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Video about Cocooning

Click on the link to view the video.

https://youtu.be/QZD7SHmVhA4

 It is vitally important that those who are coocooning  continue to heed the advice given in the video. Remember help is at hand in Kilteevan if you need it.

Be Strong. Better days are ahead.

Be Strong . Better Days  

Posted 22 April 2020

 

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Gleanings from Clooneigh by Shane Gilleran

 

    Clooneigh Road

Kilteevan’s Garden of Eden are its raised bog-lands. The townlands of Cloonlaur, Cloonmore, Doogara and Annaghmore are its jewel in the crown. Clooneigh is arguably its natural and ancient woodland. The name Clooneigh meaning ‘lawn of the night’ or Cluain (eigh) ‘meadow of the horse’ is a townland that is described as being located ‘at the bottom of Kilteevan’ along the shores of Lough Ree on the River Shannon. This is a townland defined and shaped by Lough Ree, the river Clooneigh and River Shannon. Along this Shannon corridor is a natural bog or oasis of ancient woodland that over time has given away to soft raised bog-land. On-top of these bogs are ‘artificial inland islands’ of fertile pockets of land that could only be accessed by toghers or local causeways through the bogs.

Clooneigh today is uninhabited and has been devoid of settlement for a while now. There is some visible and structural evidence of a cluster townland inhabited in the 19th and 20th centuries. While in the civic and administrative parish of Kilteevan, Clooneigh was part of the ecclesiastical parish of Derrane. According to the 1937 Folklore Commission the townland of Clooneigh was exchanged for the townlands of Culleen and Cartron sometime in the mid 1850’s. Hazel Ryan also mentions this in Kilteevan ‘A Look at a School and a Parish’: ‘the Story goes a number of families in Clooneigh had boats and used to take the monks attached to the monastery in Derrane, on the Shannon, anytime they wanted to and because of these houses, they were kept in the parish of Derrane.

As Ireland’s population increased in the 19th century, so did the desire to acquire land in Kilteevan. We know that the population of Kilteevan pre-famine was 2818, and that 45% of families were living in Kilteevan, in 4th class houses. From 1841 that there was a push and desire to farm marginalised land, or clochans; particularly on lands around bogs and lakes like Kilteevan. John Longfield in his ‘Bog Commission’ 1815, report for Co. Roscommon noted ‘the population of the county is exceedingly great, so much so that every little island or peninsula in the bogs contains more than an ordinary proportion of inhabitants’. By all accounts during the famine years the locality around Clooneigh was overrun with hungry people roaming, foraging, and scouring the bogs and roads in search of food.

The Tithe Applotment Books from Derrane parish in 1826, list P. McCutcheon as the landlord and owner of 85 acres of land in Clooneigh parish. This would have been land of agricultural value that he would have been paying a tithe on. It was the main source of income for the local clergy. Little is known about the McCutcheon family in Clooneigh. From the Longford landed gentry there was a ‘McCutcheon’ family residence located at Torboy House near Kenagh, Co Longford.

Post famine, Griffiths Valuation of Ireland 1857, details Andrew McCutcheon as the chief landholder with 531 acres and 29 perches, holding the townland of Clooneigh. His estate included a herd’s house, offices and land. He had land sub-letted to a number of tenants. These included Honoria Hanly, Bryan Kilcline, and Michael Martin. Between these three families they farmed 6 acres and 10 perches. The other named tenant was William Flynn, who had land rented from T.A.P. Mapother. The map from Griffiths Valuation 1857, outlines and intrinsically details the entrance to Clooneigh from Grove and crossing over the Clooneigh bridge from Derrinterk. It also outlines a tree lined togher or avenue to the McCutcheon residence, an avenue consisting of Ash and Oak trees. A number of these great Oaks are still standing today.

You would have had to be tough and resilient to live in this part of Kilteevan. This is an area that floods regularly as a result of the Clooneigh River overflowing its banks and flooding the surrounding landscape. Families had to be self-sufficient, people were reliant on what they could grow and source locally. Cattle and sheep were fed on these hay meadow callows during the summer. Potatoes like the Connaught Lumper grew well on the peat soil. Wheat, oats, barley flax, bere, turnips and cabbage were grown as well as fruit trees e.g. crab apples. Some food in the Autumn in the wild was sourced including wild fruits, berries, honey, and nuts. Fishing opportunities a plenty with the Clooneigh and Shannon rivers bursting full of trout, eel and pike. During the winter months hunting, shooting pheasant and snaring were popular sports and supplemented food supplies.

The 1901 census reveals a population of 21 people living in Clooneigh townland. The main families of the area consisted of Hanly, Martin, and Kilcline. The McCutcheon’s had departed by this stage and T.A.P. Mapother was now the landlord and proprietor of the farm-land in the townland. Annie Hanly was living in the former herds house of the McCutcheon’s with a family of seven. The other two families Martin and Kilcline had come into ownership of their dwellings and adjoining property. Similar enough to the 1901 census, the 1911 census lists 18 people now living in Clooneigh. Again the four families inhabiting the townland. James Hanly and his wife Kate Hanly are living in the herds-house and T.A.P. Mapother the name of the land-holder. You have a working home farm with nine out house and buildings listed with stables, cow-house, calf-house, piggery, barn, fowl-house and cart-house all listed and in use on the Clooneigh property.

We now know from military archives and statement witnesses from pension files, that this remote and secluded location was used extensively by the local IRA for hiding, drilling and manoeuvres during the War of Independence 1919-1921. Following the break-up of the local estates and local land division, turbary rights and bogs in Clooneigh were opened up to turf-cutting. The cutting and saving of turf is what many people might remember of summers gone-by in Clooneigh. Sr. Flora Fannon, in her ‘School Reflections’ Kilteevan, A Look at a School and a Parish, vividly recounts: ‘May mornings were exciting for us as the men from the town came out in their asses and carts laden with wheel barrows, and sleans to cut turf in Clooneigh bog’. The great community spirit or meitheal was alive and well in bogs like Clooneigh during the mid-1950’s. Alas as the 20th century progressed the remaining families moved on or simply died out.

Clooneigh today represents a gateway to a rich rare and vibrant landscape. A wilderness defined by its peat-lands rich in bird and plant species, a unique grassland eco-system with its myriad of wildlife species. A panoply and aroma of smells, colours, and sounds that truly comes alive in spring and summer. It’s a place that soothes the soul in an ocean of serenity and tranquillity.

Posted 14 April 2020

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Resilient Roscommon- Virtual Easter Parade 2020

 

Roscommon Chamber of Commerce and Roscommon People invited everyone to participate in a Virtual Easter Parade for 2020. Photos from former parades were welcome. The link below will take you to Kilteevan Tidy Towns contribution to a great idea.

https://www.facebook.com/kilteevantidytowns/videos/162350611686078/

Being without the parade this year really makes us appreciate what the organisers of our Easter Parade bring to Roscommon. Thank you all. 

We look forward to a bigger and even better event in 2021.

 #resilientroscommon

Posted Easter Sunday 12 April 2020

 

 

 

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Easter 2020

Easter Greetings to all our families, friends and especially to our diaspora.  We know many of you. from the four corners of the world, check in here regularly. You are all in our thoughts.

Easter is a time of growth, new beginnings and new life. May you all find strength, tenacity and hope this Easter.

Tonight, Easter Saturday at 9pm, everyone around the country is being urged to take part in a national initiative to honour all the sick, those who have lost their lives, frontline staff and healthcare workers by lighting candle in a window.

 Shine Your Light  in the window to pay tribute to them and to those keeping us going through these dark times.

Posted 11 April 2020

 

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Covid- 19 Roscommon Community Response Helpline

Members of Kilteevan Tidy Towns, Kilteevan Community Develpment Group and St. Josephs GAA Club have answered the  community call to support this community initiative so please dont hesitate to get in touch.  People of Kilteevan please note help and support is just a phone call away.

Remember Roscommon Community Response Helpline is open for elderly and vulnerable people who need our help 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.

Do you need help picking up essential supplies like groceries, medicine or maybe you just need to talk?

Please call Freephone 1800-200-727
Email [email protected]

Stay safe and please share this information.

Posted 9 April 2020

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What is Cocooning

More information about Cocooning; who should Cocoon, how to cocoon, what to do if living with others while cocooning and more is available on HSE website andGov.ie

Posted  31  2020 March

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Roscommon Co Council Essential Services during Covid 19 Pandemic

PLease note the poster.

Remember if you want or need anything, contact a member of Kilteevan Towns, Kilteevan Community Development Group or St. Joseph's GAA Club.

Our Kilteevan volunteers are receiving support from An Garda Siochana,   the HSE, Roscommon LEADER Partnership Company, Roscommon Co Council including Roscommon Fire and Civil Defence Service, An Post and the wider Roscommon community.  These groups and organisations are suppporting us to help membrs of our community. So dont hesitate to get in touch. Help is just a phone call away. 

Posted 31March 2020

 

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EARTH HOUR 2020 Saturday,28 March, 8.30pm-9.30pm

Earth Hour is a global moment of solidarity for climate action.

Kilteevan Tidy Towns invites you to respect Earth Hour 2020 ,8.30pm - 9.30pm this evening, by turning off all lights and reflecting on what we can do to help Mother Nature and Planet Earth.

Lights will go out in Áras an Uachtaráin. As they have done in previous years, President Michael D. Higgins and Sabina have asked that all non-essential lights in Áras an Uachtaráin will be switched off from 8.30 pm to 9.30 pm, to mark “Earth Hour.”

More than 350 of the world’s most iconic landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower, the Empire State Building and the Sydney Opera House – and millions of homes around the world - prepare to switch off their lights.

Speaking about the initiative, President Michael D. Higgins said:

“Sabina and I have asked that the lights at Áras an Uachtaráin be switched off for ‘Earth Hour’, to highlight the need for urgent action on climate change.

We are currently experiencing dark times, as the international community is battling to contain and defeat the COVID-19 virus. The global pandemic has brought hardship for many, and it has shone a light on the great extent to which our lives, and our vulnerabilities, are intertwined.

Like other global challenges that have left a scar on our humanity, the fight against the coronavirus requires international solidarity and coordinated action. Earth Hour is a symbolic moment reminding us of mankind’s ability to affect real change, and inviting all people of our planet to consider the impact we are having on Mother Nature.

Let us use the darkness of Earth Hour 2020 to reflect on the ways we can bring an end to our current crisis, and put in place the types of policies and practices, at every level, that can bring about a better use of the wondrous beauty of our shared, but vulnerable, planet.”

Posted March 28th 2020

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Mother Nature Working her Magic in Kilteevan NS Garden

 

In the midst of all the chaos Mother Nature continues to work her magic in Kilteevan National School garden.

Today, every inch of this small garden is bursting with life and colour. What a joy to behold!

By growing fruit and vegetables  these young people have an appreciation and understanding of food which will help them to live healthier and more sustainable lives.

By maintaining this high level of biodiversity all around us, the school is helping to keep the environment healthy and fit for all of us.

This great work is having an influence on the community. You are an inspiration to us all.

 

 

Posted 25 March 2020

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Contact Us

KILTEEVAN COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT GROUP LIMITED
Kilteevan, Roscommon, Co. Roscommon
[email protected]

 

KILTEEVAN TIDY TOWNS
[email protected] 

http://ec.europa.eu/agriculture/index_en.htm
http://www.environ.ie/en/Community/RuralDevelopment/EURuralDevelopment/

This project received grant aid from Roscommon LEADER Partnership Rural Development Programme which is financed by the Irish Government under the Rural Development Programme Ireland 2007-2013 and by the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development: Europe investing in Rural Areas.sponsors