
26.4.2010.

|

Greetings from the lands of the O'Cathans and the town of Dungiven a small vibrant and expanding town on the western slopes of the Sperrin hills on the main road between Belfast and Derry nestling beside Benbradagh hill and astride the river Roe as it swings north at Dungiven and flows up the Roe valley to flow into Lough Foyle north of Limavady close to Ballerena.
We hope that you will enjoy the recent issue and support our efforts.We have endeavoured to improve the quality by introducing colour. Please advise those who may be interested. We would like to say thanks to those who purchased last years magazine and earlier editions.Also thanks to those of you in many parts of the world who contacted us with material and comments. Feedback is always appreciated. Please call back from time to time.
No magazine was produced for the year 2001 but a new team with an interest of the area's history started putting
together a new magazine early in 2002. This magazine was aptly named
The Winding Roe after the
river Roe which rises in the hills close to Glenshane Pass then flows
seawards through the
Benedy Glen, skirts Dungiven to the immediate north
then links with the Owenreagh and Owenbeg rivers and numerous other
streams as it flows down the Roe valley passing close to the west side of Limavady town then swings
north-east eventually emptying into Lough Foyle close to Ballerena.
To date eight issues have been produced. Issues No. 1-8 for 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006. 2007, 2008 and 2009.
For those overseas please click on the icon below and you will be linked to the Glenshane Community
Development Ltd. offices in Dungiven for purchase and postage details. A check can
also be made for availability of
issues 2, 3, 4, 5, 6,7 and 8. Issue No. 1 has been sold out but you can copy early issues from website link below.
The last issue of the Benbradagh magazine was number 30 issued
at the end of 2,000.
It had been
published faithfully for some 30 years
and was much appreciated
by not only the local community but by people in far flung lands whose family roots
are in the Roe valley or indeed in the general area of this part of Co. Derry.
Sadly there are
no copies of old issues available which prompted the new team
of contributors to have
the old issues put on the Internet. We hope that those of you who visit this website will
gain information from the old issues and that you will pass on our website address to your friends
both in this country and abroad. As now we get requests for old editions or photocopies of
pages from specific issues. This is not really a practical approach so we
now hope that you can print off from the files here on this Internet site. Note that the files are in PDF format
and because of
size may takea little while to download. So be patient and allow for your local Internet speed and the speed of your computer.
The Winding Roe/Benbradagh website is primarily aimed at those who have ancestral roots in the Roe
valley and who may be doing research on this. We hope that the information
in the files
will be of use to you.
We are aware that there are families
in such far flung places
such as the United States, Australia, New Zealand, S. Africa, Argentina, Mexico,
Continental Europe
and every
place the Irish diaspora has linked will hopefully find this website useful.
Maybe you have photos,stories or old letters brought by your ancestors to their
new homelands all those years ago and you would like to share with us.
If you would like to contact the webmaster please feel free to
send an email via the Email icon at bottom of this home page. Your comments
and feedback appreciated. Be aware that you can forward images and text via the website Email icon on the Homepage so no need to
have to write, send photos etc. all that dreaded "snail mail" stuff.Thanks.
Though this website contains material mostly associated with a more "domestic" history of the Roe
Valley some of you may become interested in the general history of the area and especially the N.E. area of Ireland the
province of Ulster.To get a good comprehension of the history it will be necessary to understand the
intertwined relationships between the main clans of Ulster the O'Neills with their smaller clan allies
the O'Donnells and to a lesser extent the O'Cathans and their interaction with England
especially after the Reformation and the coming of Elizabeth 1st and James 1st to the throne. Irish history
in this part of Ireland changed for ever in the late 16th and early 17th century. The O'Neills and their allies
fought a protracted compaign against the English but eventually were defeated and rather engage in a formal surrender
chose in 1607
to flee Ireland for Continental Europe. Needless to say the run up to these events was a period of intrigue,
religious differences, deals, deceit, power struggles, arranged marriages, family fueds and the usual events
that change history to this day.
The reader may find it helpful to do some reading up on these aspects to get a good comprehension of our history
and where
we are at this moment and the history that your ancestors lived in generations gone by.
The Benbradagh a cross community magazine was issued between the years 1970 and
2000 some 30 years in Dungiven Co. Derry by a
small group of local historians in the area. The magazine is now out of print.
The magazine was generally about 20
to 30 pages
of roughly A4 size.
The Benbradagh was issued each year around Christmas or early Spring
and its content
usually consisted of articles by local writers on the
history of the immediate Dungiven area but also on the Roe valley
or about people having links to the area.
The magazine will be of interest to people world
wide who have their roots
and family history in this part of Co. Derry, the lands of the O'Cathans,
McCloskeys and O'Mullans. An area of much history
and greatly
effected by the Plantation of Ulster in the early 17th century.


In order to keep a managable size website and file size each Benbradagh has been converted into a PDF file. This should enable those interested to open each year in PDF format. It will also be possible to print out each page. Adobe Reader software is already available on most home computers or you can download free courtesy of Adobe from the link icon below.
The quality of the files
is a compromise between file size,
webspace and the quality of the original magazines some of which
were already
photocopies. The website is more suited for broadband high speed systems.
We continue on an ongoing basis to update the website so please call back from time to time.
Each file is between 2 and 6 Mbs. With broadband they will each download
in between 5 and 10 seconds.Broadband speeds are not always running at the speed claimed so be patient
if you find some slowness in download. All downloads have been tested on broadband.
Use can be made of your "Magnifier" tool on the Adobe tool bar. I find that
"Fit Visible" from the drop down menu gives the best clarity but experiment
to suit your own computer.
As of the April 2010 check with the Dungiven office for availability of early issues. Issue No. 1 is sold out.
Thanks for your support. Please feel free to access issues 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of The Winding Roe by clicking on associated icons below. Feedback and comments are appreciated via the email icon at the bottom of this Home page. Many thanks.

On a personal level and as a member of the team putting together the
new magazine
The Winding Roe
we must first record acknowledgement and thanks to the original committee members
who produced and published the Benbradagh for 30 years.We hope that by putting the old magazine on the Internet
many people world wide will be able to access the information contained in the old issues.
From time we are given old photos of groups of people who lived in Dungiven many years ago. The photo below is of the boys of Dungiven Primary School circa 1908 some 100 years ago. Can you identify any of them?. There are 43 students each has an unique number. If you can identify any of them please send us an Email from Icon below the image below with your information. Please only information that you might think interesting to other readers. No doubt many of these young men went to far off places such as America, Australia etc places many Irish emigrated to. No doubt many stayed at home. Also have a look at the photo of the school taken in 1922. It is complete with names. I suppose when we look at this type of photo we tend to think whatever happened to these young men?. Some we will know about but what is the history of the young man John Deans probably of mixed race who came amongst us only to die later in the battle fields of Europe probably as a private in the Canadian army killed by a snipers bullet.


Pupils who have been identified so far. Also a Photo of the class of 1922.
The First Book of Dungiven was already a lost treasure when it was mentioned in The Book of Lecan written around 1412 by Mac Firbis of Sligo under the patronage of the O'Dowds. The Second Book of Dungiven then is a fitting title to this 30 issue compilation. This Second Book fits neatly into the second millenium.















Some images from a recent portfolio of Denis Hegarty. Many of you have remarked on the quality of the images
on the website and those used on the cover of the magazine. Denis provides the majority of website images and all
those used for the magazine cover. This is much appreciated. With thanks also to Mary Wack who has also supplied us with some
excellent images and not forgetting the Webmaster with his box Brownie !!.
Colonel John Haslet Straw Bovevagh commander Delaware Line in Washington's Army. American Revolutionary War 1776.
Lieut John J.Ferris Drumsurn.Officer 19th Mass.Vols.American Civil War 1861-65.
Some views from the Roe valley.
Notes of interest, the probable links between the Roe and the Monroe clan of Scotland, the
legacy of the O'Neills of Ulster and a few points of interest.
The townlands of Antrim, Derry, Armagh, Fermanagh, Down, and Tyrone.
Some images of Ireland 1895-1905.
Some more images of Ireland 1895-1905.
View my Guestbook

