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Poyntzpass

Poyntzpass (Irish: Pas Phoyntz / Pas an Phointe)[1] is a small village on the border between southern County Armagh and County Down in Northern Ireland. It is situated in the civil parish of Ballymore and the historic barony of Orior Lower[2] within the Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon area. It had a population of 552 people (228 households) in the 2011 Census.[3] It was a part of the South Armagh constituency and is now part of the Newry and Armagh constituency.

Poyntzpass
The level-crossing at Poyntzpass
Location within Northern Ireland
Population552 (2011 Census)
Irish grid referenceJ057394
• Belfast29.02 mi (46.70 km)
District
County
CountryNorthern Ireland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNEWRY
Postcode districtBT35
Dialling code028
PoliceNorthern Ireland
FireNorthern Ireland
AmbulanceNorthern Ireland
UK Parliament
NI Assembly
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
54°17′13″N 6°22′19″W / 54.287°N 6.372°W / 54.287; -6.372

The village covers the townlands of Tullynacross, Brannock, Federnagh and Loughadian. It includes five places of Christian worship; a Roman Catholic Church, a Church of Ireland Church, a Presbyterian Church,[4] a Baptist Church, and an Independent Church; 3 public houses; and 2 primary schools.

History edit

The second half of the village's name reflects the fact that, historically, it was one of a few crossing points across a marsh stretching 25 miles (40 km) from Lough Neagh to Carlingford Lough, following the course of a prehistoric glacial overflow channel. It was named after Lieutenant Charles Poyntz who fought a battle there against Hugh O'Neill, 3rd Earl of Tyrone in 1598.

From "Topographical Dictionary of Ireland" by Samuel Lewis, 1837:

"POYNTZPASS, or FENWICK'S PASS, a small town, partly in the parish of AGHADERG, barony of UPPER IVEAGH, county of DOWN, but chiefly in the parish of BALLYMORE barony of LOWER ORIOR, county of ARMAGH and province of ULSTER , 2¾ miles (S.W.) from Loughbrickland, to which it has a penny post; containing 660 inhabitants, of which number, 88 are in the county of Down. This place was an encumbered pass through bogs and woods, from the county of Down into that of Armagh, and from the O'Hanlons' to the Magennises' country: it derives its present name from this important military position having been forced, after a desperate action, by Lieut. Poyntz, of the English army, with a few troops, against a numerous body of Tyrone's soldiers, for which service he was rewarded with a grant of 500 acres [2 km²] in this barony: there are some remains of the castle that commanded the pass. At Drumbanagher are vestiges of the entrenchment surrounding the principal strong hold of the Earl of Tyrone, during his wars with Queen Elizabeth, called Tyrone's Ditches. Poyntz-Pass is now one of the most fertile and beautiful spots in this part of the country. To the south is Drumbanagher Castle, the handsome residence of Lieut.-Col. Maxwell Close, built in the Italian style, with a large portico in front; on an eminence above the town is Acton House, the elegant residence of C. R. Dobbs, Esq.; not far from which is Union Lodge, that of W. Fivey, Esq., in a beautiful demesne, bounded by the extensive waters of Lough Shark. That portion of the town which is in the county of Armagh was built about 1790, by Mr. Stewart, then proprietor, who procured for it a grant of a market and fairs; the former was never established, but the latter, held on the first Saturday in every month, are large and well attended, great numbers of cattle and sheep being sold. The town comprises 116 houses in one principal street, intersected by a shorter one. It contains the church for the district of Acton, a small neat edifice in the early English style, with a tower at the east front, built in 1789, and considerably enlarged and improved in 1829; a R. C. chapel, a school, and a constabulary police station."

A castle was once situated in Poyntzpass. Its remnants were visible until the middle of the 19th century, but there is now no trace of it other than in the name 'Castle Corner' by which a corner of William Street is sometimes known.

On 3 March 1998, 26-year old Catholic Damian Trainor and 34-year old Presbyterian Philip Allen, were shot dead during a Loyalist Volunteer Force gun attack on the Railway Bar in Poyntzpass.[5][6]

Local surnames edit

In 1910, these surnames were recorded in Poyntzpass in the Ulster towns directory.[7]

  • Acheson, Adams, Agnew, Alderdice, Allen, Andrew, Andrews, Barber, Bicker, Brown, Burns, Campbell, Canavan, Carson, Carter, Clarke, Clowney, Close, Conlon, Corry, Coulter, Crothers, Cunningham, Cully, Daly, Denny, Finch, Hollow, Fisher, Flanigan, Foy, Gibson, Gilleland, Gordon, Graham, Griffith, Guy, Hanna, Harden, Henry, Humphrey, Hunter, Johnson, Johnston, Kelso, Laverty, Lennon, Little, Loughlin, O'Loughlin, Madden, Magenis, Maloney, Man, Matthews, Milne, Monaghan, Moody, Moorcroft, Morrow, Murphy, Murray, McClelland, McComb, MacCullough, McDonald, McDowell, McElroy, McElvaine, McGaw, McGill/Magill, McKelvey, McLean, McMurray, McSherry, Qua, Quin, Rafferty, Reside, Rice, Robinson, Ryan, Ryder, Savage, Searight, Shanks, Sleith, Stewart, Stuart, Strain, Traynor/Trainor, Vint, Waddell, Walsh, Ward, White, Williamson, Wilkinson, Wilson, Wright and Wylie.

Surnames local to Poyntzpass and surrounding areas (such as Drumbanagher or Lissummon) that are not included in this survey from 1910, do appear in the 1911 census of the Poyntz Pass area.[8] A few of these names are:

  • Alexander, Best, O'Callaghan, Calvert, Convery, Hanlon, Hanratty, Hudson, Ligget, Mackle, McCourt, McKeown, McVeigh, McVerry, Meehan, Minnis, Morton, O'Hagan, Sheals, Shevlin, Sterritt, Stevenson and Teggart.

Notable people edit

Demography edit

On Census day (27 March 2011) there were 552 people living in Poyntzpass, accounting for 0.03% of the NI total.[3] Of these:

  • 24.64% were aged under 16 years and 13.77% were aged 65 and over;
  • 51.81% of the usually resident population were female and 48.19% were male;
  • 68.12% belong to or were brought up in the Catholic religion and 26.89% belong to or were brought up in a 'Protestant and Other Christian (including Christian related)' religion;
  • 42.03% had an Irish national identity, 30.80% indicated that they had a British national identity and 32.25% had a Northern Irish national identity (respondents could indicate more than one national identity);
  • 35 years was the average (median) age of the population;
  • 16.60% had some knowledge of Irish (Gaelic) and 2.15% had some knowledge of Ulster-Scots.

Sport edit

The local Gaelic football club, named in honour of the rapparee, is Redmond O'Hanlon's (Cumann Réamainn Uí Anluain). Created around 1960, it became inactive in 1970 but was revived in 1977. It currently competes at Junior level in county competitions, and combines with Whitecross and Lissummon to field Minor teams as St Brigid's.[12]

Transport edit

Poyntzpass straddles the main Belfast-Dublin railway line, and has a Northern Ireland Railways railway station. Poyntzpass railway station opened on 6 January 1862.[13]

The Newry Canal which flows through Poyntzpass follows the Armagh/Down border and was one of the first major canals to be constructed in Britain or Ireland. However, it never really fulfilled its promise to bring industry and prosperity and has been derelict since the 1940s. Its summit level is one mile (1.6 km) from the village at Acton Lake (Lough Shark).

Education edit

  • St Joseph and St James's Primary School
  • Poyntzpass Primary School

References edit

  1. ^ "Pas an Phointe/Poyntzpass". Placenames Database of Ireland (logainm.ie). Retrieved 4 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Poyntzpass". IreAtlas Townlands Database. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Census 2011 Population Statistics for Poyntzpass Settlement". Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA). Retrieved 8 June 2021. This article contains quotations from this source, which is available under the Open Government Licence v3.0. © Crown copyright.
  4. ^ https://www.facebook.com/CFPPresbyterianChurches[user-generated source]
  5. ^ http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/ NI Conflict Archive on the Internet
  6. ^ "2 Killed in Ireland Attack". AP NEWS. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
  7. ^ Library Ireland, Ulster Towns directory 1910 Poyntzpass, libraryireland.com
  8. ^ census.nationalarchives.ie "Townlands/Streets in Poyntz Pass (Armagh)". The National Archives of Ireland. Retrieved 7 November 2020. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help)
  9. ^ The Green Republic on Amazon Books
  10. ^ William Robert MacDermott, F. Watters; Before I Forget, Issue 1, 1987.
  11. ^ Poyntzpass and the American Civil War, R. Morrow; Before I Forget, Issue 15, 2019
  12. ^ Armagh GAA website 2012-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ "Poyntzpass station" (PDF). Railscot - Irish Railways. Retrieved 28 August 2007.

Sources edit

  • Poyntzpass and District Local History Society
  • Lieutenant Poyntz

See also edit

poyntzpass, irish, phoyntz, phointe, small, village, border, between, southern, county, armagh, county, down, northern, ireland, situated, civil, parish, ballymore, historic, barony, orior, lower, within, armagh, city, banbridge, craigavon, area, population, p. Poyntzpass Irish Pas Phoyntz Pas an Phointe 1 is a small village on the border between southern County Armagh and County Down in Northern Ireland It is situated in the civil parish of Ballymore and the historic barony of Orior Lower 2 within the Armagh City Banbridge and Craigavon area It had a population of 552 people 228 households in the 2011 Census 3 It was a part of the South Armagh constituency and is now part of the Newry and Armagh constituency PoyntzpassIrish Pas an PhointeThe level crossing at PoyntzpassLocation within Northern IrelandPopulation552 2011 Census Irish grid referenceJ057394 Belfast29 02 mi 46 70 km DistrictArmagh Banbridge and CraigavonCountyCounty Armagh amp County DownCountryNorthern IrelandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townNEWRYPostcode districtBT35Dialling code028PoliceNorthern IrelandFireNorthern IrelandAmbulanceNorthern IrelandUK ParliamentNewry amp ArmaghNI AssemblyNewry amp ArmaghList of places UK Northern Ireland 54 17 13 N 6 22 19 W 54 287 N 6 372 W 54 287 6 372The village covers the townlands of Tullynacross Brannock Federnagh and Loughadian It includes five places of Christian worship a Roman Catholic Church a Church of Ireland Church a Presbyterian Church 4 a Baptist Church and an Independent Church 3 public houses and 2 primary schools Contents 1 History 2 Local surnames 3 Notable people 4 Demography 5 Sport 6 Transport 7 Education 8 References 9 Sources 10 See alsoHistory editThe second half of the village s name reflects the fact that historically it was one of a few crossing points across a marsh stretching 25 miles 40 km from Lough Neagh to Carlingford Lough following the course of a prehistoric glacial overflow channel It was named after Lieutenant Charles Poyntz who fought a battle there against Hugh O Neill 3rd Earl of Tyrone in 1598 From Topographical Dictionary of Ireland by Samuel Lewis 1837 POYNTZPASS or FENWICK S PASS a small town partly in the parish of AGHADERG barony of UPPER IVEAGH county of DOWN but chiefly in the parish of BALLYMORE barony of LOWER ORIOR county of ARMAGH and province of ULSTER 2 miles S W from Loughbrickland to which it has a penny post containing 660 inhabitants of which number 88 are in the county of Down This place was an encumbered pass through bogs and woods from the county of Down into that of Armagh and from the O Hanlons to the Magennises country it derives its present name from this important military position having been forced after a desperate action by Lieut Poyntz of the English army with a few troops against a numerous body of Tyrone s soldiers for which service he was rewarded with a grant of 500 acres 2 km in this barony there are some remains of the castle that commanded the pass At Drumbanagher are vestiges of the entrenchment surrounding the principal strong hold of the Earl of Tyrone during his wars with Queen Elizabeth called Tyrone s Ditches Poyntz Pass is now one of the most fertile and beautiful spots in this part of the country To the south is Drumbanagher Castle the handsome residence of Lieut Col Maxwell Close built in the Italian style with a large portico in front on an eminence above the town is Acton House the elegant residence of C R Dobbs Esq not far from which is Union Lodge that of W Fivey Esq in a beautiful demesne bounded by the extensive waters of Lough Shark That portion of the town which is in the county of Armagh was built about 1790 by Mr Stewart then proprietor who procured for it a grant of a market and fairs the former was never established but the latter held on the first Saturday in every month are large and well attended great numbers of cattle and sheep being sold The town comprises 116 houses in one principal street intersected by a shorter one It contains the church for the district of Acton a small neat edifice in the early English style with a tower at the east front built in 1789 and considerably enlarged and improved in 1829 a R C chapel a school and a constabulary police station A castle was once situated in Poyntzpass Its remnants were visible until the middle of the 19th century but there is now no trace of it other than in the name Castle Corner by which a corner of William Street is sometimes known On 3 March 1998 26 year old Catholic Damian Trainor and 34 year old Presbyterian Philip Allen were shot dead during a Loyalist Volunteer Force gun attack on the Railway Bar in Poyntzpass 5 6 Local surnames editIn 1910 these surnames were recorded in Poyntzpass in the Ulster towns directory 7 Acheson Adams Agnew Alderdice Allen Andrew Andrews Barber Bicker Brown Burns Campbell Canavan Carson Carter Clarke Clowney Close Conlon Corry Coulter Crothers Cunningham Cully Daly Denny Finch Hollow Fisher Flanigan Foy Gibson Gilleland Gordon Graham Griffith Guy Hanna Harden Henry Humphrey Hunter Johnson Johnston Kelso Laverty Lennon Little Loughlin O Loughlin Madden Magenis Maloney Man Matthews Milne Monaghan Moody Moorcroft Morrow Murphy Murray McClelland McComb MacCullough McDonald McDowell McElroy McElvaine McGaw McGill Magill McKelvey McLean McMurray McSherry Qua Quin Rafferty Reside Rice Robinson Ryan Ryder Savage Searight Shanks Sleith Stewart Stuart Strain Traynor Trainor Vint Waddell Walsh Ward White Williamson Wilkinson Wilson Wright and Wylie Surnames local to Poyntzpass and surrounding areas such as Drumbanagher or Lissummon that are not included in this survey from 1910 do appear in the 1911 census of the Poyntz Pass area 8 A few of these names are Alexander Best O Callaghan Calvert Convery Hanlon Hanratty Hudson Ligget Mackle McCourt McKeown McVeigh McVerry Meehan Minnis Morton O Hagan Sheals Shevlin Sterritt Stevenson and Teggart Notable people editThe 17th century rapparee Redmond O Hanlon was a Poyntzpass native Charles Davis Lucas first recipient of the Victoria Cross in 1857 was born and grew up nearby Dr W R MacDermott the local dispensary doctor published his novel The Green Republic in 1904 under the penname A P A O Gara His fictional village Jigglestreet was based on Poyntzpass its inhabitants and their escapades in Ireland and America MacDermott used this story to advance his ideas on Irish Land Reform 9 10 11 Joe Lennon who won three All Ireland Senior Football medals with Down and captained the team in 1968 was born in Poyntzpass International rugby players Simon and Rory Best are from the village Demography editOn Census day 27 March 2011 there were 552 people living in Poyntzpass accounting for 0 03 of the NI total 3 Of these 24 64 were aged under 16 years and 13 77 were aged 65 and over 51 81 of the usually resident population were female and 48 19 were male 68 12 belong to or were brought up in the Catholic religion and 26 89 belong to or were brought up in a Protestant and Other Christian including Christian related religion 42 03 had an Irish national identity 30 80 indicated that they had a British national identity and 32 25 had a Northern Irish national identity respondents could indicate more than one national identity 35 years was the average median age of the population 16 60 had some knowledge of Irish Gaelic and 2 15 had some knowledge of Ulster Scots Sport editThe local Gaelic football club named in honour of the rapparee is Redmond O Hanlon s Cumann Reamainn Ui Anluain Created around 1960 it became inactive in 1970 but was revived in 1977 It currently competes at Junior level in county competitions and combines with Whitecross and Lissummon to field Minor teams as St Brigid s 12 Transport editPoyntzpass straddles the main Belfast Dublin railway line and has a Northern Ireland Railways railway station Poyntzpass railway station opened on 6 January 1862 13 The Newry Canal which flows through Poyntzpass follows the Armagh Down border and was one of the first major canals to be constructed in Britain or Ireland However it never really fulfilled its promise to bring industry and prosperity and has been derelict since the 1940s Its summit level is one mile 1 6 km from the village at Acton Lake Lough Shark Education editSt Joseph and St James s Primary School Poyntzpass Primary SchoolReferences edit Pas an Phointe Poyntzpass Placenames Database of Ireland logainm ie Retrieved 4 May 2023 Poyntzpass IreAtlas Townlands Database Retrieved 13 May 2015 a b Census 2011 Population Statistics for Poyntzpass Settlement Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency NISRA Retrieved 8 June 2021 This article contains quotations from this source which is available under the Open Government Licence v3 0 c Crown copyright https www facebook com CFPPresbyterianChurches user generated source http cain ulst ac uk sutton chron NI Conflict Archive on the Internet 2 Killed in Ireland Attack AP NEWS Retrieved 4 April 2021 Library Ireland Ulster Towns directory 1910 Poyntzpass libraryireland com census nationalarchives ie Townlands Streets in Poyntz Pass Armagh The National Archives of Ireland Retrieved 7 November 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help The Green Republic on Amazon Books William Robert MacDermott F Watters Before I Forget Issue 1 1987 Poyntzpass and the American Civil War R Morrow Before I Forget Issue 15 2019 Armagh GAA website Archived 2012 08 27 at the Wayback Machine Poyntzpass station PDF Railscot Irish Railways Retrieved 28 August 2007 Sources editPoyntzpass and District Local History Society Culture Northern Ireland Lieutenant PoyntzSee also editList of villages in Northern Ireland List of towns in Northern Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Poyntzpass amp oldid 1180273224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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