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Pettigo

Pettigo, also spelt Pettigoe (/ˈpɛtɪɡ/ PET-ig-oh; Irish: Paiteagó[1] [ˈpˠatʲəɡoː]), is a small village and townland on the border of County Donegal, Republic of Ireland, and County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. It is bisected by the Termon River which is part of the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

Pettigo
Paiteagó
Village
Village centre
Pettigo
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 54°32′56″N 7°49′52″W / 54.549°N 7.831°W / 54.549; -7.831
JurisdictionsRepublic of Ireland and Northern Ireland
ProvinceUlster
CountyCounty Donegal,
County Fermanagh
Population
 (2022)
 • Urban
559
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Irish Grid ReferenceH105669

The portion of the village in County Fermanagh is officially called Tullyhommon but is locally known as 'High Street' because of its hillside position overlooking the remainder of the village. The rest of the village in the Republic includes Main Street, Mill Street and Station Street, all of which meet in The Diamond at the centre of the village. There are also two relatively modern housing estates on the northern outskirts, Termon Villas and St. Patrick's Terrace, along with new developments such as Mill Grove.

Until the late 1700s, the area was known as An Tearmann, meaning 'a place of sanctuary'. The modern Irish (Paiteagó) and English (Pettigo) names derive from the Latin protectio (protection), a translation of the Irish An Tearmann.

Population Edit

For the purpose of data collection the Census of Ireland regards the Pettigo area as three separate electoral divisions, Pettigo (396), Grousehall (76) and Templecarn (128), with a total population of 600 in 2011.[2] The portion of the village in County Fermanagh was recorded as having a population of 63, in the 2011 census.

The population of the village has decreased in recent years, the preliminary results from the 2016 census gave the three electoral divisions a total population of 590[3] and the preliminary results of the 2022 census gave the three Electoral Divisions a total population of 559.

Economy Edit

Once a thriving market village on the Enniskillen and Bundoran Railway, the village suffered from partition in 1922, the closure of the railway in 1957 and from the closure of numerous cross-border roads by the British Army at the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. The latter had the effect of cutting Pettigo off from much of its rural hinterland in counties Fermanagh and Tyrone. In recent years economic prospects have improved with the reopening of many of the cross-border roads, improving access for tourists and locals alike.[4]

Agriculture, particularly the rearing of sheep and cattle, forms the mainstay of the local economy. The quality of the local land (marshy, with much blanket bog) renders it largely unsuitable for grain crops. There are also expansive forestry plantations in the surrounding townlands, owned and operated by Coillte Teoranta, the Republic's Forestry Service. Many of the plantations occupy land unsuitable for other commercial uses, or where peat extraction has been completed, leaving poor quality thin soil cover behind. The Sitka Spruce and Lodgepole Pine softwood varieties comprise 90% of the canopy.

Pettigo has traditionally been the 'gateway' to St. Patrick's Purgatory, a Christian pilgrimage site, situated on an island in Lough Derg. During the mid-late 20th century, the popularity of the pilgrimage brought a significant boost to the local economy as tens of thousands of pilgrims from all over Ireland and abroad travelled through the village on their way to and from Lough Derg. Although the popularity of the pilgrimage has dwindled in recent years, it is still an important driver of tourism in the area.

History Edit

 
The R233 road connects Pettigo with Lough Derg

In June 1922, at the tail end of the Irish War of Independence, Pettigo in what became the new Irish Free State, and Belleek, which was now in Northern Ireland were occupied by a 100-strong Irish Republican Army unit who had arrived there from Donegal. They were attacked first by a party of 100 Ulster Special Constabulary, who crossed Lough Erne but they were beaten off, losing one killed. Two companies of British Army troops along with 6 field guns, along with the USC, was then sent to take the villages. In the ensuing fighting, in which the British bombarded the village and then stormed it, the IRA lost three men killed, six wounded and four captured before being forced to retreat back to Donegal. One British soldier was killed in the fighting. Two civilians were also shot dead by the USC in nearby Lettercan.[5] Other reports put the IRA casualties at seven killed and the total death toll as high as 30.[6] A memorial was erected in 1953 to commemorate the four men who died in the invasion of Pettigo on 4 June 1922.[7]

Owing to its numerous Protestant inhabitants and awkward position astride the border, Pettigo would have been transferred to Northern Ireland had the recommendations of the Irish Boundary Commission been enacted in 1925.[8]

Religion Edit

The local area has a mixed religious composition, with the village having Roman Catholic, Church of Ireland, Presbyterian and Methodist Churches.

 
The village is also on the R232 road

Public transport Edit

Bus services Edit

Ulsterbus route 194 provides several daily journeys to and from Enniskillen via Irvinestown whereas route 195 provides one journey each way to Bundoran via Castlecaldwell and Belleek. Pettigo is not served by Ulsterbus on Sundays, though is served by McGeehan Coaches-Bus Éireann Expressway route 30, providing one journey in each direction to/from Dublin via Enniskillen, Cavan and Dublin Airport.[9][10] Bus Éireann seasonal route 486 provides links to and from Ballyshannon and Enniskillen for pilgrims to and from Station Island but also serves Pettigo.[11]

Railway Edit

 
Pettigo railway station

The Enniskillen and Bundoran Railway opened from Bundoran Junction on the Londonderry and Enniskillen Railway near Kilskeery, Co. Tyrone to Pettigo on 13 June 1866.[12] It was extended to Bundoran, County Donegal in 1868[13] and intended to continue to Sligo but failed to do so.[14] The Great Northern Railway ran the E&BR from 1876 and took it over in 1896.[15]

The railway greatly aided the movement and export of agricultural produce such as sheep and cattle and the import and distribution of coal, building materials and imported food. Livestock were loaded onto the train from the nearby Pettigo Market Yard.

Both the partition of Ireland in 1922 and increasing road transport weakened the railway. The Government of Northern Ireland made the GNR close nearly all of its cross-border lines, including the Bundoran branch, on 1 October 1957.[16]

Notable people Edit

Termon McGrath Castle Edit

Termon McGrath Castle, also known as Castle McGrath, was probably built in the early seventeenth century, probably being built circa 1611, at the start of the Plantation of Ulster.[18] The 'castle' (in reality a Gaelic towerhouse) was built for either The Most Rev. Miler McGrath, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Cashel, or, more likely, his son, James McGrath.[18] During the campaign of 1649-1650, the castle was bombarded by Cromwellian troops, which severely damaged the structure; it seems that the castle was abandoned around this time.[18] A small village, no longer in existence, seems to have grown up immediately outside the castle walls.[19] There was an escape tunnel from the castle to the Belaut River. The castle and lands were sold to the Leslie family of County Monaghan, who controlled the Pettigo estate until the early 20th century.

The Mill Edit

 
Pettigo Mill

Pettigo Mill was built by the Leslie family who owned the Pettigo estate. The Leslie family were originally from Monaghan town. Pettigo Mill was first on the map of Pettigo dated 1767, but probably is much older. The Mill got its power from the Termon river. It was described as a cloth mill i.e. woolen cloth, but probably also ground oats and other grains. During the famine, maize or Indian meal as it was called was ground in the Pettigo Mill. This was then sent to the poor through the port of Ballyshannon in the year 1845–1846. After the arrival of the railway in Pettigo, which opened in 1860, Pettigo Mill was a saw mill as well as a grain mill. Timber for all the usual purposes was produced but the main product that was made was egg boxes which held twelve eggs. Eggs were sent by train to the cities of Belfast and Dublin or on to England and Scotland. Egg boxes were in great demand as many people depended on their egg money to buy their groceries in the local shops.

The Termon Complex Edit

The Termon Complex is a community initiative by ADoPT (Association for Development of Pettigo and Tullyhommon). It is a sports, leisure and entertainment complex located on the banks of the River Termon, opened in May 2014. The building project was a collaboration between the Planning & Economic Development Directorate of Donegal County Council, in partnership with Fermanagh District Council and the Association for the Development of Pettigo and Tullyhommon (ADoPT). The Termon Project has been awarded €8.3 million of EU support through the PEACE III Programme. The complex encompasses:

  • Different spaces within the building which will facilitate indoor sports, large meetings/conferences, drama productions and concerts—including a main hall, conference room and meeting rooms.
  • ADoPT offices
  • A purpose-built gym
  • An outdoor multi-use games area (MUGA)
  • A new playschool with secure private playground
  • A new public playground and community garden
  • Recycling space, car parking and horticultural tunnels

Walks Edit

The mountains, hills and quiet country roads offer space for hill-walking, cycling and pony trekking. The Pettigo History trail which is centred round the village can be explored at the hiker's leisure. The trail entails the history and heritage of the Pettigo area. 30 plaques tell of the creator of Riverdance, Moya Doherty, "French" Tom Barton, "Banjo" Patterson, the Crimean War Tree and the Pettigo Connection to "The Quiet Man", among many other tales of the areas surrounded by lakes.

 
Pettigo Post Office.

Lakes/angling Edit

Lying between Lough Erne and Lough Derg, Pettigo is able to offer the visiting angler a full range of fishing opportunities. With over fifty lakes, salmon and native brown trout will keep the game angler happy while the coarse angler will find specimen fish in Drumgun Lough. Fishing permits and boat hire is available from Brittons Bar which is located in the village.

Lough Derg Edit

Lough Derg, the biggest of the Pettigo lakes, is famous throughout the northwest for its trout-fishing.[citation needed] Covering 2,200 acres with a shore line of 13 miles, it offers opportunities for both boat and shore angling. It also offers excellent pike fishing. Lough Derg lies about four miles north of the village of Pettigo in County Donegal.

Station Island, the location of the Lough Derg Pilgrimage, is often referred to as Saint Patrick's Purgatory or simply Lough Derg. This small lake-island, renowned in Irish Christian tradition since the time of St. Patrick, has been receiving pilgrims continuously for well over 1000 years.

In earlier times the area around the lake was a place of protection for anyone in trouble. The monastery nearby offered hospitality to all.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ "Paiteagó/Pettigo". Placenames Database of Ireland (logainm.ie). Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Census 2011 – Population Classified by Area" (PDF). Central Statistics Office. Dublin.
  3. ^ "ArcGIS Web Application".
  4. ^ "No break for the Border". The Irish Times. 3 October 2001. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  5. ^ Robert Lynch, The Northern IRA and the early years of Partition, 1920–1922, p154-156
  6. ^ "Collins Protests British Army Move" (PDF). New York Times. 6 June 1922.
  7. ^ Bureau of Military History 1913–1921 – 1952 report by men who took part in the battle. Retrieved 2013-10-01
  8. ^ "Irish Boundary Commission Report". National Archives. 1925. pp. 140–43.
  9. ^ "Travel anywhere in Ireland by bus or coach with Bus Éireann e.g. Dublin, Cork, Galway, etc". Bus Éireann.
  10. ^ Translink. . translink.co.uk. Archived from the original on 1 August 2013. Retrieved 28 July 2013.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 29 December 2010.
  12. ^ "Pettigo station" (PDF). Railscot – Irish Railways. Retrieved 22 November 2007.
  13. ^ Hajducki, 1974, maps 6, 7
  14. ^ Sprinks 1970, p. 8.
  15. ^ Hajducki 1974, p. xiii.
  16. ^ Baker 1972, pp. 153, 207.
  17. ^ Edward Walford, The County Families of the United Kingdom, p. 57
  18. ^ a b c Brian Lac[e]y (editor), Archaeological Survey of County Donegal, pp. 350 and 351. Donegal County Council, Lifford, 1983.
  19. ^ Brian Lac[e]y (editor), Archaeological Survey of County Donegal, p. 353. Donegal County Council, Lifford, 1983.

General sources Edit

  • Baker, Michael H.C. (1972). Irish Railways since 1916. London: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-0282-7.
  • Hajducki, S. Maxwell (1974). A Railway Atlas of Ireland. Newton Abbott: David & Charles. maps 6, 7, page xiii. ISBN 0-7153-5167-2.
  • Sprinks, N. W. (1970). Sligo, Leitrim and Northern Counties Railway. Billericay: Irish Railway Record Society (London Area).

pettigo, also, spelt, irish, paiteagó, ˈpˠatʲəɡoː, small, village, townland, border, county, donegal, republic, ireland, county, fermanagh, northern, ireland, bisected, termon, river, which, part, border, between, republic, ireland, northern, ireland, paiteagó. Pettigo also spelt Pettigoe ˈ p ɛ t ɪ ɡ oʊ PET ig oh Irish Paiteago 1 ˈpˠatʲeɡoː is a small village and townland on the border of County Donegal Republic of Ireland and County Fermanagh Northern Ireland It is bisected by the Termon River which is part of the border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland Pettigo PaiteagoVillageVillage centrePettigoLocation in IrelandCoordinates 54 32 56 N 7 49 52 W 54 549 N 7 831 W 54 549 7 831JurisdictionsRepublic of Ireland and Northern IrelandProvinceUlsterCountyCounty Donegal County FermanaghPopulation 2022 Urban559Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST WEST Irish Grid ReferenceH105669The portion of the village in County Fermanagh is officially called Tullyhommon but is locally known as High Street because of its hillside position overlooking the remainder of the village The rest of the village in the Republic includes Main Street Mill Street and Station Street all of which meet in The Diamond at the centre of the village There are also two relatively modern housing estates on the northern outskirts Termon Villas and St Patrick s Terrace along with new developments such as Mill Grove Until the late 1700s the area was known as An Tearmann meaning a place of sanctuary The modern Irish Paiteago and English Pettigo names derive from the Latin protectio protection a translation of the Irish An Tearmann Contents 1 Population 2 Economy 3 History 4 Religion 5 Public transport 5 1 Bus services 5 2 Railway 6 Notable people 7 Termon McGrath Castle 8 The Mill 9 The Termon Complex 10 Walks 11 Lakes angling 12 Lough Derg 13 Citations 14 General sourcesPopulation EditFor the purpose of data collection the Census of Ireland regards the Pettigo area as three separate electoral divisions Pettigo 396 Grousehall 76 and Templecarn 128 with a total population of 600 in 2011 2 The portion of the village in County Fermanagh was recorded as having a population of 63 in the 2011 census The population of the village has decreased in recent years the preliminary results from the 2016 census gave the three electoral divisions a total population of 590 3 and the preliminary results of the 2022 census gave the three Electoral Divisions a total population of 559 Economy EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Once a thriving market village on the Enniskillen and Bundoran Railway the village suffered from partition in 1922 the closure of the railway in 1957 and from the closure of numerous cross border roads by the British Army at the height of the Troubles in Northern Ireland The latter had the effect of cutting Pettigo off from much of its rural hinterland in counties Fermanagh and Tyrone In recent years economic prospects have improved with the reopening of many of the cross border roads improving access for tourists and locals alike 4 Agriculture particularly the rearing of sheep and cattle forms the mainstay of the local economy The quality of the local land marshy with much blanket bog renders it largely unsuitable for grain crops There are also expansive forestry plantations in the surrounding townlands owned and operated by Coillte Teoranta the Republic s Forestry Service Many of the plantations occupy land unsuitable for other commercial uses or where peat extraction has been completed leaving poor quality thin soil cover behind The Sitka Spruce and Lodgepole Pine softwood varieties comprise 90 of the canopy Pettigo has traditionally been the gateway to St Patrick s Purgatory a Christian pilgrimage site situated on an island in Lough Derg During the mid late 20th century the popularity of the pilgrimage brought a significant boost to the local economy as tens of thousands of pilgrims from all over Ireland and abroad travelled through the village on their way to and from Lough Derg Although the popularity of the pilgrimage has dwindled in recent years it is still an important driver of tourism in the area History Edit nbsp The R233 road connects Pettigo with Lough DergIn June 1922 at the tail end of the Irish War of Independence Pettigo in what became the new Irish Free State and Belleek which was now in Northern Ireland were occupied by a 100 strong Irish Republican Army unit who had arrived there from Donegal They were attacked first by a party of 100 Ulster Special Constabulary who crossed Lough Erne but they were beaten off losing one killed Two companies of British Army troops along with 6 field guns along with the USC was then sent to take the villages In the ensuing fighting in which the British bombarded the village and then stormed it the IRA lost three men killed six wounded and four captured before being forced to retreat back to Donegal One British soldier was killed in the fighting Two civilians were also shot dead by the USC in nearby Lettercan 5 Other reports put the IRA casualties at seven killed and the total death toll as high as 30 6 A memorial was erected in 1953 to commemorate the four men who died in the invasion of Pettigo on 4 June 1922 7 Owing to its numerous Protestant inhabitants and awkward position astride the border Pettigo would have been transferred to Northern Ireland had the recommendations of the Irish Boundary Commission been enacted in 1925 8 Religion EditThe local area has a mixed religious composition with the village having Roman Catholic Church of Ireland Presbyterian and Methodist Churches nbsp The village is also on the R232 roadPublic transport EditBus services Edit Ulsterbus route 194 provides several daily journeys to and from Enniskillen via Irvinestown whereas route 195 provides one journey each way to Bundoran via Castlecaldwell and Belleek Pettigo is not served by Ulsterbus on Sundays though is served by McGeehan Coaches Bus Eireann Expressway route 30 providing one journey in each direction to from Dublin via Enniskillen Cavan and Dublin Airport 9 10 Bus Eireann seasonal route 486 provides links to and from Ballyshannon and Enniskillen for pilgrims to and from Station Island but also serves Pettigo 11 Railway Edit nbsp Pettigo railway stationThe Enniskillen and Bundoran Railway opened from Bundoran Junction on the Londonderry and Enniskillen Railway near Kilskeery Co Tyrone to Pettigo on 13 June 1866 12 It was extended to Bundoran County Donegal in 1868 13 and intended to continue to Sligo but failed to do so 14 The Great Northern Railway ran the E amp BR from 1876 and took it over in 1896 15 The railway greatly aided the movement and export of agricultural produce such as sheep and cattle and the import and distribution of coal building materials and imported food Livestock were loaded onto the train from the nearby Pettigo Market Yard Both the partition of Ireland in 1922 and increasing road transport weakened the railway The Government of Northern Ireland made the GNR close nearly all of its cross border lines including the Bundoran branch on 1 October 1957 16 Notable people EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Category People from Pettigo General Charles Barton 1760 1819 lived at his Pettigo estate known as the Waterfoot 17 Sir Sidney Barton British Minister to Ethiopia Moya Doherty co founder of Riverdance John Kells Ingram poet Sean McGinley actor Basil McIvor politician and pioneer of integrated education The Most Rev Miler Magrath Church of Ireland Archbishop of Cashel Sir John Leslie 4th Baronet 4th baronet Glaslough and PettigoTermon McGrath Castle EditTermon McGrath Castle also known as Castle McGrath was probably built in the early seventeenth century probably being built circa 1611 at the start of the Plantation of Ulster 18 The castle in reality a Gaelic towerhouse was built for either The Most Rev Miler McGrath Church of Ireland Archbishop of Cashel or more likely his son James McGrath 18 During the campaign of 1649 1650 the castle was bombarded by Cromwellian troops which severely damaged the structure it seems that the castle was abandoned around this time 18 A small village no longer in existence seems to have grown up immediately outside the castle walls 19 There was an escape tunnel from the castle to the Belaut River The castle and lands were sold to the Leslie family of County Monaghan who controlled the Pettigo estate until the early 20th century The Mill Edit nbsp Pettigo MillPettigo Mill was built by the Leslie family who owned the Pettigo estate The Leslie family were originally from Monaghan town Pettigo Mill was first on the map of Pettigo dated 1767 but probably is much older The Mill got its power from the Termon river It was described as a cloth mill i e woolen cloth but probably also ground oats and other grains During the famine maize or Indian meal as it was called was ground in the Pettigo Mill This was then sent to the poor through the port of Ballyshannon in the year 1845 1846 After the arrival of the railway in Pettigo which opened in 1860 Pettigo Mill was a saw mill as well as a grain mill Timber for all the usual purposes was produced but the main product that was made was egg boxes which held twelve eggs Eggs were sent by train to the cities of Belfast and Dublin or on to England and Scotland Egg boxes were in great demand as many people depended on their egg money to buy their groceries in the local shops The Termon Complex EditThe Termon Complex is a community initiative by ADoPT Association for Development of Pettigo and Tullyhommon It is a sports leisure and entertainment complex located on the banks of the River Termon opened in May 2014 The building project was a collaboration between the Planning amp Economic Development Directorate of Donegal County Council in partnership with Fermanagh District Council and the Association for the Development of Pettigo and Tullyhommon ADoPT The Termon Project has been awarded 8 3 million of EU support through the PEACE III Programme The complex encompasses Different spaces within the building which will facilitate indoor sports large meetings conferences drama productions and concerts including a main hall conference room and meeting rooms ADoPT offices A purpose built gym An outdoor multi use games area MUGA A new playschool with secure private playground A new public playground and community garden Recycling space car parking and horticultural tunnelsWalks EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message The mountains hills and quiet country roads offer space for hill walking cycling and pony trekking The Pettigo History trail which is centred round the village can be explored at the hiker s leisure The trail entails the history and heritage of the Pettigo area 30 plaques tell of the creator of Riverdance Moya Doherty French Tom Barton Banjo Patterson the Crimean War Tree and the Pettigo Connection to The Quiet Man among many other tales of the areas surrounded by lakes nbsp Pettigo Post Office Lakes angling EditLying between Lough Erne and Lough Derg Pettigo is able to offer the visiting angler a full range of fishing opportunities With over fifty lakes salmon and native brown trout will keep the game angler happy while the coarse angler will find specimen fish in Drumgun Lough Fishing permits and boat hire is available from Brittons Bar which is located in the village Lough Derg EditMain article Lough Derg This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Lough Derg the biggest of the Pettigo lakes is famous throughout the northwest for its trout fishing citation needed Covering 2 200 acres with a shore line of 13 miles it offers opportunities for both boat and shore angling It also offers excellent pike fishing Lough Derg lies about four miles north of the village of Pettigo in County Donegal Station Island the location of the Lough Derg Pilgrimage is often referred to as Saint Patrick s Purgatory or simply Lough Derg This small lake island renowned in Irish Christian tradition since the time of St Patrick has been receiving pilgrims continuously for well over 1000 years In earlier times the area around the lake was a place of protection for anyone in trouble The monastery nearby offered hospitality to all Citations Edit Paiteago Pettigo Placenames Database of Ireland logainm ie Retrieved 7 May 2022 Census 2011 Population Classified by Area PDF Central Statistics Office Dublin ArcGIS Web Application No break for the Border The Irish Times 3 October 2001 Retrieved 9 March 2020 Robert Lynch The Northern IRA and the early years of Partition 1920 1922 p154 156 Collins Protests British Army Move PDF New York Times 6 June 1922 Bureau of Military History 1913 1921 1952 report by men who took part in the battle Retrieved 2013 10 01 Irish Boundary Commission Report National Archives 1925 pp 140 43 Travel anywhere in Ireland by bus or coach with Bus Eireann e g Dublin Cork Galway etc Bus Eireann Translink Ulsterbus Translink translink co uk Archived from the original on 1 August 2013 Retrieved 28 July 2013 Christmas amp New Year Travel Arrangements Travel anywhere in Ireland by bus or coach with Bus Eireann e g Dublin Cork Galway etc Archived from the original on 29 December 2010 Pettigo station PDF Railscot Irish Railways Retrieved 22 November 2007 Hajducki 1974 maps 6 7 Sprinks 1970 p 8 Hajducki 1974 p xiii Baker 1972 pp 153 207 Edward Walford The County Families of the United Kingdom p 57 a b c Brian Lac e y editor Archaeological Survey of County Donegal pp 350 and 351 Donegal County Council Lifford 1983 Brian Lac e y editor Archaeological Survey of County Donegal p 353 Donegal County Council Lifford 1983 General sources EditBaker Michael H C 1972 Irish Railways since 1916 London Ian Allan ISBN 0 7110 0282 7 Hajducki S Maxwell 1974 A Railway Atlas of Ireland Newton Abbott David amp Charles maps 6 7 page xiii ISBN 0 7153 5167 2 Sprinks N W 1970 Sligo Leitrim and Northern Counties Railway Billericay Irish Railway Record Society London Area Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pettigo amp oldid 1176673578, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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