Classiebawn Castle & Benbulben Mountain,
Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland.
Gareth Wray Photography

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Classiebawn Castle & Benbulben Mountain,
Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland.
Gareth Wray Photography

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đClassiebawn with the majestic Benbulben rising in the background, County Sligo, Ireland đ° â°ïž đźđȘ
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Benbulben â âThe Guardian of Classiebawnâ by Gareth Wray Via Flickr: Classiebawn Castle, Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland My previous post shows âClassiebawn Castleâ from the opposite view. A few folk have asked on the more traditional view with 'Benbulbin mountainâ in the backdrop, well here is that iconic view we all know so well. Iâve captured this angle many times before, yet it looks so different on each visit depending on the light or clouds. However, when it is snowing it looks almost completely different to anything across Ireland! If it werenât for these traditional stone walls & lush green rolling hills, one could excuse this snow-capped mountain & castle to be a scene captured in âBavariaâ or further afield. We are blessed to have such a variety of beauty right here in good auld Ireland. Classiebawn Castle is a Baronial style country house completed for Viscount Palmerston in 1874 on what was formerly a 10,000 acre estate. This estate of land in Sligo, Ireland once belonged to the Irish but was confiscated by the English Parliament over 400 years ago. During the Irish Rebellion in 1916 the Castle was commandeered and used as a barracks for the Free State Irish Army, who flew their flags there and protected the Castle from damage throughout the Rebellion. After the Rebellion ended the Castle was handed back intact to its English landlord âLord Mount Templeâ However 7,000 acres of its surrounding agricultural land was reclaimed by the local Irish. Hope you enjoy! Please favourite & add me as a contact to view my newest upcoming works, Thank you Facebook | Website | Instagram
Mullaghmore Head
Mullaghmore Head is one of the discovery points of the Wild Atlantic Way. Even though I have been here on a previous visit. This is probably the first time I would be able to properly appreciate what is here. There was bad weather the previous times when we visited, this time were were extremely lucky that were was blue skies all around. The waters were only slightly calmer which just means that there were less waves now. There are still a lot of waves since this place is known to be a surfing destination. While I didn't see anyone surfing here, I managed to see more of the scenery now.
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My wanders northwards along the Wild Atlantic Way continued into County Sligo. There is something about Sligo that I cannot quite describe. Ben Bulbin in the Dartry Mountain range with its distinctive plateau, has for decades intrigued me as it changes mood and profile almost with every mile. Over the years when making my way from my home in Limerick to my former home in Donegal, there was always a compulsory stop in Drumcliffe, Sligo to visit the resting place of one of our greatest poets, W.B.Yeats. On this trip however, I am not just passing through, I am here to explore places that have long since beckoned and beguiled me.
And so I took a right hand turn and followed the signs for Glencar, a place I know only from the Yeats poem, âA Stolen Childâ.
Glencar straddles the border between Counties Sligo and Leitrim, and the lake did not disappoint! I half expected dozens of swan, but saw only two! The waterfall that falls from the side of Ben Bulbin into the lake below was a delight. I felt that I had âarrivedâ â and why wouldnât I, given that it inspired one of Irelandâs most famous poems â The Stolen Child.
Where the wandering water gushes From the hills above Glen-Car, In pools among the rushes That scarce could bathe a star, We seek for slumbering trout And whispering in their ears Give them unquiet dreams; Leaning softly out From ferns that drop their tears Over the young streams. Come away, O human child! To the waters and the wild With a faery, hand in hand, For the worldâs more full of weeping than you can understand.Â
The wandering water gushes..
âŠfrom the hills above Glencar
Onwards then to Drumcliffe, where there is a fine bronze and limestone depiction of one of my favourite Yeats poems: âHe wishes for the Cloths of Heavenâ. This is a personal favourite, although the monument is difficult to photograph!
He Wishes For The Cloths Of Heaven
Had I the heavensâ embroidered cloths, Enwrought with golden and silver light, The blue and the dim and the dark cloths Of night and light and the half-light, I would spread the cloths under your feet: But I, being poor, have only my dreams; I have spread my dreams under your feet; Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
The swan emblems on the church doors..inspired by Yeats poem â The Wild Swans at Cooleâ
The grave of Yeats â although in recent times there has been a question mark over the remains interred here
Under Ben Bulbinâs Head
Under Ben Bulbin
Under bare Ben Bulbenâs head In Drumcliff churchyard Yeats is laid. An ancestor was rector there Long years ago, a church stands near, By the road an ancient cross.
No marble, no conventional phrase; On limestone quarried near the spot By his command these words are cut: Cast a cold eye On life, on death. Horseman, pass by!
And here is that very ancient cross
Drumcliffe High Cross possibly dating from 11th Century, in the grounds of a former abbey.
Nearby is the early 19th Century Lissadell House, sitting on the shores of Sligo Bay. Yeats was a regular visitor here, then the home of  Gore-Booth, the 5th Baronet of Sligo. One of his daughters, Constance Gore-Booth, who with her sister etched her initials into the glass of a living-room window with a diamond ring, became the first female elected representative to Parliament at Westminster and later to Dail Eireann. Constance, who later became Countess Markievicz, poet, painter, suffragette, nationalist and patriot is commemorated here.
Her role in the rebellion of 1916 is proudly symbolized by the flying of the Irish tricolour alongside the house ..a fact that would have riled her family who did not use the âCâ word! (âCâ being for Constance)
The Irish Tricolour flying at Lissadell House.
And so to Mullaghmore, that sparkles there on the vast expanse of Donegal Bay. On the evening of my visit there was country and western singing and dancing on the pier between the showers! Â In the hinterland behind Mullaghmore is Classiebawn Castle, summer home for many years of Louis Mountbatten, inherited by his wife Edwina.
Classiebawn Castle
Mountbatten was related to Queen Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Philip. The extended family were regular visitors to the area and were very well liked. On a Monday morning in August 1979, thugs of the Irish Republican Army put a bomb on a small fishing boat that carried Mountbatten, his daughter, grandchildren, extended family and a local boy on a family fishing outing. Two young boys aged 14 and 15 were killed, as was Mountbatten, then aged 79 and a female relative in her 80s. Two elderly people and two children were dead, with others suffering horrible injuries.
Mullaghmore harbour
Mullaghmore Harbour
Mullaghmore Peninsula
Mullaghmore WAW sign
I loved this famine memorial at Mullaghmore because of the location with Classiebawn in the background.
Another sunset to end another wonderful day along the Wild Atlantic Way!
Postcards from the Wild Atlantic Way â Sligo poetry, scenery,history My wanders northwards along the Wild Atlantic Way continued into County Sligo. There is something about Sligo that I cannot quite describe.

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Mullaghmore Beach, Co. Sligo
Classiebawn Castle, Mullaghmore peninsula near Cliffoney, County Sligo, in the Republic of Ireland.
http://www.castlesandmanorhouses.com/photos.htm
Classiebawn Castle is a country house built for Viscount Palmerston on what was formerly a 10,000 acre estate. The current castle was largely built in the nineteenth century and is seen here against the Benbulbin. It was designed in the Baronial style by J. Rawson Carrol, and is constructed from a yellow-brown sandstone  from County Donegal. It comprises a gabled range with a central tower topped by a conical roofed turret.
Classiebawn
Classiebawn House sitting in the shadow of Ben Bulben, 'Yeats Country' Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland