Tullaghobegly (Donegal)

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A classroom in Knockastoler National School
A classroom in Knockastoler National School

Knockastolar National School, Knockastolar townland, Co. Donegal

(Dated 1880-1900)

The village of Bunbeg  is a relative stones-throw from Gweedore and Bloody Foreland in West Donegal. Just outside the little village in the townland of Knockastolar, and perched above the road from Bunbeg to Dungloe at a Y-junction, is a schoolhouse lying empty, and painted in the green and yellow of Donegal. Its date plaque was missing, although its form suggests it is a late nineteenth-century schoolhouse with a later extension perhaps. The original section of the building is identical to the old schoolhouse on Whiddy Island off Bantry Bay in County Cork (dated 1887), with an entrance porch to the side.

Inside, the building was in varying states of disrepair. The L-plan school had three classrooms beyond it’s entrance hall. The later classroom to the rear was in the best condition, with the blue wainscoting bearing the markings of some teenage gatherings.

Both classrooms to the front and in the original part of the building were in a poor state; the floor having crumbled and the roof nearing collapse. Both these classrooms contained fireplaces though nearly all other features had been destroyed and the wainscotting removed.

Knockastoler National School

Bunbeg and Knockastolar feel like a long way from anywhere. I had only come here to try and get to Gola Island, and like much of this part of the country, the area does not get anywhere near the amount of visitors that topographically similar but more popular spots like Connemara and West Kerry do. This is undoubtedly the attraction of the area for me. At Bunbeg you’ll find a tiny fishing village hidden in a cove behind an expansive strand, overshadowed by Errigal mountain in the background. The area is a mountainous Gaeltacht that drops to the sea and is dotted with dozens of idyllic villages just like Bunbeg. It is worlds away from the urban areas of Ireland.

But despite seeming disconnected from all that troubles the world, Knockastolar National School had produced at least one famous and important student who made his mark on the world during World War II. Local man John James Doherty was at Bletchley Park (Britain’s top secret decoding centre) as a cryptanalyst and translator during World War II. Being from the area and attending Knockastolar National School John was a native Irish speaker. While his languages – German, French, Italian, Spanish, Polish, Russian, Latin, Greek – were fully utilised, he never disclosed whether his knowledge of Irish helped in Hitler’s defeat.

Did you or any of your ancestors go to this school? Let us know in the comments below.


With the kind permssion of Enda O'Flaherty, taken from:

Deserted Schoolhouses of Ireland by Enda O'Flaherty (published through the Collins Press, Cork September 2018)

Web: https://endaoflaherty.com/

Twitter: @eanna81   

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/eanna81

Instagram: @oldskool_irl

Available to purchase from: 

https://www.collinspress.ie/deserted-schoolhouses-of-ireland.html

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Deserted-Schoolhouses-Ireland-Enda-OFlaherty/dp/1848893515

Type of Building:

Educational

Some communities associated with this building

Some ancestors associated with these communities

Some buildings associated with these communities