Clifden

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Clifden
An Clochán
Location
Location of Clifden
centerMap highlighting Clifden
WGS-84 (GPS) Coordinates:
53.4833° N 10.0167° W
Irish Grid Reference
L655510
Statistics
Province: Connacht
County: County Galway
Elevation: 50 m
Population (2002)
 - Town:
 - Rural:
 
1,355 
1,929

Clifden (Irish: An Clochán, meaning "bee-hive cell"*) is a town on the coast of County Galway, Ireland and being Connemara's largest town, it is often referred to as "the Capital of Connemara". It is located on the Owenglin River where it flows into Clifden Bay. The town is linked to Galway city by the N59. Clifden is a popular tourist destination for those touring Connemara and is regarded as its capital.

Contents

The town was founded at the start of the 19th century by John D'Arcy who lived in Clifden Castle (which is now a ruin that can be seen from the Sky Road west of Clifden). Clifden gained prominence in the early 1900s when Guglielmo Marconi built his major transatlantic wireless telegraphy station there to minimize the distance to Newfoundland.

Clifden is near the landing place (53°26′N 10°01′W) of the first transatlantic flight by Alcock and Brown 15 June 1919. The plane crashlanded in Derrygimlagh bog, close to the location of the Marconi station. The first point-to-point fixed wireless service connecting Clifden with Nova Scotia opened 17 October 1907 and closed 25 July 1922 after suffering serious damage in the Irish Civil War. At peak times over 400 people were employed on the wireless station.

In "the burning of Clifden" in 1921, 14 suspected Republican homes were burnt by the Black and Tans.

From 1895 to 1935 Clifden was the western terminus of the Midland Great Western Railway.

Communications
Dialing Code: 095
Coast Guard: channels 16,26 and 67
RNLI Lifeboat:

The N59 road from Galway (77 km away) to Westport (64 km) passes through the town.

Regular coach services are provided by Bus Éireann and Michael Nee, connecting Clifden with Galway city.

  • The Connemara Pony Show, organized by the Connemara Pony Breeders Society and held on the third Thursday in August since 1924.
  • Clifden Community Arts Week in late September offers poetry reading, lectures, recitals and traditional music. The festival was first started by teachers in Clifden Community School in 1979 to bring creative arts into the classroom.
  • Omey Island Races: horse racing on the beach.
  • Clifden Regatta.

Clifden lies within the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galway and Kilmacduagh and the Church of Ireland United Dioceses of Tuam, Killala and Achonry and its Omey Union Parish.

Note *: A "bee-hive cell" is small, free standing stone dwelling, circular in shape, constructed of stone and corbelled until it closes at the top. It is usually associated with hermits and monks.

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