Camlough

Camlough
Irish: Camloch

The 'crooked lake' from which Camlough derives its name
 Camlough shown within Northern Ireland
Population 1,081 (2011)
DistrictNewry, Mourne and Down
CountyCounty Armagh
CountryNorthern Ireland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town NEWRY
Postcode district BT35
Dialling code 028, +44 28
EU Parliament Northern Ireland
UK ParliamentNewry & Armagh
NI AssemblyNewry & Armagh
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
Armagh

Coordinates: 54°10′50″N 6°24′39″W / 54.1805°N 6.4109°W / 54.1805; -6.4109

Camlough or Camloch (/kæmˈlɒx/ kam-LOKH; from Irish: Camloch, meaning "crooked lake")[1] is a small village in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.The village of Camlough (Crooked Lake), is so called from the shape of the lake in the parish, which is about 90 acres in extent. It is located five kilometres west of Newry. Land to the south east of Camlough rises steeply to Camlough Mountain within the Ring of Gullion.[2]

History

There is much evidence of pre-Christian settlers in and around the village: the erection of Dolmens on Camlough Mountain, The Hag's chair in Lislea and the Ballykeel Dolmen which all point towards Stone Age dwellers.

Camlough (Camloch) was an ecclesiastical district in the Barony of Upper Orior and was anciently part of the O'Hanlon's country. At the time of the Plantation of Ulster 1000 acres of 12 town lands were granted to Henry McShane O'Neill and the village was developed during this period.

Camlough village is in the townland of Cross, referring not to a stone monument but to the village crossroads in the north of the townland. In 1620 Camlough Mountain was known as Sliabh na Croise 'mountain of the cross'.

Camlough National School

Camlough National School was built in 1836 and was located on the Quarter Road. It was divided into a boys' school and a girls' school. The classroom was heated by a pot-bellied stove in the centre of the room and pupils would have been sent to collect sticks for the fire.

Mass Rock

A Mass Rock (Carraig an Aifrinn), dating from the Penal era, is located in Camlough. It is situated in Grant's rocks and is over 300 years old. In 2003, a special Mass was held at the Mass Rock in memory of the people who suffered during Penal times.

St Malachy's Church, Carrickcruppen is the oldest church building in the Parish of Lower Killeavy. It was built in 1816 and replaced an earlier church.

Kelly's Mill

Camlough river is a small meandering stream that makes its way from Camlough to the Newry Canal. It was once a vibrant fast flowing river, teeming with trout and the power source of approximately nine mills. The first of these mills was Kelly's flax and scutching mill in Camlough village. It was situated to the rear of Carragher's house. Established around the mid-18th century the mill comprised nine buildings, two of which were split level. It was powered by water from two ponds on either side of the Keggal Road.

1920s

The Camlough Volunteer company was part of the Newry Brigade, which was formed in the winter of 1918-19 to direct activities in South Down and South Armagh and continued to do this until the formation of the Forth Northern Division in March 1921. During the Irish War of Independence, plans were put in place in the autumn of 1920 for an attack on Camlough RIC barracks. In December 1920, Frank Aiken led an abortive Camlough Volunteers assault on the Royal Irish Constabulary station in Camlough. In reprisal the newly formed Ulster Special Constabulary burned Aiken's home and those of ten of his relatives in the area. In addition to Aiken’s home being burned, the military burned many other houses and premises in Camlough as well as the Sinn Féin hall in Newry.

The Troubles

Camlough is situated in South Armagh, which was the most militarised region in Western Europe during the Troubles. The region was a stronghold of support for the Provisional IRA, earning it the nickname "Bandit Country" (see Provisional IRA South Armagh Brigade).

On 19 May 1981, five British soldiers were killed in an Irish Republican Army (IRA) landmine attack on the Chancellors Road near Camlough. The soldiers had been travelling in a Saracen armoured personnel carrier when the bomb exploded. This attack was during the 1981 Irish hunger strike in Maze (HM Prison), and near to the home of one of the hunger strikers, Raymond McCreesh.

World Record

A Guinness World Record for the longest open water relay swim was broken by a team of intrepid swimmers at Camlough Lake in South Armagh on Saturday 19 September 2009.[3] The group beat the world record for a 'continuous long distance relay swim' after embarking on the world beating attempt over a week before.

Two hundred swimmers from across Ireland took part in the challenge. The previous record was 480 km; Camlough set the record at 680 km.

Places of interest

Events

  • Lord & Lady of the Lake 2.4km
  • Night Swim
  • Coffee Dock Swim
  • Try a Tri
  • 1k swim
  • Kids & adults duathalon (swim run)

Sports

Open Water / Marathon Swimming Since breaking the Open Water Relay Guinness World Record the lake has been a prominent training ground for Triathletes and Open Water Swimmers. Local Swimmer and CLWF Chairman Padraig Mallon then went on to complete the English and North Channel in the same year (only 3rd person to ever do so). His sister Colleen Mallon went on to break the Irish record for crossing the North Channel in 2014 and Keith Garry completed the English Channel in 2014. The area has also produced 2 successful relay teams crossing the North Channel and world class ice swimmers.

Camlough Rovers F.C. is the local football team, playing in the Mid-Ulster Football League.

Camloch is famous for its links with the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA). The village hosts two Gaelic football clubs. St Patrick's Carrickcruppen GFC has won four Senior county championships; Shane O'Neill's GAC, a continuation of the first Camloch club (William O'Brien's, founded in 1888), has won two Senior and three Junior titles.

Craobh Rua Camloch hurling club was established in 1991 in the Camlough and Bessbrook areas of South Armagh. As hurling had not been played in the area in some 40 years, the club received some help from Armagh Hurling Board chairman, Jimmy Carlisle, who helped set up coaching courses for the children and their mentors. Over its first ten years the club has successfully fielded teams at under 12, under 14, under 16 and since 2010 at under 8, minor and senior levels. They play their home games at Dunster Park (An Dún Rua) on High Street, Derrymore.

In 2010 the Seniors reached the Junior Championship Final and subsequently made it to the semi-final of the Ulster championship. The Under 14s won the 2010 Championship and the Feile, and represented County Armagh in the All Ireland Feile in Ennis, where they reached the semi-final. There are currently three Craobh Rua players representing Armagh at senior inter-county level, Fiachra Bradley, Micheal Garvey and Ryan Lewis.

Education

2001 Census

Camlough is classified as a Small Village by the NI Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) (i.e. with population between 500 and 1,000 people). On Census day (April 29, 2001) there were 910 people living in Camlough. Of these:

Notable residents

References

  1. Placenames Database of Ireland
  2. See Census 2011 - Headcount and Household Estimates for Settlements published by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, available at http://www.nisra.gov.uk/census/2011/results/settlements.html
  3. "Longest distance swimming in relay (open water)". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2015-06-19.
  4. "Archaeological Sites of Counties Armagh and Down" (PDF). Northern Ireland Archaeology Forum. Retrieved 2010-11-17. External link in |publisher= (help)
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