Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Letterkenny: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
84.203.61.169 (talk)
Undid revision 171269325 by 84.203.61.169 (talk)
Line 206: Line 206:
The [[Letterkenny Institute of Technology]] [http://www.lyit.ie/] (LYIT), which is situated east of the town centre on the Port Road, is a centre for engineering, information technology, materials science, design, business and nursing humanities. The institute has a student populatiion of 3000.
The [[Letterkenny Institute of Technology]] [http://www.lyit.ie/] (LYIT), which is situated east of the town centre on the Port Road, is a centre for engineering, information technology, materials science, design, business and nursing humanities. The institute has a student populatiion of 3000.


[[St. Eunan's College]] is the best secondary education centre situated just north-west of the town centre. It was built in 1906.
[[St. Eunan's College]] is the major secondary education centre situated just north-west of the town centre. It was built in 1906.


Primary and secondary education in the town is organised similarly to the rest of Ireland. There are 37 primary schools[http://www.educationireland.ie/httpdocs/htm/primary/schools/donegalp.html] in Letterkenny, including [[Scoil Colmcille, Letterkenny|Scoil Colmcille]], while there are 5 secondary schools.[http://www.educationireland.ie/httpdocs/htm/secondary/schools/donegals.html].
Primary and secondary education in the town is organised similarly to the rest of Ireland. There are 37 primary schools[http://www.educationireland.ie/httpdocs/htm/primary/schools/donegalp.html] in Letterkenny, including [[Scoil Colmcille, Letterkenny|Scoil Colmcille]], while there are 5 secondary schools.[http://www.educationireland.ie/httpdocs/htm/secondary/schools/donegals.html].

Revision as of 22:10, 13 November 2007

Template:Infobox Irish Place

Letterkenny (Irish: Leitir Ceanainn) is the largest town in County Donegal, an Ulster county within the Republic of Ireland. It is located on the River Swilly. Despite its size, it is not the administrative centre of County Donegal. Lifford is the County Town or administrative capital of the county. Letterkenny completley dominates the economy of County Donegal, Ulster's largest county. Letterkenny is considered to be one of the fastest growing towns in all of Ireland. Letterkenny and the nearby City of Derry form the major economic core of North-West Ireland.

It has been said that the town's Main Street is one of the longest in Ireland. The town was voted "Best Kept Urban Centre" in the 2007 "Best Kept Town Awards" [1] and "Tidiest Large Urban Centre" in the 2007 Tidy Towns competition. [2]

Name

Letterkenny takes its name from the Irish "Leitirceanainn" – meaning the "Hillside of the O'Cannons" – the O'Cannons being the last of the ancient chieftains of Tir Conaill. Although the O'Cannons were the last chieftains of Tir Conaill no evidence of forts or castles belonging to the clan exists in or around the Letterkenny district. (Leading to speculation on a possible derivation of the name Letterkenny: from the Irish "Leitir Ceann-Fhoinn" meaning "Fairheaded Hillside").

History

Letterkenny Town Centre ca. 2005

Letterkenny began as a market town in the 17th century (before the Great Famine) and was the first crossing point of the River Swilly. In the recent past the population of Letterkenny consisted of cattle and sheep grazing on what were then untilled hillside - when Conwall (2 miles west of Letterkenny) was the ecclesiastical and seaport centre. The waters of the Atlantic had not yet reached from the basin of the Swilly whose estuary at that time extended up almost as far as New Mills - proof of this may be found in those alluvial flat-lands between Oldtown and Port Road.

Rory O'Cannon, the last chieftain of the O'Cannon clan was killed in 1248. Godfrey O'Donnell succeeded Rory O'Cannon as King of Tir Conaill. He engaged Maurice Fitzgerald, the Norman Lord, in battle at Credan in North Sligo in 1257 in which both were badly wounded - Fitzgerald immediately fatally so. Godfrey (also dying from his wounds) retired to a crannog in Lough Beag (Garten Lake). O'Neill of Tyrone - taking advantage of Godfrey's fatal illness - demanded submission, hostages and pledges from the Cenél Conaill since they had no strong chieftain since the wounding of Godfrey. Godfrey summoned his forces and led them himself, although he had to be carried on a litter (stretcher). O'Neill and his men were completely defeated by the Swilly in 1258. Godfrey died however after the battle as he was being carried through the town. He was buried in Conwall Cemetery. A cross-shaped coffin slab marks his grave to this day.

The receding of the waters of the Atlantic eastwards enabled progress, and with the building of bridges etc, the town of Letterkenny started to take the shape it has today. In the wake of the Ulster Plantation 1610-'11, when a 1000 acres were granted to a Scotsman Patrick Crawford, the compact community formed.

The honour of formally launching the town fell to Sir George Marbury who married Patrick Crawford's widow, - Crawford having died suddenly while on a return visit to his native Scotland. Initially there were possibly fifty simple habitations sited where the Oldtown is situated today.

The main streets, though now suffering traffic congestion, were simple pony tracks used by the hill farmers to come to the markets. The markets - started by Patrick Crawford with only a few animals - grew into much busier mart days of the recent past which are sadly not present today.

During the Irish Rebellion of 1798, on 12 October, a large French force consisting of 3,000 men, and including Wolfe Tone attempted to land in County Donegal near Lough Swilly. They were intercepted by a large Royal Navy squadron, and finally surrendered after a three hour battle without ever landing in Ireland. After Wolfe Tone was captured at Laird's Hotel (opposite the Market Square) in the Main St. of Letterkenny[3], he was tried by court-martial in Dublin and found guilty. He committed suicide in prison.


In 1824 when the first description of Letterkenny as a modern town was written it was stated that: "Within half a mile is the Port of Ballyraine, whither vessels of 100 tons bring iron, salt and colonial produce and whence they export hides and butter". Nothing remains now except the warehouses with the example of 19th century warehouse architecture.[4]

Letterkenny achieved town status in the early 1920s following the partition of Ireland, when the Irish punt replaced the British Pound Sterling as the national currency of Ireland. This led to many Irish banks that had been previously located in the closest city, Derry (now in Northern Ireland), opening branches in Co. Donegal, including in Letterkenny.

Demographics

The Market Square area of the town

The population of Letterkenny and environs is 17723 (based on the 2006 census carried out by the CSO), of which 6855 live in the town limits and 10868 live in the towns's environs. The population of the town, if the current growth rate continues, is expected to hit 50000 by 2020. [5]

Letterkenny is the largest town in the County Donegal. Despite having a long tradition of emigration that continued up until the early 1990s, Letterkenny has gained cultural diversity over many years, with people immigrating from all over the world, particularly from Poland, Romania, Latvia and various African nations. This is reflected in the recent growth of international restaurants and shops, including Chinese and Indian restaurants, Italian pizzerias, as well as specialised shops run by and providing goods for Africans, Asians, South Americans, and eastern Europeans.

The figures for ethnic and cultural background for people in the State in 2006 reveals that 16% of Letterkenny's population are non-nationals. The figures also show that most of Donegal's non-national population are living in the town. Of the town's total population 2709 are non-nationals.[6]

According to the 2006 census 4957 people have a disability illness, 640 people have a registered disability, 537 have a chronic illness while 345 suffer from a psychological or an emotional condition.[7]

Letterkenny is being quoted at 66/1 by Paddy Power Bookmakers to become the next town to be officially upgraded to a city by 2015. [8]

Climate

Climate Table
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average daily maximum temperature (°C) 7 8 10 12 15 17 18 19 17 13 10 7 14
Average daily minimum temperature (°C) 3 3 4 4 6 9 11 12 9 7 5 3 7
Mean total rainfall (cm) 9.85 9.79 6.06 7.74 6.66 6.99 7.13 6.83 8.06 12.68 9.55 9.86 52.95
Source:

MSN

Politics

Local

Letterkenny Courthouse.

Services such as waste disposal/recycling, maintenance of town parks, provision of social housing and traffic management are the remit of a nine member town council, elected by the town's electorate every four years. It is one of only four town councils in the Donegal County Council area. The make-up of the current town council following the last election was one Fine Gael, four Fianna Fáil, one Green Party, one Sinn Féin, one Independent Fianna Fáil and one Independent.

There has been some political change in Letterkenny Town Council's composition since the last elections in 2004. Fine Gael lost its only seat when Jimmy Harte resigned from them to become a non-party councillor and Independent Fianna Fáil amalgamated with Fianna Fáil as of 26 July 2006.

National

Letterkenny is part of the Donegal North East constituency of Dáil Éireann. There are three TDs (Teachtaí Dáil) in this constituency, with two, Jim McDaid of Fianna Fáil and Joe McHugh of Fine Gael, living in Letterkenny town environs. The other Dáil Éireann representative is Niall Blaney of Fianna Fáil, from Milford, an area about eight miles to the north of Letterkenny.

Architecture

St. Eunan's Cathedral dominates the Letterkenny skyline.

Many of the Letterkenny's more notable buildings were built in the early 1850s - or earlier. These include educational and ecclesiastical buildings. The town's tallest building is St. Eunan's Cathedral, a neo-gothic Roman Catholic cathedral on the southside of the River Swilly which, alongside the nearby Bishop's House and Parochial House, was finished in 1901 in Victorian style. St. Eunan's Cathedral - designed by William Hague from County Cavan - is considered to be, architecturally, one of the finest places of worship anywhere in Ireland. It is built in a fine, light Victorian neo-Gothic version of the French thirteenth-century Gothic style. Also within distance is the Loreto Convent which was built over 150 years ago. The oldest building in the town is Conwal church, opposite the Cathedral, it dates from 1636.

Another dominant building in the town is the historic St. Eunan's College which was built as a seminary in 1906, using monies left over after the building of the Cathedral and the Parochial House. The college is a three-storey castelated structure with four round towers at each corner of the building. The school is named after the Abbot of Iona St. Eunan, a native of Donegal and patron saint of the Diocese of Raphoe. It is an all-male education facility which today houses over 850 students.

File:Georgian-house-lk.jpg
Mount Southwell Terrace

Other architecturally notable buildings can be found at Mount Southwell Terrace. This Georgian terrace of red brick was built in 1837 by Lord Southwell. Located at the top of Market Square, just off Castle Street, the terrace contains all five of the most distinctive examples of Georgian houses in Letterkenny.

The Donegal County Museum is housed in the old workhouse and is located on the High Road. It was built in 1843. Each year the museum attracts tourists, who seek to find out about the history of County Donegal, to the town.

In more recent years, Letterkenny has seen more unusual architectural development. The new Letterkenny Town Council Offices, known locally as "The Grasshouse", were designed by Donegal-based Antoin MacGabhann Architects. Tarla MacGabhann spent five years working in Berlin with Daniel Libeskind, on such projects as the Jewish Museum. Standing at the edge of Letterkenny, it is considered by many tourists and locals to be one of the most unusual buildings to be erected in the county for many years. One of its most notable features is its distinctive sloping grass roof situated above a broad band of aluka matt cladding although it is also noticeable for its runway-like ramp to the first-floor concourse. It is said to be a building of international interest. [5]

Social

The town is a popular nightlife location for the local catchment area - especially at the weekends. Main Street, originally the retail centre of the town, has become a centre for popular night clubs and pubs, but still also has the remnants of a shopping district. The Grill is a popular nighclub which regularly plays host to acts such as Boy George, Ash, Hot Chip, Dirty Sanchez, Fun Lovin' Criminals, Paul Van Dyk and Judge Jules. [9] Pubs such as The Central Bar, The Cavern, Josie's Bar and The Cottage Bar give an extensive range of drinking experiences from the old to the modern cutting edge.

Media and the arts

Theatre

An Grianán Theatre

There is a large cinema complex in the town. Located on Canal Lane, Century Cinemas [6] is an eight-screen cinema with full carparking facilities. An Grianán Theatre[7], the largest theatre in County Donegal with a seating capacity of 383. The Letterkenny Arts Centre provides a constant throughput of new blood. Recent additions to the arts infrastructure include modern additions to Letterkenny Library and Arts Centre and the Cristeph Gallery. Letterkenny Regional Cultural Centre, located behind An Grianán Theatre, opened on 9 July 2007.

Festivals

The town proved it had the capacity to host major festivals by recently playing host to the annual Irish traditional music festival, the Fleadh Cheoil for two consecutive years. Both festivals were organised by Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann. The town has also hosted the international Pan Celtic Festival for two consecutive years (2006 and 2007). Celts from Ireland, Wales, Scotland, Isle of Man, Brittany and Cornwall visited Letterkenny for the "craic agus ceoil". Along with the daily street performances on Market Square, An Grianán Theatre and The Courtyard Shopping Centre, song, fiddle, harp and dance contests also featured.

Media

Letterkenny can receive all national radio stations, television stations and cable and satellite services. The area can also receive many British stations. The local radio station is Highland Radio which broadcasts from the town to most of north County Donegal. It began broadcasting in 1990.

The main regional newspaper in the town and county is the Donegal Democrat, whose offices also prints two other titles every week - the Donegal People’s Press on Tuesday and also Donegal on Sunday. The three papers are printed at the company's print works in the heart of the town. The Donegal News is distributed on a Friday, as well as having a Monday edition, while the Tirconaill Tribune, printed in the town, is distributed throughout the county.

The town also produces two free-sheet newspapers, the Letterkenny People, which prints on a Monday, and the Letterkenny Post which prints on a Thursday night for Friday circulation.

Economy

Retail

File:LongestMainStreet.jpg
Letterkenny's Main Street

The retail trade in Letterkenny includes modern shopping centres and family owned local shops - providing often hand-made crafts.

Many High Street stores operate in Letterkenny. The town is the north-west regions major shopping centre and helps to serve outlying areas including rural County Donegal and County Londonderry. The town has three main shopping malls; The Courtyard Shopping Centre, The Forte Shopping Centre and The Letterkenny Shopping Centre, the latter being the oldest. These centres feature numerous international, UK-wide and Ireland-wide chains such as Penneys, Tesco, Eason and others.

Previously, Main Street served as the main shopping area in the town but trade has now shifted further afield expanding the town in the process. Newer shopping areas in the town include the Letterkenny Retail Parks on Pearse Street and Canal Lane. Smaller streets such as Church Street and Castle Street have grown in recent years with businesses such as bakeries, pharmacies and fashion outlets having opened. The Market Square has also attracted fresh business. There are two Four Lanterns outlets in the town.

Industry

Traffic Congestion on Letterkenny's High Road

The town's major employers include the General Hospital (which grew from St. Conal's Psychiatric Hospital, Pramerica, and the Department of Social and Family Affairs.

Letterkenny is at the centre of industry in the north west of Ireland. Eircom, Boston Scientific and Pacificare are significant employers in the region. As the main commercial centre of north Donegal, Letterkenny also has a host of financial service institutions, legal firms and small businesses. There has been a significant decline in the manufacturing base, however employment has grown in the service sector. Since 2002 there has been a significant expansion in the retail sector. Allied to this growth has been the development of the cultural infrastructure. This includes the opening of An Grianan Theatre and the development of a new arts centre.

Letterkenny is also the home of the confectionery manufacturers Oatfield. It is based at the entrance to Ballyraine near the town's central area .

A private hospital, which is to provide radiotherapy services to the northwest region, is currently under construction. Construction of the first independent hospital in the county will cost €60 million. The hospital will provide four surgical theatres, renal dialysis and an MRI and PET scan. The 130,000 square foot Wyndale Clinic is due to be completed in 2008. [10]

The economy in the town is strongly dependent on cross-border trade, and times of economic boom are determined mostly by the currency exchange rate between the Euro and the British Pound.

Crime

Recent years have seen serious crimes in Letterkenny being linked with feuds between gangs within certain areas of the town, mainly the Mountain Top and Oldtown and the surrounding areas. Five separate incidents were reported over two months in 2005. In one such incident a man was seriously injured when attacked with pitchforks and slash hooks in the Mountain Top area of the town. [11]

The Oldtown area has seen numerous feuds in recent years. This has led to feuds being dubbed ‘‘Battle of the Oldtown’’. In one incident a man was stabbed and another taken to hospital. The gangs used ninja-type weapons of chains and swords. They only calmed upon the intervention of a local priest. Eyewitnesses reported seeing stones and pots being throw through a house window. Daggers, knives, chains and rapier-type swords were later confiscated by gardaí.[12]

In recent years local community organizations, ranging from the local authority to local businesses have all set about addressing social issues. However this requires considerable time and co-operation to successfully implement.

Education

Letterkenny Institute of Technology

The Letterkenny Institute of Technology [8] (LYIT), which is situated east of the town centre on the Port Road, is a centre for engineering, information technology, materials science, design, business and nursing humanities. The institute has a student populatiion of 3000.

St. Eunan's College is the major secondary education centre situated just north-west of the town centre. It was built in 1906.

Primary and secondary education in the town is organised similarly to the rest of Ireland. There are 37 primary schools[9] in Letterkenny, including Scoil Colmcille, while there are 5 secondary schools.[10].

Coláiste Ailigh is one of the "gaelscoileanna" in Letterkenny. It is a secondary school specifically designed for education through the Irish language. It was opened in 2000.

The Loreto Convent Secondary School, adjacent to St. Eunan's Cathedral, is over 150 years old.

Sport

See also: List of Letterkenny people- Sports

Gaelic football, rugby and soccer are the most popular sports in the town, but many other minority sports are practiced also, such as hurling, boxing, karate, kick-boxing, handball, bowling, golf, swimming and gymnastics.

Gaelic games

There are two Gaelic Athletic Association clubs in Letterkenny, St. Eunan's GAA and Letterkenny Gaels who play their home games at O' Donnell Park and The Glebe, respectively. Almost uniquely in Ireland, the rugby club and Gaelic club Letterkenny Gaels, share facilities. Gaelic football, like most of County Donegal, is the predominant sport, although soccer is also very popular.

Rugby

Rugby is also popular in the town, being played at various levels, from school to senior league level. Letterkenny RFC, which was founded in 1973, is the major rugby club in the town. It has recently forged links with New Zealand rugby fraternities due to the fact the first All-Black captain, Dave Gallaher was born in Ramelton, a village eight miles from Letterkenny. The club's rugby ground in Letterkenny was named The Dave Gallaher Memorial Park in his honour in November 2005 by a visiting contingent of All-Black players, led by captain Tana Umaga.

Association football

Letterkenny Rovers F.C. are one of the most well-known soccer clubs in the town. The team play their home games at Leckview Park, at Canal Road, in the town. Bonagee United F.C. are another local team and play their home games at Dry Arch Park. There are a number of schoolboy soccer clubs within the town's environs and an annual league is played at Under 12, Under 14 and Under 16 age groups.

Other sports

Letterkenny has two mens basketball teams, Letterkenny Heat and Letterkenny IT, as well as a womans basketball team, the Letterkenny Blaze. Letterkenny Golf Club is located just outside the town centre. There are also pitch and putt and tennis facilities in the town. Letterkenny Sports Complex, a state of the art leisure centre complete with skate park, is located on the edge of the town. Letterkenny Athletic Club is also located in the town. The town also hosts the Donegal International Rally in June every year and the Donegal Harvest Rally every October.

Transport

Letterkenny Infrastructure Hub & Midlands Gateway access

Air

The nearest airport is City of Derry Airport about 30 miles away. There are daily flights to London (Stansted), Dublin, Glasgow, Liverpool and Nottingham (East Midlands).

Donegal Airport is also less than an hour away. Aer Arann provide two flights daily from Donegal Airport to Dublin and flights daily to Glasgow (Prestwick).

1906 Irish Rail Infrastructure (including Letterkenny station)

Rail

See also: History of Irish rail.

The town was, in times past, connected with the once extensive narrow gauge rail network of County Donegal. This provided connections to Derry (and through there to Dublin and Belfast), to Lifford and Strabane, to Gweedore and Burtonport, and to Carndonagh, north of Derry. The rail system was built in the late 19th century, with the last extensions opening in the 1900s. Some of these lines were never profitable, built using British government subsidies, described as an attempt to kill the Home Rule movement "with kindness". Only a couple of decades later, political events resulted in rail companies operating across two jurisdictions where there had previously been one. This had devastating effects on an already fragile economic situation, resulting eventually in the final closure of all parts of the rail system in the area by 1960.

Road

Letterkenny is well served by road transport. Bus Éireann operates a number of bus services from its bus depot to Dublin, Derry and Galway a number of times each day. Many private coach companies have daily services to and from the town. The Lough Swilly Bus company operates a local transport service in cooperation with Bus Éireann. Currently, access from Dublin is improving with motorway status roads being constructed along the route, allowing cars to complete the Dublin-Letterkenny journey in about 3hours 30mins. Galway is 4 hours away by car while Belfast is 2 hours. Taxi services are available from a rank on Main St. at The Market Square. Two national primary roads serve the town: the N13 from the South (Stranorlar) and the N14 from the West (Lifford).

Youth facilities

The Loft LK (Learning Opportunities For Teens) Letterkenny is located on Port Road on a site previously occupied by the old cinema. Since opening in April 2006 it has offered the chance for young teenagers to meet in a safe supervised environment. Coffee, tea and snacks may also be purchased. As well as this, the LOFT offers music, computer games, satellite TV, spacious comfortable sofas and a pool table And is a great place to be used as a meeting point to be used by young people. A raised platform can be converted into a stage for instruments and other equipment during Band Nights which are hosted regularly. The LOFT plays host to many other social events such as a Film Club and offers courses in Media Studies, Health, Peer Leadership, Writing Club, Arts and Crafts, Sign Language, teambuilding, photography and Personal Development. The primary focus of the LOFT is personal development, a place where young people can be themselves.

YIC

The YIC or Youth Information Centre is located in the same building as the LOFT. It offers computers and broadband facilities as well as information that may be of interest to young people.

LYT

Letterkenny Youth Theatre is run in association with An Grianán Theatre and usually meets on Fridays. It offers the chance for young people to gain valuable experience in areas such as acting skills and stage management. It has run a number of small one-off productions in the past, in Letterkenny and also outside the town. It recently ran a production on Monday April 23 and Tuesday April 24 2007 in An Grianán.

Sister cities

Footnotes

See also