A
large number of young men and women belonging to Ballyholland were leaving for America and a
considerable concourse of friends besieged the carriage doors, shouting and
weeping with great vehemence.
The
railway authorities, observing that the confusion which prevailed might lead to
either serious accident or loss of life, had the carriages shunted further up
the line, but to no avail, for the female relatives of the emigrants clung to
the doors and gave vent to the most piteous cries.
As
the hour of departure approached the scene became heart-rending, the emigrants
making desperate exertions to shake hands with those outside, and the latter
surging and crushing round the carriage doors.
Ultimately
the whistle sounded and the train moved off, the travellers shouting …
“Goodbye
Newry and Ireland” and “Farewell to the cot and the mount” and "Ballyholland No More!"
The
women thereupon bewailed the separation in agonising strains and the utmost
vigilance was required to keep them from following the train along the
line.
Altogether
the scene was a memorable one in the annals of the Irish exodus.’
The
above is an extract from an April 1884 edition of the Belfast Morning News
(Irish News) and refers to Newry’s ‘forgotten’ railway line to Greenore.