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Neglect of cross "a national embarrassment" 08.10.09

by Simon McGeady, Inishowen Independent

A MOVILLE tour guide, who has branded the condition of Cooly Cross graveyard a ‘national embarrassment,’ is launching a campaign to restore the site to its former glory.
The graveyard, the site of an early Christian monastery dating back as far as the 6th century, is so overgrown with weeds and briars as to be virtually impassable, with only the tallest headstones visible from the entrance.
Martin Hopkins, from nearby Gulladuff, runs historical walks part-time during Moville's St Patrick’s Day and summer festivals.
“The graveyard’s ancient headstones and Skull House are what the tourists want to see. Back in March I had a group of foreign tourists up here and the graveyard was in a really bad condition. Between March and the time of the summer festival the bushes had grown so high I couldn’t even bring the tourists in.
“If you look around Inishowen there are a number of National Monuments under the protection of Office of Public Works like Grianan or Donagh Cross. These attractions bring in tourists from all over the place. If a tourist visited Cooly, they would never want to come back. They certainly wouldn’t tell their friends to come here.”

Mr Hopkins says Donegal County Council have a duty of care for site in Cooly but believes it’s been many years since a proper clean up carried out at the graveyard.
“I knew at that point [this summer] that something had to be done or this important heritage site would disappear completely from sight.
Moville tour guide Martin Hopkins at the overgrown Cooly monastic site.
I thought it was time to take the bull by the horns and do something, so I have called a meeting for Thursday the 15th of October in the Caiseal Mara Hotel at 8.30pm sharp. Everyone is welcome. I hope to form a preservation group with a core of volunteers. The cost of the project will have to be covered by grant aid. We need a lot of volunteers to get funding then to help clean up the graveyard.”
Mr Hopkins acknowledges that a plan for the restoration and maintenance of the graveyard will be difficult to come up with, but he is determined to try.
“It’s not just a simple case of going up to Cooly with a strimmer. Because this is a site of national significance we will need to get permission from the Department of Environment, the Heritage Council, Donegal County Council, and the owners of the land. I even had Wildlife Ranger Emmet Johnston here to advise me if the graveyard had become a wildlife habitat due to all plant life now present.”
Mr Hopkins would like to see all the vegetation cut down to the ground revealing the ancient headstones and other ecclesiastical ruins.
He hopes the physical restoration of the graveyard will be accompanied by greater level of interest into just what sort of settlement it was, and the people who have been buried there over the centuries.
“This is a site of national significance. Cooley was the original settlement in Moville, people lived there long before the current town was built. It was probably a graveyard for monks as far back as the 6th Century.”
Mr Hopkins pointed to the work done by locals to restore St Mura’s graveyard in Fahan as an example of what could be done when the community came together to act. (Inishowen Independent)
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