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Ráth Chairn

Coordinates: 53°36′39″N 6°51′48″W / 53.6108°N 6.8632°W / 53.6108; -6.8632
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Ráth Chairn
Village
Ráth Chairn is located in Ireland
Ráth Chairn
Ráth Chairn
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 53°36′39″N 6°51′48″W / 53.6108°N 6.8632°W / 53.6108; -6.8632
CountryIreland
ProvinceLeinster
CountyCounty Meath
Elevation
61 m (200 ft)
Population
 (2006)
 • Total
447
Irish Grid ReferenceN800567
Ráth Cairn is the only official name.

Ráth Chairn (Template:Lang-en or Rathcarran) is a small village and Gaeltacht (Irish-speaking area) in County Meath, Ireland. It is about 55 km northwest of Dublin.

Ráth Chairn Gaeltacht was founded in 1935 when 41 families from Conamara were settled on land previously acquired by the Irish Land Commission. Each family was provided with a Land Commission house and a farm of approximately 8.9 hectares (22 acre), a sow, piglets and basic implements. A further 11 families joined the original settlers in 1935. In all, 443 people moved from Connemara to the Ráth Chairn area. In 1967 Ráth Chairn received official recognition as a Gaeltacht, following a local campaign.[1] Today, it and the nearby village of Baile Ghib make up the Meath Gaeltacht.

A cooperative (the "Ráth Chairn Cooperation Society") was formed in 1973. Ráth Chairn has since grown into a village with a Catholic church, community hall for dramas, Corchumann Ráth Chairn and RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta (also used by Coláiste na bhFiann during the summer months), sports facilities, an all-Irish primary and secondary school, a library and a pub (An Breadán Feasa).

Several facilities in Ráth Chairn host children and adults wishing to learn Irish, and residential Irish language courses are run for teenagers in the summer months.[2]

Notable people

See also

References