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Donegal guilds celebrate ICA centenary 27.09.10

THE 18 guilds of the Irish Countrywomen's Association in Co Donegal including several from Inishowen gathered at the weekend to celebrate 100 years of the organisation in the county.
The Dungloe guild was the first branch of the ICA. It was formed in December 1910, several months after the organisation was founded in Bree, Co Wexford.
The Donegal ICA Federation held an oak tree-planting ceremony in Riverside Park, Dungloe, on Saturday to mark the ICA Centenary and the role the town's guild had played from the start.
The event was attended by 75 women representing Co Donegal's 18 guilds, ICA national president, Anne Marie Dennison, North and West MEP Pat 'the Cope' Gallagher and Sinn Féin councillor, Marie Therese Gallagher.
Mary Coyle, left, and Margaret Callaghan of the Grianán Aileach Guild in Burt at the ICA Centenary celebration in Dungloe.
"This tree-planting ceremony is a very fitting tribute to the ICA in Donegal, as it was here in Dungloe that the first branch of the Society of the United Irishwomen, as our association was called at that time, was formed, in December 1910," said Ms Dennison. "I hope the ICA will continue to grow as this tree will grow, and that both will be strong and healthy at the next centenary celebration."
Ms Dennison also described the founding of the Dungloe ICA Guild: "The records show that on the 3rd of December, 1910, Ellice Pilkington travelled to Dungloe, Donegal, armed with an organiser bag and a map lent by the Irish Agricultural Organisation Society, a thermos flask, and a passport in the old tongue given by the President of the Gaelic League, Douglas Hyde, later President of Ireland.
In Dungloe she found an enterprising bi-lingual community with a flourishing co-operative society and a knitting industry in the hands of women and girls, and all around them great possibilities for cottage gardening, dairying, and jam-making. There was also a village hall, suitable for social occasions and other events. Ellice
Pilkington received an enthusiastic reception. At a meeting in the village hall, the Dungloe branch was founded and a committee was elected. Within a short time the branch had 200 members, and two teachers taught subjects such as household economics, home dairying, and cottage gardening."
The Dungloe tree-planting ceremony was one of numerous centenary celebrations that the more than 15,000 ICA members nationwide have organised at local and national levels throughout the year. As part of the ceremony, ICA officers paid special thanks to Coillte and the Dungloe Tidy Towns Committee for their assistance in selecting and planting the tree. The ceremony was followed by a Donegal ICA Federation and a raffle for a beautiful patchwork quilt made by the members to help the women of Eritrea in Africa. To view more photos click here .
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