Coomkeen

Coomkeen
Irish: Com Caoin
Country Ireland
County County Cork
Barony Carbery West (W.D.)
Civil parish Durrus
Area
  Total 370 ha (914 acres)
Townland location
Coordinates 51°38′25″N 09°31′52″W / 51.64028°N 9.53111°W / 51.64028; -9.53111Coordinates: 51°38′25″N 09°31′52″W / 51.64028°N 9.53111°W / 51.64028; -9.53111

Coomkeen (Irish: Com Caoin) is a townland located near Durrus in West Cork, Province of Munster, Ireland.[1] It is a small valley home to approximately 14 families, it is also the home of the world famous Durrus Cheese.

History

Home to Reverend Timothy Crowley, Parish Priest, Coomkeen Upper, 1776.

Prior to purchase under the Land Acts of the early 1900s, the lands were owned by Lord Bandon and rented by tenant farmers. In the late 1920s a new road to Bantry was built from Coomkeen and was celebrated by local poet Charles Dennis:

Oh! Durrus, you were often fleeced,
In the good old days gone by
And only for Mr. MacManaway
You should lie down and die
He's out to help industry
Give every man fair play,
His enterprising capitalist
Will surely win the day
His latest stunt is to build a road
Through the fair valley of Coomkeen
It starts at Crocawadra
An ends in Gearameen
We'll make of him a Bishop
And that without a doubt,
And he'll remove the Border,
Between North and South.

1901 census

1901 Census of Coomkeen.[2]

Speakers of Irish and English, 1901 Census

John, Mary, 26, Daniel Burke, Daniel, 64, Mary Burke, 60, Daniel, 63, Mary Ann, 50, Sullivan, Catherine Mahony, 68, John 50, Hanorah, 40, Cronin, Mary Wholly, 80, Daniel, 50, Julia, 48, Jeremiah, 14, Wholihan, Timothy Wholihan, 55

1911 Census

1911 Census of Coomkeen.[3]

Name: Number in each family

Present population

By 2006 most of the original families who lived in the 19th and early 20th centuries were no longer resident. Around 10 of the current dwellings are pre-famine, according to the early OS maps. This townland has had most of its field names preserved by the Cork and Kerry Place Names Survey in 2008.

There is a burial ground; mass rock site and on the Crottees boundary, a stone circle overlooking Durrus village. There was reputedly some mining exploration carried out on the south side of Knockboolteeangh in the 1840s and ore was extracted but not dressed.[4]

References

  1. "Placenames Database of Ireland". Dublin City University. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
  2. "1901 Census of Ireland". National Archives of Ireland. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
  3. "1911 Census of Ireland". National Archives of Ireland. Retrieved 7 November 2014.
  4. D Cowman, T A Reilly (1988). The Abandoned Mines of West Carbery. Geological Survey of Ireland.


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