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Campile

Village in County Wexford, Ireland

Campile

Summary

Village in County Wexford, Ireland

FieldValue
nameCampile
native_nameCeann Poill
native_name_langga
settlement_typeVillage
image_skylineDunbrody Abbey, Campile, Wexford (geograph 4572049).jpg
image_captionDunbrody Abbey lies 1 km west of Campile
pushpin_mapIreland
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Ireland
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameIreland
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Leinster
subdivision_type3County
subdivision_name3County Wexford
unit_prefMetric
population_as_of2022
population_footnotes
population_total371
population_density_km2auto
timezone1WET
utc_offset1+0
timezone1_DSTIST (WEST)
utc_offset1_DST-1
coordinates
elevation_m48
blank_nameIrish Grid Reference
blank_info

Campile () is a small village situated in County Wexford in the south of Ireland. It is 14 km south of the town of New Ross. As of the 2022 census, Campile had a population of 371 people.

History

Archaeological evidence of ancient settlement in the area include several burnt mounds and ringforts in the neighbouring townlands of Ballyvelig, Tinnock, and Dunbrody. Approximately 1 km southwest of Campile is the 12th century Dunbrody Abbey, and the 17th century bawn of the (incomplete) Dunbrody Castle.

In 1798, during the United Irishmen Rebellion, a rebel camp was located on nearby Slieve Coillte hill.

WWII bombing

Memorial in Campile marking the bombing of the area during WW2

During World War II, in which Ireland remained officially neutral, the German Luftwaffe bombed Campile. The bombing took place on 26 August 1940. The bombs were dropped by a lone German bomber that appeared over Campile around lunch time. A second aircraft dropped a number of bombs at nearby Ambrosetown.

The first bomb dropped at Campile failed to detonate. Local man Teddy Drought, who was fifteen years old and worked in Shelburne Co-op at the time of the bombing, described witnessing the aircraft approach and the first bomb being dropped while sat on a wall with a friend. In an interview with RTÉ in 1990, Drought recalled the following scene:

"A bomb come down-we didn't know at the time it was a bomb-came down through the roof and down on the ground alongside the two of us (...) it busted, it didn't explode".

After dropping this first bomb, the plane circled the Campile area and dropped an additional three bombs over the Shelburne Co-op creamery and restaurant area. Approximately 150 employees worked at the Shelburne Co-op at the time of the bombing. Three women were killed during this daylight bombing – Mary Ellen Kent (30), her sister Catherine Kent (26), both from Terrerath, and Kathleen Hurley (27) from Garryduff. The bomb that exploded and killed the three women landed on the restaurant section of the Co-op where the women had been working. A total of four German bombs were dropped on the creamery and restaurant sections of Shelburne Co-op, and the railway line was also targeted. Greater loss of life was narrowly avoided due to approximately fifty employees leaving the restaurant after the lunch time rush shortly before the bomb was dropped.

The attack has never been fully explained, although some historians have suggested that it was a deliberate attack to discourage the supply of foodstuffs to wartime Britain. Despite this, a commonly given explanation for the bombing is that the German pilot had gotten lost and mistook Ireland's South-East for Wales.

Following the bombing, precautions were taken in an attempt to protect locals in the event of another attack. For example, sirens were installed in the village that would sound at the Shelburne Co-op any time a plane flew overhead for the duration of the war.  In an interview with RTÉ reporter Michael Ryan in 1990, the area manager of Waterford Cooperative Tom Connery claimed that upon hearing these sirens locals would "lay awake at night wondering if it was them again".

On the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the bombing, a memorial garden was dedicated to the memory of the three women who died.

Amenities

The village has two small supermarkets, a Centra store and a Londis store. There are also two smaller local shops. The Shelbourne Co-Op, which was hit during the Campile Bombing, was demolished in 2010. There is also a pharmacy, joinery, hardware store, filling station, take-away, soccer pitch, hair salon, community hall and two pubs. The local churches are situated in Horeswood and Ballykelly, approximately a half-mile and four miles from Campile respectively. The parish school is situated in Ballyfarnogue, adjacent to the Horeswood GAA complex, two miles from the village.

Transport

Rail transport

Campile railway station closed in 2010

Campile railway station opened on 1 August 1906. On 21 July 2010, Irish Rail announced that it would suspend its rail service through Campile, and this took effect after the operation of the evening train on 18 September 2010. Before that date, it was served Mondays to Saturdays by one passenger train in each direction.

Bus transport

Prior to the cessation of the rail service Campile's Bus Éireann service was infrequent consisting of the commuter route between Duncannon and Waterford city via New Ross and on certain days by a cross-country bus to Wexford. After the rail service ceased, the bus service was enhanced significantly. A revised Bus Éireann route 370 service came into effect from Monday 20 September 2010.

Sport

The local sports teams for Campile and the surrounding area are Campile United in soccer, who play in the Wexford soccer league, and Horeswood GAA who play in the Wexford Gaelic football and hurling leagues. Horeswood GAA has won the Wexford Senior Football Championship 4 times in 2005, 2006, 2009 and 2011.

Education

Scoil Mhuire is situated in the townland of Ballinamona on the New Ross-Campile road. It is a central school for the parish of Sutton's, which is divided into Horeswood Parish and Ballykelly Parish. In 1979, four schools in the parish amalgamated into Scoil Mhuire. These four schools were Aclare NS, Ballykelly NS, Horeswood NS, and Killesk NS.

References

References

  1. "Census 2022 Urban Profiles".
  2. A. D. Mills. (2003). "A Dictionary of British Place-Names". Oxford University Press.
  3. "Ceann Poill / Campile". Irish Placenames Commission.
  4. (1995). "Recorded Monuments Protected Under Section 12 of the National Monuments (Amendment) Act 1994 – County Wexford". Office of Public Works.
  5. (13 April 2020). "Left Unfinished – Dunbrody Castle".
  6. "Campile Bombing". RTÉ Archives.
  7. Heffernan, Breda. (9 August 2010). "The day Hitler's bombs brought death to a quiet Wexford village".
  8. Furlong, Nicholas. (2003). "A History of County Wexford". Gill & MacMillan.
  9. (1 September 2000). "Bombing of Campile remembered". Wexford People.
  10. "August 27th, 1940: From The Archives (reprint of article published 27 August 1940)".
  11. (9 August 2010). "The day Hitler's bombs brought death to a quiet Wexford village". Independent News & Media.
  12. (6 August 2010). "Wexford village to commemorate World War II bombing". Irish Examiner.
  13. "Campile station". Railscot – Irish Railways.
  14. (21 September 2010). "End of the line". Independent News & Media.
  15. "Timetable – Route 370".
  16. "Campile United". Wexford Football League.
  17. "Horeswood".
  18. "Club Title – Wexford".
  19. "Scoil Mhuire, Horeswood".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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