Allihies, County Cork, Ireland

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Allihies, County Cork, Ireland

Today's journey takes us through the lovely seaside village of Allihies, County Cork, Ireland.

Please join artist and writer Susanne Iles as she travels around the Most Captivating Place in Ireland.

The Beara Peninsula, otherwise known as the Ring of Beara, is a place where ancient landscapes and changing skies welcome the passionate traveler. Discover mysterious stone circles, wedge tombs and standing stones. Explore wild beaches and rolling hills. Enjoy the music, great conversation, and company of friendly people in colourful towns. The Beara Peninsula holds the spirit of Ireland within its rugged beauty.

Allihies

A small seaside village with a big personality

Ah, beautiful Allihies! This little seaside village has so many personalities it's difficult to know where to start. The town is lovely and the beach is stupendous, but you can't go walking in those inviting hills unless you travel the carefully laid out roadways. Once properly known as Cluin, Allhies was a thriving copper mining town, the landscape now dotted with dangerous, abandoned mine shafts.

Over Knockgour Mountain

Driving toward Ballydonegan Bay

We made our way over Knockgour Mountain and drove down through the mist towards the village. If you look carefully at the picture you will be able to see the beach tucked below Ballydonegan Bay, a lovely bright half-moon in a rugged landscape. The road twists and winds through rocky hills until you come upon a blue sign at the side of the road explaining a bit about the history of the area.

Allihies Copper Mine Trail

(Slí Mianaigh Umha Na hAilichí)

The sign reads as follows:

Allihies Copper Mine Trail (Slí Mianaigh Umha Na hAilichí)
Dooneen Mine-Minach Dunin
Copper mining at Allihies started here in 1812 by John Puxley, a local landlord, after the large quartze promontory to the left here was identified as copper bearing as can be seen by its bright Malachite staining.

Initial mining began with a tunnel or adit driven into the quartze lode from the beach below. In 1821 two shafts were sunk as can be seen either side of the road here. Flooding was a continuous problem and in 1823 the engine house was erected to house a steam engine brought over from Cornwall to pump water from the depths. The remains of this building with the base of the chimney can be seen across the road.There is also evidence of a steam powered stamp engine to the left of the chimney and dressing floors in front of the engine house. The high dam further inland is the remaining evidence of a water reservoir which stored the water that was pumped out from the bottom of the mine. It was used for the steam engines and needed to separate the copper from the rock.All the rubble on the cliff at the sea side of the road is the crushed useless quartz rock left over after the copper was extracted.

This is one of six productive mines in the Allihies area and continued its operation until 1838 when it closed due to failing ore.

John Puxley died in 1860 and in 1868 his son Henry Puxley sold the mines to the new Berehaven Mining Company who reopened the mine and installed a new 22 inch steam engine in 1872. Little ore was produced though in this period and the mine was finally abandoned in 1878.

For further information on the Allihies mining story visit Allihies Copper Mining Museum at the bottom of the village."

Mine Shafts Plunging to the Beach

Vertigo Inducing

The view from this spot was vertigo inducing as deep crevices were visible plunging into the sea below. One could only imagine the danger and the struggle families went through in the area as they tried to battle nature for her treasures. It's amazing to note that copper mining in this area had begun before the Bronze age finally reaching its peak in the late 1800's! After the decline in production,emigration took its toll as miners left the area in search of a new future, leaving Allihies virtually a ghost town for decades.

Guardians of the Past

Haunting looking structures loomed up through the mist, guardians of the past.

We learned that one of the structures has been restored and was named,"The Mountain Mine Man Engine House".

The Mountain Mine Man Engine House

Sole remaining purpose-built man engine house in the world

From The Allihies Copper Mine Museum Website we learn:

"The Mountain Mine Man Engine House is unique in Ireland and it is the sole remaining purpose-built man engine house anywhere in the world. Like a lonely sentinel, the Cornish design Man Engine House stands guard over the village of Allihies, the surrounding valley, the bay below and the Atlantic Ocean beyond. Erected in 1862, it is a potent symbol of the village, the valley and the community, and it is the primary surviving embodiment of what was once a thriving copper mining industry during the 19th Century. It is a monument to the life and times of those copper miners, of trade routes to Swansea, and along with Cornish immigrants, to the diaspora of people to other parts of the world, including Butte, Montana, after the mines eventually closed in the 1880s."

So much to offer...

Allihies not only offers tales rich in history but is also a welcoming town with a beautiful beach and interesting people.

Allihies Beach

White Quartz Sand

The jewel of Allihies is its beautiful beach. Swimming in Allihies is exhilarating and safe most of the time. Like any place beside the sea, it pays to use common sense, especially when the the tides turn and the waves come thundering in!

Delicate tidal pools and a white quartz strand make Allihies beach a treasure to behold.

A Beautiful Place by the Sea

Allihies Village

Coordinates: 51°38'N 10°02 Irish: Na hAilichí

The main street is small but welcoming; its brightly painted buildings stand in brilliant contrast to the gray hills they nestle under.

In its heyday the village boasted a population of several thousand people. Today around 600 people populate the area. Drawn to the area's exquisite beauty, Allihies is home to many creative people including artists, writers and musicians. Tourism has taken the place of mining as the village's mainstay which has allowed this self-contained village to retain its natural splendour.

Two interesting events to keep in mind are the Annual Sports and Horse Racing Day held in August, as well as the Michael Dwyer Memorial Festival,an annual celebration In Allihies of traditional Irish music.

Allihies is Worth the Visit!

One of the Beara Peninsula's Gems

Would You Like to Learn More?

Allihies-Wikipedia
Allihies (Irish: Na hAilichí, meaning "the cliff fields"is a coastal parish (and townland) in the west of County Cork, Ireland.
Knockgour (Cnocura) Mountain
Climbing the hill that leads to Allihies and Ballydonegan Bay.
Allihies Copper Mine Museum
The Copper Mine Museum located in the heart of Allihies.
Mining Heritage Trust of Ireland
The Mining Heritage Society of Ireland was founded in 1996 to develop public awareness, appreciation, conservation and enjoyment of all facets of mining heritage throughout Ireland. The Society converted to a Trust in 2001.
Butte, Montana
Information about Butte, Montana,home to many Allihies families who emigrated to the United States.
The Emigration of Allihies Miners
What forces compelled so many in post famine Ireland to resettle in North America?
The Cornish In West Cork
"The history of the Berehaven (or Bearhaven) mines is bound inextricably with the Puxley family, of English origin. John Lavallin Puxley formed the Allihies Mining Company in 1812.3 The first Mine Captain was a Cornishman, Edward NETTLE, and he commenced work at Dooneen, where a quartz vein extends into the sea. Even today, this vein is visibly stained green from the copper within...."
Michael Dwyer Memorial Festival
An Annual Celebration In Allihies of Traditional Irish Music
ALLIHIES.IE
An excellent resource created by Allihies' own, Dave Spathaky. His site includes weather conditions, news and local links. It is well worth a visit!
The Leadville Irish; Life, Labor and Loss at 10,200 Feet
"Colorado's largest Irish community in its history lived in its highest city. Leadville's silver boom took off in the late 1870s and its east side became home to thousands of Irish immigrants. Most of these immigrants came from the Beara peninsula in west county Cork, where they had worked as copper miners near Allihies."

Where is Allihies?

Allihies and the Beara Peninsula on YouTube

John moriarty/Allihies
by thatssamhesgreat | video info

9 ratings | 3,360 views
curated content from YouTube

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The Ring of Beara Blog

Living in the beautiful Beara Peninsula, County Cork, Ireland

The Most Captivating Place in Ireland
The Beara Peninsula, otherwise known as the Ring of Beara, is a place where ancient landscapes and changing skies welcome the passionate traveler. Discover mysterious stone circles, wedge tombs and standing stones. Explore wild beaches and rolling hills. Enjoy the music, great conversation, and company of friendly people in colourful towns. The Beara Peninsula holds the spirit of Ireland within its rugged beauty.
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SusanneIles.Com Blog

Reconnecting Our Natural World With The Divine

Current news and information about Susanne and her art studio in Castletownbere, County Cork, Ireland.
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I'd Love to Hear from You

Please leave a message

  • Susanne_Iles Aug 19, 2009 @ 4:30 am | delete
    Thank you so much for commenting Michael. I've added your link to the "Would You Like to Learn More ?" section above. It is indeed a fascinating story.
  • Michael Aug 18, 2009 @ 7:59 pm | delete
    Great piece on Allihies. Many of the miners from there emigrated to Colorado to work in the mines at Leadville. It's a fascinating story. http://www.celticconnection.com/detail.lasso?t=news&r=np5rd

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Susanne_Iles

Welcome! My name is Susanne Iles and I am a contemporary symbolist painter, writer, and curator. Please visit my homepage, Bone Singer Studio~Gallery at... more »

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