Cloonoghil (Sligo)

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Ballynaraw South townland, County Sligo
Ballynaraw South townland, County Sligo

Bunnanaddan National School, Ballynaraw South townland, Co. Sligo

(dated 1883)

Bunnadden National School Sligo

County Sligo in the north-west of Ireland is undoubtedly rich in history, heritage, mythology and folklore. The dramatic and spectacular landscape rises from the wild Atlantic coast with expansive, sandy dunes and beaches, to the Tolkien-esque Dartry Mountains where every cave, cliff face and hill has its own unique story to tell. This environment lends itself easily to storytelling and the imagination, and it is easy to see why it has inspired and featured in a wealth of fantastical folklore throughout the millennia.

Within the rolling hills of the drumlin belt in south County Sligo, and under the shadow of the Bricklieve Mountains, is the sleepy and unremarkable hamlet of Bunnanadden (Bunnanaddan or Bunninadden), 9km from Tubbercurry and 8km from
Ballymote.

During the late-19th century this was a busy spot with a local mill, two churches, a Constabulary Barracks, and a sylvan street scene with a row of detached houses. On a low rise to the north-east of the village was the local school house overlooking the goings-on below

A plaque on the northern end of the building dates its construction to 1883 although the first edition Ordnance Survey sheet shows that there was a pre-existing school at this site in at least the 1840s. Although in ruin, the interior is relatively well preserved, with the brightly painted walls having a now ghostly patina.

The building is of a standard design, comprising a detached, multi-bay, single-storey, rendered construction. It has two contiguous three-bay, north– south classroom blocks with gabled entrance porches to north end of the east and west elevations.

The pitched roof is feeling the strain of time but it still protects the interior from the elements. When I visited the school in March 2016, the building was home to two inquisitive and woolly schoolchildren.

Given the schools setting among the inspiring landscape of Co. Sligo, it is not surprising the that school children here were well-able to spin a fantastical tale. In 1937 the Irish Folklore Commission, in collaboration with the Department of Education and the Irish National Teachers’ Organisation, initiated a revolutionary scheme in which schoolchildren were encouraged to collect and document folklore and local history. Over a period of eighteen months some 100,000 children in 5,000 primary schools in the twenty-six counties of the Irish Free State were encouraged to collect folklore material, information about local traditions, games and pastimes in their home districts. In Bunnadden, many of the local tales recorded as part of this scheme feature some element of the supernatural, set in the local landscape. Below, local lad Michael Wynne from Everlawn relates one such story:

Michael Wynne Story

This traditional village school retains most of its original features and, although derelict, is a good example of an unaltered late-19thcentury National School, with large well-proportioned classrooms and clear segregation of accommodation for male and female pupils.

Did you or any of your ancestors go to this school? Let us know in the comments below


With the kind permssion of Enda O'Flaherty, taken from:

Deserted Schoolhouses of Ireland by Enda O'Flaherty (published through the Collins Press, Cork September 2018)

Web: https://endaoflaherty.com/

Twitter: @eanna81   

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eanna81

Instagram: @oldskool_irl

Available to purchase from: 

https://www.collinspress.ie/deserted-schoolhouses-of-ireland.html

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Deserted-Schoolhouses-Ireland-Enda-OFlaherty/dp/1848893515

Type of Building:

Educational

Comments

  • Thank you for such fascinating snippets from the past. Such an interesting Author.

    Brian and Carole

    New Zealand

    brianandcarole

    Sunday 24th March 2019 09:39PM
  • Hi, I attended the above school from 1950 to 1958 as did my three siblings My mother taught the junior classes there from 1936 to her retirement in 1968 It's great to see the photos, with the same colours still on the walls, brings back so many memories. 

     John McDonagh

    John. J. IrelandXO Volunteer ☘

    Wednesday 9th September 2020 04:43PM

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