Finuge
Finuge Irish: Fionnúig | |
County Kerry | |
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River Feale at Finuge Crossing | |
Location | |
Grid reference: | R746888 |
Location: | 52°25’12"N, 9°31’48"W |
Data | |
Local Government |
Finuge is a village near Listowel in County Kerry, standing on the banks of the River Feale, two miles from Listowel. The Finuge crossing is a bridge over the River Feale linking Finuge to Killocrim. It is in the Barony of Clanmaurice. Tralee is twelve miles to the south-west.
This is a traditional Irish crossroads village with a shop, a pub, Teach Siamsa and a G.A.A. pitch. Sheehan's Thatched House located at Finuge Cross is regarded as one of the oldest surviving authentic thatched houses in Ireland. Conservation experts estimate it at least 300 years old.
The village's name is derived from Préachán, meaning crow.[1]
History
Around 1660, Finuge was planted by the Desmond Geraldines during the Cromwellian Plantation. At that time, Finuge village was situated near the bank of the River Feale. The land here was of excellent quality, so much so that the families were evicted and pushed south-east and re-located beside the "new road" that links Listowel and Lixnaw today.
About the time of the Fenian Rising, Lord Listowel decided that he wanted this land and his agent Major Homes planned to shift the whole village and evict the locals further south-east to the north-west of the townland of Irremore. The house plots were marked out and the eviction about to take place, when the Agent Holmes died unexpectedly and the village was saved.
There were three churches in Finuge at one time. In 1825 a new church was built at Irremore, it was renovated in 1961 and serves the people to the present day.
The big house in the district was Ennismore House, it became the property of the Desmond Geraldines as a result of the Cromwellian Plantation. In later times George Hewson inherited it from the last of the Fitzgeralds.
Finuge House, the ruins of which can be seen beside Finuge Bridge was owned by another Hewson family, not related to George. This family were always associated with "Harvest Home", an annual celebration at the end the harvest. The last record of such a gathering was 25 October 1877, when sixty men and women sat down to dinner.
Ringforts were features of the parish, with examples on the farms of Quinlans and McElligotts of Coolnaleen, Galvin's and Whelan's of Finuge.
Sport
- Gaelic games: Finuge GAA
Outside links
References
- ↑ Fionnúig/Finuge: Placenames Database of Ireland