136
Registres de recensement
27
Foyers
2
Années de recensement
- Personnes
- 72
- Foyers
- 13
- Personnes
- 64 -11.1%
- Foyers
- 14 +7.7%
À propos
Loguestown is a small townland located in County Derry in Northern Ireland, situated within the broader landscape of the Sperrins region. The townland forms part of the rural, agricultural character typical of County Derry's interior, with rolling terrain and fields that reflect centuries of farming practices. Like many townlands in the area, it represents the smallest administrative division in the Irish land system, a legacy of historical land measurement and organization that dates back several centuries. The surrounding landscape is predominantly pastoral, with the typical stone walls and hedgerows that define the Irish countryside.
The history of Loguestown, as with most townlands in County Derry, is intertwined with the broader historical movements that shaped the region, including the various phases of settlement, land division, and social change. County Derry itself has experienced significant historical shifts, from its earlier Gaelic settlement patterns through the Ulster Plantation period and subsequent developments. Townlands like Loguestown preserve the layered historical geography of the region, with their names and boundaries often reflecting different periods of occupation and land tenure.
As a rural townland, Loguestown would have been shaped by the agricultural economy that has long dominated County Derry. The community would have developed around farming, with local connections formed through shared land use, family ties, and participation in broader parish structures. The townland system itself created a sense of local identity and community cohesion, with residents sharing common interests in land management, local infrastructure, and parish affairs. Such townlands remain meaningful units of local geography and community reference for those with family connections to the area.
Today, Loguestown, like many rural townlands in County Derry, represents part of the region's heritage landscape and contributes to the complex patchwork of place names and local identities that characterize the Irish countryside. For residents and descendants with family connections to the townland, it often holds significant personal and genealogical importance, serving as a touchstone for family history and local heritage.
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- Paroisse
- Comté
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Baronnie
North-East Liberties of Coleraine
- Logainm
Valuation Office Records
From the National Archives of Ireland (c. 1830s–1850s)
1 occupiers recorded in the Valuation Office Books for this townland.
Source: Valuation Office Books, National Archives of Ireland. Public records.
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