Whitegate
An Geata Bán (Irish) | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates: 51°49′34″N 8°13′56″W / 51.8262°N 8.2322°W | |
Country | Ireland |
Province | Munster |
County | County Cork |
Dáil constituency | Cork East |
EU Parliament | South |
Population | 1,248 |
Time zone | UTC+0 (WET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC-1 (IST (WEST)) |
Whitegate (Irish: an Geata Bán)[2] is a small village in East Cork on the eastern shore of Cork Harbour in County Cork, Ireland. It lies within the townlands of Ballincarroonig and Corkbeg.[3] Whitegate is within the Cork East Dáil constituency.
The ruins of a 14th-century or 15th-century church lie in the grounds of Corkbeg churchyard close to Whitegate village.[4] The current Church of Ireland parish church was built within the same churchyard in 1881.[5][6]
Once a fishing port and known for lace-making, during the 20th-century Whitegate became the location for Ireland's only oil refinery. This facility, Whitegate refinery, was built on Corkbeg Island on one side of Whitegate Bay and has been owned by Irving Oil since 2016.[7] Aghada Power Generating plant lies on the other side of the bay.
The writer William Wall grew up here, though his home, then vacant, was destroyed in a fire in 2008 in a suspected arson attack.[8][9] Trabolgan Holiday Village is located nearby.[10]
CO088-033002-/Church/Corkbeg/Near NE corner of graveyard (CO088-033001-), ivy-clad ruins of rectangular church stone plaque with date 1587 set in S side of doorway. Human head carved in stone Parish church of Corkbeg, in repair 1615 but probably out of use by 1700 Replaced by new church built on site immediately to S of graveyard in 1881