Village in County Wicklow, Ireland
Village in Leinster, Ireland
Ballyknockan or Ballynockan ( bal-ə-NOK-ən; Irish: Buaile an Chnocáin)[2] is a village and townland in County Wicklow, Ireland.
Ballyknockan is situated on the western edge of a large granite band extending from Dublin Bay to County Carlow.[3]
Ballyknockan village is located 220 m (722 ft) above sea level[citation needed] and is around 40 km (25 mi) from Dublin.
History
Commercial granite quarries were first opened in the early 1820s which lead to the development of the village.[4] Many of the first workers came from nearby Manor Kilbride and the Golden Hill quarry there.[5] According to an Ordnance survey of 1838, at the time almost half of the population of 400 were employed in the quarries.[3]
Ballyknockan was an area of anti-landlord agitation during the Land War. In 1887, a widow and her family were to be evicted from their home. Men employed by her landlord knocked the roof of her house and evicted the family while they were at mass. A law at the time stated that if a house was built within a day with smoke coming out of the chimney, the occupants couldn’t be evicted. The community worked together and built a house in a day for them and the fire was lit, ensuring they could not be evicted.[6][7] A plaque commemorating the event can be seen on the remains of the ruined cottage.[8]
In 1940 the village of Balinahown was completely flooded and parts of the surrounding villages of Valleymount and Lacken were also flooded to make way for the Poulaphouca Reservoir which spans out over 20 km2 (8 sq mi) across the land. Since then, the village overlooks the reservoir that provides water to thousands of Dublin homes and creates electricity, while also offering many water pursuits such as fishing, sailing, windsurfing, boating, and leisure cruising and canoeing.[9]
Ballyknockan hosted KnockanStockan, an independent music festival which was held annually each summer from 2007 until 2019.[10]
Filming location
The following films have been filmed in part in Ballyknockan:
See also
Further reading
- Wicklow History & Society by Ken Hannigan & William Nolan 1994
References