144
Census Records
26
Households
2
Census Years
- People
- 57
- Households
- 11
- People
- 87 +52.6%
- Households
- 15 +36.4%
About
Ballyskeagh is a small townland located in County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the Sperrins region. Like many townlands in this part of Ulster, it forms part of the patchwork of rural settlements that characterize the county's agricultural hinterland. The area is characterized by rolling countryside typical of mid-Ulster, with a landscape shaped by both natural geology and centuries of human farming practices. The townland's name, like many in the region, derives from Irish: "Bally" typically indicates a settlement or homestead, and "Skeagh" likely refers to a hawthorn or thorn bush, suggesting a place historically marked by such vegetation.
The broader region of County Tyrone has a complex and layered history, with evidence of settlement stretching back through medieval times and into the pre-Christian period. Ballyskeagh, as a defined townland, reflects the Anglo-Norman and later administrative divisions of Ireland, particularly the system of townland demarcation that became standardized during the Tudor period and consolidation under English rule. The area would have been part of the territories involved in the plantation of Ulster and subsequent colonial land divisions that shaped the settlement patterns visible today.
Ballyskeagh remains a rural agricultural community, as do most townlands in County Tyrone. The locality is representative of the farming communities that have sustained life in this region, with the landscape dominated by fields, hedgerows, and scattered farmsteads. Like many rural townlands, it is connected to the broader infrastructure and services of larger nearby towns rather than serving as a significant settlement in itself. The community's significance lies primarily in its role as part of the interconnected rural fabric of Tyrone and its place within the cultural and historical identity of the region.
The townland exemplifies the distinctive administrative and social structure of Irish rural organization that persists to the present day. Understanding places like Ballyskeagh requires appreciating how Irish townlands function as historical, geographical, and social units that, while small in scale, form the fundamental basis of how rural communities in Ireland have been organized and understood for centuries. For residents and those with connections to the area, Ballyskeagh represents part of their local heritage and sense of place within County Tyrone's broader rural landscape.
Source: AI generated
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- Parish
- County
-
Barony
Strabane Lower
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
3 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
Townland Location
OpenStreetMapDetails
- English
- Ballyskeagh
- Parish
- Leckpatrick
- Barony
- Strabane Lower
- County
- Tyrone

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