Glenveagh Castle - geograph.org.uk - 395086.jpg
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Glenveagh ( ; ) is the second-largest national park in Republic of Ireland, Ireland. Located in County Donegal, it includes Glenveagh Castle grounds, Lough Veagh, and much of the Derryveagh Mountains. National parks in Ireland conform to IUCN protected area categories#Category II – National Park, IUCN standards.


Geography

The park covers 170 square kilometres and includes much of the Derryveagh Mountains, Lough Veagh and Glenveagh Castle on its shores. The castle gardens display a multitude of exotic and delicate plants.


History

Captain John George Adair (1823–1885), an Anglo-Irish businessman, built Glenveagh Castle and founded the Glenveagh estate. Adair came into dispute with his Irish Catholic tenants over hunting and fishing rights and trespassing sheep. During the Irish Famine (1861), 1861 famine, Adair evicted 44 families (224 people total) from their blackhouses on his land, earning him the nickname "Black Jack Adair". The estate passed to his wife Cornelia Adair. It was then bought by Arthur Kingsley Porter in 1929, before being bought by Henry Plumer McIlhenny in 1937. McIlhenny bequeathed Glenveagh to the Irish state in the 1970s, but continued to use the castle as a part-time residence until 1982. The park is home to the largest herd of red deer in Ireland and the formerly Local extinction, extirpated golden eagle were reintroduced into the park in 2000. In winter 2018 and spring 2019, many native and non-native trees and plants were cleared from the park, and the water and pipe system was updated.


See also

*List of loughs in Ireland


References


External links


National Parks WebsiteGlenveagh National Park WebsiteIn Depth History of Glenveagh
{{authority control Important Bird Areas of the Republic of Ireland National parks of the Republic of Ireland North Atlantic moist mixed forests Protected areas established in 1986 Parks in County Donegal, Glenveagh National Park 1986 establishments in Ireland