| James Dargan - Brother Alban Mary JAMES
Dargan was born in Moira, Co Down in 1833, the son of
William John Dargan and Margaret (nee Magee). He joined
the Marist Brothers, a French teaching order, making his
noviciate in Beauchamps in 1860 and was sent at once to
London, where he taught for three years before going to
Glasgow. This was followed by eight years in Sligo
before returning to Gla sgow. In 1877 he went to the
recently opened house in Jarrow on Tyneside, as 'house
headmaster of the school. Six years later he returned to
London until 1881 when he returned to Dumfries where he
died on 29th July, 1893. |
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AS my pen name implies I have no agenda.
As well, I am inclined to write mostly about local people and
places.
But the speed at which the revolution in communications has moved
has launched me on the sea of instant world wide readership.
Our fan, Paul McParlin, in Newcastleupon-Thames, whose letter I
referred to some weeks ago, is still on the ball, very much so.
At this request I pin pointed Darganstown House 'DH' Moira on an
ad hoc ordnance map which he produced for the purpose.
Since a small holding which has been in the ownership of my
family for generations adjoins DH I had no problem save that the map
of the site as it is today shows only the truncated remnant of the
loan (lane) which led to the ruins which father always identified as
Henry Dargan's old house.
Our friend Paul has, by research, discovered that a notable
ancestor of his take in enclosures was indeed born at Moira and that
he, Paul, hopes to bring his family on a visit to the ancestral pile
fairly soon.
IT is a prestigious dwelling on the roadside bearing a suitable
name plate and now the property of leading medical consultant.
Darganstown is not a town land. The name probably pre-dates the
allocation of town land names when 'clachans', ie. groups of
farmhouses, were identified by the names of the principal occupiers.
There are X towns and Y towns and Z towns all over Ulster, relies
of bygone years when swains had no wheeled vehicles they tend to go
no further than the farm next door for a wife. It happened in my
family in the Aghalee./Aghagallon corner of what was Lisburn rural
district where no fewer than four families all inter married have
owned adjoining holdings for more than a century. But how does one
put all this across to Paul who is unfamiliar with Ulster folk life!
If the DOE had left Darganstown Road its traditional name and not
changed it to Kilmore Road, lift would have been easier. Locals may
remember the ugly rocky outcrop on the bend at Darganstown earning
it the name of 'the rocks.'
Before motor traffic increased in volume and speed the rocks were
picturesque but eventually mv brother who lived opposite had to help
pick up the wreck of a smashed car in his garden every few weeks and
the roads authority was forced to blast the impediment. Good
riddance!
Incidentally the town land is Kilinioge, named after the first
Christian church in Magheralin parish.
PS. For the benefit of Dargans past or present, or still to come,
the house that my father showed me as Henry Dargans house was
located behind the haggardy 'DH', farmhouse up a short loanen. The
large mansion now labelled Darganstown House was occupied latterly
by a family named Kerr, a group of elderly sisters.
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