Tuesday, 16 April 2024

Pomeroy

EDITED EXTRACTS FROM THE TOPOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY OF IRELAND, 1837

POMEROY, a parish, in the barony of Dungannon, County Tyrone, 7¼ miles from Dungannon, on the road to Omagh.

The district was granted by JAMES I to Sir Arthur Chichester, Lord Deputy of Ireland, and soon after was created a manor, under the name of Manor Chichester.

It was then altogether an extensive forest, some of the oaks of which, when cut down several years since, measured 29 feet in circumference.

During the unsettled period of 1641 it was nearly stripped of its timber, and for many years after remained in a neglected state, until 1770, when the Rev James Lowry undertook its management: he planted a great portion of the demesne, which now exhibits some very fine timber, and bequeathed a sum to erect the present mansion.

In the demesne, which consists of 556 acres, is a small lake, the borders of which resemble in shape the coast of Ireland, on a scale of about one foot to a mile.

Near it is a very abundant spring of water, strongly impregnated with carbonic acid gas.

Pomeroy from The Diamond  (Image: Donaghmore Historical Society)

The village, which is small and meanly built, on the summit of a hill, consists of a square and long street, the roadway of which having been cut down in order to diminish to ascent, has placed the houses on each side in an unsightly and even dangerous situation.

Pomeroy from The Diamond (Timothy Ferres, 2024)

The eastern and southern parts of the parish are fertile and well cultivated; the western, which forms part of the Altmore mountain, and comprises nearly 3,000 acres, is uncultivated mountain and bog.

Granite, basalt, quartz, limestone, freestone, clay-slate, iron-stone and coal have been found within its limits.

The principal seats are Pomeroy House, the fine residence of R W Lowry; Mulnagore Lodge, of Mrs Stafford; Drummond Lodge, of J Suter; and the Glebe, of the Rev Thomas Twigg.

The parish was erected in 1775, by an Order of Council, at the application of Lord Primate Robinson, by severing 41 townlands from that of Donaghmore: it is a rectory and vicarage, in the diocese of Armagh, and in the patronage of the Lord Primate.

The Glebe House, built in 1786, at an expense of £414 [about £54,000 in 2024], supplied by Primate Robinson, and enlarged in 1793 at a cost of £322 by the then incumbent, has a glebe of 560 statute acres.

The church, built in 1775 on a site three miles from the village, is a handsome edifice, yet, though spacious, it does not afford sufficient accommodation for the congregation during the summer months.

*****

POMEROY is the highest village in County Tyrone.

Central Bar, Pomeroy (Timothy Ferres, 2024)

Facing Altadesert parish church, opposite The Diamond, the Central Bar is celebrated locally as an establishment where a ghost is said to have haunted an attic at the beginning of the 20th century until the parish priest exorcised it.

The parish priest is said to have persuaded the rowdy spirit to enter a bottle, which was hastily corked and bricked into a wall in the back yard.

No comments:

Post a Comment