Coole, County Westmeath
Coole (Irish: An Chúil, meaning 'the corner')[1] is a village in County Westmeath, Ireland, on the R395 regional road. It is situated on a plateau that overlooks the part of the Bog of Allen, cultivated for peat for fuel consumption purposes by Bórd na Móna, the government-owned peat production industry and for garden plant soil compost products by Harte Peat Ltd., a private enterprise, and Bórd na Móna.
Coole 
    An Chúil  | |
|---|---|
Village  | |
![]() Grocery shop in Coole  | |
![]() Coole Location in Ireland  | |
| Coordinates: 53°42′00″N 7°22′12″W | |
| Country | Ireland | 
| Province | Leinster | 
| County | County Westmeath | 
| Government | |
| • Dáil Éireann | Longford–Westmeath | 
| Time zone | UTC+0 (WET) | 
| • Summer (DST) | UTC-1 (IST (WEST)) | 
| Irish Grid Reference | N408724 | 
The village is stretched over a series of junctions and cross-roads. These regional and communal roads connect to Castlepollard to the east, Coolure, near Lough Derravaragh to the south, and Abbeylara to the north-west in neighbouring County Longford. Another communal road accesses and crosses the low-lying bog-land, permitting machinery access to the area.
The village consists of a pub, a post office, a shop, a church, and a medical centre. There is also a primary school and a parish community hall.
Coole is the birthplace of Lt. Maurice James Dease VC, the first posthumous recipient of the Victoria Cross in the Great War at the Battle of Mons.[2]
References
    
- "An Chúil/Coole". Placenames Database of Ireland (logainm.ie). Retrieved 18 October 2021.
 - John Patrick Kierans (8 November 2018). "The untold stories of the 49,000 Irishmen who died fighting in World War One". Irish Mirror. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
 


