Tag Archives: Mrs Muriel Bell

Bellaghy Historical Society – October 2003

Bellaghy Historical Society held the first meeting of its fourth season as a society on Tuesday last, at its usual venue. The Old School Centre, Castle Street, Bellaghy.

The speaker for the evening was Mrs Muriel Bell from Magherafelt who spoke on A Look Back at Castledawson. A very large audience listened attentively as she displayed and explained the many slides of Castledawson as it used to be with some comparative pictures of the same sites and buildings as they are now.

Her material covered all angles of the streets, the village churches and factories and the houses of note which existed in and around the village.

Pictures of the bridges over the Moyola river were included with impressive slides of the large weir built in 1823. Mrs Bell gave most interesting information about families who had occupied the houses, and those who had given employment in the area.

She concluded her talk with a brief history of the Graves family of Gravesend, now the Club House on the Golf Course and the Dawson family who had built Moyola Park and the estate chapel, later to become Christ Church.

Thanking the speaker, the Chairperson, Mrs. Mary Breslin reminded members of the book life in the Past which the society had produced, and of which there are a few copies left and added that she looked forward to welcoming them all again on 11th November, when Mr. Alec Blair, the well known broadcaster, will speak on Past Diversions and Entertainments of the Ulster Countryside.

Mrs-Muriel-BellGuest speaker at the October meeting Mrs Muriel Bell from Magherafelt who spoke on A Look Back at Castledawson.   (Below) A few photographs that were taken at the meeting.

Bellaghy Historical Society – January 2003

For the first meeting of 2003 Bellaghy Historical Society had as speaker Mrs Muriel Bell, well known Local Historian from Magherafelt, to talk about the Paupers Grave at Magherafelt and its connection with the Workhouse and the Famine.

Mrs Bell spoke of the conditions which had given rise to the need for Workhouses or Poor Houses, which were built as a solution to the problem of poverty and destitution caused by the sub-division of land among families whose numbers increased at least fourfold in the course of two or three generations. The Famine of 1847 had greatly exacerbated the difficulties experienced by the poor, although our county had suffered less than many others (the worst being Cork) because of its alternative source of income in the weaving and spinning industries.

Conditions in the Workhouse were Spartan in the extreme, fever was rife and easily transmitted, so the numbers dying in the institution rose to as many as five a day in the worst years. A very unceremonious burial was given to the dead in the Paupers plot unless they had relatives prepared to take their bodies home for a more dignified burial. The plot itself had to be moved further away from the buildings when the incidence of typhoid fever caused officials to realise that its original site was so close to the well as to cause contamination. The new site was officially recognised and a memorial was erected there by the Ballinascreen Historical Society in May 2002.

Mrs Bells talk was very carefully researched and movingly expressed so that the large audience at the meeting listened with wrapt attention and in thanking her, the Chairperson, Mrs Mary Breslin expressed the gratitude of the members not only for the content of her talk but for putting forward the date of her visit by a month in order to facilitate Mr Tom McErlean, who had been booked to lecture in America and whose flight date there made it impossible for him to fulfil his engagement in Bellaghy. He will now come to Bellaghy Historical Society on 11th February to speak on Archaeology in Northern Ireland with special reference to the Bellaghy Townlands. The meeting will take place as usual in the Old School Centre at 8 p.m

Mrs-Muriel-BellLocal Historian Mrs Muriel Bell was the guest speaker at the January meeting of the Bellaghy Historical Society.