...The Manx Electric Railway has been running since 1893, and by 1899 it had stretched just under eighteen miles along the eastern coastline of the Island from Douglas to Ramsey. The MER also runs from the midway point between the two [a town called Laxey] to the top of the Islands only mountain, Snaefell with a height of 2,037 feet. Most of the rolling stock and infrastructure dates back to the Victorian and Edwardian era.
The site of St Adamanan’s Church, or Lonan Old Church as it is also known, dates back to the fifth century. Irish missionary monks set up small shelters called “
Keeills” and they worked on local farms for food, whilst serving as priests to the area. Circa 1188, the then named “
The Chapel by the Shore” or “
Keeill-ny-Traie” in Manx, was rebuilt and eventually re-named. The name comes from an Abbott of Iona Abbey, which is located on the Isle of Iona, just off the Isle of Mull on the west coast of Scotland.
This a view to the West from the church, looking towards Ireland.
This is the public footpath to Cashtal Yn Ard, as you can see it doesn’t seem to have had much traffic lately! My feet were last on this pathway over forty years ago.
Cashtal Yn Ard is the remains of a burial site dating back to the New Stone Age, circa 1800 BC.
Originally a stone covered cairn, it consists of an open forecourt with a portal leading to five burial chambers within the cairn itself.
This is a view from Cashtal Yn Ard, looking South East towards Wales.
And this is a river!