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Ballymore, County Westmeath

Ballymore (Irish: An Baile Mór, meaning 'big town')[2] is a village in County Westmeath, Ireland, on the R390 road between Athlone and Mullingar. The historic Hill of Uisneach is nearby. The village was known in medieval times as the medieval borough of Ballymore Lough Sewdy, or Loughsewdy, after the nearby lake, the site of an ancient bruighean, or hostel.

Ballymore
An Baile Mór
Village
R390 road through the village
Ballymore
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°29′28″N 7°40′48″W / 53.491°N 7.68°W / 53.491; -7.68Coordinates: 53°29′28″N 7°40′48″W / 53.491°N 7.68°W / 53.491; -7.68
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyCounty Westmeath
Elevation
128 m (420 ft)
Population
 (2016)[1]
 • Total483
Time zoneUTC+0 (WET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-1 (IST (WEST))
Irish Grid ReferenceN209490

History

Evidence of the area’s bloody history can be deduced by translation of some of its placenames - although it’s not clear when some of these names came into being. One notable townland is Lugnacaha (often pronounced locally as “Lugahaca”), which translates as “the hollow of the battle”. There’s a field in Shinglis referred to as “Lug na Fola”, which translates as “the hollow of the blood”, and locally, it is claimed that when, once, an attempt was made to plough that field, blood seeped up through the soil.

Plary Abbey was founded before the year 700, and a monastery, in honour of the Virgin Mary, for Gilbertin canons, which order consisted of canons of the Premonstre order, and Benedictine nuns, was erected here by the de Lacey family. The church of this monastery was for a short time the cathedral church of the diocese of Meath.[3]

Brewer states that the Gilbertine Abbey was founded in 1218, on the site of a monastery that had stood there from before the year 700. He describes the location as being "at the foot of the Hill of Clare, or Mullaghcloe", and says that on the summit are the ruins of Clare Castle.[4]

In the year 1338, Theobald de Verdun, 2nd Lord Verdun, Justiciar of Ireland (born 8 September 1278), lord of the manor of Ballymore, obtained a grant of a weekly market, and a 15-day fair for in Ballymore.

As far back as 1315, Edward the Bruce, younger brother of Robert the Bruce of Scotland, came to the village. He arrived in Ireland in May 1315, and was proclaimed king within a month. He stormed through the country attempting to subdue it, and spent Christmas of 1315 in Ballymore, at the manor of Theobald de Verdun, reportedly using up all the stocks of food there and extending his thanks by burning the manor to the ground as he left.

In the period of decline for the colony following the Bruce Invasion and Black Death the lands around Ballymore fell to the hands of a locally based Hiberno-Norman family of Dalton. By the mid-fifteenth century, the Daltons in six branches were lords of Rathconrath barony one of which was based in Ballymore.

By about 1600, Ballymore had become the property of Sir Francis Shaen, an Elizabethan soldier, who had been involved in the plundering of Multyfarnham Abbey. In 1636, the castle, manor and lake of Ballymore were granted to Nicholas, first Viscount Netterville.

Towards the latter end of the wars of 1641, Ballymore was home to a strong garrison of the English forces. Their garrison was located beside Lough Seudy, and divided from the mainland by "a deep and large graff, with ramparts of earth and bulwarks: the ditch was carried so low as to receive three or four feet of the stagnant water of the lake, over which was by a draw-bridge the entry into the fort; this was the chief fortress of this county".[5]

In 1831, Ballymore village consisted of 121 houses, chiefly small houses or cabins, forming one long street. Today it is still jokingly referred to as "the village with two ends and no middle".

Substantial emigration took place from Ballymore to Argentina in the 1800s.[6]

Siege of Ballymore 1691

The Williamite War in Ireland (Irish: Cogadh an Dá Rí, meaning "war of the two kings") was a conflict between Jacobites (supporters of Catholic King James II) and Williamites (supporters of Protestant Prince William of Orange) over who would be King of England, Scotland and Ireland. It is also called the Jacobite War in Ireland or the Williamite–Jacobite War in Ireland.

While James II was unpopular in England, he had widespread popular support in Ireland, and following the Glorious Revolution, in which he was overthrown by William of Orange who became William III of England, William landed a multi-national force in Ireland, composed of English, Scottish, Dutch, Danish and other troops, to put down Jacobite resistance. James left Ireland after a reverse at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690, but the successful resistance at the Siege of Limerick gave the Irish Jacobites time. However they would be decisively defeated following the Battle of Aughrim in 1691.

Prior to that, in late 1690 and early 1691, while the main armies went into winter quarters, an area east of the Shannon became a zone of contention which was ruinous to the local population caught between the two forces. The Williamites established small garrisons around which irregular Irish forces, rapparees, and raiding troops from the Jacobite positions operated in small-scale actions. Ballymore however remained the principal forward position for the Jacobites and Sarsfield showed particular concern for its retention as covering the approach to Athlone.

In the lead up to what was to become the Battle of Aughrim, Mullingar was fortified by the Dutch-born Godert de Ginkell, 1st Earl of Athlone, Viscount of Aughrim and Baron of Ballymore, who in the spring of 1691, on William's instructions, took command as Lieutenant General of the Williamite forces in Ireland.[7] Mullingar thus became the principal point of concentration of the Williamite forces, with Ballymore the first place in their sights as they moved towards Athlone.

With a large force of mounted and infantry troops, de Ginkell left Mullingar in early June for Ballymore, where, in a fort on the shores of Lough Seudy, a thousand adherents of James II were encamped. There was a smaller force, consisting of a sergeant only and a few men in a castle "on an eminence at some distance from the village", and it was this location that de Ginkell attacked first. The sergeant and his small band resisted, and when eventually they were captured, de Ginkell hanged the sergeant before turning his attention to the fort.[8]

"The [fort], which stands on the verge of Lough Seudy, was defenceless towards the lake, and as the besiegers not only battered it with their artillery on the land side, but approached it on that of the water by boats, the governor, Colonel Ulick Burke deemed it right to surrender on the following day".[9]

The Williamite forces lost just eight men in the siege.

De Ginkell remained at Ballymore for a further ten days, enabling his troops to prepare for their next engagement, which was to be at Athlone. At Ballyburn-Pass, between Ballymore and Athlone, de Ginkell and 20,000 troops [10] were joined by the Duke of Wurtemberg and Count Nassau with 7,000 mercenaries before proceeding on to Athlone.[11][12] Before leaving Ballymore, de Ginkell placed Colonel Toby Purcell in charge of the captured garrison,[13] with, under his command, "but 4 companies of foot or no more than 240 men, exclusive officers" [14] and the 51 officers, 780 soldiers and 220 raparees captured there were transported to Dublin, the officers to Dublin Castle, and the rest to Lambay Island, off the coast of Dublin, as internees.[15]

Meanwhile, for the native population of Ballymore at the time, there was little joy in existence. An account from an eyewitness [16] from the Williamite camp reported that the fort was "haunted by wretched people in the lowest stage of suffering, from the famine caused by the waste of both parties."

He reported that while the English army had supplies, they "could afford nothing to the crowd of forlorn and famishing outcasts whom danger collected around the camp; to these, so dreadful was their destitution that a morsel of garbage was a feast, and they flocked as ravens round the putrifying and blackened carcasses of dead horses which lay rotting in the summer sun".

Significant buildings

 
The parish pump in Ballymore, Co Westmeath

The Roman Catholic "Church of the Most Holy Redeemer" in Ballymore was built around c.1845 and is described in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage as having been built in a Tudor-Gothic style with, circa 1870, early English Gothic-style alterations. It comprises a six-bay nave with an attached three-stage tower on square-plan to the north with a slated pyramidal roof, flanked to the east and west by advanced gable-fronted bays containing the main entrances. There is a single-storey flat-roofed sacristy to the rear.[17]

At the end of Church Lane, at Market Hill, Ballymore, can be found the ruins of St Owen's Church of Ireland, erected in 1827 using a loan of £1200 from the Board of First Fruits. It comprises a three-bay hall to the east and a three-stage tower on square plan to the west end, having crow-stepped parapets and corner pinnacles. The churchyard contains a graveyard with mainly nineteenth-century grave markers, and there are the remains of single-cell chapel on rectangular plan to the east, built c.1625.[18]

Demographics

In the 2006 Census, the village had a population of 485, a 6% increase above the 2002 Census.[19]

Festivals

 
Singer Mike Denver on stage at the Ballymore Country Music Festival 2014

Ballymore Country Music Festival, which had run for around ten years in the late 1970s and early 1980s, was revived in 2013 by Ballymore GAA and Fr Dalton's Hurling Club.[20] The 2015 festival took place on 3 August with performances from Nathan Carter, Brendan Shine, and Johnny Brady.[21]

Sport

Ballymore is home to Ballymore GAA Club, which was founded in 1884. The club enjoy some success at intermediate level, and were Senior Finalists in 1965.[22] Fr Dalton's Hurling Club shares facilities with Ballymore GAA.[23]

There is a Gaelic 4 Mothers & Others (G4M&O) club in the town. Ballymore G4M&O participated in the 2019 Gaelic 4 Mothers & Others National Blitz.[24]

Ballymore has a bowls club that meets in Ballymore Community Centre on Wednesday nights.[25] Within the community centre, there is also a handball court and a squash court.

Ballymore Pitch and Putt course is located 1.5 km south of Ballymore, on Moate Road.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Sap map Area - Settlements - Ballymore". Census 2016. CSO. 2016. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  2. ^ "An Baile Mór/Ballymore". Placenames Database of Ireland (logainm.ie). Retrieved 17 October 2021.
  3. ^ A Topographical Dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland: Compiled from local information, and the most recent and official authorities by John Gordon (Vol 1). London: Chapman and Hall, 1833
  4. ^ James Norris Brewer (1826). The Beauties of Ireland: Being Original Delineations, Topographical, Historical, and Biographical, of Each County. Sherwood, Jones, & Company. pp. 248–.
  5. ^ William Wenman Seward (1797). Topographia Hibernica, Or The Topography of Ireland, Ancient and Modern: Giving a Complete View of the Civil and Ecclesiastical State of that Kingdom ... Alexander Stewart.
  6. ^ Darwin, Kenneth (December 1992). Familia 1992: Conference Essays. ISBN 9780901905567.
  7. ^ Stockdale's Peerage of England, Scotland and Ireland: Containing an Account of All the Peers of the United Kingdom, Volume 2 (Google eBook)
  8. ^ The History of Ireland, Vol II. O'Driscol, J. London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown and Green. Paternoster Row. 1827
  9. ^ The History of Ireland, Ancient and Modern: Derived from Our Native Annals. Haverty, M. Dublin: James Duffy, 15 Wellington Quay, 1867
  10. ^ The Irish chieftains; or, A struggle for the crown (Google eBook), Blake-Forster, CF. 1872
  11. ^ The History of Ireland, Ancient and Modern: Derived from Our Native Annals. Haverty, M. Dublin: James Duffy, 15 Wellington Quay, 1867
  12. ^ The life of William the Third. Ryan, John Sprott. Dublin: Grant and Bolton, Dame Street. 1836
  13. ^ Macariae Excidium, Or, The Destruction of Cyprus: Being a Secret History of the War of the Revolution in Ireland. O'Kelly, C. Dublin, 1850.(Google eBook)
  14. ^ The green book; or, Gleanings from the writing desk of a literary agitator. O'Callaghan JC, Dublin, 1841. (Google eBook)
  15. ^ Here and There Through Ireland, Banim, M. Dublin, The Freeman's Press, 1891
  16. ^ Lives of illustrious and distinguished Irishmen, Vol III part II. Wills, J. ed. Dublin: Maggregor, Polson & Co, 10 Upper Abbey Street. MDCCCXLI
  17. ^ "Church Of The Most Holy Redeemer, Ballymore, County Westmeath". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  18. ^ "St. Owen's Church Of Ireland Church, Ballymore, County Westmeath". National Inventory of Architectural Heritage.
  19. ^ (PDF). Census 2006 - Preliminary. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 March 2009.
  20. ^ Donohoe, John (15 July 2013). "Ballymore revives country music festival". Meath Chronicle. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  21. ^ "Ballymore country music festival on tomorrow". Westmeath Examiner. 2 August 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  22. ^ "History". Ballymore GAA.
  23. ^ "Hurling". Ballymore GAA.
  24. ^ "REVIEW: 2019 Gaelic4Mothers&Others National Blitz day is the biggest and best yet!". Ladies' Gaelic Football Association. 7 October 2019. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  25. ^ Kelly, Tom (3 February 2009). "Ballymore Notes". Westmeath Independent. Retrieved 27 January 2020.

External links

  • Ballymore Country Music Festival on Facebook

ballymore, county, westmeath, ballymore, irish, baile, mór, meaning, town, village, county, westmeath, ireland, r390, road, between, athlone, mullingar, historic, hill, uisneach, nearby, village, known, medieval, times, medieval, borough, ballymore, lough, sew. Ballymore Irish An Baile Mor meaning big town 2 is a village in County Westmeath Ireland on the R390 road between Athlone and Mullingar The historic Hill of Uisneach is nearby The village was known in medieval times as the medieval borough of Ballymore Lough Sewdy or Loughsewdy after the nearby lake the site of an ancient bruighean or hostel Ballymore An Baile MorVillageR390 road through the villageBallymoreLocation in IrelandCoordinates 53 29 28 N 7 40 48 W 53 491 N 7 68 W 53 491 7 68 Coordinates 53 29 28 N 7 40 48 W 53 491 N 7 68 W 53 491 7 68CountryIrelandProvinceLeinsterCountyCounty WestmeathElevation128 m 420 ft Population 2016 1 Total483Time zoneUTC 0 WET Summer DST UTC 1 IST WEST Irish Grid ReferenceN209490 Contents 1 History 2 Siege of Ballymore 1691 3 Significant buildings 4 Demographics 5 Festivals 6 Sport 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditEvidence of the area s bloody history can be deduced by translation of some of its placenames although it s not clear when some of these names came into being One notable townland is Lugnacaha often pronounced locally as Lugahaca which translates as the hollow of the battle There s a field in Shinglis referred to as Lug na Fola which translates as the hollow of the blood and locally it is claimed that when once an attempt was made to plough that field blood seeped up through the soil Plary Abbey was founded before the year 700 and a monastery in honour of the Virgin Mary for Gilbertin canons which order consisted of canons of the Premonstre order and Benedictine nuns was erected here by the de Lacey family The church of this monastery was for a short time the cathedral church of the diocese of Meath 3 Brewer states that the Gilbertine Abbey was founded in 1218 on the site of a monastery that had stood there from before the year 700 He describes the location as being at the foot of the Hill of Clare or Mullaghcloe and says that on the summit are the ruins of Clare Castle 4 In the year 1338 Theobald de Verdun 2nd Lord Verdun Justiciar of Ireland born 8 September 1278 lord of the manor of Ballymore obtained a grant of a weekly market and a 15 day fair for in Ballymore As far back as 1315 Edward the Bruce younger brother of Robert the Bruce of Scotland came to the village He arrived in Ireland in May 1315 and was proclaimed king within a month He stormed through the country attempting to subdue it and spent Christmas of 1315 in Ballymore at the manor of Theobald de Verdun reportedly using up all the stocks of food there and extending his thanks by burning the manor to the ground as he left In the period of decline for the colony following the Bruce Invasion and Black Death the lands around Ballymore fell to the hands of a locally based Hiberno Norman family of Dalton By the mid fifteenth century the Daltons in six branches were lords of Rathconrath barony one of which was based in Ballymore By about 1600 Ballymore had become the property of Sir Francis Shaen an Elizabethan soldier who had been involved in the plundering of Multyfarnham Abbey In 1636 the castle manor and lake of Ballymore were granted to Nicholas first Viscount Netterville Towards the latter end of the wars of 1641 Ballymore was home to a strong garrison of the English forces Their garrison was located beside Lough Seudy and divided from the mainland by a deep and large graff with ramparts of earth and bulwarks the ditch was carried so low as to receive three or four feet of the stagnant water of the lake over which was by a draw bridge the entry into the fort this was the chief fortress of this county 5 In 1831 Ballymore village consisted of 121 houses chiefly small houses or cabins forming one long street Today it is still jokingly referred to as the village with two ends and no middle Substantial emigration took place from Ballymore to Argentina in the 1800s 6 Siege of Ballymore 1691 EditThe Williamite War in Ireland Irish Cogadh an Da Ri meaning war of the two kings was a conflict between Jacobites supporters of Catholic King James II and Williamites supporters of Protestant Prince William of Orange over who would be King of England Scotland and Ireland It is also called the Jacobite War in Ireland or the Williamite Jacobite War in Ireland While James II was unpopular in England he had widespread popular support in Ireland and following the Glorious Revolution in which he was overthrown by William of Orange who became William III of England William landed a multi national force in Ireland composed of English Scottish Dutch Danish and other troops to put down Jacobite resistance James left Ireland after a reverse at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 but the successful resistance at the Siege of Limerick gave the Irish Jacobites time However they would be decisively defeated following the Battle of Aughrim in 1691 Prior to that in late 1690 and early 1691 while the main armies went into winter quarters an area east of the Shannon became a zone of contention which was ruinous to the local population caught between the two forces The Williamites established small garrisons around which irregular Irish forces rapparees and raiding troops from the Jacobite positions operated in small scale actions Ballymore however remained the principal forward position for the Jacobites and Sarsfield showed particular concern for its retention as covering the approach to Athlone In the lead up to what was to become the Battle of Aughrim Mullingar was fortified by the Dutch born Godert de Ginkell 1st Earl of Athlone Viscount of Aughrim and Baron of Ballymore who in the spring of 1691 on William s instructions took command as Lieutenant General of the Williamite forces in Ireland 7 Mullingar thus became the principal point of concentration of the Williamite forces with Ballymore the first place in their sights as they moved towards Athlone With a large force of mounted and infantry troops de Ginkell left Mullingar in early June for Ballymore where in a fort on the shores of Lough Seudy a thousand adherents of James II were encamped There was a smaller force consisting of a sergeant only and a few men in a castle on an eminence at some distance from the village and it was this location that de Ginkell attacked first The sergeant and his small band resisted and when eventually they were captured de Ginkell hanged the sergeant before turning his attention to the fort 8 The fort which stands on the verge of Lough Seudy was defenceless towards the lake and as the besiegers not only battered it with their artillery on the land side but approached it on that of the water by boats the governor Colonel Ulick Burke deemed it right to surrender on the following day 9 The Williamite forces lost just eight men in the siege De Ginkell remained at Ballymore for a further ten days enabling his troops to prepare for their next engagement which was to be at Athlone At Ballyburn Pass between Ballymore and Athlone de Ginkell and 20 000 troops 10 were joined by the Duke of Wurtemberg and Count Nassau with 7 000 mercenaries before proceeding on to Athlone 11 12 Before leaving Ballymore de Ginkell placed Colonel Toby Purcell in charge of the captured garrison 13 with under his command but 4 companies of foot or no more than 240 men exclusive officers 14 and the 51 officers 780 soldiers and 220 raparees captured there were transported to Dublin the officers to Dublin Castle and the rest to Lambay Island off the coast of Dublin as internees 15 Meanwhile for the native population of Ballymore at the time there was little joy in existence An account from an eyewitness 16 from the Williamite camp reported that the fort was haunted by wretched people in the lowest stage of suffering from the famine caused by the waste of both parties He reported that while the English army had supplies they could afford nothing to the crowd of forlorn and famishing outcasts whom danger collected around the camp to these so dreadful was their destitution that a morsel of garbage was a feast and they flocked as ravens round the putrifying and blackened carcasses of dead horses which lay rotting in the summer sun Significant buildings Edit The parish pump in Ballymore Co Westmeath The Roman Catholic Church of the Most Holy Redeemer in Ballymore was built around c 1845 and is described in the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage as having been built in a Tudor Gothic style with circa 1870 early English Gothic style alterations It comprises a six bay nave with an attached three stage tower on square plan to the north with a slated pyramidal roof flanked to the east and west by advanced gable fronted bays containing the main entrances There is a single storey flat roofed sacristy to the rear 17 At the end of Church Lane at Market Hill Ballymore can be found the ruins of St Owen s Church of Ireland erected in 1827 using a loan of 1200 from the Board of First Fruits It comprises a three bay hall to the east and a three stage tower on square plan to the west end having crow stepped parapets and corner pinnacles The churchyard contains a graveyard with mainly nineteenth century grave markers and there are the remains of single cell chapel on rectangular plan to the east built c 1625 18 Demographics EditIn the 2006 Census the village had a population of 485 a 6 increase above the 2002 Census 19 Festivals Edit Singer Mike Denver on stage at the Ballymore Country Music Festival 2014 Ballymore Country Music Festival which had run for around ten years in the late 1970s and early 1980s was revived in 2013 by Ballymore GAA and Fr Dalton s Hurling Club 20 The 2015 festival took place on 3 August with performances from Nathan Carter Brendan Shine and Johnny Brady 21 Sport EditBallymore is home to Ballymore GAA Club which was founded in 1884 The club enjoy some success at intermediate level and were Senior Finalists in 1965 22 Fr Dalton s Hurling Club shares facilities with Ballymore GAA 23 There is a Gaelic 4 Mothers amp Others G4M amp O club in the town Ballymore G4M amp O participated in the 2019 Gaelic 4 Mothers amp Others National Blitz 24 Ballymore has a bowls club that meets in Ballymore Community Centre on Wednesday nights 25 Within the community centre there is also a handball court and a squash court Ballymore Pitch and Putt course is located 1 5 km south of Ballymore on Moate Road See also EditList of towns and villages in Ireland Alison SpittleReferences Edit Sap map Area Settlements Ballymore Census 2016 CSO 2016 Retrieved 27 January 2020 An Baile Mor Ballymore Placenames Database of Ireland logainm ie Retrieved 17 October 2021 A Topographical Dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland Compiled from local information and the most recent and official authorities by John Gordon Vol 1 London Chapman and Hall 1833 James Norris Brewer 1826 The Beauties of Ireland Being Original Delineations Topographical Historical and Biographical of Each County Sherwood Jones amp Company pp 248 William Wenman Seward 1797 Topographia Hibernica Or The Topography of Ireland Ancient and Modern Giving a Complete View of the Civil and Ecclesiastical State of that Kingdom Alexander Stewart Darwin Kenneth December 1992 Familia 1992 Conference Essays ISBN 9780901905567 Stockdale s Peerage of England Scotland and Ireland Containing an Account of All the Peers of the United Kingdom Volume 2 Google eBook The History of Ireland Vol II O Driscol J London Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green Paternoster Row 1827 The History of Ireland Ancient and Modern Derived from Our Native Annals Haverty M Dublin James Duffy 15 Wellington Quay 1867 The Irish chieftains or A struggle for the crown Google eBook Blake Forster CF 1872 The History of Ireland Ancient and Modern Derived from Our Native Annals Haverty M Dublin James Duffy 15 Wellington Quay 1867 The life of William the Third Ryan John Sprott Dublin Grant and Bolton Dame Street 1836 Macariae Excidium Or The Destruction of Cyprus Being a Secret History of the War of the Revolution in Ireland O Kelly C Dublin 1850 Google eBook The green book or Gleanings from the writing desk of a literary agitator O Callaghan JC Dublin 1841 Google eBook Here and There Through Ireland Banim M Dublin The Freeman s Press 1891 Lives of illustrious and distinguished Irishmen Vol III part II Wills J ed Dublin Maggregor Polson amp Co 10 Upper Abbey Street MDCCCXLI Church Of The Most Holy Redeemer Ballymore County Westmeath National Inventory of Architectural Heritage St Owen s Church Of Ireland Church Ballymore County Westmeath National Inventory of Architectural Heritage Population of each Province County City urban area rural area and Electoral Division 2002 and 2006 PDF Census 2006 Preliminary Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Donohoe John 15 July 2013 Ballymore revives country music festival Meath Chronicle Retrieved 27 January 2020 Ballymore country music festival on tomorrow Westmeath Examiner 2 August 2015 Retrieved 27 January 2020 History Ballymore GAA Hurling Ballymore GAA REVIEW 2019 Gaelic4Mothers amp Others National Blitz day is the biggest and best yet Ladies Gaelic Football Association 7 October 2019 Retrieved 27 January 2020 Kelly Tom 3 February 2009 Ballymore Notes Westmeath Independent Retrieved 27 January 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ballymore County Westmeath Ballymore Country Music Festival on Facebook Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ballymore County Westmeath amp oldid 1066555575, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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