five other clubs namelyFintona Pearses , Omagh Colemans, Carnlea Emmetts, Tattysallagh and Aughafad. Knockmoyle no longer has its own football club and has now become subsumed by the nearbyKillycloger St Marys club.A
boxing club operated in Knockmoyle for a number of years during the 1970s.A very successful
table tennis club was based in Knockmoyle from the mid 1970's until the mid 1980's. The club won several county titles and some of its players also won individual county championship titles.The resident population of the hamlet include relatives of the
Hollywood actress,Meryl Streep .Knockmoyle had its own
primary school until the mid 1960's which was founded under the will of John McEvoy who endowed it with £16 per annum "for the gratuitous education of the poor children in Mountjoy Forest, and vested in its management in the Rector for ever."References
Northern Ireland Census 2001. http://www.nicensus2001.gov.ukUlster Way. http://www.walkingworld.com/home/index.asp?id=38&nid=241
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