
Tiny school on stunning Irish island with clear water, dolphins & turtles issued urgent appeal as it faces closure
Scoil Naisiunta Inis Chleire is a historic Irish-speaking primary school situated on the island of Cape Clear off the coast of West
3
The appeal comes after only three children enrolled in the next school year
The 129-year-old
It echoes appeals made in 2018, when the school's only two teachers retired.
Now fears that Ireland's southernmost Gaeltacht island primary school could close have resurfaced.
As a result, the local community development organisation, Comharchumann Chleire Teo, has launched a campaign aimed at bringing
READ MORE FROM IRISH NEWS
Amenities such cheap long-term rental accommodation and fibre broadband are being advertised in an attempt to draw visitors to the island.
A €35,000-a-year tourist manager job is also being offered, in order to manage the Cape Clear Fastnet Experience and Heritage Centre, a site which received €1million from Failte Ireland and Udaras na Gaeltachta last year.
While families with a competent level of Irish are considered favourable, the island is also keen to attract families from various backgrounds and nationalities.
The island, notably already boasts a varied community, with residents from France, Germany, Ukraine,
MOST READ IN THE IRISH SUN
Cape Clear's island development agency manager, Kevin McCann, and his board are currently offering two low-cost rental properties for September as an incentive for young families to move to the island.
Mr McCann said to the Irish Examiner: "We don't expect people to stay forever, although that would be nice. But we do want to encourage anybody with young children and preferably at least one person who wants to be a school principal to come and join our community."
NEWCOMERS NEEDED
He added: "Island life is not for everyone. But what they will get here is a wonderful sense of community and people do rely on each other here more than in the bigger, more urban areas."
Residents like McCann worry that a closure of the school would threaten the island's viability.
The island currently boasts a local bus service, a public library, a public health nurse, two pubs, and its own postal service.
However, with the number of
3
The 129-year-old school is one of the last Island primary schools in the country
3
The school is currently in need of a new principal teacher, and students in order to remain open
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
41 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Almost 60,000 Tower air fryers recalled over fire risk
Irish households have been warned to stop using certain models of Tower air fryers over a potential fire risk. The Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (CCPC) said on Thursday that almost 60,000 affected models have been sold in retail outlets across the country. The models were made between 2020 and 2024 and sold in outlets across Ireland, including Argos, Tesco, DID, Dealz, Lidl, and Amazon. A manufacturing defect is causing these air fryers to overheat, potentially leading to fires and risking injury or death. While there have been reports in the UK of these air fryers catching fire, no incidents have been reported in Ireland to date. Consumers who use the following air fryers are urged to take action: T17023 Tower 2.2Ltr Manual Air Fryer T17061BLK Tower 4Ltr Manual Air Fryer T17067 Tower 4Ltr Digital Air Fryer T17087 Tower 2Ltr Compact Manual Air Fryer T17129L Vortx 8L Dual Basket Air Fryer The CCPC said the model number can be found on the appliance rating label on the bottom of the air fryer. The appliance should be unplugged before people start looking for it. Each model number starts with a T. The Tower air fryers being recalled. Anyone with one of these air fryers should stop using it immediately, unplug it and contact Tower Housewares. They can do this on their website or by emailing towerproduct@ 'This recall covers five Tower air fryer models with a dangerous manufacturing defect that could cause the models to overheat,' CCPC director of communications Grainne Griffin said. 'Almost 60,000 affected units have been sold in Ireland so it's vital that consumers who have a Tower air fryer check their model. If their model is affected, it is not safe to use.' The watchdog added that consumers should always follow manufacturer and health and safety instructions when operating any electrical appliances. It said that anyone concerned about a product safety issue should contact the CCPC's national consumer helpline on 01 402 5555 from 9am to 6pm, Monday to Friday, or email ask@


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Poem of the Week: You Were
A half-crown in a purse of copper pennies, The talking of neighbours after Sunday mass, A moveable feast that follows a day of fasting, A spring of water behind summer grass, A winter's night spent by the open fire, A candle flame in the window on Christmas Eve, The last turn on the road before homecoming, A May-bush with its ribbons in the breeze, A roadside pump that never refused water, Evening sunshine after a day of rain, The last dance before Lent, a waltz, a reel, A Summer's day that will not come again. (in memory of my mother) Liam Aungier has had poems in Poetry Ireland Review, Cyphers and The Irish Times. A collection, Apples in Winter, was published by Doghouse.


The Irish Sun
3 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
I exposed one of the darkest secrets in Irish history after discovering sickening fate of brothers I never knew I had
IT was not until her fifties that 'only child' Anna Corrigan discovered she actually had two older brothers she never knew – and could never know. Both boys had died as infants at St Mary's Mother and Baby Home in the west of Ireland, and became two of an estimated 796 babies secretly buried in a septic tank beneath the site. 8 There are an estimated 796 babies secretly buried in a septic tank beneath St Mary's Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Ireland Credit: Getty 8 Anna Corrigan discovered she actually had two older brothers she never knew Credit: 2020 Ray Ryan,All rights reserved. 8 Anna's mother Bridget had two sons who died at St Mary's Mother and Baby Home in Tuam, Ireland Credit: Supplied The home, run by Catholic order of nuns The Bon Secours Sisters between 1925 and 1961, took in women — often the victims of rape — who got pregnant out of marriage. It is believed a child died there every TWO WEEKS. Now, ten years after the scandal first hit headlines in 2014, work to excavate the mass grave will finally begin on Monday. Speaking at the grounds of She said: 'I was an only child, but now I'm a third child. "God only knows how that feels. I used to think I was special, unique, but that too has changed.' Hunger and neglect She also reflected on the trauma her mother would have experienced in the home, adding: 'How did you feel being away from your family, ostracised from your village and giving birth to your children alone?'. Bridget gave birth to John Desmond Dolan on February 22, 1946, weighing in at a healthy nine pounds. Most read in Irish News However, an inspection report retrieved by Anna and dated April 1947, described a 13-month-old John as 'a miserable, emaciated child with a voracious appetite and no control over his bodily functions'. Little John died two months later. The cause was given as ' Mass grave of babies' bodies is uncovered in UK town – just yards away from remains of 300 tragic infants Meanwhile, his brother William Joseph Dolan was born on May 21, 1950. No official death certificate has been found. Anna had discovered the existence of her older brothers after hearing an argument between some relatives. She began to investigate, and it was when she reported William as a missing person in 2013 that she was put in contact with local historian Catherine Corliss, who had also begun digging into the home's terrible past. Catherine uncovered how hunger and neglect were rife at the home. It rocked my world because I considered myself mum's eldest daughter Annette McKay She previously said: 'The children were treated as commodities. "The prettier babies were set up for Anna and Catherine took what they had found about the babies' deaths and burials to local papers in 2014. Then they turned to journalist Alison O'Reilly to take it national. Within days, Tuam was making headlines around the world. Alison told The Sun: 'This is the darkest secret in Irish history now exposed. 'People need to know that it's black and ugly and rotten and what they did to the children that were born in those homes was an absolute disgrace. "You wouldn't do it to a dog.' The controversy led to the Irish government setting up the Mother and Baby Homes Inquiry, which confirmed significant quantities of human remains had been found in an unmarked grave in Tuam in 2017. Devastatingly, Anna's story is replicated hundreds of times over. Annette McKay, 71, now living in Manchester, grew up knowing she had an older sister called Mary Margaret who had died as an infant. But what she never knew was that nuns had dumped her in a mass unmarked grave. She told The Sun: 'It was disbelief at first. "We imagined when we spoke about it that in some churchyard in the west of Ireland would be a little marked grave that said 'Mary Margaret, daughter of Maggie O'Connor'. "Then to find out that the nuns had put 796 children in a sewage tank, it was pretty mind-boggling.' Annette's mother Maggie had kept the existence of her first child a secret for decades. She only revealed the painful truth when she was 70, following the birth of a great-grandchild. Annette said: 'It rocked my world because I considered myself mum's eldest daughter.' Aged 17, Maggie had been sent to the Tuam home in the 1940s after being raped. People need to know that it's black and ugly and rotten and what they did to the children that were born in those homes was an absolute disgrace Journalist Alison O'Reilly But six months after giving birth, she was callously told by nuns 'the child of your sin is dead'. Annette discovered that the baby's death certificate had been signed off by a lady described as a cleaner at the home. For historian Catherine, the past decade has been a battle to uncover the full truth behind the horror. She told The Sun: 'I knew it was wrong, I knew it was terrible, and it just strengthened me to keep fighting to the bitter end, which I did. 'Terrible price' 'The government finally buckled because they had to because of pressure from the media, and pressure from other mother and baby home groups. 'It was just constantly keeping the story out there.' 8 Annette McKay grew up knowing she had an older sister called Mary Margaret who had died as an infant Credit: 2020 Ray Ryan,All rights reserved. 8 Annette's mother Maggie had kept the existence of her first child a secret for decades Credit: Supplied The government made a formal apology in 2021 after a judicial commission carried out a five-year investigation into a network of mother and baby homes across the country. Irish prime minister Micheal Martin said Ireland had suffered a warped attitude to sex. He added: 'Young mothers and their sons and daughters were forced to pay a terrible price for that dysfunction. 'As a society we embraced judgmental, moral certainty, a perverse religious morality and control which was so damaging. 'What was so very striking was the absence of basic kindness.' However, for Tuam locals, the scandal had always been an open secret, with the septic tank burial area being known as the babies' graveyard. Resident Bernie Lunn, 53, told The Sun: 'We knew it was the babies' graveyard. We knew it was the babies' graveyard. When we were small, we were told by our parents when we were going out there playing, we were always told not to go over near the babies Resident Bernie Lunn 'When we were small, we were told by our parents when we were going out there playing, we were always told not to go over near the babies. 'I feel very sorry for the families, obviously. I think it's very wrong what was done.' The excavation of the site will now try to identify the remains. And for those involved, it is about returning dignity to the families of those infants denied a proper burial. Forensic archaeologist Dr Niamh McCullagh, who is in charge of the dig, said: 'This is a very specific situation where a sewage tank has been reused, repurposed to deposit children and infants who died. 'That's not acceptable under anybody's standards and there's been a growing acceptance of that and a growing understanding of that. 'For me, it's about removing them from their current location as individuals if we can and then let them be reburied properly. 'That's the minimum I expect us to achieve.' Overseeing the work is Director of Authorised Intervention Daniel MacSweeney. He told The Sun: 'The overarching element to all of this I think is dignity and the restoration of dignity in death to these children who have been buried in this manifestly inappropriate place. 'We want to make sure the families of these babies understand exactly what is happening and aren't surprised by anything that happens. "Then they can give their babies a proper and dignified burial.' 8 It is believed a child died at the home every TWO WEEKS Credit: Getty 8 Work to excavate the mass grave will finally begin on Monday Credit: AP In response to the scandal, the Bon Secours Sisters previously issued an apology. It read: 'We did not live up to our Christianity when running the home. 'We failed to respect the inherent dignity of the women and children who came to the home. "We failed to offer them the compassion that they so badly needed. 'We were part of the system in which they suffered hardship, loneliness and terrible hurt. 'We acknowledge in particular that infants and children who died at the home were buried in a disrespectful and unacceptable way. Read more on the Irish Sun 'For all that, we are deeply sorry.' 8 The home was located in the town of Tuam, County Galway, Ireland Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.