The Port, County Donegal

Our story begins in The Port, County Donegal, Ireland with William Cassidywho would one day become the patriarch of the Cassidys of Cassidy Lake. William was born in The Port in 1797, the eldest of ten children of Andrew and Margaret Cassidy. He grew up in a modest stone cottage and married Jane Milligan, also of The Port. Together they emigrated to Canada in 1819. Jimmy Henderson, now of Donegal Town, who is related to the Cassidys and possibly to William Cassidy, grew up across the road from the Cassidy cottage and remembers it well.

Mike Cassidy has done extensive research on the Cassidy home in The Port. It was a small two-story Irish cottage probably less than 20 ft. x 20 ft. It was torn down around 1980. Jimmy says it was the last home on the left hand side of the road down to the port. By 1999, this property which had no water or sewage, had sold for a mere 8,000 Irish Punts, or about $16,000. Next door there is a large modern bungalow with workspace for fishing gear.

The Port is a small, 107 acre, townland in the Parish of Inver situated on Inver Bay about 7 miles from Donegal Town. In 2005 it consisted of about 50 houses and a few commercial buildings, most of which appear to support the local fishing industry. There is little indication that the town was ever much larger.

The Eany River empties into Inver Bay at Inver Village and The Port is 1.2 miles (1.9 km) southwest along Inver Bay. From a history of Ardaghey[1], one of the four Catholic church areas that make up the Parish of Inver, we learn that historically The Port was not a prosperous area. The Fisheries Commission of 1836 describes the pier as being “neglected and is now in total ruin.” In the 1860s nearby Inver Village is described as bearing the “unmistakable marks of decay” and “following up this old broken road, we arrive at another decayed village called ‘The Port’.”

Today, as with most of Ireland, The Port appears to be relatively prosperous with a number of new middle and upper income homes. While the access road is little more than a laneway, it is in respectable repair. There are several commercial fishing boats that use The Port. Recently, to the dismay of some of the residents due to the resulting pollution, salmon fish farms have been established in Inver Bay. While The Port is a fishing village, the Cassidys were carpenters and, according to Jimmy Henderson, would not have been engaged in commercial fishing.

Inver is often called Invermayle. St. Natalis, who died in 563, was Abbot of a monastery here. In 1821, the entire county of Donegal had a population of 248,270 and the Inver area had a population of 11,785. Today there are two “Invers” within a mile or so of each other. There is the town of Inver situated on the main highway, N56, just west of the Enay River, and Inver Village which is located right on Inver Bay on the west bank of the Eany River. The Port is southwest of Inver Village along Inver Bay.

A landmark of interest is the Church of Ireland where William and Jane Cassidy were married in 1818. This church is in Mullanboys on the east side of the Eany River. The former parish church was located on the west bank of the Eany River near Inver Village. It was abandoned around 1805 when the current Church of Ireland was built. There is an old cemetery on the site of the original Church of Ireland that is very hard to find. It does contain a Cassidy gravestone.
It is possible Andrew and Margaret Cassidy were buried in this cemetery or the one connected to the new Church of Ireland since this was their church.

If you visit the area, you will also find the Inver Methodist Church, located just east of the Eany River in Mullanboys. It was built in 1881 long after William Cassidy lived there. While the church that William helped establish at Cassidy Lake was also a Methodist church, we have no reason to believe William had any connection with Methodism in Ireland.

 

[1] Ardaghey Church and People, Vincent O'Donnell, et al, 1995

 

Map of Ireland
Ireland

 

Port of Inver
Port of Inver

 

Map of Inver Area
Inver Area

 

Inver Church of Ireland
Ruins of original Church of Ireland. Photo by Carole and Garth Christie 1993