How the Cloghaun B&B got its name
Cloghaun is the name of the Irish town where Thomas Donnelly grew up, although it wasn’t until Bond’s great-aunt Nellie ran the place that the B&B took on that name. It was previously known as the Donnelly Cottage. Bond never knew his great-grandparents, but he has learned a little of their history:- It was Bridget Donnelly’s uncle who helped pay for their emigration to America. Charles O’Malley had come to Mackinac Island several years earlier and gained success in the fur trade. He ended up building the Island House Hotel, which today remains a popular place to stay on Mackinac Island.
- In the midst of the potato famine, Thomas and Bridget Donnelly left Ireland in 1848. Just before they boarded the boat to America, they were married alongside 15 other couples using the same claddagh ring!
- Shortly after arriving in America, Thomas Donnelly found work building the Soo Locks in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. It was the money he earned from that work that the couple used to buy the land on Mackinac Island, where the Cloghaun still stands.