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'Armada gun belongs in Inishowen' 19.05.10

A Spanish Armada cannon found off the coast of Kinnego Bay could be housed in the Inishowen Maritime Museum if lobbying by a local senator is successful.
Senator Cecilia Keaveney said she had received a number of approaches for the cannon, reclaimed from 'La Trinidad Valencera' shipwreck, to be brought back home.
Kinnego Bay is where La Trinidad Valencera shipwreck was discovered.
A gun was first taken to the National Museum in Dublin for conservation and is now part of the 'Soldiers and Chiefs' exhibition at Collins Barracks. Other items recovered from the wreck are housed in the Ulster Museum, Belfast.
"We have always felt that, contrary to policy as it currently stands, these locally recovered artefacts should, where possible, be displayed close to where they were found. There may have been an argument years ago when we had no museum to display them in, but the Maritime Museum in Greencastle has gone from strength-to-strength," she said.
"I do recognise that Minister Hanafin has said that, while the cannon is part of a permanent exhibition, it could be loaned temporarily, subject to the borrowers being able to fulfil the museum's loan requirements."
The Moville-based representative said it was difficult to attract cultural tourists when all the major artefacts of interest were held in the biggest population centres including Dublin.
"It is therefore now a chance for Greencastle, and indeed other museums in the county to look to reclaiming, even on a temporary basis, items with important local stories of their own. I am in contact with Inishowen Maritime Museum in relation to the feasibility of meeting those criteria," she added.
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