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Muingnabo River

Coordinates: 54°15′42″N 9°43′51″W / 54.261799°N 9.730750°W / 54.261799; -9.730750
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Muingnabo River
Abhainn Mhoing na Bó
Muingnabo River upstream from Annie Brady's Bridge
Map
Native nameAbhainn Mhoing na Bó (Irish)
Location
CountryIreland
County Mayo
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • location
Atlantic Ocean via Sruwaddacon Bay

The Muingnabo River (Irish: Abhainn Mhoing na Bó)[1] is a river in north County Mayo, in the northwest of Ireland. It flows into the Atlantic Ocean via Sruwaddacon Bay.

Geography

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Sruwaddacon Bay, the Glenamoy River and the Muingnabo River are part of the Glenamoy Bog Complex Special Area of Conservation.[2]

History

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Before the famine, the Wood family from Yorkshire owned the townland surrounding the river. The Woods built a hunting lodge by the river, using a salmon net with a bell alert system to detect caught fish. They cultivated oil seed in a nearby area called "Park na Rapa".[3]

A road connecting two nearby villages, Carrowteige and Glenamoy, was built in 1846. As there was no bridge yet constructed over the Muingnabo River, a fording point was used. Annie Brady, the wife of a local Fisheries Inspector fundraised for a new bridge, completed in 1886. The current bridge replaces Brady's bridge, destroyed by floods in 1933.[4][3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Abhainn Mhoing na Bó/Muingnabo River". logainm.ie. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  2. ^ "Glenamoy Bog Complex SAC | National Parks & Wildlife Service". www.npws.ie. Retrieved 2023-12-31.
  3. ^ a b Noone, Fr. S. Where the Sun Sets (1991)
  4. ^ "Bridges in co. Mayo in the West of Ireland". www.mayo-ireland.ie. Retrieved 2023-12-31.

54°15′42″N 9°43′51″W / 54.261799°N 9.730750°W / 54.261799; -9.730750