Clonduff GAC

{{short description|Gaelic sports club in County Down, Northern Ireland}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

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{{No footnotes|date=October 2023}}

{{Primary|date=October 2023}}

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{{Infobox GAA club

| club gaa = Clonduff

| crest = Clonduff GAC crest.jpg

| irish = Chluain Daimh

| county = Down

| nickname = The Yellas

| colours = Home: Yellow and White Away: Full White

| grounds = Clonduff Park
({{lang|ga|Páirc Cluain Daimh}})

| coordinates = {{coord|54|11|59.06|N|6|08|05.22|W|display=it|region:IE_type:landmark}}

| founded = 1887

| province = Ulster

| f3 = 9

| pattern_la = _yellow_hoops

| pattern_b = _whitethinlines

| pattern_ra = _yellow_hoops

| leftarm = FFFFFF

| body = FFFF00

| rightarm = FFFFFF

| shorts = FFFFFF

| socks = FFFF00|

}}

Clonduff GAC is a Gaelic Athletic Association club, based in Hilltown County Down, Ireland. It represents the 2 areas that make up the Clonduff parish, namely Hilltown and Cabra.

History

Press reports show the history of Gaelic football in Clonduff dates to at least 1887, when the parish had two teams: the Hilltown Amateurs and The Red Hands. Gaelic games flourished for a few years but then subsided and it was not until 1910 that the parish again fielded a Gaelic football team. During the next ten years the parish fielded teams at Junior and Senior level under names such as The Emeralds, The Harps and The Sarsfields.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

The modern Clonduff Shamrocks club was founded in 1920.{{fact|date=August 2024}} Success on the playing field over the next few years was commonplace.{{fact|date=August 2024}} For most of the 1930s, the club was less successful, but re-emerged in the early 1940s.{{fact|date=August 2024}} When Down won the 1946 All Ireland, Clonduff provided six of the panel.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

In 1955, the club split into two distinct entities – Cabra and Hilltown – the two ends of the parish. Two years later they met in the county final. The teams amalgamated again in 1959 and the following year two of their players won All-Ireland Senior football medals with Kevin Mussen being the first man from the north to bring the Sam Maguire Cup over the border.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

The club opened its own grounds in 1968 and became one of the leading clubs in the newly formed Scór competitions.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

In the GAA's centenary year, Clonduff published its McNamee Award winning history and in 1987 when Down won its second All Ireland Minor Championship, the club provided six of the panel.{{fact|date=August 2024}} In the All Ireland wins of 1991 and 1994, Clonduff's Ross Carr played a significant role. Cathal Murray was also on the panel in 1991.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

Clonduff are one of the few clubs in the county who have senior teams in all 5 codes (football, ladies football, hurling, camogie and handball).{{fact|date=August 2024}}

In recent times, the clubs camogie team have been the most successful in the club. Since winning their first Senior Championship in 2007, they have won several more county championships, three Ulster Club Intermediate Championships and won the All Ireland Intermediate Club Championship in 2018 -the very first 15-a-side All Ireland win in the club's history.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

Club crest

The team crest depicts a scene with an ox, a thorn bush and a church. The crest represents a tale associated with the 6th-century saint, St Comghall of Bangor. Comghall reputedly sent his followers to this area of County Down to spread Christianity. They began building their church in the townland of Ballynanny (located on The Kilkeel Road below Spelga Dam). Each morning, the previous day's work would be demolished. Upon investigation, it was discovered that an ox, belonging to the local druid came down from the mountain (The Mournes) each night and razed the building. One of the monks cut a thorn stick and stuck it into the ground between the ox's meadow and the new church. The stick grew into a thorn bush and the monk defied the ox to pass the thorn bush - it never did and the building of the church was completed. The area where the thorn bush allegedly grew is known as Bushtown to this day. The church was eventually destroyed during the Cromwellian invasion of Ireland in 1649. The remains of the church are still standing today on the Kilkeel Road end of Old Clonduff Road.{{fact|date=August 2024}}

Milestones

class="wikitable"
Year

! Event

1887

| The Banbridge Chronicle of 6 November 1398 carried an account of a Gaelic Football match between Ballyroney (Rathfriland) and a Clonduff team known as The Hilltown Amateurs

1888

| A team from Lenish (one of Clonduff's 14 townlands) competed in a Gaelic Football Tournament for a "set of crosses"

1888

| A Clonduff team known as the "Red Hands" played two games against St Patrick's Mayobridge in May 1888

1898

| A team from Cabra called "The Harps" and one from Hilltown called the "Ninety-Eights" took part in the ’98 tournament organised by the Young Ireland League to commemorate the Centenary of 1798

1912

| The "Frontier Sentinel" dated 9 April 1912 gives a report of a 1st round County Championship meeting between Mayobridge and a Clonduff team called "Hilltown". The Hilltown team read: John Crilly, Bernard O’Hagan, Patrick Morgan, James Magill, James Brady, Michael Fegan, Arthur Ronan, Hugh Doyle, Hugh Morgan, Michael Morgan, James Brown, Frank O’Hare, John O’Hagan

1916

| Registrations – still extant – show that two teams, known as "Emeralds Gaelic Football Club" and "Cabra", were registered with the Down County Board of 1916-17

1916

| An unofficial team known as "John Attey’s Men" or "Faugh an Ballagh" played games here and there during this period. A report of a famous match between Mullaghmore and John Attey's Men, played on Easter Sunday 1916 still lives on in the folk memory of the district

1918

| Clonduff take part in "The Gaelic Sunday" protest matches of 4 August 1918 called in defiance of the ban on Gaelic matches under The Defence of the Realm Act

1918

| Clonduff men John McPolin and John McAlinden play for Down on 9 May against Louth in Newcastle

1920

| A new Parish team called Clonduff Shamrocks was formed and entered in Shanahan Cup Competition by Willie Woods and John McPolin. "The jerseys were yellow and there were Shamrocks embroidered on them. Two girls, Maggie O’Hare and Sarah Magennis it was who sewed them on. Their playing pitch was John Murphy’s and it was Paddy Murphy who gave the pound to enter the team."

1920

| Clonduff win Shanahan Cup

1921

| George Mussen chosen on the Railway Cup Panel

1922

| Clonduff win Shanahan Cup

1926

| Clonduff win McLoughlin Cup

1930

| Clonduff win their first Down Senior Championship

1931

| On 13 September, Dan Mussen becomes first Clonduff man to play in an All-Ireland Football Semi-Final

1932

| Club wins The Shanahan Cup outright

1934

| George Mussen captains the first Down team to play in Croke Park

1935

| Jimmy Doyle in Ulster Railway Cup panel

1937

| Clonduff re-enters South Down and Mourne League

1938

| Armagh play Down in National League in Hilltown with Jimmy Doyle starring at right full-forward

1943

| Clonduff defeat Ardtole by 15 points to 11 to win Down Junior Championship on 12 September but Ardtole awarded game on an objection

1944

| Clonduff win their 2nd Senior County Championship

1945

| Clonduff win their 3rd Senior County Championship

1946

| Down win Junior All-Ireland and Clonduff have on the panel: Henry, Tom and Pat Brown, Eddie Grant, Paddy O’Hagan and Andy Murnin

1947

| Clonduff win their 4th Senior County Championship

1949

| Clonduff win their 5th Senior County Championship

1949

| James Brown on Railway Cup panel

1952

| Clonduff win League, Championship (6th) and County Sevens

1953

| Clonduff's 19-year-old Kevin Mussen selected on Ulster Railway Cup

1956

| Cabra Harps win Down Junior Championship

1957

| The two Parish teams – Cabra Harps and The Shamrocks – meet in County Senior Championship final – Shamrocks win

1959

| Patsy O’Hagan scores 2 goals in a 3–9 to 1–4 victory for Down in the Wembley Tournament