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From Ireland Home Page >> County Mayo Page >> Mayo Lewis Topographical Dictionary Index >>Cong Civil parish, Co.'s Mayo and Galway, Ireland
CONG, a post-town and parish, partly in the barony of ROSS, county of GALWAY, but chiefly in that of KILMAINE, county of MAYO, and province of CONNAUGHT, 19 miles (S.) from Castlebar, and 121 (W.) from Dublin city; containing 8378 inhabitants. This
place, though now only an inconsiderable village, was formerly a town
of some importance, and the ancient residence of the Kings of Connaught.
A monastery, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, was founded here by St.
Fechen, who died in 664; though by some writers its foundation is ascribed
to Donald, son of AEd, nephew of Amirach, King of Ireland, who is said
to have made St. Fechen its first abbot. Little further is recorded
of its history till 1134, when a great part of the town was burnt and
the abbey plundered by the people of Munster. Roderic O'Connor,
the last native king of all Ireland, spent the last 15 years of his
life in seclusion within this monastery, where he died on the 29th of
November, 1198, in the 82nd year of his age; he was interred at Clonmacnoise.
In 1201 the town and monastery were plundered by William de Burgo,
who repeated his ravages in 1204; and in 1310, the town was plundered
by Hugh Breifneach. The family of de Burgo afterwards
became munificent benefactors to the abbey, to which they gave ample
endowments in land, and it continued to flourish till the dissolution.
The
town is situated on an island formed by the several openings of a subterraneous
river that flows from Lough Mask into Lough Corrib; the
principal of these openings rises in a great body from a depth of 73
feet, forming a powerful eddy which turns two large mills, and the approaches
are over three bridges. It consists of two streets of small houses,
of which the greater number are thatched, and has a sub-post-office
to Ballinrobe. There are two large
mills, the property of Mr. John Thompson, erected about 40 years
since, and each grinding on an average 300 tons of wheat annually. Fairs
are held at Funshinough in May and September; and petty sessions
are held every Saturday alternately for Mayo and Galway
counties. The
parish comprises 17,622 acres, as applotted under the tithe act, of
which about 240 are woodland, 480 mountain and bog, and, with the exception
of about one-fifth, which is waste, the remainder is good arable and
pasture land, chiefly under tillage, and producing excellent crops;
that which is in pasture, lying upon a substratum of limestone, feeds
a large number of sheep and goats. Limestone is everywhere found, rising
in many places above the surface; and there are quarries of the finest
description of building stone, which is sent to most parts of the adjoining
counties, for which Lough Corrib, navigable for 20 miles to Galway
city for boats of 10 tons' burden, affords a facility for conveyance.
The gentlemen's seats are Strand Hill, the residence of T. Elwood, Esq.; Garracloone, of R. Blake, Esq.; Ballymagibbon, of J. Fynn, Esq.; Blake Hill, of Mrs. Blake; Ashford, of Lord Oranmore; Royal Rock, of the Rev. M. Waldron; Houndswood, of Martin D'Arcy, Esq.; and the glebe-house, of the Rev. E. L. Moore. The
living is a rectory and vicarage, in the diocese
of Tuam, and in the patronage of the Archbishop; the rectory
is partly impropriate in Sir R. A. O'Donel, Bart., as representative
of the abbot of Cong, and partly appropriate to the prebend of
Killabegs in the cathedral of Tuam. The tithes amount to £489.
4s. 7½d., of which £18.9s.2¾d., is payable to the
prebendary, and the remainder to the incumbent; the impropriate tithes
are not under composition. The glebe-house was built by aid of a gift
of £400 and a loan of £380 from the same Board, in 1817;
the glebe comprises 25 1/2 acres. The church, a neat edifice with a
small square tower, and in good repair, was erected by aid of a loan
of £640 from the late Board of First Fruits, in 1811. The Roman Catholic parish is co-extensive with that of the Established Church; the chapel is a handsome edifice, in the later English style, with a square tower surmounted with a cross. The
parochial school is under the Tuam Diocesan Society, aided by an annual
donation from the incumbent; a school at Ballymagibbon is supported
by John Fynn, Esq.; one at Funshinough is aided by Martin
D'Arcy, Esq.; and there is a national school at Carrokeel.
About 430 children are instructed in these schools; and there are also
four pay schools, in which are about 150 children; and a dispensary.
There
is an ancient cross in the centre of the town, and the ruins of several
churches are still to be seen here. Spars of various colours are found,
and the neighbourhood abounds with natural curiosities. Lough Mask,
which is on much higher ground than Lough Corrib, discharges
its superfluous waters into the latter by subterraneous channels, which,
from the openings in the limestone, may in several places be seen flowing
at a great depth below the surface. The most remarkable of these openings
is the Pigeon Hole, which is of great depth; a descent to it
is formed by 68 steps, and at the bottom the water rushes with great
violence and noise till it is again lost in the dark recesses of the
cavern, which extends to a considerable distance; in the middle of the
stream is a small eel weir. There are several other caverns in the limestone
range, of which Kelly's Cave and the Lady's Buttery have
their roofs fantastically encrusted. In Lough Corrib is the island
of Innisduras, containing 29 acres and about 20 inhabitants. Near
the glebe-house are the ruins of four druidical circles.
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From Ireland Home Page >> County Mayo Page >> Mayo Lewis Topographical Dictionary Index >>Cong Civil Parish, Co. Mayo & Galway, Ireland http://www.from-ireland.net©Dr. Jane Lyons 2001-2009
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