Spiddal


Spiddal, also known as Spiddle, is a village on the shore of Galway Bay in County Galway, Ireland. It is west of Galway city, on the R336 road. It is just east of the county's Gaeltacht which is in the Connemara region.
According to the 2022 census, approximately 75% of the population are Irish-speaking and, of these, approximately 40% speak Irish on a daily basis outside the education system. Spiddal is a centre for tourism with a beach, harbour, and shore fishing. The village is part of the civil parish of Moycullen.

Name

The name of the village in Irish, An Spidéal, derives from the word ospidéal, which in turn derived from the Insular French, or Anglo-Normand, word ospitel.
The name originates from a mediaeval leper hospital situated in An Spidéal Thiar. A number of other hospital facilities were based in the area over the years, including a famine hospital during the Great Famine of the mid-1840s. While "Spiddle" is recorded in the Placenames Database of Ireland as the English variant of the name, "Spiddal" is used locally.

History

Spiddal, like much of the west of Ireland, suffered greatly during the Great Famine of the 1840s, with many people being evicted, and many starving. Appeals were made by the parish priest John O'Grady and by A.W. Blake and, as a result, the Board of Works employed some men in improvements to the village harbour.
From 1848, the evangelical Protestant Irish Church Missions were active, establishing the Connemara Orphan's Nursery in the early 1850s, the home could accommodate up to 90 boys and girls, and became affiliated with the Protestant-run Smyly Homes. Following its closure as an orphanage, it became a secondary school for girls run by the Catholic Sisters of Mercy.
The local Catholic church, Cill Éinde, was built in 1904. The ruin of an older chapel, dating to 1776, is nearby.

Amenities

There are a number of pubs, shops and other services in the village. Spiddal's Garda station is on Mountain Road. An Ceardlann is a craft centre east of the village where craft works are made and sold.
There is a primary school and secondary school.
The area is served by Bus Éireann route 424 from Galway City. The Boluisce River flows south from Boluisce Lake and enters Galway Bay at Spiddal.

Culture and sport

Each summer, groups of Irish teenagers visit Spiddal for three-week Irish language courses. Coláiste Chonnacht and Coláiste Lurgan are two Irish language summer schools. American students visit for the autumn term each year to study Irish-language literature and culture.
Live traditional Irish music is regularly performed in the village's pubs. The music group The Waterboys recorded part of their Fisherman's Blues album in Spiddal. They also recorded a song called Spring Comes to Spiddal on their album Room to Roam. The television series Ros na Rún is filmed there, and broadcast on TG4.
The local Gaelic Athletic Association club is Cumann Lúthchleas Gael An Spidéal, with Gaelic football and hurling being the most popular sports. There is also a sailing club in the village.

Notable people