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01/10/2016
Helen Mark brings you the people and stories that make Northern Ireland the place it is. The great Ardmore Altar oak tree, angling in Tyrone, Hugh Heaney on his brother's poetry and a new memorial to Catherine O'Hare Schubert in Rathfriland.
Last on
Sat 1 Oct 2016
08:05
³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio Ulster & ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio Foyle
Clip
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Ardmore Alter Oak Tree: 'A Grand Old Specimen'
Duration: 02:19
John Wallace Crawford
Is also famously known as 'Captain Jack' Crawford, who was a Wild West Pioneer whose stories began in Carndonagh right
in the heart of the Inishowen Peninsula. Jack was born to Scottish parents in
1847 in a small house in the Diamond area of Derry. Now such was the fame of
John Wallace Crawford that a Blue Plaque is to be unveiled there on Saturday 1st
October. Helen Mark met with Sean Beattie, Chairman of the Ulster History Trust
about the Scot’s adventurous life.Â
Haunted Donegal
Spooky stories from the wild and beautiful Donegal where ghost stories are a way of life. It’s a new book called ‘Haunted Donegal’, written by Madeline McCurry which features the goblin child of Castlereagh, the Blue Stacks Banshee, the ghostly swans of Burt Castle and much more. Helen Mark speaks live to Madeline about the imminent release of her book.Â
Seamus Heaney Lives On
This weekend sees the official opening of the new arts and literary centre dedicated to the life and literature of the late poet and Nobel Laureate. ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖPlace opens its doors in Bellaghy and it’s a proud moment for the town to have an arts and literary centre dedicated to his life and works. But amidst that pride there's also a tinge of sadness for the Heaney family which was so beautifully described by Seamus's brother Hugh when Helen Mark visited him back in January at the family farmhouse on the edge of the town.
Broadcast
- Sat 1 Oct 2016 08:05³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio Ulster & ³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ Radio Foyle