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Wexford Area , N: Enniscorthy   Subarea
Feature count in area: 14, all in Wexford, OSI/LPS Maps: 61, 62, 68, 69, 76, 77, EW-B, EW-B, EW-B2
Highest Place: Slieveboy 420m

Starting Places (16) in area Wexford:
Askamore Cemetery, Ballymore Wood, Clone Strand, Clonegal, Coolmelagh Forest CP, Cummer Wood South, Gibbet Hill West, Mary Neal's Spout, Mount St Benedict's School, R746 Half Way House, Scroughmore Cross W, Slieveboy NE, Slieveboy SE, St John's Church, Tarahill House, Vinegar Hill

Summits & other features in area Wexford:
N: Bunclody: Kilmichael Hill 269.3m
N: Bunclody : Gibbet Hill 315m, Kilcullen Hill 218m, Slieveboy 420m
N: Enniscorthy  : Oulart Hill 179m, Vinegar Hill 116.6m
NE: Wexford East : Carrigroe Hill 232m, Tara Hill 253m
S: Wexford South: Bree Hill 179m, Camaross Hill 181m, Forth Mountain 237m
SW: New Ross Hills : Carrickbyrne Hill 233m, Lacken Hill 193m, Slievecoiltia 268.5m

Note: this list of places may include island features such as summits, but not islands as such.
Rating graphic.
Oulart Hill, 179m Hill
Place Rating ..
, Wexford County in Leinster province, in Binnion Lists, Oulart Hill is the 1434th highest place in Ireland.
Grid Reference T08652 41635, OS 1:50k mapsheet 69
Place visited by: 28 members, recently by: Nailer1967, benjimann9, MartaD, Roen, andodenis, loftyobrien, jlk, simoburn, JoHeaney, conormcbandon, Nakoz, ClareKeeley, newpark-cc, Barry28213, liz50
I visited this place: NO (You need to be a logged-in member for this.)
Longitude: -6.400253, Latitude: 52.515685, Easting: 308652, Northing: 141635, Prominence: 104m,  Isolation: 8.2km, Has trig pillar
ITM: 708577 641681
Bedrock type: Dark grey slates with siltstone laminae, (Ballyhoge Formation)

  Short or GPS IDs, 6 char: OlrtHl, 10 char: Oulart Hil

Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1316/
Gallery for Oulart Hill and surrounds
Summary for Oulart Hill : Across the wheat field
Summary created by wicklore 08 Apr, 2014
            MountainViews.ie picture about Oulart Hill
Picture: A flat walk to the summit
Oulart Hill was the scene of a battle in the Wexford Rebellion of 1798. The Battle took place on 27 May 1798 when a gathering of 1,000 rebels annihilated a detachment of militia sent from Wexford town to stamp out the spreading rebellion in county Wexford. A monument was built in 1998 to commemorate the Wexford Rebellion, and this is situated about 900 metres to the south of the main Oulart Hill summit. The monument is a large grassy mound with a hollow centre that can be walked through – like a modern day Newgrange. It is ‘split’ in half to let sunlight enter. A car park is situated on the road that crosses Oulart Hill and this can be used as the starting point to easily reach both the summit and monument.

Head north from Oulart Village to the Oulart Hill car park at A (T08468 41225). From here the summit is a very short walk across a field to the north. Go through a gap in the hedge and keep to the edge of the wheat field. Find the trig pillar at the junction of four fields in the north west corner of the field. Fine views over rolling country side and Slieveboy to the north.

Go back to the car park. Follow a good track south for several minutes to the monument. The path has many large rocks engraved with the names of town lands from where the rebels hailed who fought in the Wexford Rebellion. Don’t slip on the slippy paving inside the monument and don’t let yourself or children fall into the mound from the top if you climb up the grassy mound.
Linkback: mountainviews.ie/summit/1316/comment/15560/
Member Comments for Oulart Hill

            MountainViews.ie picture about Oulart Hill
Picture: Tulach a
“Like the surprise of finding a Fairy Ring”
by wicklore 10 Apr 2014
There are two points of interest on this hill –the natural summit , which is the corner of a wheat field, and a large monument built to commemorate the battle of Oulart Hill in May 1798. To reach the summit head north from Oulart village to the car park at A (T08468 41225). From here head across the road, through the gap in the hedge and across the wheat field. The summit trig pillar is amongst a scattering of high grass and brambles in the north west corner of the field. There is negligible ascent on this short walk. Fine views across the surrounding countryside.

Return to the car park. Follow the excellent path south to the monument. The path is lined with large rocks engraved with the names of town lands from where the rebels hailed who fought in the battle of 1798. The monument is nestled in a field at the end of the track. It is called ‘Tulach a' tSolais’, or, if my translation is correct, ‘burial mound of light’. To quote from the architects, it is “like the surprise of finding a fairy ring”. It is like a modern-day Newgrange - a grassy mound with a hollow paved centre and 'split' in two. You can walk into the mound to a central area. Two pieces of sculpted 200 year old oak complete the scene. A place of reflection and solitude, and absolutely empty when I was there in August 2012. I got the feeling it's not a busy place. It was built in 1998 to mark the bicentenary of the Wexford Rebellion. If you visit the summit, make sure to take the time to visit the monument. If you bring children be careful if you climb the large mound that they (or you) don’t fall the 15 or so feet into the ‘split’ into the mound. Equally, the paving inside the mound is likely to be damp and slippy. Be warned!

The following is taken from the website of Scott Tallon Walker who designed the monument:

The Challenge: The construction of a tulach or burial mound, as a place of connection between the world of the living and the "other world" was common in ancient Ireland....Tulach a' tSolais, was built to commemorate the bicentenary of this (Wexford) rebellion and is the product of dynamic collaboration between the sculptor Micheal Warren and Dr. Ronald Tallon.

The Building: Upon arrival, there are no carved names, no flames, no pools of water. This is a much older kind of memorial.. "What we want,...is to go over a broken stone wall and be there. The approach should be like the surprise of finding a fairy ring." Tallon chose white concrete for its "pallor of death", illuminated by "the light of resurrection." "We wanted a basic monolithic material of strength and nobility," says Tallon, "with which to create a modern Stonehenge." Tallon calls Warren's two sculptures - horizontal curving tablets of 200-year-old Irish oak that make a shrine of the interior - "upturned hands, offering hope for the future." Warren likens them to the cremation bowls found in Newgrange.

So go on – hope over the “broken stone wall”! Linkback: mountainviews.ie/summit/1316/comment/15981/
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            MountainViews.ie picture about Oulart Hill
Picture: Under the hill
The Mound of Light
by wicklore 8 Apr 2014
This is the interior of the monument on Oulart Hill. To quote from the architects of this memorial to the Wexford Rebellion:

The Building

Upon arrival, there are no carved names, no flames, no pools of water. This is a much older kind of memorial. Warren recalls Tallon saying, "What we want, Michael, is to go over a broken stone wall and be there. The approach should be like the surprise of finding a fairy ring."Tallon chose white concrete for its "pallor of death", illuminated by "the light of resurrection." "We wanted a basic monolithic material of strength and nobility," says Tallon, "with which to create a modern Stonehenge."

Tallon calls Warren's two sculptures - horizontal curving tablets of 200-year-old Irish oak that make a shrine of the interior - "upturned hands, offering hope for the future." Warren likens them to the cremation bowls found in Newgrange. Linkback: mountainviews.ie/summit/1316/comment/15982/
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            MountainViews.ie picture about Oulart Hill
Picture: A rustic scene
Looking north from the summit
by wicklore 8 Apr 2014
The view north from Oulart Hill with rolling countryside and Slieveboy in the distance. Stick to the edge of the field to leave crops undisturbed. You can find my gps track for Oulart Hill uploaded on MountainViews here: http://mountainviews.ie/track/2471/ Linkback: mountainviews.ie/summit/1316/comment/15983/
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