Headford, Co. Galway - 17 miles (23km) from Galway City
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  1. Headford Town/Castle
  2. Ross Errilly
  3. Killursa
  4. Carraigin Castle/Graveyard
  5. Clydagh House
  6. Anaghkeen
  7. Greenfields
  8. Ower
  9. Moyne Castle/Graveyard
  10. Kinlough
  11. Lisdonagh
  12. Laragan/Knockroon
  13. CastleHackett
  14. Knockma
  15. Kilcoona
  16. Corner Chapel
  17. Eva of the Nation

Headford Town/Castle

The lands of Headford were granted in 1238 by Richard De Burgo to an under lord called Walter De Riddlesford (Baron of Leinster) who commenced to build a castle here. Walter died two years later and his wife died shortly afterwards leaving two daughters. The Crown took custody of their possessions.

The girls were called Christiana and Emelina. Christiana had married Robert De Mariscis and Emelina married Hugh De Lacy (Earl of Ulster). Emelina inherited Corofin and Christiana inherited Headford Castle plus at least 15,000 acres. Christiana’s daughter went to England and in 1283 the lands of Headford were exchanged for the same amount of land in England.

1283 Adam Gaynnard was allowed the lands of Headford and the family were tenants for a number of years.

Gaynnards were succeeded by a McWalter and later De Burgo in 1350.

1641 In the late 16th or early 17th Century Edmund Skerritt owned Headford Castle and Estate but was expelled by Cromwell in 1641 and the Estate was transferred to Hatley St. George.

1674 Church of St. John the Baptist
Sir Oliver St. George built the protestant church. It was known as the white church and was opened in 1674 and was a place of worship for nearly 300 years.

The Rectory on the Shrule Road was built in the 19th Century.

1715 Lord St. George of Headford.
His forebears replaced the Catholic Edmund Skerritt. St. George built himself a Manor House in the Elizabethan style where he resided occasionally as he had been appointed Governor of Galway City and Vice Admiral of Connacht.

Stone dated 1702 beside the castle ruins

“No entrance to the manor except through an old ivied castle, which forms a sort of barbican or outwork.” (C. Ottways Tour of Connacht. 1839)

Lt. General Richard St. George of Carrick on Shannon owned the Castle later and left it to his natural daughter Mary St. George. Mary married Capt. James Mansergh of Macrony Castle, Kilworth, Co. Cork in 1749.

Their son Col. Richard Mansergh of Headford assumed the name St. George in order to inherit the Castle and lands. He married Anne Stepney of Durrow. His portrait, in which he is depicted in 1794 mourning over the tomb of his wife Ann, was painted by Hugh Douglas Hamilton and acquired by the National Gallery, Dublin. A portrait of his wife, Ann Stepney was painted by the famous artist George Romney and is in the Heckscher Museum in Huntington, Long Island, New York. Col. Richard Mansergh St. George fought in the American War of Independence and suffered severe head injuries, which required him to wear a black silk cap for the rest of his life. He suffered from dark brooding moods and also became increasingly obsessed and even paranoid about the spirit of insubordination and rebellion. In 1797 he went to Cork with an armed escort determined to nip rebellion in the bud issuing dire and improvident threats even against his own tenants, having burned down one house a supposed place of assembly. As an act of bravado he let it be known that he was staying without a guard over night with his agent Joseph Uniacke.

They were both attacked and killed in Carey’s Lodge Araglin. St. George was buried in Athlone.

The Col. and his wife had two sons;
· Mr. Richard James Mansergh St. George 1789-1857 Married Elizabeth Sophia Shaw in l812. No children.
· Col. Stepney St. George 1791-1847. Married Fanny L’Estrange in 1833 and they had seven children.

1840 The St. George’s were staunchly Protestant and did not look kindly on the building of Catholic Churches on the estate. Thatched Chapels were accepted for there was one at the corner opposite the Grand Gates. This was the original Corner Chapel but when the present one was built about 1840, it was away from the demesne entrance. Mr. St.George gave the site free, as well as a large donation towards the building.

Capt. Stepney St. George was Chairman of the Relief Committee during the famine and wrote several letters to the Relief Commission Office at Dublin Castle requesting boilers for soup making and other help. He had given up his office and stores to set up soup kitchens but the four boilers they had were not sufficient. Stepney died during the famine –a fever victim?

Census of population

1841 Pre famine population of Headford - 1,647
1851 Post famine population of Headford - 1,195
(a drop of 452 or 25%.)

The number of inhabited houses for this same period fell from 236 to 181.


1847 Regarding the St. Georges dealings with the tenants there are conflicting reports. Their response during the famine was quite good, setting up and heading, with generous subscriptions the local famine relief fund. We also have evidence that few of the St. George tenants at the time had to seek refuge at the local workhouse in Tuam.

1855 Against this we have the following from May l855 “Fifteen houses were levelled on the property of Mr. St. George on Thursday last and the greater number of these poor people had paid, and the remainder were willing to pay all arrears. Amongst the evicted, a poor child in fever was thrown upon the dunghill in bitter cold”. (Local people say the evictions were in Keernaun and were carried out by an Agent – Mr. Hunt).

1857 Richard James St. George (l838 – l891). Eldest son of Stepney inherited the castle and lands. Richard married Mary Agatha Henely. Who later became Mary A. Trudon.

1860 Fr. Conway who built the present church in Headford approached Mr. St. George about getting a site for a church and school in Headford.

1863 A lease of land dated the l3th May l863 for a term of 900 years was granted to Fr. P. Conway and Most Rev. John McHale for building a chapel and schoolhouse. The great walls that enclosed the Market Place were handed over for stones for the new church.

1870 Mr. Richard M. St. George was listed as being the owner of seven and a half thousand acres. Owning large tracts of land in Headford, Caherlistrane, Deerpark, Racepark, Gortnamona, Horsevalley, Caltra, Skeaghbeg, Balllycolgan, Crossursa, Donaghpatrick and Bohercoill.

“The extravagances of the owner of Headford Castle considerably crippled his resources and caused the compulsory surrender of many thousand of the estates most fertile acres”.

1874 The Estate was put up for sale through the Landed Estates Court.

1876 The property was for sale in 38 lots to facilitate buyers. The purchasers were other landlords, business people Assurance companies and some of the better off tenants. The Castle, town and some of the lots were not sold.

1891 Mary A St. George (Henely) became the registered owner of the Castle and lands.

1892 The Castle and some of the lands were purchased by Martin McDonnell a Merchant from Dunmore.

1895 Martin McDonnell purchased houses in the town and lands at Gortnamona for £5,000.

1906 Headford Castle burned down

1920 Killursa Co-operative Farming Society Ltd. purchased houses and some land from the vendor Frank McDonnell Barrister at law of Dublin, James McDonnell of Tuam Merchant and Stephen J McDonagh of St. Mary’s Road Dunmore Trustees. The Co-operative Society later sold the houses back to the tenants.

1921 The Land Commission was involved in the division of land from 1921.

Greenfields

Greenfields owes its fame to not only having a very pleasant location on the lakeshore, but also it is by far the most important fishing berth on the east shore of Lough Corrib. In early Summer, it is agog with activity as anglers gather from all over the world for the trout fishing, when the mayfly rises. Leading from Greenfields, stretching across the water is a long, narrow roadway. This road was built in the early 1960s, and links Inchaquin, one of the largest islands on the lake, to the mainland. Indeed, according to William R. Wilde, it encompasses an area of 229acres, and supported 14 families in 1909 (Galway Express, July 1909). It has associations with St. Brendan the Navigator, who it is said built a church there. However there is little trace of that building now.

Killursa

Killursa is about 1.5 miles west of Headford on the Greenfields road. It is a ruined church set in an extensive graveyard. The ruin measures 70feet by 24feet, and it has a gothic pointed doorway, and a large mullioned gothic window, which indicates that the present structure was erected after the Norman invasion, 1169. A wall was built across this church, probably cutting off a section for the officiating clergyman, who had his habitat there. Killursa means the church of St. Fursa whose statue one sees as one enters the graveyard. It was here St. Fursa had the famous visions of the unseen world which grave authors assert inspired Dante to write his “Comedia Divina”. Among those visions, Fursa narrates how the holy Bishops Meldan, and Beacon appeared to him, and described the enormous evils of pride, especially spiritual and intellectual pride, and they told him that abstinence, and self-denial were unavailing, unless the soul was cleansed from malice and iniquity! This same Fursa is remembered in Peronne, a small town east of Paris. Here he preached in the 7th century and we can see a fine statue of him in the Catholic Church in Peronne, and there is also an alleyway and a pharmacy called after him!

Kilbeg Pier


We continue the narrow winding road which for some distance resembles more a grassy path than a roadway,and we come to Kilbeg on the lakeshore. This is the narrowest point of the lake and directly across from Kilbeg on the west side is Knockferry .The pier which extends a short distance out in the lake is a reminder of former days . Little used now except by anglers and the occasional pleasure boat,it was used extensively in the past as a stopping point when ferries travelled regularly on the lake from Cong to Galway. The steamer 'St. Patrick 'operated between Galway and Cong up to 1914 and was obviously in demand as the timetable indicates."leaves Wood Quay ( alway) on Mondays Wednesdays and Fridays for Cong at 12 noon calling at Kilbeg and returning from Cong on each alternate dayduring the Winter months. In Summer from 15th. March to 15th. October ,she leaves Wood Quay at 3.00p.m. returning from Cong the following day at 8p.m. One hopes the endeavours of many people on both sides of the lake to build a bridge across the water at this point will come to fruition.

Carraigin Castle


Carraigin Castle is our next stop. It has been a landmark on the Eastern
shore of the Corrib for almost 7 centuries. For long a neglected ruin ,the Castle has been restored to it's former glory, using the same materials and techniques as the original 13th. century builders Modern comforts have been incorporated without detracting from the charm and simple grandeur of this ancient dwelling, a rare beautiful example of the medieval " Hall House. Despite its massive castellated wall, Caraigin was never a mere fortress but rather an elegant home where a land owning family could have security in turbulent times. For 10 generations , the castle was occupied by descendants of its founder, Adam Gaynard 111,the grandson of a Norman adventurer who took part in the colonisation of this locality in the early period of the Norman invasion .Sometime in the middle of the 17th. Century a period of intense turbulence in Irish History, another military adventurer ,George
Staunton acquired 'the castle and the lands of Cargin which his descendants continued to own until 1946. By then the castle had long been abandoned and the roof was stripped in the early 18th. Century. Mush of the stonework was demolished to make lime for the construction of the nearby Georgian Mansion. However due to the eeforts of the present owner the castle has been restored to its original majesty and glory in 1970- for that we are thankful.

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