Seagoe Parish Magazine.
JULY, 1917.
In memoriam.
In Proud and Affectionate Remembrance of those from
the Parish of Seagoe who fell in the Great Advance on
July 1st, 1916, near Hamel, Picardy, France.
These laid the world away, poured out the red
Sweet wine of youth ; gave up the years to be
Of work and joy, and that unhoped serene
That men call age; and those who would have been
Their sons, they gave, their immortality."
Thomas Joyce Atkinson.
Robert Taylor Montgomery,
William dames Allen.
Thomas Hewitt.
Harry Holmes.
Alexander M 'Cabe.
Frank M'Kerr.
Joseph Parkes.
THE LATE MR. GEORGE CALVERT.
The accompanying Portrait of the late Mr. Calvert will remind us
of the face and form of one who is sadly missed in the Parish. More and
more each day we feel how large a place he filled in our Church and
social life. We have not found if possible this month to give, as we
had intended, an outline of his activities on the various Public Boards of
which he was a member, but we hope to be able to do so in a future
issue. In every direction he exerted an immense influence, and that
influence was always on behalf of what was good and
true. Many expressions of regret and sympathy have
been forthcoming from the organisations in which he was
interested, and one and all voice the same feeling
of the loss which his death has caused in the community,
" Seest thou a man diligent in his business, he shall
stand before kings, he shall not stand before mean
men."
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE.
Protestant Orphan Society,
The Annual Appeal on behalf of the County
Armagh Protestant Orphan Society will be made in
the Parish Church on Sunday morning, July 8th.
The Society is a staunch helper of the orphans in
Seagoe Parish, and we hope there will be a liberal
response.
Seagoe Day School,
At the examination, held on 15th May, 1917, by the
Diocesan Inspector, the Rev. John Gordon, 107
children passed,
The following received Certificates.
—Seniors—Mervyn Sweeney, Isabella Best, Amy
Holmes, William Kilpatrick, Norman Dickson, and
William Simpson.—Juniors—Sidney Walker, Tom
Best, Sarah Whaley, Eva Magee, Mary Coulter,
Sarah Coulter, Albert Best, Floribel Best. The
Inspector's Report was very favourable.
Eggs for Wounded Soldiers,
At the request of Mrs. Blacker, the children
attending Seagoe Day School, collected Eggs for the
Wounded Soldiers in the Ulster Volunteer Hospital,
Belfast, last week. The eggs were brought in on
Thursday and Friday, 21st and 22nd June, and
reached the large total of 47 ½ dozen or 567 eggs in
all. The eggs were brought on Friday to Mrs. Brew,
Rathlin, for direct despatch to the Hospital.
Edna Watson collected the largest number of
eggs—6 dozen and 7.
The Battle of Messines,
Our local Battalion though not, we believe, actually
engaged in the fight during the first day of the
Battle of Messines, came in for some sharp fighting
on the second or third day during a counter-attack
made by the Germans. The casualties were slight
6 killed and 32 wounded. None of the six, who made
the supreme sacrifice, belonged to this neighbourhood.
Sergeant James Sheppard, of Levaghery, received a
wound in the forehead, but we are glad to hear that it
is slight, and we hope soon to welcome him back again
among his old friends in Seagoe. He is at present in
Hospital in England. We hear on good authority
that the Germans suffered more heavily at Messines
than during any other engagement in the war.
Our Advertisements.
Do you ever read the Advertisements in our
Magazine? We know there are some people, not a
few, who read every word of this Magazine each
month, but, if you have not carefully looked through
the Advertisements, do so this month. You want
good value and you are sure to get it from the Firms
who are kind enough to advertise in our pages.
Can you find out in what advertisements the following
words occur ?—Drawing, Reasonable, Explain,
Private, United, Uusurpassed, Process, Inquire,
Minutes, Way, General, Reported, Note, Worry,
Inspection, Always, Except, Stock, Attractive,
Discounted, Yard, Ulster, 2/8.
Special Anniversary Service.
A Special Anniversary Service will (D. V.) be held
in Seagoe Parish Church on Sunday evening, July
8th, at 7 p.m. The collection will be in aid of the
Enniskillen Memorial Orphan Fund.
Our Sunday Schools,
Prizes for Attendance were distributed on Sunday,
June 24th, in Edenderry Sunday School and in
Seagoe Afternoon Sunday School. Owing to the
difficulty and expense incurred in obtaining Books,
the Prizes were limited to those who had attended
45 Sundays and over during 1916. A large number
of the pupils attained this high standard, which is
very creditable to the Schools. Farther Distributions
of Prizes will be made in the other Sunday Schools
of the Parish on succeeding Sundays.
PARISH REGISTER FQR
JUNE, 1917.
Baptisms.
The following were Baptized in the Parish
Church on 2nd June, 1917.
Steenson—Alice, daughter of George (Private, 10th Royal Irish Fusiliers) and Mary Steenson,
of Portadown. Sponsors—Sarah Totton, Mary Steenson.
McNeill—James Henry, son of Samuel George Irish (Private, Royal Fusiliers, Salonica) and Anna McNeill, of Ballymacrandle. Sponsors—Edith Fleming, Anna McNeill.
McClatchey—Josephine, daughter of William (Munition Worker) and Mary Anne McClatchey, of Edenderry. Sponsors—Elizabeth McNally, Mary Anne McClatchey.
Freeburn—Joseph, son of Joseph and Sarah Freeburn, of Edenderry.
Sponsors—Isabel Black, Sarah Freeburn.
Jane, daughter of William Henry and Eliza Jane Armstrong, of Portadown.
Sponsors—-Maria Jane Gordon, Eliza Jane Armstrong.
Marriage,
Magee and Magee—On 13th June, 1917, Joseph William Magee, of Kernan,
to Emma Magee, of Kernan.
Burial
McKerr—14th June, 1917, Elizabeth Isabella McKerr, of Dublin, aged 9 months.
SEAGOE
Offertories for June,
PARISH MAGAZINE.
Sunday—Mornings, £5 3 6
Evenings, 1 5 5
Week Days 0 5 6
£6 14 5
Special War Certificates,
Special War Certificates on Parchment have been
awarded to Lance-Corporal James Henry England, of
Knock, and to Private A. Lyness, of Drumgor, for
Distinguished Conduct in the Field. This is a very
high Distinction, and we congratulate very heartily
our two young Parishioners on their Courage and
Devotion to Duty.
The following is the Certificate awarded to Lance
Corporal James Henry England 36th (Ulster) Division,
British Expeditionary Force.
This Certificate is awarded to No. 248, Lance Corporal James Henry England, 16th Batt. Royal
Irish Rifles (P.), who on two occasions endeavoured under heavy fire to bring in from " No Man's Land " (Thiepval Wood), his Platoon Sergeant, who was fatally wounded on 7th July, 1916.
O, S. NUGENT,
Major General,
Commanding 36th (Ulster) Division.
Date, 2nd April, 1917.
ITEMS.
A resident in Ardmore Parish made a profit of £92
in a fortnight this spring by the sale of eggs.
The title of Armagh Protestant Orphan Society has
been altered to the County Armagh Protestant Orphan
Society.
The In Memoriam lines printed on our front page
were written by Lieut. Rupert Brooke. who died
from fever while serving with the Mediterranean
Expeditionary Force.
Mr. Moffett has on view at his Photographic Studio
in Edenderry a most life-like portrait of the late Mr.
George Calvert. It is an enlargement of a photograph
taken by Mr. Moffett at the time when Mr. Calvert
was photographed for his portrait as Churchwarden
of Seagoe Parish. No likeness could be more perfect
than that which Mr. Moffett has reproduced in this
enlargement.
Congratulations.
We offer our hearty congratulation to Major the
Rev. F. J. Halahan, S.C.F., Rector of Drumcree, on
his being awarded the Military Cross. Those who
have been with our Battalion since it went to France
speak in glowing terms of Major Halahan's courage
and devotion to duty, and all who know him will
rejoice that he has obtained this fine distinction.
Old Seagoe Notes.
The Blue Stone, Seagoe.—BY THE REV. ABRAHAM
DAWSON, AM —A portion of the ancient Parish of
Seagoe, on the old road between Portadown and
Lurgan, where the Townland of Lisnamintry adjoins
Lylo and Clanrolla, is known by the local designation
of The Blue Stone. It derives this name from a large
boulder stone which stood in this locality until
one hundred years ago. Its position is said to have
been at the right hand corner of the field on Mr.
William Robinson's farm, close beside the junction of
the lane through Clanrolla (called " The Blue Stone
Lonan ") with the Lurgan Road, as it passes through
Lisnamintry At this spot it is said to be now
buried, and the place is noted on the Ordnance Survey
Map as " The Blue Stone." An old tradition hands
down the memory of its great size. It is said that
Duke Schomberg marched by this way to the Boyne,
with his division of King William's army, and that
on the top of this stone he had his dinner laid out, of
which he partook without alighting from his horse.
The disappearance of this remarkable stone is
connected with a frightful murder, of which tradition
still preserves the remembrance in a very peaceful
district. We are indebted for the following details to
notes on the parish of Seagoe, compiled by the late
Lieutenant-Colonel William Blacker, of Carrickblacker,
for Shaw Mason's Statistical Survey of Ireland,
In the year 1781, an old man, named John
M 'Neilly, resided in the Townland of Lylo. He had
a valuable farm, and his only child had been married
to James Tollerton, but was at this time deceased.
Tollerton expected to succeed to the farm on the
death of his father in law ; but, disappointed at the
old man's prolonged life, and probably instigated by
his father—a man of the worst character, and the
terror of the neighbourhood—he resolved to murder
M'Neilly. Aided by his father and his brother John,
a, man of weak mind, he carried out his ruthless
design, killing the old man as he lay in his bed, A
variety of circumstances, strikingly providential, led
to the conviction of James Tollerton and his father.
and they were hanged near the scene of the murder,
on a hill which to this day is known as " The
Gallows' Hill." Mr. Workman, an active magistrate,
who had been mainly instrumental in procuring the
conviction of the murderers, had the bodies taken
down from the gallows and removed for burial. He
caused a deep pit to be dug close to and extending
under the Blue Stone. In this pit the bodies were
laid, and the great stone being heaved in on the top
of them, the whole was covered over with earth. Not
long afterwards Mr. Workman received information
that some friends of the murderers had arranged to
raise the bodies, and he hastened to the spot to
prevent the act, which they had nearly accomplished ;
but, on his approach, they fled, leaving the bodies
and their implements behind them. Mr. Workman
and his assistants then raised the bodies ; and, having
made great fire of turf, he reduced them to ashes.
which he cast into the hole under the stone, and
covered all up once more. The place has been undisturbed ever since.
Stuart (History of Armagh, p. 562, note) says that
the persons who sought to raise the bodies belonged
to a riotous band called " The Blue Stone Boys ;" and
that those who aided Mr. Workman in dispersing
them and defeating their project, were the Armagh
Second Volunteer Company. " Since that period,"
he adds, " The Blue Stone Boys have not assembled."
The brother of weak mind, mentioned in the
narrative, disappeared immediately after the murder,
and it was generally supposed that he had been made
away with by his father and brother, to prevent his
blabbing the crime. But above twenty years later,
in the year 1803 or 1804," Colonel Blacker writes,
'”A gaunt, and time withered idiotic creature presented
himself at the house of one of my tenants, an
elderly man who had known the Tollerton family.
He took some meat which was offered him, refused a
bed, but lay down on some straw in the barn. His
moans during the night were described to me as
something unearthly. The only intelligible words he
was heard to utter were, “The bloody deed ! “ repeated
two or three times. When day broke he had disappeared.
This was John Tollerton .—Lurgan
Parochial Magazine, 1880.
Where the Blue Stone is Buried.—Our readers
may like to know exactly where the Blue Stone is
buried, Some day we hope to see it raised and set
on a neat pedestal. It was a historic landmark.
SEAGOE PARISH MAGAZINE.
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1. Original site of the Blue Stone. The hollow
where it lay may still be seen.
2. The place where the Blue Stone was buried.
The exact site is marked by some large stones let
into the bank above it.
3. The triangular grass plot marking the place
where the bodies of the Bluestone murderers were
first buried.
Postilion Days in Portadown.—A Portadown
resident of the last generation used to recount the
scenes of excitement which occurred in Portadown
and the neighbourhood when the Primates of Armagh
were expected to pass through the town. In the
days before Railways were introduced the Archbishops
of Armagh travelled in magnificent coaches, drawn
by four or six horses ridden by postilions in bright
livery, and accompanied by much luggage and many
servants. The Episcopal equipages were specially
attractive to the residents on the occasions when the
Primates drove through Portadown to Donaghadee to
embark for Portpatrick in Scotland on their way to
attend the House of Lords at Westminster.
The Prebend of Dromara in 1748.—The Rev.
Arthur Ford, formerly Rector of Seagoe, was collated
Prebendary of Dromara in the year 1748. After a
lapse of 170 years the office has come back to the
Parish of Seagoe in the appointment of the present
Rector, to the same position.
Ancient Looms in Seagoe Parish.—Some of
the Hand Looms still in use in the Parish are of
great age. One at least has been in use for 110 years,
and the ribbon of cloth woven on it in that period
would reach from Seagoe to Constantinople. Perhaps
some of our readers could give us particulars regarding
the age and history of their looms.
Ardmore Church in 1783. —Ardmore Church
was blown down in a, great storm on November 4th,
1783. This Church was apparently in the townland of
Ardmore, near the lake shore. The present Church is
in the townland of Derryadd.
Seagoe Church in 1862.—Seagoe Church underwent
many alterations and improvements in 1862,
and was re-opened for Public Worship on October 26th
of that year.
Extent of Seagoe Parish.—The Parish of Seagoe
comprises 29 Townlands, extending over 5,466 acres.
In 1880 it contained 704 Church families and 3,647
individual members of the Church. These figures
were the result of a careful census made by Dean
Dawson.
Portadown and the Pneumatic Tyre—Mr. J.B.
Dunlop, the inventor of the Pneumatic Tyre, in a
letter to the Irish Cyclist," published on June 6th,
1917, writes.—" In 1889 the pneumatic appeared on
once cinder track in Ireland. This happened in
Portadown a week before the Liverpool Events, when
McCormick 'c cleared the boards." The interesting
fact recorded in this extract is that Portadown can
claim to be the first place in which the Pneumatic
Tyre was used in a regularly contested cycle
race on a cinder track. We have heard
it stated, though with what certainty we cannot say,
that the inventor of the Pneumatic Tyre is a native
of the Birches district, near Portadown. The race
above referred to took place in August, 1889, and the
track was in the present People's Park.
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