by more than 500 media figures, including Gary Lineker, Anita Rani and Riz Ahmed.
It's there that Monty would live until the age of 13, when he returned to England.But it was Moville, and New Park, which his father had inherited in 1887, that he thought of as home.
“He wasn’t born in Moville, but he spent all his holidays there,” Sean Beattie from the Donegal Historical Society told BBC News NI.“He sailed Lough Foyle in the summer time, played croquet on the lawn and attended church in Moville,” he said.His parents were quick to become part of the community and would help build the local Church of Ireland.
A row of terraced houses, Montgomery Terrace, named in the family’s honour, still looks out over the town’s shoreline and to Lough Foyle.A plaque close by remembers that the bishop gave back part of the land bought by Samuel to the community.
“People are very much aware of the Montgomery connection in Moville, it’s very much alive,” Mr Beattie said.
“The bishop and Lady Montgomery were very active in the community, the family were very much part of Moville.It is one of three councils in the country to have an inspection currently underway, the other two being
In August, the inspection report was extended until the end of November.The council borrowed to make investments in property between 2016 and 2018 to offset the loss of government funding, and previously said its debt was sustainable with income generated by the assets "comfortably exceeding" the financing cost of the debt.
Trustees and volunteers of a community growing space have launched an opposition campaign after learning their site could be used for housing.The Green Backyard site in Peterborough forms part of