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25ft oak 'Fid' unveiled in Moville 04.09.09

INISHOWEN was out in force on Wednesday for the unveiling of Moville's new monument - the €50,000 solid oak 'Fid' at the town's old stone pier.
Locals, schoolchildren from Scoil Eoghain, public representatives and a delegation from New Brunswick, Canada, gathered at the seafront to help Derry artist Locky Morris unveil his latest creation with the help of Donegal Mayor Cllr Brendan Byrne and Declan Sheehan of the Donegal Public Art Office.
Designed as a monument to Moville’s maritime history and the legacy of emigration from the town, Derry and wider Donegal, the 25ft high Fid, is carved from a single trunk of a large oak tree. The upright oak structure is designed to reflect the ancient name of Moville itself, Maigh Bhile, or “the plain of the sacred tree”.
"It touches directly on the history of sea food harvesting in this coastal region and broadens out further to make connections to the shipping and maritime history of this area of the Lough, with its suggestion of marine architecture such as masts, buoys or channel markers," said the artist. He got the inspiration, in part, from an actual fid, a conical pin of hardwood used to open the strands of rope in slicing and an important tool in sail making. During his research for the project, he came across an example of a fid, in the long-line fishing basket display in the Inishowen Maritime Museum in nearby Greencastle.
Cllr Byrne welcomed Dr Edward Doherty, New Brunswick's Minister for Supply and Services whose ancestral roots can be traced back to Derry. He said New Brunswick had pulled "a master stroke" by sending over a delegation headed up by 'a Doherty'.
The 'Fid' on Moville's pier.
Following the Fid unveiling, an exhibition of images called 'Per Cent for Art' by the Scoil Eoghain pupils went on display at the Caiseal Mara Hotel while a new book 'Across the Atlantic: Emigrating from Moville and Derry' was launched in the same hotel.
The events were the culmination of two years' work following a trip in 2007, when representatives from Derry City Council, Inishowen Rural Development, the
University of Ulster, the Ulster American Folk Park and local community groups visited New Brunswick. Meanwhile, Locky Morris who was accompanied on the day by daughter, Edan, thanked the men who brought his design to life, namely engineer Mark Hill with the help of Paddy Morgan and tree surgeon Jess McSparron. He also thanked local historians including Sean Beattie and Martin Lynch.
To see more photos of the launch click here .
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