R205 road in Crossmakellagher townland

Crossmakelagher, also written Crossmakellagher or Crossmakellegher (from Irish Cros Mhic Chéileachair, meaning 'McKelleher's Crossroads') is a townland in the civil parish of Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland. It lies in the Roman Catholic parish of Templeport and barony of Tullyhaw. The local people abbreviate it as 'Cross'.

Geography

Crossmakelagher is bounded on the north by Cavanaquill and Killynaff townlands, on the west by Tonyhallagh and Tonyrevan townlands, on the south by Bellaheady and Killarah townlands in Kildallan parish and on the east by Cormeen townland in Kildallan parish and Lecharrownahone townland. Its chief geographical features are the Shannon-Erne Waterway, a small plantation, a pond, a quarry, a spring well and several dug wells. Crossmakelagher is traversed by the regional R205 road, minor roads and rural lanes and the disused Cavan and Leitrim Railway. The townland covers 197 statute acres.[1]

History

In medieval times the McGovern barony of Tullyhaw was divided into economic taxation areas called ballibetoes, from the Irish Baile Biataigh (Anglicized as 'Ballybetagh'), meaning 'A Provisioner's Town or Settlement'. The original purpose was to enable the farmer, who controlled the baile, to provide hospitality for those who needed it, such as poor people and travellers. The ballybetagh was further divided into townlands farmed by individual families who paid a tribute or tax to the head of the ballybetagh, who in turn paid a similar tribute to the clan chief. The steward of the ballybetagh would have been the secular equivalent of the erenagh in charge of church lands. There were seven ballibetoes in the parish of Templeport. Crossmakelagher was located in the ballybetagh of "Ballen Tulchoe" (alias 'Bally Tullagh'). The original Irish is Baile Tulach, meaning 'The Town of the Hillock')

Up until the 18th century, Crossmakelagher was divided into two different townlands, the part lying north of the present R205 main road was Crossmakelagher and the part between the R205 and the Shannon-Erne Waterway was called Drumcon (Irish derived place name Druim Con, meaning 'The Ridge of the Greyhounds'). Crossmakelagher was also called Barne at the time (Irish derived place name Bearn, meaning 'A Gap').

The 1609 Ulster Plantation Baronial Map depicts the townland as Cross.[2][3][4] The 1652 Commonwealth Survey spells the name as CrossmcKelagher and the other subdivisions as Barne and Drumgoone. The 1665 Down Survey map depicts the north part as Crosmckellagher and the south part as Drumcone.[5]

William Petty's 1685 map depicts them as Crossemckelaher and Drumcon.[6]

In the Plantation of Ulster by grant dated 4 June 1611, along with other lands, King James VI and I granted one poll of Barne to Hugh McManus Oge Magauran.[7] He was the great-grandson of a previous Magauran chief, Tomás mac Maghnus Mág Samhradháin who ruled from 1512 to 1532. His father, Manus Og Magauran, lived in Cor and received a pardon in 1586.

In the Plantation of Ulster by grant dated 23 June 1610, along with other lands forming the Manor of Calva, King James VI and I granted two polls of Crosse to Hugh Culme.[8] In the same year Culme surrendered his interest to Walter Talbot of Ballyconnell. Walter Talbot died on 26 June 1625 at Ballyconnell and his son James Talbot succeeded to the Ballyconnell estate aged just 10 years. An Inquisition held in Cavan on 20 September 1630 found that James Talbot was seized of two polls of Crosse, along with other lands.[9] James Talbot married Helen Calvert, the daughter of George Calvert, 1st Baron Baltimore of Maryland, USA, in 1635.

In the Irish Rebellion of 1641 Eleanor Reynolds of Lissanore made a deposition about the rebellion in Lissanover, which included: Ellenor Reinolds, late of Lissanore in the County of Cauan, widow aged 46 yeares or thereabouts duly sworne etc. .. She further saith that in May 1642 this deponent's mother not being able (because of age & weaknes) to goe to Croghan Castle was left behind with some of the tenants at Lissanore aforesaid, where she was about the tyme aforesaid barbarously murthered by one ffarell Groome mc Kellogher of CrossemacKellogher who confessed the said barbarous fact to divers persons that voluntarily did depose the same to be true.[10]

In the aftermath of the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Talbot's estate was confiscated because he was a Catholic and he was granted an estate in 1655 at Castle Rubey, County Roscommon instead. He died in 1687. Talbot's land in Crossmakelagher was redistributed as follows:

The 1652 Commonwealth Survey lists the townland as belonging to 'Captain Gwilliams' (i.e. Captain Thomas Gwyllym, the landlord of Ballyconnell) and the tenants as Edward Rely & Others. The same survey also lists Barne and Drumgoone as also belonging to Captain Gwilliams. A further confirming grant dated 11 August 1666 was made from King Charles II of England to Thomas Guyllym of Ballyconnell included 52 acres 1 rood and 24 perches in Crossmackillagher, alias Crosse, alias Barne and part of the same 10 acres and 16 perches. The grant also included 47 acres 2 roods in Dromcowen, alias Drumgoney.[11] Thomas Gwyllym died in 1681 and his son Colonel Meredith Gwyllym inherited the Ballyconnell estate, including Crossmakelagher. Colonel Meredith Gwyllym died in 1711 and the Ballyconnell estate passed to his eldest son, Meredith Gwyllym.

A deed dated 2 May 1724 by the aforesaid Meredith Gwyllym includes the townland as Crossmackillagher alias Cross alias Barne and Dromcowen alias Dromgony.[12]

The Gwyllym estate was sold for £8,000 in 1724 to Colonel Alexander Montgomery (1686–1729) of Convoy House, County Donegal, M.P. for Donegal Borough 1725 to 1727 & for Donegal County 1727 to 1729.

A lease dated 14 May 1728 by the aforesaid Alexander Montgomery included Crossemakillagher alias Cross alias Barne and Dromcowen alias Dromconey.[13]

Montgomery died in 1729 and left the Ballyconnell estate to his nephew George Leslie, who then assumed the name of George Leslie Montgomery. George Leslie Montgomery was M.P. for Strabane, County Tyrone from 1765 to 1768 and for County Cavan from 1770 to 1787, when he died and left the Ballyconnell estate to his son George Montgomery, whose estate was administered by the Court of Chancery as he was a lunatic.[14] George Montgomery died in 1841 and his estate went to his Enery cousins of Bawnboy.

The 1790 Cavan Carvaghs list spells the name as Crossmakellagher.[15]

The Tithe Applotment Books for 1827 list twelve tithepayers in the townland.[16]

The Crossmakelagher Valuation Office Field books are available for 1839-1841.[17][18][19]

Griffith's Valuation (1857) lists ten landholders in the townland.[20]

Census

Year Population Males Females Total Houses Uninhabited
184134191580
1851633330112
1861492524111
187135181781
188131181371
189127161182

In the 1901 census of Ireland, there are eleven families listed in the townland[21] and in the 1911 census of Ireland, there are thirteen families listed in the townland.[22]

Antiquities

There seem to be no structures of historical interest in the townland apart from the disused Cavan and Leitrim Railway. In 1739 Dean John Richardson referred to two megaliths in Crossmaclaght but there is no trace today. He may have mistaken the location.[23]

References

  1. "IreAtlas". Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  2. "4.25. The Baronie of Tollagh Aghe".
  3. "National Archives Dublin" (PDF).
  4. "Templeport Development Association - 1609 Baronial-Map". templeport.ie.
  5. Trinity College Dublin: The Down Survey of Ireland.
  6. "Down Survey Maps | The Down Survey Project". downsurvey.tcd.ie.
  7. Chancery, Ireland (11 April 1800). "Calendar of the Patent Rolls of the Chancery of Ireland". A. Thom via Google Books.
  8. Chancery, Ireland (11 April 1800). "Calendar of the Patent Rolls of the Chancery of Ireland". A. Thom via Google Books.
  9. "Inquisitionum in Officio Rotulorum Cancellariae Hiberniae Asservatarum Repertorium". command of his majesty King George IV. In pursuance of an address of the house of Commons of Great Britain (an Ireland). 11 April 1829 via Google Books.
  10. "1641 Depositions". 1641.tcd.ie. Archived from the original on 1 October 2019. Retrieved 11 April 2020.
  11. "Commissioners of Public Records in Ireland : fourteenth and fifteenth reports with appendix, 1824-25". HMSO. 11 April 1825 via Internet Archive.
  12. "Memorial extract — Registry of Deeds Index Project".
  13. "Memorial extract — Registry of Deeds Index Project".
  14. Malcomson, A. P. W. (2006). The Pursuit of the Heiress: Aristocratic Marriage in Ireland 1740-1840 By A. P. W. Malcomson. Ulster Historical Foundation. ISBN 9781903688656.
  15. http://www.cavanlibrary.ie/file/Local-Studies/Library-Scanned-Docs/The-Carvaghs-A-List-Of-The-Several-Baronies-And-Parishes-in-the-County-Of-Cavan.pdf Archived 6 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  16. http://titheapplotmentbooks.nationalarchives.ie/search/tab/results.jsp?county=Cavan&parish=Templeport&townland=Cross&search=Search , in the Tithe Applotment Books 1827
  17. http://census.nationalarchives.ie/reels/vob/IRE_CENSUS_1821-51_007246947_00400.pdf
  18. "Valuation Office Books". census.nationalarchives.ie.
  19. "Valuation Office Books". census.nationalarchives.ie.
  20. "Griffith's Valuation". www.askaboutireland.ie.
  21. "National Archives: Census of Ireland 1911". www.census.nationalarchives.ie.
  22. "National Archives: Census of Ireland 1911". www.census.nationalarchives.ie.
  23. Dean Richardson's Further Account of Com. Cavan by Patterson, T.G.F., Gaffikin, M. and Davies, O., in 1938 Ulster Journal of Archaeology 1, 142-151.

54°05′53″N 7°37′34″W / 54.098°N 7.626°W / 54.098; -7.626

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