Crookhaven

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Crookhaven
Irish: An Cruachán
County Cork
Crookhaven - geograph.org.uk - 3450.jpg
Location
Grid reference: V805255
Location: 51°27’47"N, 9°43’13"W
Data
Population: 240
Local Government
Website: http://www.crookhaven.ie

Crookhaven is a village in County Cork, on the most south-western tip of the island of Ireland. A winter population of about forty swells in the summer to about four hundred with the occupants of the many holiday homes arriving.

History

The village name is attributed to an association with the Crooke family, and initially with Sir Thomas Crooke, 1st Baronet[1][2] who also founded Baltimore, County Cork about 1610. The Crooke family were granted large estates in West Cork in the early 17th century, but their association with the area ended around 1665, on the death of Sir Thomas's son and heir Sir Samuel.[3]

In the late 1500s and early 1600s the village was used as a base for piracy[4] - where not only the local justices (including the vice-admiral of Munster) but the broader population were involved.[5] These activities were unaffected by official discouragement under King James VI and I, but the Dutch attack on Crookhaven in 1614 did significant damage[6] and piracy in the region declined thereafter.

The village was an important port of call for shipping between Europe and the United States, and many inhabitants were in the business of supplying the ships as they sheltered in Crookhaven after or before a long voyage.

Crookhaven was also used by Guglielmo Marconi as a location for experiments in wireless communication and ship-to-shore communication. Some of these tests and experiments took place between the Fastnet lighthouse, Crookhaven, and Cape Clear Island - since they were so closely connected. The area was useful for these purposes as a fixed telegraph line also connected Crookhaven and Cape Clear Island - located eight miles away. Marconi worked here from 1901 until 1914, when he sold the rights. The station was ultimately destroyed in 1922.[7]

Crookhaven on screen

In 1959 Crookhaven was the subject of a film by British film maker James Clarke in his film Irish Village. At that time the film records the population of the town and local farms as being 69.

About the village

Quayside at Crookhaven

The village has three pubs. O'Sullivans faces the harbour and its walls are adorned with historical pictures of the village and notes about the area.

Nottages (or The Welcome Inn) is only open during the summer. The pub was once owned by a Mr Nottage, who came to the village to work at the Marconi signal station.

The last pub is The Crookhaven Inn. The pub building today was once the bottle store for the larger pub and hotel located across the road. When the original building was converted to flats, the bottle store was converted.

The village also has a shop and post office located next to O'Sullivans.

Places of interest

The road to the village comes from Goleen and curves around the harbour. As one drives from Goleen, one passes a road to the left leading onto Rock Island. Originally this was the site of a coast guard station - which replaced an earlier station to its south. The "new" station was occupied from 1907 until 1921. During the height of the Irish War of Independence, Royal Marines were stationed there to protect the station and Brow Head War Signal Station. During their occupation, the IRA destroyed Brow Head. Also on Rock Island was a fishery plant. From here most of the shellfish of Ireland was exported to Europe. The ponds were open until the late 1970s, then it became a food processing plant packaging garlic butter and mussels - but is now derelict.

Outside links

References

  1. Crookhaven.ie - History
  2. Logainm.ie - Placenames Database of Ireland Earliest reference to Crookehaven attributed to "Calendar to Fiants of reign of Henry VIII. 1510-47...of Queen Elizabeth. 1558-1603 (print 1875-90)
  3. Burke, John Extinct and Dormant Baronetcies of England, Scotland and Ireland 2nd Edition London 1841
  4. "South-West was haven for piracy and prostitution". Irish Examiner. 12 April 2012. http://www.irishexaminer.com/ireland/south-west-was-haven-for-piracy-and-prostitution-190252.html. 
  5. Senior C.N. (2004). A Nation of Pirates: English Piracy in its Heyday. Penguin Books. p. 349. ISBN 978-0-14-029724-9. "As quoted in Rodger, N.A.M., The Safeguard of the Sea. A naval history of Britain, 660-1649." 
  6. "Adventures of 17th-Century Pirate Alliance Uncovered". Discovery Communications (News). http://news.discovery.com/history/adventures-of-17th-century-pirate-alliance-uncovered-in-ireland-140227.htm. Retrieved 8 June 2015. 
  7. Sexton, Michael. Marconi The Irish Connection. Portland: Four Courts Press, 2005. Print