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Ballingarry, South Tipperary

Ballingarry
Baile an Gharraí
Town
Ballingarry is located in Ireland
Ballingarry
Ballingarry
Location in Ireland
Coordinates: 52°35′N 7°32′W / 52.59°N 7.54°W / 52.59; -7.54Coordinates: 52°35′N 7°32′W / 52.59°N 7.54°W / 52.59; -7.54
Country Ireland
Province Munster
County County Tipperary
Elevation 204 m (669 ft)
Population (2006)
 • Urban 761
Time zone WET (UTC+0)
 • Summer (DST) IST (WEST) (UTC-1)
Irish Grid Reference S310484

Ballingarry (Irish: Baile an Gharraí, meaning "town of the gardens") is a village and civil parish in County Tipperary, Ireland. It is one of 19 civil parishes in the barony of Slievardagh. It is associated with the coal mining industry. It is also an ecclesiastical parish in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cashel and Emly. The village is situated near the Kilkenny border on route R691 in the Slieveardagh range.

On Main Street may be found a church, primary school and shops. There is also a GAA pitch in the village. The nearby collieries of Ballingarry are historically associated with anthracite mining in Ireland.

Historically, Ballingarry found fame in the mid-19th century when a rebellion broke out there on 29 July 1848 against British rule. The site of this uprising, the McCormack House, known also as the Warhouse (officially Famine Warhouse 1848) has since been designated as a national memorial and historical building by the State. It was here during the ill-fated rebellion that the national tricolour of green, white and orange was unfurled for the first time by the rebels, led by William Smith O'Brien, thus emulating the French rebels who also took to the streets with their tricolour for the first time earlier that year. Sub-Inspector Trant and 46 other local policemen took refuge from the rebels in a large two-story farmhouse, taking the five young children in the house as hostages. They barricaded themselves in, pointing their guns from the windows. The house was surrounded by the rebels and a stand-off ensued. Mrs. Margaret McCormack, the owner of the house and mother of the children, demanded to be let into her house, but the police refused and would not release the children. Mrs. McCormack found O'Brien reconnoitring the house from the out-buildings, and asked him what was to become of her children and her house.


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