Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Last day in Enniskillen! Florence Court photos

Our last day on the farm. It will be sad to leave, we will miss Molly, Ollie, Mark, Mannus and Eileen. Looking forward to lunch with Molly today at Weatherspoons Pub then a special breakfast tomorrow with them all before we leave on 10.05 bus to Dublin tomorrow.
We have had a wonderful time - just loved meeting wonderful people & seeing the houses, villages, farms and churches where all my families came from.
Mt great-great-grandparents (John COLLUM & Eliza BAXTER) gravestone is going to be cleaned & the green & gold plant planted nearby! A special remembrance from all the COLLUM/MESSER relations in Australia.
We did get back to Florence Court the other day. It was the last day it is open before opening again in March next year. The Earls of Enniskillen lived here - built late 1700's. Lovely walk to the Walled Garden & Rose Garden - still some roses out & LOTS of buds. Autumn colours beautiful.










Last drive south - Garrison - Bundoran - Drumcliffe - Sligo - Lough Gill

Lovely drive on a 4 seasons day! Lots of rainbows - St Patrick Holy Well - on way to Garrison, small town near Beleek. Beleek is a border town, with the border going up Lough Melvin with some islands in the Republic & some in Northern Ireland!
We drove down the coast through the seaside towns of Bundoran, Cliffdony and Grange. It was mostly closed up 'for the winter'. Waters of Donegal Bay whipped up by the cold winds.
We saw a turn off to Streedagh Castle & headland. We were surprised to see 8 cars & a 'Learn to Surf' bus parked there. We put our jackets & scarfs on against the howling wind 9 degrees!!! - walked over the small sand hill to fine 20 kids/people SURFING!!!!!!! (It is mid-term break here this week as well as Halloween).The memorial & castle were to commemorate the 3 ships from the Spanish Armada that sank there in 1588.
We continued to Drumcliffe where  W A Yeats is buried. The site is an old monastery from 900 -1200 - only half the round tower & a tall Celtic Cross with Bible pictures from the Old & New Testaments on all sides. 4 tourist buses there!
We crossed by the side of Sligo & did a scenic drive around Lough Gill - very big - sunshine & lots of  full/complete rainbows. Continued on to Castle Parkes (also closed for the winter), Lough Allen, Drumshanbo & Ballyconnell.










Sunday, October 27, 2013

Last week in Enniskillen!


Unbelievable we only have a few days left here! 
Today is Sunday & we are going to church in Tempo Presbyterian, where the COLLUMs (John & Eliza BAXTER) were married in 1864. At 1am we turned our clocks back to real time – I think there is now 11 hours difference to Sydney, will have to check. Huge storm predicted to ‘hit’ England & Wales today, haven’t heard Ireland mentioned, ferries cancelled between here & Eng. Pouring rain here now & COOL & WINDY!

Had a lovely afternoon yesterday. Went out to Ethel’s (Baxter) for last time. I took her an Aust/kangaroo embroidered towel (Denise’s Mum or sister made it) & James, her grandson was there. I’d taken little kangaroos &  koala keyrings for the 3 children. He was thrilled – made a lego house for it while we were there!
Ethel had found another of her Mum’s old family letters – about a great uncle Robert who fought in WW1 & ended up living & dying in Johanasburg (sp!), Sth Africa in 1919. Letter was from the lady he boarded with, they were like brother & sister she said. She was Irish, (3 miles from Enniskillen) had lived in Aust for 17 yrs, married an Aust & lived in  Sth Africa for 19 yrs!
Ethel had also found a map showing & describing all the land leases in 1789 – showing all the names of all the people on the leases I’d got copies of!!!!! In amongst ALL the Baxters was Thomas MACOLLOM!!!!!!!!
After afternoon tea we went to visit the BETTY sisters, Florence 86 & Jean 84 (both unmarried). They live in Grogey (a mile away) on the site where the COLLUM house was! Only the foundations of the tiny original house (2 rooms, thatched) were there when her parents bought it (Eliza died 1921) & built a house on them. Sisters moved there in 1960 & extended.
 The only things of the COLLUMs were the apple tree (still fruiting well!) & a stone with markings on it. John COLLUM was a stone mason (as was his son Robert – our g-grandfather who came to Aust - photos on blog). John worked on the many local stone bridges, earning a shilling a day.
Florence told me her aunt Jenny married Willie COLLUM (one of the elusive sons I haven’t been able to find out anything about in Boston  USA!)  I remember Uncle Bill COLLUM talking about him. He & his brother Matthew went to USA in 1903.  Florence told me they changed their name to COLEMAN!!!!!; didn’t have any children & Jenny (“she was the first woman bus driver in Boston”!) sponsored lots of relatives to leave Ireland & join them. They didn’t go back to Ireland.
Ethel drove us to see where her mother had grown up – house gone, only a stone shed left – it was known as the ‘halfway house’ between Monaghan & Enniskillen & she remembers ‘blackening the windows when the ‘Black & Tan’ arrived (the British soldiers seeking out the Sinn Fein Republican fighters ‘in the forests’ during the War of Independence after 1916).
We ended up at the old BAXTER house where their son David & family live. He & his dad, Roy, were organising the milking of the cows (done by robot machine – fully automated & ends up in tanker ready to be put into cartons/bottles!)

On Firday I went to Belfast again for a last day of researching. Couldn’t find anything on the MOOREs – although I did find the birth of Jane GIVINS in 1828 at ARBOE not Drunquin where they married. Coincidentally, we stopped at ARBOE (on the shores on Lough Neagh) with Denise & David when we did our Sperrin Mtn drive!!!!!!!
I met Belle (McCollum) & Harry at PRONI!!!!! I had told them about it & when he knew it was free…………. They looked up her family & I had lunch with them.











Saturday, October 26, 2013

Killybegs - Slieve League - Blue Stack Mountains Donegal

We went for a lovely trip on Thursday! We left at 9 am with it being a brisk 5 degrees outside! It was fine & sunny though. We drove along the southern shore of Lough Erne, beautiful as the sun was through the autumn leaves on the enormous chestnut, sychamore (sp?) and beech  trees. We past through Beleek & into the Republic.

We bypassed Donegal and drove the 24 kms to Killybegs on the coast. It is the main fishing port in Ireland. LOTS of very BIG fishing boats/ships tied up one next to the other, five in a row. We continued on along the coast road - very NARROW, weaving in & out the oncoming traffic. We laughed as the speed limit was 80kms!!!! You could smell the peat fires as we went - beautiful smell - photo is a pile of it drying out.

5kms further on was Slieve League, 300' cliffs forming a peninsular out into the Atlantic Ocean. When we arrived the gate was closed & a parking area with a sign 'Walking track to view Slieve league'. So we parked & walked - more than a km up a really steep, windy 'road'. Next thing a car, 2, 3 passed us! When we got to the top & could see the 'road' winding on around a few bends we decided to go back & get the car. Passed two other couples who thought you had to walk too!

When we finally arrived (picking up another couple on the way!) the view was incredible! There was another hike up the hillside to the top but we decided to give it a miss -  more to see. We had lunch there - the little leprachaun sitting nearby! It warmed up to 14 degrees (warmer than a 14 at home!)

We drove back to Killybegs to get some fresh fish & chips, only to find the van (car-battery powered!) only sold fresh UNCOOKED fish! We bought some & he put ice in with it - to get us home to cook it!

Home via Ardara (more open, drier area - the ferns on the mountain hillsides has all browned off as well) & Fintown beside Lough Finn; shore line around the Blue Stack Mountains to Ballyfoley, towards Donegal, Ballyshannon, Beleek & home.

The fish was beautiful!!!! Bought pack of microwave chips (cost one pound) - not bad at all!!!!

last photo are Rowan berries - trees everywhere!



















one pound) - not bad at all!!!!

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Belle Isle

After lunch we continued on, across Carry Bridge to Belle Isle - sun was out & just beautiful!
Bellisle Castle was originally built in 1780 by fellow who became the Earl of Ross; it was refurbished & 'spruced up' to a Manorial House in mid 1800's & 5 storey tower & 'stable wing' added onto it. It too was a centre of education & culture. 'The Annals of Ulster' written there in 1500's.
Today it has a Cookery School, Equestrian Centre & self-accommodation.
Lovely gardens & woods - even a holly tree with red berries!