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Clarecastle GAA

Clarecastle
Clár Átha an Dá Choradh
Founded: 1887
County: Clare
Nickname: Magpies
Colours: Black and White
Grounds: Clarecastle
Coordinates: 52°48′58.74″N 8°58′10.09″W / 52.8163167°N 8.9694694°W / 52.8163167; -8.9694694Coordinates: 52°48′58.74″N 8°58′10.09″W / 52.8163167°N 8.9694694°W / 52.8163167; -8.9694694
Playing kits
Standard colours
Senior Club Championships
All Ireland Munster
champions
Clare
champions
Football: - - 1
Hurling: - 1 12

Clarecastle GAA is a Gaelic Athletic Association club in the village of Clarecastle in County Clare, Ireland.

In existence since 1887.

The name “Clár Átha an Dá Choradh” has its origins in the local medieval castle first built around 1250 and reconstructed and fortified in the late 15th century. The castle is built on a site, which was an island formed by a divide in the river Fergus. In the Irish Annals, the place is called “Clár Átha an Dá Choradh” or ‘the board of the ford of the two weirs’. The shortened form of this place name “An Clár” in the anglicised form eventually gave its name to the modern county of Clare.

Hurling and football have been played in the parish since earliest times but its present existence dates probably from the spring of 1887. A football tournament is recorded as having taken place in October of that year. It is also on record that the Killone hurling club and the Clarecastle football club took part in a funeral procession of a Clarecastle Fenian in March 1888.

There have been many changes since those times. The name of the club in Clarecastle has been changed many times from “Robert Emmets”, “Parnells” to “An Clar”, “An Clar Mor”, “Droichead an Chlair” etc., until 1971 when the historic name of “Clár Átha an Dá Choradh” was restored to the club and has remained ever since.

The club remained without a home ground until the early 1980s when a first permanent site was purchased from St Flannans College at Clareabbey. That well-appointed grounds and clubhouse has since passed from the club in a roundabout way to the Clare County Board. It was purchased from the club by the Ennis Urban Council in 1998 and subsequently bought back from the Urban Council by the county board and is now the official headquarters of Clare GAA.

The clubs present location, back in the heart of the village, is the fruit of necessity, foresight, effort, persuasion and a bit of luck on the part of club members and the generosity and community spirit of the Roughan and Ryan families. We are justifiably proud of this achievement. It consists of a clubhouse opened in 2002 and five playing pitches (three full size and two junior fields) first used in 2001. This development will serve the club and community well into the future and is constantly being upgraded to now include an indoor training facility for club members.

On the playing field, Clarecastle won their first senior hurling championship as part of an Ennis/Clarecastle team in 1928. Having contested three finals as an independent club in the 30′s, the breakthrough in the county was finally made in 1943 with a win over Scariff. Successes followed in ’45, ‘49, ’70, ’86, ’87, ’91, ’94, ’97, 2003 and 2005. In between, 12 finals were contested and lost. In 1997, Clarecastle also made the historic breakthrough in Munster with victory over Patrickswell, following final defeats in 1970 and ’86, and were subsequently unfortunate to lose in a replay to a great Birr team at the All-Ireland semi-final stage.


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