Noon's Hole

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Noon's Hole – Arch Cave
Fermanagh

Caver rigging the entrance of Noone's Hole
Location: Devenish
H12684431
Co-ordinates: 54°22’60"N, 7°51’24"W
Depth: 354 feet
Length: 2.3 miles
Hazards: Verticality & water
Geology: Limestone

Noon's Hole is a cave found three miles north-west of the centre of Boho, in the townland of Old Barr and the parish of Devenish in Fermanagh, close to the bounds of Boho parish. The cave is under part of the escarpment on the east side of the Glenade Sandstone uplands.[1]

At 266 feet, this pothole was thought to have the deepest shaft in Ireland, but this honour was passed to the nearby Reyfad Pot, which contains an entrance shaft of 289 feet. The continuation of the cave system (incorporating the Afternoon Series and High Noon's) contains 2.3 mile (3.7 km) of passage, and it connects to the resurgence at Arch Cave through three cave dives, making this system the 8th deepest in Ireland, at 354 feet.[2]

Noon's Hole was previously called "Sumera", meaning "abyss", but it came to be known by a new name after it gained notoriety in the 1820s, following the murder of Dominick Noone, whose body was thrown into the cave. Ordnance Survey maps still use both names.[3]

Exploration

A Sumera is a bottomless pit, and locals were wont to treat Noon's Hole as a supernatural area, viewing it with suspicion and fear. However, in August 1895, the French cave explorer Édouard-Alfred Martel explored the cave for the first time, descending to 65 feet.[4] It was not until 1912 that a group from the Yorkshire Ramblers' Club reached the bottom. Not discouraged by their equipment not having arrived from Yorkshire, they made the descent of the complex 255-foot shaft using a rope ladder 115 feet long made from materials purchased from Fermanagh ships' chandlers and timber merchants, hauling it up and down from the surface when the explorers found ledges to stand on. All they found at the bottom was a short passage leading to a sump.[5] In January 1970 a group from the University of Leeds Speleological Association investigated the parallel shafts, and found that one led into 1,300 feet of passages they named the After-Noon Series.[6]

In the meanwhile, cave divers had been pushing in Arch Cave from which the water from Noon's Hole resurges. In 1972 Martyn Farr and Roger Solari passed a 260-foot sump into a long canal, and then a 26-foot sump into a major extension which extended into the mountain for a further 1,600 yards to a third sump. The pair returned in 1973, and after a 160-foot dive they emerged into the After-Noon series of Noon's Hole.[7]

Easter 1975 a party followed a draught in the After-Noon series through a rocky crawl, to break out into a mile of new passage which included a streamway, the terminal sump of which corresponded to a sump with the main water flow in Arch II cave. This was named the High Noon Series.[8] In 1984, a group managed to find a dry connection between High Noon and Arch II cave to create the 'finest sporting trip in County Fermanagh'.[9]

Dominick Noone

Dominick Noone was originally from the Ballinamore area in the east of County Leitrim. Whilst in Derrygonnelly, he became a member of an illegal Roman Catholic organisation known as the Ribbonmen, an agrarian reform group, but subsequently became an informer for the Crown.[1] It was on his evidence in 1826 that a number of fellow members were transported to Australia. He was invited to a wedding party and despite police protection he was then kidnapped and murdered and his body thrown down into the depths of the Sumera. The authorities suspected that his body lay in the shaft, and a man named Cavanagh from Castlecoole, a townland on the outskirts of Enniskillen, accepted a substantial reward to descend the shaft in a rope and creel. Noone's body was found at a depth of 190 feet, and retrieved. The body was then carried to a chapel for a wake but local people blocked the doorway preventing entrance. The murderers of Noone were never caught despite the offer of a £100 award.[10]

In 1879 a long ballad was composed about the event. The penultimate verse goes:

Within the mountain nature made,
A deep and dismal cave,
That suited well the murderers said,
To be a traitor's grave,
They flung the lifeless body below -
A groan they thought it gave.[11]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Belmore, Ballintempo & Tullybrack Uplands; Noon's Hole-Arch Cave", Earth Science Conservation Review (National Museums Northern Ireland), http://www.habitas.org.uk/escr/summary.asp?item=1161, retrieved 2009-08-07 
  2. "N Ireland - Deepest caves". UKCaves.co.uk. http://www.ukcaves.co.uk/country-nireland-deepest. Retrieved 2009-03-11. 
  3. Jones, Gareth Ll.; Burns, Gaby; Fogg, Tim; Kelly, John (1997), The Caves of Fermanagh and Cavan (2nd Ed.), Lough Nilly Press, ISBN 0-9531602-0-3 
  4. "Belmore, Ballintempo & Tullybrack Uplands; Noon's Hole-Arch Cave", Earth Science Conservation Review (National Museums Northern Ireland), http://www.habitas.org.uk/escr/site.asp?item=1161, retrieved 2009-08-07 
  5. Baker, Earnest (1933). Caving. Episodes of Underground Exploration. London: Chapman & Hall Ltd.. pp. 151–157. 
  6. White, Tony (September 1960). "After-Noon Serooes - Noon's Hole". ULSA Review (7): 24–26. 
  7. Farr, Martyn (1991). The Darkness Beckons. London: Diadem Books. p. 162. ISBN 0906371872. 
  8. Francis, P. "Easter 1975 in Ireland". South Wales Caving Club Newsletter (81): 10–12. 
  9. Ball, Hywel (March–April 1985). "How a 'cold start' trip resulted in Noon's-Arch link-up". Descent (Gloucester: Ambit Publications Ltd.) (63): 10. 
  10. McCusker, Breege (1988). "Dominick Noone and How Noone's Hole near Derrygonnelly Got Its Name". Clogher Record 13 (1): 137–140. doi:10.2307/27699283. 
  11. Willis, Brian. "Noon's Hole, (OS 209348) Nr. Boho, Fermanagh". Your Place and Mine: Fermanagh. BBC. http://www.bbc.co.uk/northernireland/yourplaceandmine/fermanagh/A954182.shtml. Retrieved 3 January 2014. 
  • Magennis, Peter (1874), The Ribbon Informer 
  • Jones, Gareth Ll.; Burns, Gaby; Fogg, Tim; Kelly, John (1997), The Caves of Fermanagh and Cavan (2nd Ed.), Lough Nilly Press, ISBN 0-9531602-0-3