Images

Image of Doohatty Glebe (Court Tomb) by ryaner

The central chamber is in the centre of the shot. The terrain here is difficult, to say the least. Fortunately it’s only 20 metres in from the forest track.

Image credit: ryaner
Image of Doohatty Glebe (Court Tomb) by ryaner

Looking south along the central gallery’s larger chamber. Pity about all the cairn rubble.

Image credit: ryaner
Image of Doohatty Glebe (Court Tomb) by ryaner

The larger, southern chamber with sillstone visible centre left.

Image credit: ryaner
Image of Doohatty Glebe (Court Tomb) by ryaner

Looking north at the northern chamber of the central gallery with the dividing jambstones prominent.

Image credit: ryaner
Image of Doohatty Glebe (Court Tomb) by ryaner

Looking north over the two chambers of the central gallery.

Image credit: ryaner

Articles

Doohatty Glebe

Third time lucky? No such thing. Third time I knew exactly where the tomb is because of the excellence of the mapping at the NISMR which I hadn’t got the last two times I was here. Start at the forest track on the Ulster Way where it crosses the Swanlinbar to Enniskillen road. There’s a place to park that doesn’t block any farm gates and it’s over a stile and along a field track.

Benaughlin is prominent to the west as you start to rise out of a small valley bottom. It’s not at all strenuous and after about 1,200 metres you take a left turn, off the Way. Another 300 metres in a south-westerly direction, the dot on the OS map could mean that the tomb is well in to the left off the track. It isn’t. The central chamber of a sprawling, ‘star-shaped’ cairn is 20 metres in amongst the scrub. In fact, some of the cairn almost reaches the track itself.

It was excavated by Wakeham in 1882. It was he who first described a ’starfish-shaped’ cairn or a star-shaped cairn. This is now thought to have come about by, according to Estyn Evans, ‘the accidental result of pillage.’ Whatever about all that it’s evident that someone cares enough to come here and cut back some of the under/overgrowth and stop it completely inundating the gallery and chambers.

We mooched around for a bit – it’s not the easiest on the eye nor on the ankles. There’s a large amount of cairn rubble in both the small northern chamber and the larger southern one. Herbage of various sorts obscures the small arm at the south-east of the gallery. Vibes-wise I would say for the completists only, or maybe for those who still want to bear witness to the burial rites of the ancestors.

Doohatty Glebe

Twice now I’ve gone in search of this tomb, twice defeated. The walk along the Ulster Way, under the gaze of the magnificent Benaughlin, is only a small consolation for the disappointment of not finding the sepulchre.

The tomb was excavated in 1882 by Wakeman and when the modern forestry was being planted was given enough room in its own little clearing. Alas, for us, this has now been overgrown completely, to an extent where even the more adventurous and determined are left completely defeated. The area in which the tomb lies has been left unmanaged for so long that when the forestry workers do make a move on it, the tomb is in danger of being completely destroyed. Shame.

Edit: [After some more research I think I may have been looking in the wrong place. Twice. Oops.]

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