To
facilitate it the lake at nearby Camlough was enlarged (a fact already alluded
to) and its water used to regulate the stream that supplied power to drive the
mills for grinding corn, scutching flax and bleaching linens.
By
the mid nineteenth century it was only in a few locations that the old
irregular cluster of farm dwellings known as clachans, survive. Instead bogs had been drained, mountain
slopes brought into cultivation and farmhouses built down laneways or sited at
intervals along the new, straight main roads.
The
clachans (e.g. at Clontygora, Cornamuchlagh, Ballynamadda,
Lislea and Pollynagrasta) may have represented elements of the Pre-Plantation
settlement pattern and in general they were located alongside the older roads
which followed spring lines along the lower hill slopes: here farming communities
could have benefited from rough pasture on the hills and cultivated land in the
valley bottoms.
In
contrast, the large houses of the landlords set within wooded estates,
parklands and gardens, represented the new features of the 19th
century landscape. Examples are numerous
but in our area we might name Heath Hall in Ballymacdermott townland, Killeavy Castle
and Halls’ Narrow
Water Castle.
…
end …