Muinaghan

Road at Muinaghan townland, Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland, heading north-west to Bawnboy.

Muinaghan (from Irish: Muineachán meaning 'A Shrubbery' - Local pronunciation is 'Meenaghan') is a townland in the civil parish of Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland. It lies in the Roman Catholic parish of Templeport and barony of Tullyhaw.

Geography

Muinaghan is bounded on the north by Corrasmongan and Killycrin townlands, on the west by Kilsob townland, on the south by Kildoagh townland and on the east by Port, Templeport and Kilsallagh townlands. Its chief geographical features are the Bawnboy River, spring wells, dug wells and a gravel pit.

Muinaghan is traversed by the regional N87 road (Ireland), minor roads and rural lanes.

The townland covers 233 statute acres.[1]

History

Until the Cromwellian Act for the Settlement of Ireland 1652, Muinaghan formed part of the modern townland of Corrasmongan, so its history is the same until then.

The 1665 Down Survey map depicts it as Drunagh.[2]

William Petty's 1685 map depicts it as Druna.

An 1809 map of ecclesiastical lands in Templeport depicts it as Monaghon.

The 1662 Hearth Money Rolls show no Hearth Tax payers in Muinaghan.

By grant dated 9 September 1669 King Charles II of England gave Arthur Annesley, 1st Earl of Anglesey, inter alia, the lands of Drimagh or Drunagh with an area of 61 acres and 17 perches at an annual rent of £0-16s-5 1/2d.

The 1790 Cavan Carvaghs list spells the name as Munaghine.[3]

The Tithe Applotment Books for 1827 list ten tithepayers in the townland.[4]

In 1841 the population of the townland was 78, being 37 males and 41 females. There were fourteen houses in the townland, all were inhabited.[5]

In 1851 the population of the townland was 84, being 40 males and 44 females. There were fifteen houses in the townland, all inhabited.[6]

Griffith's Valuation of 1857 lists twenty eight landholders in the townland.[7]

In 1861 the population of the townland was 67, being 33 males and 34 females. There were twelve houses in the townland and all were inhabited.[8]

In 1871 the population of the townland was 73, being 36 males and 37 females. There were twelve houses in the townland and all were inhabited. (page 296 of census)[9]

In 1881 the population of the townland was 77, being 39 males and 38 females. There were twelve houses in the townland, all were inhabited.[10]

In 1891 the population of the townland was 55, being 28 males and 27 females. There were nine houses in the townland, all were inhabited.[11]

In the 1901 census of Ireland, there are twelve families listed in the townland, [12] and in the 1911 census of Ireland, there are thirteen families listed in the townland.[13]

Fr. Philip McGovern

Springhill House in Muinaghan was the residence of Father Philip McGovern, parish priest of Templeport parish from 1826 to 1855. John O'Donovan (scholar) writing in the Ordnance Survey Letters for 16 May 1836 states- We proceeded southwards through the Parish of Templeport with a view of seeing Father Philip Magauran, a lineal descendant of the last chief of the tribe of Eochy (Tullyhaw) but he was not at home.[14] In 1842 Father Theobald Mathew (temperance reformer) addressed a large rally of 27,000 people from Fermanagh, Cavan and Leitrim, at Fr. McGovern's house at Springhill. Fr. McGovern was born in Brackley townland and baptised on 13 February 1772. He was in the first year of students to attend the newly opened St Patrick's College, Maynooth, the Irish national seminary. He was ordained a priest in 1798 and matriculated from Maynooth in 1800. He was appointed curate of Cavan town in 1802 and of Crosserlough parish in 1805. In 1811 he was appointed parish priest of Kinawley parish and then from 1826 until his death he was parish priest of Templeport parish. He died on 10 May 1855 aged 83, not 94 as given in the following obituary from the Anglo-Celt newspaper of 17 May 1855- On Thursday, the 10th instant, at his residence Springhill, near Bawnboy, the Very Rev. Philip M'GAURAN, P.P. of Templeport, and Dean of the diocese of Kilmore. The deceased reverend gentleman was in the 94th year of his age, and had been at the time of his death fully 51 years a labourer in the Lord's vineyard. In life his zeal for the glory of Him until whom he ministered was unremitting, nor in the house of death did he forego, for whatever little means he had accumulated in the years of his long and frugal life were distributed amongst the three chapels of the parish to which he was attached, out of a love for the "beauty of God's holies and the place where His glory dwelleth." No board was more hospitable than that of the Rev. Mr. M'Gauran, and yet no life was more temperate than his own, for, from the time that Father Matthew was in this country, fifteen years ago, he was a rigid teeetotaller(sic). And now that he has passed away forever, we may say! that he left few like himself behind; kind, charitable, ardent, social, and enthusiastic. Where shall we find his equal? His memorial plaque in Kildoagh R.C. church is viewable online at . Fr. McGovern was the great-grandson of the last McGovern chief, Colonel Bryan Magauran, who fought for King James II of England at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. He was also a first cousin once removed of Major Edward Magauran, the author of the Memoirs of Major Edward M’Gauran[15] [16] (London 1786) and also a relative of Canon Anthony Magauran (b. 8 May 1711, died February 1788) of Meerbeek church in the Belgian province of Flemish Brabant, part of the municipality of Kortenberg. Fr. McGovern's will dated 25 October 1853 is held in the Diocesan Archives of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Kilmore (ref C/39-47) but does not name any McGovern relatives . His executors were Mr Hugh Maguire of Kilsub and Mr. Pat Reilly of Clintycarnahan.

Antiquities

The only structures of historical interest in the townland are

  1. Springhill House
  2. Stepping stones over the stream

References

  1. "IreAtlas". Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  2. Trinity College Dublin: The Down Survey of Ireland.
  3. Muinaghan
  4. Census of Ireland 1911
  5. Letters Containing Information Relative to the Antiquities of the Counties of Ireland: Cavan and Leitrim

Coordinates: 54°04′31″N 7°48′37″W / 54.07514°N 7.810271°W / 54.07514; -7.810271

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