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Lisburn

Lisburn (/ˈlɪzbɜːrn, ˈlɪsbɜːrn/; from Irish: Lios na gCearrbhach[1] [ˌl̠ʲɪsˠ n̪ˠə ˈɟaːɾˠwəx]) is a city in Northern Ireland. It is 8 mi (13 km) southwest of Belfast city centre, on the River Lagan, which forms the boundary between County Antrim and County Down. First laid out in the 17th century by English and Welsh settlers, with the arrival of French Huguenots in the 18th century, the town developed as a global centre of the linen industry.

Lisburn
Irish Linen Museum and Christ Church Cathedral
Lisburn
Location within Northern Ireland
Population45,370 (2011 Census)
• Belfast8 miles
District
County
CountryNorthern Ireland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLISBURN
Postcode districtBT27, BT28
Dialling code028
PoliceNorthern Ireland
FireNorthern Ireland
AmbulanceNorthern Ireland
UK Parliament
NI Assembly
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
54°30′43″N 6°01′52″W / 54.512°N 6.031°W / 54.512; -6.031Coordinates: 54°30′43″N 6°01′52″W / 54.512°N 6.031°W / 54.512; -6.031

In 2002, as part of Queen Elizabeth's Golden Jubilee celebrations, the predominantly unionist borough was granted city status alongside the largely nationalist town of Newry. With a population of 45,370 in the 2011 Census.[2] Lisburn was the third-largest city in Northern Ireland. In the 2016 reform of local government in Northern Ireland Lisburn was joined with the greater part of Castlereagh to form the Lisburn City and Castlereagh District.[3]

Name

The town was originally known as Lisnagarvy (also spelt Lisnagarvey or Lisnagarvagh) after the townland in which it formed. This is derived from Irish Lios na gCearrbhach 'ringfort of the gamesters/gamblers'.[4]

In the records, the name Lisburn appears to supersede Lisnagarvey around 1662.[5] One theory is that it comes from the Irish lios ('ringfort') and the Scots burn ('stream').[4] Some speculate that -burn refers to the burning of the town during the Irish Rebellion of 1641, but there is evidence of earlier use. An English soldier later recalled the rebels having entered the town of Lisnagarvy at "a place called Louzy Barne".[5] In the town's early days, there were possibly two ringforts: Lisnagarvy to the north and Lisburn to the south, and the latter may simply have been easier for the English settlers to pronounce.[5]

History

 
Market Square in 1880

Early town

Lisburn's original site was a fort located north of modern-day Wallace Park.[6] In 1609 James I granted Sir Fulke Conway, a Welshman of Norman descent,[7][8] the lands of Killultagh in southwest County Antrim. In 1611 George Carew, 1st Earl of Totnes remarked: In our travel from Dromore towards Knockfargus, we saw in Kellultagh upon Sir Fulke Conway’s lands a house of cagework in hand and almost finished, where he intends to erect a bawn of brick in a place called Lisnagarvagh. He has built a fair timber bridge over the river of Lagan near the house. The said Sir Fulke has built a fair gate at the fort of Enisholaghlin in Killultagh where he intends to build a good house. He has already at the place 150,000 of bricks burnt with other materials.[9]

In 1622 the first impressions of Sir Fulke's brother and heir, Edward Conway, was of "a curious place ... Greater storms are not in any place nor greater serenities: foul ways, boggy ground, pleasant fields, water brooks, rivers full of fish, full of game, the people in their attire, language, fashion: barbarous. In their entertainment free and noble."[10]

Management of the Conways' Irish estate fell largely to George Rawdon, a Yorkshire man, who laid out the streets of Lisburn as they are today: Market Square, Bridge Street, Castle Street and Bow Street. He had a manor house built on what is now Castle Gardens, and in 1623, a church on the site of the current cathedral. In 1628, King Charles I granted a charter for a weekly market, which is still held in the town every Tuesday.[11] To populate the town, Rawdon, hostile to the Presbyterian Scots already moving into the area, brought over English and Welsh settlers.[12]

In 1641 the Irish, rising in first instance against English, and not Scottish, settlers,[13] were driven back three times from the town, although it nonetheless burned. A herd four hundred head of cattle driven against the gates failed to batter them down.[14] In 1649 the town was secured by forces loyal to Cromwell's English Commonwealth, routing an army of Scots Covenanters, and their Royalist allies, in the Battle of Lisnagarvey.[15]

The Presbyterians, despite their loyalty to the Crown, upon its Restoration continued to be penalised as "dissenters" from the established Anglican church, the Church of Ireland. It was not until 1670 that they were permitted a meeting house in town, and that had to be of "perishable materials [...] dark, narrow and devoid of any pretensions to art and comfort.[10] Their support for King William (whose forces wintered in the town) and the "Protestant cause" in 1690 likewise failed to win them equal standing. Like the Roman Catholics, who had to wait another 60 years for a "Mass House", Presbyterians were discouraged from exerting their presence. The First Presbyterian Church built in 1768 was screened (until 1970) from Market Square by shops.[16]

The town was destroyed once again in 1707: the accidental conflagration giving rise to the town's motto Ex igne resurgam --"Out of the fire I shall arise". Conway's Manor House was not restored (part of the surrounding wall and its gateway with the date 1677 engraved still stands on the south and east side of Castle Gardens). The Anglican church, designated by Charles II as Christ Church Cathedral in 1662, was rebuilt retaining the tower and the surviving galleries in the nave. The distinctive octagonal spire was added in 1804.[17]

One of the few buildings spared in the fire of 1707 was the Friend's Meeting House. Quakerism had been brought to the town in 1655 by a veteran of Cromwell's army, William Edmundson. In 1766, a prosperous linen merchant, John Hancock, endowed what is now the grammar school known as Friends' School Lisburn.[18]

John Wesley first visited Lisburn in 1756, and thereafter he returned to preach biannually until 1789. The first Wesleyan Methodist Preaching House was established in the town in 1772.[19]

The Huguenot and the linen trade

 
Barbour's Hilden Mills, c 1880

Lisburn prides itself as the birthplace of Ireland's linen industry. While production had been introduced by the Scots, the arrival in 1698 of Huguenot refugees from France brought more sophisticated techniques, and government support.[20] Even as it raised duties on Ireland's successful woollen trade (with the concurrence of the subordinate Irish Parliament),[21] the English Parliament removed them on all Irish articles of hemp and flax, and the government gave Louis Crommelin, "overseer of the royal linen manufacture of Ireland", money to promote their production.[22]

The Huguenot retained their own place of worship, the "French Church" in Castle Street, until 1820. The last of its pastors, Saumarez Dubourdieu, was 56 years Master of the Classical School of the Bow Street. His students subscribed to his memorial and bust on the south interior of the cathedral.[23]

Large scale manufacture began in 1764 when William Coulson established his first linen looms close by is now the Union Bridge. His mill supplied damask to the royal courts of Europe and, in the early nineteenth century, was to draw celebrity visitors, among them Grand Duke Michael of Russia, Crown Prince Gustaf of Sweden, Louis Napoléon Lannes duc de Montebello, the Duke of Wellington and Lord John Russell.[24]

To carry the town's new trade, construction of the Belfast-Lisburn section of the Lagan Canal began in 1756. Despite problems of low water levels during the summer, the canal (extended in 1794 to Lough Neagh) continued to carry bulk cargoes until 1958.[25]

In 1784, the Scotsman John Barbour began spinning linen thread, and in 1831 his son William moved production to what had originally been Crommelin's bleach green at Hilden. By the end of the century Barbour's Linen Thread Company was the largest mill of its kind in the world employing about 2000 people to work 30,000 spindles and 8,000 twisting machines. The company had built a model village for the workers, with 350 houses, two schools, a community hall, children's playground and a village sports ground.[26]

Irish Volunteers, Croppies and Orangemen

 
Lisburn Volunteers in Market Place firing a feu de joie in honour of the Dungannon Convention1782.

Mechanisation, tied first to water, and then to steam, power drove the growth of industry, but displaced independent weavers. In 1762, over 300 paraded through Lisburn brandishing blackthorn sticks as a protest against the threat of unemployment.[25] In the 1780s they were gripped by the spirit of "combination"—the formation, in defiance of the law, of unions to press for higher piece rates. This brought workers into a sometimes uneasy relationship with the Volunteer militia.[27]

The Volunteer militia movement, formed in response to the defence emergency caused by French intervention in the American War of Independence, served the town's merchants and tradesmen as an opportunity to protest (with their kindred in the American colonies) the restrictive English Navigation Acts and to insist on the independence of the Irish Parliament in Dublin. In 1783 Todd Jones,[28] a captain of the Lisburn Fusilier Corps of Volunteers, took this patriot programme (approved at a convention in Dungannon) a step further. He successfully challenged the parliamentary nominees of the town and district's principal landlord, the Hertfords, on a platform of a representative reform to include votes for Catholics.[29]

In the wake of the French Revolution the cause of religious equality and representative government for Ireland was taken up in a still less compromising form by the Society of United Irishmen. The society won support of working men in the town, and of its leading Catholic family, the Teelings of Chapel Hill, wealthy linen manufacturers. Bartholomew Teeling (destined to hang) and his brother Charles, were an important connection between the largely Presbyterian "United men" and Catholic Defenders in rural areas.[30] It is likely, however, that the greater strength in the district was the fraternal Orange Order, newly formed in defence of the Protestant [Church of Ireland] Ascendancy. In 1797 the Order paraded 3000 loyalists in the town before the British commander General Lake.[31]

The neighbouring military camp at Blaris, ensured that when in 1798 the United Irishmen, decided upon insurrection, there could be no rebel demonstration in the town.[32] Blaris supplied troops that helped ensure defeat for the forces of the "Republic" to the north of the town at the Battle of Antrim on June 7, and to the south at the Battle of Ballynahinch on June 12 where the "Croppies" had been under the command of the Lisburn linen draper, Henry Munro. For over a month, the severed heads of Munro and three of his lieutenants were displayed on pikes, one on each corner of the Market House.[33]

The Victorian Town

The county-by-county record of pre-Famine Ireland, Hall's Ireland: Mr and Mrs Hall's Tour of 1840, found Lisburn recognisable as the settlement Rowden had formed more than two centuries before. Believing that between Drum Bridge and Lough Neagh the people were "almost exclusively" of English and Welsh extraction, the Halls ventured that in no town in Ireland were "the happy effects of English taste and industry more conspicuous".[34] With the formation in 1836 of the Lisburn Cricket Club, the Halls might have noted that English taste also extended to sport and leisure.[35]

To the visitors the town still appeared in 1840 to consist "principally of one long street" (Bow Street) at the Market Square end of which stood the cathedral. An "interesting and picturesque church", it contained "two very remarkable monuments". One is of "the great and good Jeremy Taylor" (1613–1667), sometime Bishop of Down and Conor (reputed "Shakespeare of the Divines" and former chaplain to Charles I).[36] The other is to the memory of Lieutenant William Dobbs killed in the capture of his vessel, HMS Drake, by the American privateer John Paul Jones[34] (an engagement in Belfast Lough in 1778 that spurred formation of the Volunteer movement).[37]  

The Halls would have been able to proceed the eight miles to Belfast on the newly completed Ulster Railway line. The line from Belfast was continued to Portadown and, with the completion of the Boyne Viaduct, connected with Dublin in 1855. A junction out of Lisburn at Knockmore, established further service to Banbridge and Newcastle and to Antrim and Derry. Lisburn's present railway station, built for the Great Northern Railway Company, dates from 1878.[38]

The new transportation links encouraged further industrial growth. In 1889, newspapers reported a rival to Barbour's factory: a "splendid new mill" by Robert Stewart & Son to employ over a thousand hands, with the novelty of electric lighting and "toilets on every floor".[39]

As had other Protestant-majority districts, Lisburn quickly reconciled to the union with Great Britain that followed the 1798 rebellion. Support for the Union, seen both as a guarantee of free trade and as security against Catholic-majority rule, spurred the further growth in the town of the Orange Order and helped return Hertford-approved Conservative candidates to the Westminster parliament. The political loyalty of tenants (who were to enjoy a secret ballot only from 1871) was further secured by the relative beneficence of the 3rd Marquess of Hertford, Francis Seymour-Conway (1777-1842). Characteristically when cholera struck in 1832, the Marquess erected a hospital and distributed medicines, blankets, clothing and other necessities throughout the estate.[24]

Absentee proprietors

 
"Education indeed! What next? The people of Lisburn commencing to think for themselves will become absolutely uncontrollable. Ha you infernal young brats, there is not one of your parents, Widow or not, whose rent I will not double." Comment on Lord Hertford's agent, the Rev. James Stannus, Rector of Lisburn Cathedral, circa 1850

In 1842, Captain Richard Seymour-Conway (1800–1870), the 4th Marquess of Hertford, inherited 10 by 14 mile Lagan Valley estate on which some 4,000 tenants provided an income of £60,000 (or £5 million in today's money).[40] Yet he was to visit it but once, and then with the wish that, "pray God!", he should never have to do so again.[41] When the edge of the Great Irish Famine reached the valley in 1847 and 1848, the Marquess declined to join the mill owners in subscribing to the relief efforts.[42] [10] London's Wallace Collection, named after his illegitimate Parisian son and heir Sir Richard Wallace, is testimony to his chief passion, the acquisition of art.[43]

 
The Old Town Hall in Castle Street

Wallace (1818–1890) was created baronet in 1871 and was the Conservative and Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) for Lisburn from 1873 to 1885. His bequests to the people of Lisburn included Wallace Park, grounds for the Intermediate and University School (later renamed in his honour, Wallace High School), and a remodelling of the Market House.[44] (The large residence he built on Castle Street, but never occupied, today houses offices of the South Eastern Regional College). In 1872 he donated 50 "Wallace" drinking fountains (cast from a sculpture of Charles-Auguste Lebourg), to Paris (on whose humanitarian relief during the German siege of 1870–1871 he had already spent a considerable fortune)[45] and five to Lisburn where one still to be found in Castle Gardens and another in Wallace Park.[46] The town responded with a memorial to Wallace In Castle Gardens.[47]

In 1852, Lord Hertford's agent, the Reverend James Stannus, the Rector of Lisburn Cathedral, had occasion to write to him suggesting a general increase in rents as punishment for the tenants both for an attack on his person and for their defiance in voting for a dissident Conservative, a free-trade "Peelite". The following year the tenants sent a delegation to Hertford in Paris in a vain protest.[48] In 1872, charges of "high-handed management of the estate" (the arbitrary fining and eviction of tenants, interference in elections, and discrimination against non-Anglicans) prompted Stannus's son and successor to sue the Belfast paper, the Northern Whig for defamation. The Dublin jury found for the plaintifff only under pressure from the judge, fixing the damages at £100.[40]

Together with failing agricultural prices, a willingness even of Orangemen to join the Land League helped turn the tables: in the 1880s agents were proposing to appease tenant with rent reductions. Under the later marquesses, and as their legal powers to dictate terms diminished, tenant-landlord relations improved.[48]

By the new century the Irish Land Acts had effectively retired the great proprietors and their agents from the scene. In a departing gesture, in 1901, Sir John Murray Scott, heir of Lady Wallace, gave the Market House with its Assembly Rooms to Lisburn Urban District Council, for "the benefit of the inhabitants of the town".[44] The Hertford Rent Office in Castle Street was closed in 1901 and became Lisburn Town Hall.[49]

Ulster Volunteers

In July 1914, in the first of many acts of political violence Lisburn was to experience in the new century, the chancel of Lisburn Cathedral was destroyed by a bomb.[50] It had been placed by Lilian Metge as part of a broader campaign on behalf of women's suffrage, co-ordinated by Dorothy Evans of the Women's Social and Political Union. The previous year, explosives having been found in her Belfast apartment, Evans had created uproar in court when she demanded to know why James Craig, who at that point had overseen the arming of the Ulster Volunteers (UVF) with smuggled German munitions, was not appearing on the same charges.[51]

Lisburn and neighbouring communities raised three battalions of the UVF, the South Antrim Volunteers. They were a token of the determination of local people (in the words of Ulster's Solemn League and Covenant) "to stand by one another in defending for ourselves and our children our position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom, and in using all means which may be found necessary to defeat the present conspiracy to set up a Home Rule Parliament in Ireland".[52] The United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany (August 3), paused resolution of the Home Rule Crisis, and many of Lisburn's Volunteers would go on to serve with the 36th (Ulster) Division.[53]

On July 12, 1916, for the first time since 1797 there was no Orange demonstration of any kind to celebrate the Williamite victory at the Boyne. The customary midnight drumming parade was abandoned, and no arches or flags were displayed. Most of the mills and factories were closed.[54] The town responded to the news that on the first day of Somme offensive, July 1, the Ulster Division had lost 5,000 men wounded, 2,069 killed.[55]

The Burnings and Partition

 
Catholic-owned businesses destroyed by loyalists in Lisburn

In 1920, Lisburn saw violence related to the Irish War of Independence and partition of Ireland. On 22 August, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) assassinated Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) Inspector Oswald Swanzy in Lisburn's Market Square, as worshippers left Sunday service in the cathedral.[56] Swanzy was among those a coroner's inquest in Cork had held responsible for the killing of Tomás Mac Curtain, the city's republican Lord Mayor.[57]

Over the next three days and nights Protestant loyalist crowds looted and burned practically every Catholic business in the town, and attacked Catholic homes.[58] There is evidence that Ulster Volunteers had helped organise the burnings.[59] Rioters attacked firemen who tried to save Catholic property,[60] and lorries of British soldiers sent to help the police.[58] Brigadier-General William Pain (a former Ulster Volunteer leader) had troops guard the Catholic church and convent, but failed to take strong action to quell rioting elsewhere.[58] The parochial house was looted, burnt out and daubed with sectarian slogans.[61] Some Catholics were severely beaten, and a Catholic pub owner later died of gunshot wounds.[58] A charred body was also found in the ruins of a factory.[62]

Lisburn was likened to "a bombarded town in France" during the war.[63] About 1,000 people, a third of the town's Catholics, fled Lisburn.[64] Many were forced to take the mountain road to Belfast where troops were already blocking off streets with barbed wire cordons, a prelude to still greater violence. Fires soon raged across Belfast and in the next few days thirty people were killed in the city (see Belfast Pogrom).[65] As a result of the violence, Lisburn was the first town to recruit the special constables who went on to become the Ulster Special Constabulary. In October, about thirty special constables faced charges for involvement in the "Swanzy riots".[66] The last Chief Secretary for Ireland, Sir Hamar Greenwood, admitted that "some hundred special constables in Lisburn threatened to resign" in protest.[67] Charges were not pursued.[66]

 
John Nicholson centenary memorial (1922), Lisburn

On the day that a 700-year English presence in the south of Ireland ended with the formal hand over of Dublin Castle to the government of the Irish Free State, 16 January 1922, Lisburn celebrated the centenary of the local "hero of the Indian Mutiny", John Nicholson (1822–1857).[68] Under a marble relief of his final assault on Delhi's Kashmir Gate, a memorial in the Cathedral credited Nicholson with dealing a "death blow to the greatest danger that ever threatened the British Empire".[69] For James Craig, now the first prime minister of Northern Ireland, and for other dignitaries speaking at the unveiling of a new statue in Market Square, the East India Company Brigadier (depicted with both sword and gun in hand) was "a symbol of the defence of Empire in Ireland as well as India.[70]

In April the following year crowds gathered again to dedicate the Victory Memorial in Castle Gardens.[71]

From town to city

As the linen industry was hugely dependent on the export market, Lisburn and the surrounding area was hit hard in the 1930s by the worldwide economic depression. The pattern of unemployment, half-time contracts and reduced wages was fully reversed only by new wartime mobilisation. While some of the town and region linen mills helped produce material for uniforms, boot laces, kit bags, bandages, tents, and parachutes, others were converted to churning out munitions, with women undertaking much of the work.[72] 

The Second World War struck close to Lisburn with the Belfast Blitz of April and May 1941. The town and the surrounding area was flooded by thousands of evacuees all of whom, as one member of the Lisburn Women's Voluntary Service recalled, had to be "fed, housed, deloused, marshalled, bathed, clothed, pacified and brought back to normal".[73]

In the post-war decades the demand for linen declined (precipitously after World War Two) in response to new textiles and changing fashion. With a workforce reduced to just 85, the Barbour mill in Hilden finally closed in 2006.[26]

The population of Lisburn, which in 1951 was still just 15,000, nonetheless continued to grow. In part this was a consequence of the expansion of the town boundary lines in 1973, and of a dramatic increase in public authority housing with overspill from Belfast. As stock improved, the town retained few examples of the terraced housing built by the mill owners in the nineteenth century. Development did see the loss of some historic landmarks: the Victorian Court House in Railway Street, the Sacred Heart of Mary Grammar School in Castle Street and, in Linenhall Street, the Independent Order of Good Templars hall and the weaving factory of William Coulson.[74]

The opening of the M1 motorway in 1962 further integrated Lisburn into the greater Belfast commercial and residential area.[75]

In 1989 the new edge-of-town Sprucefield retail park opened.[76] The centre was virtually destroyed in January 1991 in a Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) incendiary attack. Three of four stores were destroyed, (MFI, Allied Maples and Texas), while the Marks and Spencer wing suffered only water damage.[77]

On what was once known (because of the production of sulphuric acid bleach) as Vitriol Island in the middle of the River Lagan, the last remnants of the Island Spinning Company were demolished in the early 1990s. The Lagan Valley Island Complex was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, in November 2001.[78]

A borough since 1973, Lisburn was granted city status in 2002 as part of Queen Elizabeth II's Golden jubilee celebrations.[79]

Thiepval Barracks

First built in 1940, Thiepval Barracks is a large military complex on the edge of town was named after the village of Thiepval in Northern France, the site of the Ulster Division's heaviest losses in 1916 on the Somme.[80]

In early 1970 the Thiepval Barracks became home to 39 Infantry Brigade[81] and provided the headquarters for the locally recruited Ulster Defence Regiment.[82] From August 1969, the Brigade, as 39 Airportable Brigade, was involved in The Troubles in Northern Ireland, eventually taking on responsibility, under HQ Northern Ireland, for an area including Belfast and the eastern side of the province, but excluding the South Armagh border region. From September 1970, it was commanded by (then) Brigadier Frank Kitson.[83]

In Lisburn's last casualties of the conflict, a soldier was killed and 31 people were injured when the(IRA) exploded two car bombs in the barracks on October 7, 1996.[84]

The barracks remain home to 38th (Irish) Brigade.[85]

The Troubles

With communities across Northern Ireland, from the end of the 1960s Lisburn suffered through three decades of political violence, "The Troubles". For Lisburn the first killings came in 1976: in the course of the year, five Catholic residents died as a result of gun and bomb attacks by the Ulster Defence Association and (a new) Ulster Volunteer Force, loyalist paramilitary groups that subsequently entered their own feud.[86] In 1978 the IRA murdered a Royal Ulster Constabulary officer at his home in front of his family.[87] It was the first in a series of targeted assassinations of security-force personnel in the town that culminated in the 1988 Lisburn Van Bombing: five off-duty British soldiers killed at the end of a charity run in Market Square.[88][89] The Troubles in the town claimed a total of 32 lives.[90]

Lisburn in the 21st Century

 
Canal lock and Lisburn Civic Centre

As elsewhere, private investment in Lisburn has shifted employment away from traditional industries toward services. Just under 10% of the town and district's workforce remains in manufacturing,[91] but it is a dynamic sector that includes precision-engineering exporters.[92] Recent decades have seen very considerable public investment and new public service jobs, now accounting for a third of the district's overall employment.[91]

After receiving city status in 2008, in the 2016 reform of local government in Northern Ireland Lisburn was combined with residential areas of broadly similar social and political complexion bordering Belfast to the south and east. The fusion produced Lisburn City and Castlereagh District.[3] According to measures devised by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, the district ranked among the least socially and economically deprived in the province.[93]

In the second election to new 40-seat Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council, in 2019, the twelve seats representing Lisburn returned an overall unionist majority: five seats for the DUP and four for the UUP. The cross-community Alliance Party held two; and the moderate nationalist SDLP one.[94]

Administration

Lisburn is the administrative centre of Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council area.[95]

In elections for the Westminster Parliament the city falls mainly into the Lagan Valley constituency.[96]

Two District Electoral Areas cover the city and surrounding areas. Lisburn North (Derriaghy, Harmony Hill, Hilden, Lambeg, Magheralave, Wallace Park) and Lisburn South (Ballymacash, Ballymacoss, Knockmore, Lagan Valley, Lisnagarvey, Old Warren). In the 2019 local elections the following were elected to represent the two DEAs:

Current council members
District electoral area Name Party
Lisburn North Stephen Martin Alliance
Jonathan Craig DUP
Johnny McCarthy SDLP
Scott Carson DUP
Nicholas Trimble Ulster Unionist
Stuart Hughes Ulster Unionist
Lisburn South Jenny Palmer Ulster Unionist
Andrew Ewing DUP
Amanda Grehan Alliance
Tim Mitchell Ulster Unionist
Paul Porter DUP
Alan Givan DUP

The headquarters of the British Army in Northern Ireland at Thiepval Barracks and the headquarters of the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service are located in the city.[97]

Demography

2011 Census

On Census Day (27 March 2011) the usually resident population of Lisburn City Settlement was 45,370 accounting for 2.51% of the NI total.[100]

  • 97.51% were from the white (including Irish Traveller) ethnic group;
  • 22.24% belong to or were brought up Catholic and 67.32% belong to or were brought up in a 'Protestant and other (non-Catholic) Christian (including Christian related)' and
  • 67.65% indicated that they had a British national identity, 11.32% had an Irish national identity and 29.04% had a Northern Irish national identity.

Respondents could indicate more than one national identity

On Census Day, in Lisburn City Settlement, considering the population aged 3 years old and over:

  • 3.72% had some knowledge of Irish;
  • 6.51% had some knowledge of Ulster-Scots; and
  • 3.25% did not have English as their first language.

Schools and colleges

The Classical School in Bow Lane, founded 1756 and mastered for fifty-six years by the Huguenot and Anglican cleric and scholar, the Rev. Saumaurez Dubourdieu was the first school of note in Lisburn. Friends' School, founded for Quaker children, followed in 1774. Comparable grammar-school education was not provided for Catholic children until the Convent of the Sacred Heart of Mary started boarding pupils in a house in Castle Street in 1870, and not for other children in the town until 1880 when Sir Richard Wallace founded the Intermediate and University School on the Antrim (renamed Wallace High School in his honour in 1942).[101][102]

The first Lisburn school which did not ask pupils whether they attended church, chapel or meeting was that founded on the Dublin Road by John Crossley in 1810. Known then as the Male Free School, it was the first free school in Ulster to be based on the Bell and Lancaster monitorial system.[101]

A school for poor children, established by Jane Hawkshaw in 1821 with the support of the 3rd marquess,[24] taught no catechism and made no attempt at religious instruction. It adopted that principle that "while so great diversity prevails on this subject, it [is] best to separate religion from the instructing in reading, writing, arithmetic and sewing". Religious instruction was to be left to "the parents, with the assistance of their respective teachers".[103] It is a principle that the government tried, but in the face of church opposition failed, to realise in its original 1830 plans for an Irish system of National Schools.[104]

Another exception to control by the church education authorities was Hilden School, established under mill management by William Barbour in 1829.[101]

Today, Fort Hill Primary and Fort Hill College make a conscious effort to surmount principal sectarian divide in the town through a system of "integrated education". Children from Catholic and Protestant homes in Lisburn are otherwise taught, with limited exception, separately on a pattern that, by the mid-nineteenth century, had been established throughout Ireland.[105]

The Lisburn Technical Institute, the forerunner of South Eastern Regional College, opened in Castle Street in 1914.[106]

  • Pond Park Primary School
  • Central Primary School
  • Tonagh Primary School
  • Largymore Primary School
  • St. Aloysius Primary School
  • Killowen Primary School
  • Ballymacash Primary School
  • Brownlee Primary School
  • Forthill Integrated Primary School
  • Harmony Hill Primary School
  • Scoil na Fúiseoige
  • St. Joseph's Primary School

Churches

Lisburn is notable for its large number of churches, with 132 churches listed in the Lisburn City Council area.[107] Christ Church Cathedral, commonly referred to as Lisburn Cathedral, is the diocesan church for the Church of Ireland bishopric of Connor.[108]

The principal Roman Catholic Church in Lisburn is St Patrick's on Chapel Hill dedicated in 1900.[109] For Presbyterians the senior congregation remains that of the First Presbyterian Church, off Market Square, built in 1768, and enlarged and remodelled in 1873 and 1970.[110] For the Methodists, it is the Seymour Street Church opened on ground donated by Sir Richard Wallace in 1875.[111]

Transport

Rail

The Lisburn railway station was opened on 12 August 1839.[112] Express trains taking 10–15 minutes to reach Belfast's Great Victoria Street. The train also links the city directly with Newry, Portadown, Lurgan, Moira and Bangor. The station also has services to Dublin Connolly in the city of Dublin, with three trains per day stopping at the station. All railway services from the station are provided by Northern Ireland Railways, a subsidiary of Translink. The city is also served by Hilden railway station.[113]

Bus

Ulsterbus provides various bus services that connect the city with Belfast city centre, which lies eight miles northeast. These services generally operate either along Belfast's Lisburn Road or through the Falls area in west Belfast. In addition to long-distance services to Craigavon, Newry and Banbridge, there is also a network of buses that serve the rural areas around the city, such as Glenavy and Dromara; as well as an hourly bus service 6:00 am – 6:00 pm Monday-Saturday to Belfast International Airport.[114]

 
Lisburn's Buscentre

The city has a network of local buses, serving the local housing developments and amenities. These are operated by Ulsterbus.[115]

A new "Buscentre", provided by the regional public transport provider Translink, opened on 30 June 2008 at the corner of Smithfield Street and the Hillsborough Road. It replaced the shelters that formerly stood in Smithfield Square.[116]

Road

The city is located on the Belfast-Dublin corridor, being connected with the former by the M1 motorway from which it can be accessed through junctions 3, 6, 7 and 8. The A1 road to Newry and Dublin deviates from the M1 at the Sprucefield interchange, which is positioned one mile southeast of the city centre. An inner orbital route was formed throughout the 1980s which has permitted the city centre to operate a one-way system as well as the pedestrianisation of the Bow Street shopping precinct.[117] In addition to this, a feeder road leading from Milltown on the outskirts of Belfast to Ballymacash in north Lisburn, was opened in 2006. This route connects with the A512 and permits traffic from Lisburn to easily access the M1 at junction 3 (Dunmurry) thus relieving pressure on the southern approaches to the city.[118]

Inland waterways

The Lagan Canal passes through Lisburn. This connected the port of Belfast to Lough Neagh, reaching Lisburn in 1763 (although the full route to Lough Neagh was not complete until 1793). Prior to World War II the canal was an important transportation route for goods, averaging over 307,000 tons of coal per year in the 1920s. Following competition from road transport, the canal was formally closed to navigation in 1958, and grew derelict. A short stretch and lock in front of Lisburn Council offices was restored to use in 2001.[119]

Cycling

Lisburn is served by National Cycle Route 9, connecting the city with Belfast with Newry.[120]

Shopping

 
Lisburn City Centre

Bow Street Mall, on Bow Street, houses over 60 stores, many eateries (including a food court).[121] Sprucefield Shopping Centre and Sprucefield Retail Park are two large retail parks located just outside the city centre.[122]

Communications

The local area code, like the rest of Northern Ireland is 028. However, all local 8-digit subscriber numbers are found in the form 92xx-xxxx. Before the Big Number Change in 2000, the STD code for Lisburn and its surrounding area was 01846, having previously been 0846.[123]

Before STD

Before STD (Subscriber Trunk Dialling) codes were introduced in Northern Ireland, during the 1960s and 1970s, an operator based system was in operation. Each subscriber had short (usually 3 or 4 digit) number within the local exchange. For example, the post office in Dromore was Dromore 201.[124]

0846 and 08462

When STD was introduced to the area in the early 1970s, the local towns and villages around Lisburn all scrapped their three digit numbers (with the exception of Stoneyford) and added an extra three digits. These towns used 0846 + six digits.

  • Moira took 611, therefore Moira 369 became 611369.
  • Maze took 621, therefore Maze 249 became 621249.
  • Baillies Mills took 638, therefore Baillies Mills 775 became 638775.
  • Aghalee took 651, therefore Aghalee 276 became 651276.
  • Hillsborough took 682, therefore Hillsborough 477 became 682477.
  • Dromore took 692, therefore Dromore 201 became 692201.

Dialling a number any of the aforementioned exchanges, from another area code was achieved by simply using (0846) xxxxxx.

However Lisburn, which already had four and five digit numbers, used the code 084 62.

To call Lisburn 2201/Lisburn 77712 from another area code (outside 0846), one dialled (084 62) 2201/(084 62) 77712.[125]

1989 changes

In 1989, numbers in Lisburn town were adjusted to bring them into line with the surrounding area.

  • Four digit numbers gained 66, therefore Lisburn 2201 became 662201
  • Five digit numbers, commencing with '7', gained 6, therefore Lisburn 77712 became 677712.
  • Five digit numbers, commencing with '8', lost the first digit and gained 60 in its place. Lisburn 81114 became 601114.

This meant that Lisburn town could use the 0846 code.[126]

1993 changes

In 1993, many changes were made throughout the country in preparation for phONE day in 1995. Many of the changes were eliminating 3-digit and 4-digit subscriber numbers in rural exchanges.

The only exchange affected in the 0846 area was Stoneyford. It had 3 and 4 digit numbers and used the area code 084 664.

  • Three digit numbers would gain 648, so Stoneyford 299 became 648299.
  • Four digit numbers would gain 64, so Stoneyford 8149 became 648149.

Thus, Stoneyford became 0846.

PhONEday

"PhONEday", on 16 April 1995 meant the addition of the number '1' to every area code in the United Kingdom. 0846 therefore became 01846. The subscriber numbers were unchanged.

Big Number Change

The Big Number Change on 22 April 2000 was the introduction of eight-digit local numbers to areas of the country where there was a shortage of numbers under the six-digit/seven-digit system. Belfast's 01232 code was approaching its limit and with unavailability of a 011x area code, the decision was made to change the whole province to 028. Numbers in the 01846 area, which was deemed part of the 'Greater Belfast Area' were given the 92 prefix on the existing number.

  • (01846) 651276 became (028) 9265 1276
  • (01846) 662214 became (028) 9266 2214
  • (01846) 648299 became (028) 9264 8299

Calling within the original 01846 area now meant the inclusion of '92' irrespective of whether the number was your exchange or not. However it did omit the need to include the area code when calling other areas of the province.[127]

Today

Nowadays[when?], with the expansion of the area, more local numbers have been introduced. Here is a list of first 4/5 digits of the local number and area it covers.

  • 920x xxxx – Greater Lisburn (Recently introduced)[when?]
  • 921x xxxx – Greater Lisburn (Recently introduced)
  • 925x xxxx – Greater Lisburn (Recently introduced)
  • 9261 xxxx – Moira and Upper/Lower Ballinderry
  • 9262 1xxx to 9262 2xxx – Mazetown and Long Kesh
  • 9262 8xxx to 9262 9xxx – Greater Lisburn
  • 9263 0xxx to 9263 7xxx – Greater Lisburn
  • 9263 8xxx to 9263 9xxx – Baillies Mills and Temple
  • 9264 0xxx to 9264 7xxx – Greater Lisburn
  • 9264 8xxx – Stoneyford
  • 9265 xxxx – Aghalee, Aghagallon and Gawley's Gate.
  • 9266 xxxx – Greater Lisburn
  • 9267 xxxx – Greater Lisburn
  • 9268 xxxx – Hillsborough, Culcavy and Annahilt
  • 9269 xxxx – Dromore

Townlands

Townlands are traditional land divisions used in Ireland. As well as Lisnagarvy, Lisburn covers all or part of the following townlands.[128]

County Antrim:

  • Aghalislone (from Irish Achadh Lios Luain 'field of Luan's fort')[129]
  • Aghnahough (from Achadh na hUamha, 'field of the cave')[130]
  • Ballymacoss or Ballymacash (from Baile Mhic Coise, 'MacCoise's townland')[131]
  • Clogher (from Clochar, 'stony place')[132]
  • Knockmore (from An Cnoc Mór, 'the great hill')[133]
  • Lambeg (from Lann Bheag, 'little church')[134]
  • Lissue or Teraghafeeva (from Lios Áedha, 'Áed's fort' and Tír Átha Fiodhach, 'wooded land of the ford')[135]
  • Magheralave (from Machaire Shléibhe, 'plain of the mountain grass' or Machaire Léimh, 'plain of the elms')[136]
  • Old Warren
  • Tonagh (from An Tamhnach, 'the grassy field')[137]

County Down:

  • Blaris (from Bláras, a field or battlefield)[138]
  • Ballintine (from Baile an tSiáin, 'townland of the fairy mound')[139]
  • Ballymullan (from Baile Uí Mhaoláin, 'O'Mullan's townland')[140]
  • Largymore (from An Leargaidh Mhór, 'the big slope')[141]
  • Magherageery (from Machaire na gCaorach, 'plain of the sheep')[142]

Climate

As with the rest of the British Isles, Lisburn experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters. The nearest official Met Office weather station for which online records are available is at Hillsborough.[143]

Averaged over the period 1971–2000 the warmest day of the year at Hillsborough will reach 24.3 °C (75.7 °F),[144] although 9 out of 10 years should record a temperature of 25.1 °C (77.2 °F) or above.[145]

Averaged over the same period, the coldest night of the year typically falls to −6.0 °C (21.2 °F)[146] and on 37 nights air frost was observed.[147]

Typically annual rainfall falls just short of 900 mm, with at least 1 mm falling on 154 days of the year.[148]

Water can be supplied from Dams and nearby rivers thanks to the rainfall and mountains. In the 19th Century, Duncan's Dam provided the town with water and now serves as a free public park.[149]

Climate data for Hillsborough climate station (91m elevation) 1981–2010 averages
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 14.7
(58.5)
15.8
(60.4)
19.4
(66.9)
22.8
(73.0)
23.8
(74.8)
28.1
(82.6)
29.5
(85.1)
28.4
(83.1)
24.5
(76.1)
21.1
(70.0)
15.8
(60.4)
14.5
(58.1)
29.5
(85.1)
Average high °C (°F) 7.1
(44.8)
7.3
(45.1)
9.2
(48.6)
11.4
(52.5)
14.4
(57.9)
16.8
(62.2)
18.6
(65.5)
18.2
(64.8)
16.0
(60.8)
12.6
(54.7)
9.4
(48.9)
7.4
(45.3)
12.4
(54.3)
Average low °C (°F) 1.7
(35.1)
1.5
(34.7)
2.7
(36.9)
3.8
(38.8)
6.2
(43.2)
9.0
(48.2)
10.9
(51.6)
10.8
(51.4)
9.1
(48.4)
6.6
(43.9)
3.9
(39.0)
2.0
(35.6)
5.7
(42.3)
Record low °C (°F) −12.2
(10.0)
−7.8
(18.0)
−10.0
(14.0)
−4.9
(23.2)
−3.3
(26.1)
0.0
(32.0)
2.5
(36.5)
1.8
(35.2)
−1.2
(29.8)
−4.5
(23.9)
−8.3
(17.1)
−11.5
(11.3)
−12.2
(10.0)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 83.5
(3.29)
58.9
(2.32)
70.7
(2.78)
59.1
(2.33)
60.3
(2.37)
67.8
(2.67)
71.4
(2.81)
85.4
(3.36)
76.0
(2.99)
92.8
(3.65)
90.1
(3.55)
85.6
(3.37)
901.8
(35.50)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 14.4 11.6 13.9 11.5 11.8 11.7 12.2 12.8 12.0 14.4 14.1 14.4 154.8
Mean monthly sunshine hours 46.0 71.9 105.9 151.7 195.4 165.3 158.3 151.1 123.0 96.5 61.3 38.4 1,364.8
Source 1: metoffice.gov.uk[150]
Source 2: KNMI

Health care

The main hospital in the city is the Lagan Valley Hospital, which provides Accident and Emergency services to the area. The hospital lost its acute services in 2006. Residents now must travel to Belfast for acute surgery. The Lagan Valley lost its 24-hour A&E from 1 August 2011 due to a shortage of Junior Doctors. It will now instead be open 9:00 am – 8:00 pm and will be closed on weekends. This has caused much controversy as residents of the city will now have to travel to Belfast or Craigavon.[151] Primary care in the area is provided by the Lisburn Health Centre, which opened in 1977.[152] The city lies within the South Eastern Health and Social Care Board area.[153]

Sport

In November 2012 the Award of 2013 European City of Sport was officially handed over to Lisburn at a presentation ceremony at the European Parliament in Brussels.[154]

Football

Other sports

People

Academia and science

Arts and media

Business

Government and politics

Sport

See also

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External links

  • Lisburn at Curlie
  • Lisburn.com directory of shops & services with extensive history of the city.

lisburn, confused, with, lisbon, ɜːr, ɜːr, from, irish, lios, gcearrbhach, ʲɪsˠ, ˠə, ˈɟaːɾˠwəx, city, northern, ireland, southwest, belfast, city, centre, river, lagan, which, forms, boundary, between, county, antrim, county, down, first, laid, 17th, century, . Not to be confused with Lisbon Lisburn ˈ l ɪ z b ɜːr n ˈ l ɪ s b ɜːr n from Irish Lios na gCearrbhach 1 ˌl ʲɪsˠ n ˠe ˈɟaːɾˠwex is a city in Northern Ireland It is 8 mi 13 km southwest of Belfast city centre on the River Lagan which forms the boundary between County Antrim and County Down First laid out in the 17th century by English and Welsh settlers with the arrival of French Huguenots in the 18th century the town developed as a global centre of the linen industry LisburnIrish Lios na gCearrbhach 1 Irish Linen Museum and Christ Church CathedralLisburnLocation within Northern IrelandPopulation45 370 2011 Census Belfast8 milesDistrictLisburn and CastlereaghCountyCounty AntrimCounty DownCountryNorthern IrelandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townLISBURNPostcode districtBT27 BT28Dialling code028PoliceNorthern IrelandFireNorthern IrelandAmbulanceNorthern IrelandUK ParliamentLagan ValleyNI AssemblyLagan ValleyList of places UK Northern Ireland 54 30 43 N 6 01 52 W 54 512 N 6 031 W 54 512 6 031 Coordinates 54 30 43 N 6 01 52 W 54 512 N 6 031 W 54 512 6 031In 2002 as part of Queen Elizabeth s Golden Jubilee celebrations the predominantly unionist borough was granted city status alongside the largely nationalist town of Newry With a population of 45 370 in the 2011 Census 2 Lisburn was the third largest city in Northern Ireland In the 2016 reform of local government in Northern Ireland Lisburn was joined with the greater part of Castlereagh to form the Lisburn City and Castlereagh District 3 Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Early town 2 2 The Huguenot and the linen trade 2 3 Irish Volunteers Croppies and Orangemen 2 4 The Victorian Town 2 5 Absentee proprietors 2 6 Ulster Volunteers 2 7 The Burnings and Partition 2 8 From town to city 2 9 Thiepval Barracks 2 10 The Troubles 2 11 Lisburn in the 21st Century 3 Administration 4 Demography 4 1 2011 Census 5 Schools and colleges 6 Churches 7 Transport 7 1 Rail 7 2 Bus 7 3 Road 7 4 Inland waterways 7 5 Cycling 8 Shopping 9 Communications 9 1 Before STD 9 1 1 0846 and 08462 9 1 2 1989 changes 9 1 3 1993 changes 9 1 4 PhONEday 9 1 5 Big Number Change 9 1 6 Today 10 Townlands 11 Climate 12 Health care 13 Sport 13 1 Football 13 2 Other sports 14 People 14 1 Academia and science 14 2 Arts and media 14 3 Business 14 4 Government and politics 14 5 Sport 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksNameThe town was originally known as Lisnagarvy also spelt Lisnagarvey or Lisnagarvagh after the townland in which it formed This is derived from Irish Lios na gCearrbhach ringfort of the gamesters gamblers 4 In the records the name Lisburn appears to supersede Lisnagarvey around 1662 5 One theory is that it comes from the Irish lios ringfort and the Scots burn stream 4 Some speculate that burn refers to the burning of the town during the Irish Rebellion of 1641 but there is evidence of earlier use An English soldier later recalled the rebels having entered the town of Lisnagarvy at a place called Louzy Barne 5 In the town s early days there were possibly two ringforts Lisnagarvy to the north and Lisburn to the south and the latter may simply have been easier for the English settlers to pronounce 5 History Market Square in 1880 Early town Lisburn s original site was a fort located north of modern day Wallace Park 6 In 1609 James I granted Sir Fulke Conway a Welshman of Norman descent 7 8 the lands of Killultagh in southwest County Antrim In 1611 George Carew 1st Earl of Totnes remarked In our travel from Dromore towards Knockfargus we saw in Kellultagh upon Sir Fulke Conway s lands a house of cagework in hand and almost finished where he intends to erect a bawn of brick in a place called Lisnagarvagh He has built a fair timber bridge over the river of Lagan near the house The said Sir Fulke has built a fair gate at the fort of Enisholaghlin in Killultagh where he intends to build a good house He has already at the place 150 000 of bricks burnt with other materials 9 In 1622 the first impressions of Sir Fulke s brother and heir Edward Conway was of a curious place Greater storms are not in any place nor greater serenities foul ways boggy ground pleasant fields water brooks rivers full of fish full of game the people in their attire language fashion barbarous In their entertainment free and noble 10 Management of the Conways Irish estate fell largely to George Rawdon a Yorkshire man who laid out the streets of Lisburn as they are today Market Square Bridge Street Castle Street and Bow Street He had a manor house built on what is now Castle Gardens and in 1623 a church on the site of the current cathedral In 1628 King Charles I granted a charter for a weekly market which is still held in the town every Tuesday 11 To populate the town Rawdon hostile to the Presbyterian Scots already moving into the area brought over English and Welsh settlers 12 In 1641 the Irish rising in first instance against English and not Scottish settlers 13 were driven back three times from the town although it nonetheless burned A herd four hundred head of cattle driven against the gates failed to batter them down 14 In 1649 the town was secured by forces loyal to Cromwell s English Commonwealth routing an army of Scots Covenanters and their Royalist allies in the Battle of Lisnagarvey 15 The Presbyterians despite their loyalty to the Crown upon its Restoration continued to be penalised as dissenters from the established Anglican church the Church of Ireland It was not until 1670 that they were permitted a meeting house in town and that had to be of perishable materials dark narrow and devoid of any pretensions to art and comfort 10 Their support for King William whose forces wintered in the town and the Protestant cause in 1690 likewise failed to win them equal standing Like the Roman Catholics who had to wait another 60 years for a Mass House Presbyterians were discouraged from exerting their presence The First Presbyterian Church built in 1768 was screened until 1970 from Market Square by shops 16 The town was destroyed once again in 1707 the accidental conflagration giving rise to the town s motto Ex igne resurgam Out of the fire I shall arise Conway s Manor House was not restored part of the surrounding wall and its gateway with the date 1677 engraved still stands on the south and east side of Castle Gardens The Anglican church designated by Charles II as Christ Church Cathedral in 1662 was rebuilt retaining the tower and the surviving galleries in the nave The distinctive octagonal spire was added in 1804 17 One of the few buildings spared in the fire of 1707 was the Friend s Meeting House Quakerism had been brought to the town in 1655 by a veteran of Cromwell s army William Edmundson In 1766 a prosperous linen merchant John Hancock endowed what is now the grammar school known as Friends School Lisburn 18 John Wesley first visited Lisburn in 1756 and thereafter he returned to preach biannually until 1789 The first Wesleyan Methodist Preaching House was established in the town in 1772 19 The Huguenot and the linen trade Barbour s Hilden Mills c 1880 Lisburn prides itself as the birthplace of Ireland s linen industry While production had been introduced by the Scots the arrival in 1698 of Huguenot refugees from France brought more sophisticated techniques and government support 20 Even as it raised duties on Ireland s successful woollen trade with the concurrence of the subordinate Irish Parliament 21 the English Parliament removed them on all Irish articles of hemp and flax and the government gave Louis Crommelin overseer of the royal linen manufacture of Ireland money to promote their production 22 The Huguenot retained their own place of worship the French Church in Castle Street until 1820 The last of its pastors Saumarez Dubourdieu was 56 years Master of the Classical School of the Bow Street His students subscribed to his memorial and bust on the south interior of the cathedral 23 Large scale manufacture began in 1764 when William Coulson established his first linen looms close by is now the Union Bridge His mill supplied damask to the royal courts of Europe and in the early nineteenth century was to draw celebrity visitors among them Grand Duke Michael of Russia Crown Prince Gustaf of Sweden Louis Napoleon Lannes duc de Montebello the Duke of Wellington and Lord John Russell 24 To carry the town s new trade construction of the Belfast Lisburn section of the Lagan Canal began in 1756 Despite problems of low water levels during the summer the canal extended in 1794 to Lough Neagh continued to carry bulk cargoes until 1958 25 In 1784 the Scotsman John Barbour began spinning linen thread and in 1831 his son William moved production to what had originally been Crommelin s bleach green at Hilden By the end of the century Barbour s Linen Thread Company was the largest mill of its kind in the world employing about 2000 people to work 30 000 spindles and 8 000 twisting machines The company had built a model village for the workers with 350 houses two schools a community hall children s playground and a village sports ground 26 Irish Volunteers Croppies and Orangemen Lisburn Volunteers in Market Place firing a feu de joie in honour of the Dungannon Convention1782 Mechanisation tied first to water and then to steam power drove the growth of industry but displaced independent weavers In 1762 over 300 paraded through Lisburn brandishing blackthorn sticks as a protest against the threat of unemployment 25 In the 1780s they were gripped by the spirit of combination the formation in defiance of the law of unions to press for higher piece rates This brought workers into a sometimes uneasy relationship with the Volunteer militia 27 The Volunteer militia movement formed in response to the defence emergency caused by French intervention in the American War of Independence served the town s merchants and tradesmen as an opportunity to protest with their kindred in the American colonies the restrictive English Navigation Acts and to insist on the independence of the Irish Parliament in Dublin In 1783 Todd Jones 28 a captain of the Lisburn Fusilier Corps of Volunteers took this patriot programme approved at a convention in Dungannon a step further He successfully challenged the parliamentary nominees of the town and district s principal landlord the Hertfords on a platform of a representative reform to include votes for Catholics 29 In the wake of the French Revolution the cause of religious equality and representative government for Ireland was taken up in a still less compromising form by the Society of United Irishmen The society won support of working men in the town and of its leading Catholic family the Teelings of Chapel Hill wealthy linen manufacturers Bartholomew Teeling destined to hang and his brother Charles were an important connection between the largely Presbyterian United men and Catholic Defenders in rural areas 30 It is likely however that the greater strength in the district was the fraternal Orange Order newly formed in defence of the Protestant Church of Ireland Ascendancy In 1797 the Order paraded 3000 loyalists in the town before the British commander General Lake 31 The neighbouring military camp at Blaris ensured that when in 1798 the United Irishmen decided upon insurrection there could be no rebel demonstration in the town 32 Blaris supplied troops that helped ensure defeat for the forces of the Republic to the north of the town at the Battle of Antrim on June 7 and to the south at the Battle of Ballynahinch on June 12 where the Croppies had been under the command of the Lisburn linen draper Henry Munro For over a month the severed heads of Munro and three of his lieutenants were displayed on pikes one on each corner of the Market House 33 The Victorian Town The county by county record of pre Famine Ireland Hall s Ireland Mr and Mrs Hall s Tour of 1840 found Lisburn recognisable as the settlement Rowden had formed more than two centuries before Believing that between Drum Bridge and Lough Neagh the people were almost exclusively of English and Welsh extraction the Halls ventured that in no town in Ireland were the happy effects of English taste and industry more conspicuous 34 With the formation in 1836 of the Lisburn Cricket Club the Halls might have noted that English taste also extended to sport and leisure 35 To the visitors the town still appeared in 1840 to consist principally of one long street Bow Street at the Market Square end of which stood the cathedral An interesting and picturesque church it contained two very remarkable monuments One is of the great and good Jeremy Taylor 1613 1667 sometime Bishop of Down and Conor reputed Shakespeare of the Divines and former chaplain to Charles I 36 The other is to the memory of Lieutenant William Dobbs killed in the capture of his vessel HMS Drake by the American privateer John Paul Jones 34 an engagement in Belfast Lough in 1778 that spurred formation of the Volunteer movement 37 The Halls would have been able to proceed the eight miles to Belfast on the newly completed Ulster Railway line The line from Belfast was continued to Portadown and with the completion of the Boyne Viaduct connected with Dublin in 1855 A junction out of Lisburn at Knockmore established further service to Banbridge and Newcastle and to Antrim and Derry Lisburn s present railway station built for the Great Northern Railway Company dates from 1878 38 The new transportation links encouraged further industrial growth In 1889 newspapers reported a rival to Barbour s factory a splendid new mill by Robert Stewart amp Son to employ over a thousand hands with the novelty of electric lighting and toilets on every floor 39 As had other Protestant majority districts Lisburn quickly reconciled to the union with Great Britain that followed the 1798 rebellion Support for the Union seen both as a guarantee of free trade and as security against Catholic majority rule spurred the further growth in the town of the Orange Order and helped return Hertford approved Conservative candidates to the Westminster parliament The political loyalty of tenants who were to enjoy a secret ballot only from 1871 was further secured by the relative beneficence of the 3rd Marquess of Hertford Francis Seymour Conway 1777 1842 Characteristically when cholera struck in 1832 the Marquess erected a hospital and distributed medicines blankets clothing and other necessities throughout the estate 24 Absentee proprietors Education indeed What next The people of Lisburn commencing to think for themselves will become absolutely uncontrollable Ha you infernal young brats there is not one of your parents Widow or not whose rent I will not double Comment on Lord Hertford s agent the Rev James Stannus Rector of Lisburn Cathedral circa 1850 In 1842 Captain Richard Seymour Conway 1800 1870 the 4th Marquess of Hertford inherited 10 by 14 mile Lagan Valley estate on which some 4 000 tenants provided an income of 60 000 or 5 million in today s money 40 Yet he was to visit it but once and then with the wish that pray God he should never have to do so again 41 When the edge of the Great Irish Famine reached the valley in 1847 and 1848 the Marquess declined to join the mill owners in subscribing to the relief efforts 42 10 London s Wallace Collection named after his illegitimate Parisian son and heir Sir Richard Wallace is testimony to his chief passion the acquisition of art 43 The Old Town Hall in Castle Street Wallace 1818 1890 was created baronet in 1871 and was the Conservative and Unionist Member of Parliament MP for Lisburn from 1873 to 1885 His bequests to the people of Lisburn included Wallace Park grounds for the Intermediate and University School later renamed in his honour Wallace High School and a remodelling of the Market House 44 The large residence he built on Castle Street but never occupied today houses offices of the South Eastern Regional College In 1872 he donated 50 Wallace drinking fountains cast from a sculpture of Charles Auguste Lebourg to Paris on whose humanitarian relief during the German siege of 1870 1871 he had already spent a considerable fortune 45 and five to Lisburn where one still to be found in Castle Gardens and another in Wallace Park 46 The town responded with a memorial to Wallace In Castle Gardens 47 In 1852 Lord Hertford s agent the Reverend James Stannus the Rector of Lisburn Cathedral had occasion to write to him suggesting a general increase in rents as punishment for the tenants both for an attack on his person and for their defiance in voting for a dissident Conservative a free trade Peelite The following year the tenants sent a delegation to Hertford in Paris in a vain protest 48 In 1872 charges of high handed management of the estate the arbitrary fining and eviction of tenants interference in elections and discrimination against non Anglicans prompted Stannus s son and successor to sue the Belfast paper the Northern Whig for defamation The Dublin jury found for the plaintifff only under pressure from the judge fixing the damages at 100 40 Together with failing agricultural prices a willingness even of Orangemen to join the Land League helped turn the tables in the 1880s agents were proposing to appease tenant with rent reductions Under the later marquesses and as their legal powers to dictate terms diminished tenant landlord relations improved 48 By the new century the Irish Land Acts had effectively retired the great proprietors and their agents from the scene In a departing gesture in 1901 Sir John Murray Scott heir of Lady Wallace gave the Market House with its Assembly Rooms to Lisburn Urban District Council for the benefit of the inhabitants of the town 44 The Hertford Rent Office in Castle Street was closed in 1901 and became Lisburn Town Hall 49 Ulster Volunteers In July 1914 in the first of many acts of political violence Lisburn was to experience in the new century the chancel of Lisburn Cathedral was destroyed by a bomb 50 It had been placed by Lilian Metge as part of a broader campaign on behalf of women s suffrage co ordinated by Dorothy Evans of the Women s Social and Political Union The previous year explosives having been found in her Belfast apartment Evans had created uproar in court when she demanded to know why James Craig who at that point had overseen the arming of the Ulster Volunteers UVF with smuggled German munitions was not appearing on the same charges 51 Lisburn and neighbouring communities raised three battalions of the UVF the South Antrim Volunteers They were a token of the determination of local people in the words of Ulster s Solemn League and Covenant to stand by one another in defending for ourselves and our children our position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom and in using all means which may be found necessary to defeat the present conspiracy to set up a Home Rule Parliament in Ireland 52 The United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany August 3 paused resolution of the Home Rule Crisis and many of Lisburn s Volunteers would go on to serve with the 36th Ulster Division 53 On July 12 1916 for the first time since 1797 there was no Orange demonstration of any kind to celebrate the Williamite victory at the Boyne The customary midnight drumming parade was abandoned and no arches or flags were displayed Most of the mills and factories were closed 54 The town responded to the news that on the first day of Somme offensive July 1 the Ulster Division had lost 5 000 men wounded 2 069 killed 55 The Burnings and Partition Catholic owned businesses destroyed by loyalists in Lisburn In 1920 Lisburn saw violence related to the Irish War of Independence and partition of Ireland On 22 August the Irish Republican Army IRA assassinated Royal Irish Constabulary RIC Inspector Oswald Swanzy in Lisburn s Market Square as worshippers left Sunday service in the cathedral 56 Swanzy was among those a coroner s inquest in Cork had held responsible for the killing of Tomas Mac Curtain the city s republican Lord Mayor 57 Over the next three days and nights Protestant loyalist crowds looted and burned practically every Catholic business in the town and attacked Catholic homes 58 There is evidence that Ulster Volunteers had helped organise the burnings 59 Rioters attacked firemen who tried to save Catholic property 60 and lorries of British soldiers sent to help the police 58 Brigadier General William Pain a former Ulster Volunteer leader had troops guard the Catholic church and convent but failed to take strong action to quell rioting elsewhere 58 The parochial house was looted burnt out and daubed with sectarian slogans 61 Some Catholics were severely beaten and a Catholic pub owner later died of gunshot wounds 58 A charred body was also found in the ruins of a factory 62 Lisburn was likened to a bombarded town in France during the war 63 About 1 000 people a third of the town s Catholics fled Lisburn 64 Many were forced to take the mountain road to Belfast where troops were already blocking off streets with barbed wire cordons a prelude to still greater violence Fires soon raged across Belfast and in the next few days thirty people were killed in the city see Belfast Pogrom 65 As a result of the violence Lisburn was the first town to recruit the special constables who went on to become the Ulster Special Constabulary In October about thirty special constables faced charges for involvement in the Swanzy riots 66 The last Chief Secretary for Ireland Sir Hamar Greenwood admitted that some hundred special constables in Lisburn threatened to resign in protest 67 Charges were not pursued 66 John Nicholson centenary memorial 1922 Lisburn On the day that a 700 year English presence in the south of Ireland ended with the formal hand over of Dublin Castle to the government of the Irish Free State 16 January 1922 Lisburn celebrated the centenary of the local hero of the Indian Mutiny John Nicholson 1822 1857 68 Under a marble relief of his final assault on Delhi s Kashmir Gate a memorial in the Cathedral credited Nicholson with dealing a death blow to the greatest danger that ever threatened the British Empire 69 For James Craig now the first prime minister of Northern Ireland and for other dignitaries speaking at the unveiling of a new statue in Market Square the East India Company Brigadier depicted with both sword and gun in hand was a symbol of the defence of Empire in Ireland as well as India 70 In April the following year crowds gathered again to dedicate the Victory Memorial in Castle Gardens 71 From town to city As the linen industry was hugely dependent on the export market Lisburn and the surrounding area was hit hard in the 1930s by the worldwide economic depression The pattern of unemployment half time contracts and reduced wages was fully reversed only by new wartime mobilisation While some of the town and region linen mills helped produce material for uniforms boot laces kit bags bandages tents and parachutes others were converted to churning out munitions with women undertaking much of the work 72 The Second World War struck close to Lisburn with the Belfast Blitz of April and May 1941 The town and the surrounding area was flooded by thousands of evacuees all of whom as one member of the Lisburn Women s Voluntary Service recalled had to be fed housed deloused marshalled bathed clothed pacified and brought back to normal 73 In the post war decades the demand for linen declined precipitously after World War Two in response to new textiles and changing fashion With a workforce reduced to just 85 the Barbour mill in Hilden finally closed in 2006 26 The population of Lisburn which in 1951 was still just 15 000 nonetheless continued to grow In part this was a consequence of the expansion of the town boundary lines in 1973 and of a dramatic increase in public authority housing with overspill from Belfast As stock improved the town retained few examples of the terraced housing built by the mill owners in the nineteenth century Development did see the loss of some historic landmarks the Victorian Court House in Railway Street the Sacred Heart of Mary Grammar School in Castle Street and in Linenhall Street the Independent Order of Good Templars hall and the weaving factory of William Coulson 74 The opening of the M1 motorway in 1962 further integrated Lisburn into the greater Belfast commercial and residential area 75 In 1989 the new edge of town Sprucefield retail park opened 76 The centre was virtually destroyed in January 1991 in a Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA incendiary attack Three of four stores were destroyed MFI Allied Maples and Texas while the Marks and Spencer wing suffered only water damage 77 On what was once known because of the production of sulphuric acid bleach as Vitriol Island in the middle of the River Lagan the last remnants of the Island Spinning Company were demolished in the early 1990s The Lagan Valley Island Complex was officially opened by Queen Elizabeth II accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh in November 2001 78 A borough since 1973 Lisburn was granted city status in 2002 as part of Queen Elizabeth II s Golden jubilee celebrations 79 Thiepval Barracks First built in 1940 Thiepval Barracks is a large military complex on the edge of town was named after the village of Thiepval in Northern France the site of the Ulster Division s heaviest losses in 1916 on the Somme 80 In early 1970 the Thiepval Barracks became home to 39 Infantry Brigade 81 and provided the headquarters for the locally recruited Ulster Defence Regiment 82 From August 1969 the Brigade as 39 Airportable Brigade was involved in The Troubles in Northern Ireland eventually taking on responsibility under HQ Northern Ireland for an area including Belfast and the eastern side of the province but excluding the South Armagh border region From September 1970 it was commanded by then Brigadier Frank Kitson 83 In Lisburn s last casualties of the conflict a soldier was killed and 31 people were injured when the IRA exploded two car bombs in the barracks on October 7 1996 84 The barracks remain home to 38th Irish Brigade 85 The Troubles Main article The Troubles in LisburnWith communities across Northern Ireland from the end of the 1960s Lisburn suffered through three decades of political violence The Troubles For Lisburn the first killings came in 1976 in the course of the year five Catholic residents died as a result of gun and bomb attacks by the Ulster Defence Association and a new Ulster Volunteer Force loyalist paramilitary groups that subsequently entered their own feud 86 In 1978 the IRA murdered a Royal Ulster Constabulary officer at his home in front of his family 87 It was the first in a series of targeted assassinations of security force personnel in the town that culminated in the 1988 Lisburn Van Bombing five off duty British soldiers killed at the end of a charity run in Market Square 88 89 The Troubles in the town claimed a total of 32 lives 90 Lisburn in the 21st Century Canal lock and Lisburn Civic Centre As elsewhere private investment in Lisburn has shifted employment away from traditional industries toward services Just under 10 of the town and district s workforce remains in manufacturing 91 but it is a dynamic sector that includes precision engineering exporters 92 Recent decades have seen very considerable public investment and new public service jobs now accounting for a third of the district s overall employment 91 After receiving city status in 2008 in the 2016 reform of local government in Northern Ireland Lisburn was combined with residential areas of broadly similar social and political complexion bordering Belfast to the south and east The fusion produced Lisburn City and Castlereagh District 3 According to measures devised by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency the district ranked among the least socially and economically deprived in the province 93 In the second election to new 40 seat Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council in 2019 the twelve seats representing Lisburn returned an overall unionist majority five seats for the DUP and four for the UUP The cross community Alliance Party held two and the moderate nationalist SDLP one 94 AdministrationLisburn is the administrative centre of Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council area 95 In elections for the Westminster Parliament the city falls mainly into the Lagan Valley constituency 96 Two District Electoral Areas cover the city and surrounding areas Lisburn North Derriaghy Harmony Hill Hilden Lambeg Magheralave Wallace Park and Lisburn South Ballymacash Ballymacoss Knockmore Lagan Valley Lisnagarvey Old Warren In the 2019 local elections the following were elected to represent the two DEAs Current council membersDistrict electoral area Name PartyLisburn North Stephen Martin AllianceJonathan Craig DUPJohnny McCarthy SDLPScott Carson DUPNicholas Trimble Ulster UnionistStuart Hughes Ulster UnionistLisburn South Jenny Palmer Ulster UnionistAndrew Ewing DUPAmanda Grehan AllianceTim Mitchell Ulster UnionistPaul Porter DUPAlan Givan DUPThe headquarters of the British Army in Northern Ireland at Thiepval Barracks and the headquarters of the Northern Ireland Fire and Rescue Service are located in the city 97 DemographyHistorical populationYearPop 18214 684 18315 745 22 7 18416 284 9 4 18516 533 4 0 18617 462 14 2 18717 876 5 5 188110 755 36 6 189112 250 13 9 190111 461 6 4 191112 388 8 1 192612 406 0 1 193713 042 5 1 195114 781 13 3 196117 700 19 7 196621 522 21 6 197131 836 47 9 198182 091 157 9 199199 458 21 2 200171 465 28 1 201145 370 36 5 Figures for 1981 and 1991 are the census figures for Lisburn City Council which covered a larger area than the former county borough The figure for 2001 is for Lisburn Urban Area The figure for 2011 is for Lisburn City Settlement 2 98 99 2011 Census On Census Day 27 March 2011 the usually resident population of Lisburn City Settlement was 45 370 accounting for 2 51 of the NI total 100 97 51 were from the white including Irish Traveller ethnic group 22 24 belong to or were brought up Catholic and 67 32 belong to or were brought up in a Protestant and other non Catholic Christian including Christian related and 67 65 indicated that they had a British national identity 11 32 had an Irish national identity and 29 04 had a Northern Irish national identity Respondents could indicate more than one national identityOn Census Day in Lisburn City Settlement considering the population aged 3 years old and over 3 72 had some knowledge of Irish 6 51 had some knowledge of Ulster Scots and 3 25 did not have English as their first language Schools and collegesThe Classical School in Bow Lane founded 1756 and mastered for fifty six years by the Huguenot and Anglican cleric and scholar the Rev Saumaurez Dubourdieu was the first school of note in Lisburn Friends School founded for Quaker children followed in 1774 Comparable grammar school education was not provided for Catholic children until the Convent of the Sacred Heart of Mary started boarding pupils in a house in Castle Street in 1870 and not for other children in the town until 1880 when Sir Richard Wallace founded the Intermediate and University School on the Antrim renamed Wallace High School in his honour in 1942 101 102 The first Lisburn school which did not ask pupils whether they attended church chapel or meeting was that founded on the Dublin Road by John Crossley in 1810 Known then as the Male Free School it was the first free school in Ulster to be based on the Bell and Lancaster monitorial system 101 A school for poor children established by Jane Hawkshaw in 1821 with the support of the 3rd marquess 24 taught no catechism and made no attempt at religious instruction It adopted that principle that while so great diversity prevails on this subject it is best to separate religion from the instructing in reading writing arithmetic and sewing Religious instruction was to be left to the parents with the assistance of their respective teachers 103 It is a principle that the government tried but in the face of church opposition failed to realise in its original 1830 plans for an Irish system of National Schools 104 Another exception to control by the church education authorities was Hilden School established under mill management by William Barbour in 1829 101 Today Fort Hill Primary and Fort Hill College make a conscious effort to surmount principal sectarian divide in the town through a system of integrated education Children from Catholic and Protestant homes in Lisburn are otherwise taught with limited exception separately on a pattern that by the mid nineteenth century had been established throughout Ireland 105 The Lisburn Technical Institute the forerunner of South Eastern Regional College opened in Castle Street in 1914 106 Pond Park Primary School Central Primary School Tonagh Primary School Largymore Primary School St Aloysius Primary School Killowen Primary School Ballymacash Primary School Brownlee Primary School Forthill Integrated Primary School Harmony Hill Primary School Scoil na Fuiseoige St Joseph s Primary School St Colman s Primary School Old Warren Primary School Knockmore Primary School Friends School Lisnagarvey High School Wallace High School Fort Hill Integrated College Laurelhill Community College St Patrick s Academy South Eastern Regional College Lisburn Campus formerly Lisburn Institute ChurchesLisburn is notable for its large number of churches with 132 churches listed in the Lisburn City Council area 107 Christ Church Cathedral commonly referred to as Lisburn Cathedral is the diocesan church for the Church of Ireland bishopric of Connor 108 The principal Roman Catholic Church in Lisburn is St Patrick s on Chapel Hill dedicated in 1900 109 For Presbyterians the senior congregation remains that of the First Presbyterian Church off Market Square built in 1768 and enlarged and remodelled in 1873 and 1970 110 For the Methodists it is the Seymour Street Church opened on ground donated by Sir Richard Wallace in 1875 111 TransportRail The Lisburn railway station was opened on 12 August 1839 112 Express trains taking 10 15 minutes to reach Belfast s Great Victoria Street The train also links the city directly with Newry Portadown Lurgan Moira and Bangor The station also has services to Dublin Connolly in the city of Dublin with three trains per day stopping at the station All railway services from the station are provided by Northern Ireland Railways a subsidiary of Translink The city is also served by Hilden railway station 113 Lisburn railway station Bus Ulsterbus provides various bus services that connect the city with Belfast city centre which lies eight miles northeast These services generally operate either along Belfast s Lisburn Road or through the Falls area in west Belfast In addition to long distance services to Craigavon Newry and Banbridge there is also a network of buses that serve the rural areas around the city such as Glenavy and Dromara as well as an hourly bus service 6 00 am 6 00 pm Monday Saturday to Belfast International Airport 114 Lisburn s Buscentre The city has a network of local buses serving the local housing developments and amenities These are operated by Ulsterbus 115 A new Buscentre provided by the regional public transport provider Translink opened on 30 June 2008 at the corner of Smithfield Street and the Hillsborough Road It replaced the shelters that formerly stood in Smithfield Square 116 Road The city is located on the Belfast Dublin corridor being connected with the former by the M1 motorway from which it can be accessed through junctions 3 6 7 and 8 The A1 road to Newry and Dublin deviates from the M1 at the Sprucefield interchange which is positioned one mile southeast of the city centre An inner orbital route was formed throughout the 1980s which has permitted the city centre to operate a one way system as well as the pedestrianisation of the Bow Street shopping precinct 117 In addition to this a feeder road leading from Milltown on the outskirts of Belfast to Ballymacash in north Lisburn was opened in 2006 This route connects with the A512 and permits traffic from Lisburn to easily access the M1 at junction 3 Dunmurry thus relieving pressure on the southern approaches to the city 118 Inland waterways The Lagan Canal passes through Lisburn This connected the port of Belfast to Lough Neagh reaching Lisburn in 1763 although the full route to Lough Neagh was not complete until 1793 Prior to World War II the canal was an important transportation route for goods averaging over 307 000 tons of coal per year in the 1920s Following competition from road transport the canal was formally closed to navigation in 1958 and grew derelict A short stretch and lock in front of Lisburn Council offices was restored to use in 2001 119 Cycling Lisburn is served by National Cycle Route 9 connecting the city with Belfast with Newry 120 Shopping Lisburn City Centre Bow Street Mall on Bow Street houses over 60 stores many eateries including a food court 121 Sprucefield Shopping Centre and Sprucefield Retail Park are two large retail parks located just outside the city centre 122 CommunicationsThe local area code like the rest of Northern Ireland is 028 However all local 8 digit subscriber numbers are found in the form 92xx xxxx Before the Big Number Change in 2000 the STD code for Lisburn and its surrounding area was 01846 having previously been 0846 123 Before STD Before STD Subscriber Trunk Dialling codes were introduced in Northern Ireland during the 1960s and 1970s an operator based system was in operation Each subscriber had short usually 3 or 4 digit number within the local exchange For example the post office in Dromore was Dromore 201 124 0846 and 08462 When STD was introduced to the area in the early 1970s the local towns and villages around Lisburn all scrapped their three digit numbers with the exception of Stoneyford and added an extra three digits These towns used 0846 six digits Moira took 611 therefore Moira 369 became 611369 Maze took 621 therefore Maze 249 became 621249 Baillies Mills took 638 therefore Baillies Mills 775 became 638775 Aghalee took 651 therefore Aghalee 276 became 651276 Hillsborough took 682 therefore Hillsborough 477 became 682477 Dromore took 692 therefore Dromore 201 became 692201 Dialling a number any of the aforementioned exchanges from another area code was achieved by simply using 0846 xxxxxx However Lisburn which already had four and five digit numbers used the code 084 62 To call Lisburn 2201 Lisburn 77712 from another area code outside 0846 one dialled 084 62 2201 084 62 77712 125 1989 changes In 1989 numbers in Lisburn town were adjusted to bring them into line with the surrounding area Four digit numbers gained 66 therefore Lisburn 2201 became 662201 Five digit numbers commencing with 7 gained 6 therefore Lisburn 77712 became 677712 Five digit numbers commencing with 8 lost the first digit and gained 60 in its place Lisburn 81114 became 601114 This meant that Lisburn town could use the 0846 code 126 1993 changes In 1993 many changes were made throughout the country in preparation for phONE day in 1995 Many of the changes were eliminating 3 digit and 4 digit subscriber numbers in rural exchanges The only exchange affected in the 0846 area was Stoneyford It had 3 and 4 digit numbers and used the area code 084 664 Three digit numbers would gain 648 so Stoneyford 299 became 648299 Four digit numbers would gain 64 so Stoneyford 8149 became 648149 Thus Stoneyford became 0846 PhONEday PhONEday on 16 April 1995 meant the addition of the number 1 to every area code in the United Kingdom 0846 therefore became 01846 The subscriber numbers were unchanged Big Number Change The Big Number Change on 22 April 2000 was the introduction of eight digit local numbers to areas of the country where there was a shortage of numbers under the six digit seven digit system Belfast s 01232 code was approaching its limit and with unavailability of a 011x area code the decision was made to change the whole province to 028 Numbers in the 01846 area which was deemed part of the Greater Belfast Area were given the 92 prefix on the existing number 01846 651276 became 028 9265 1276 01846 662214 became 028 9266 2214 01846 648299 became 028 9264 8299Calling within the original 01846 area now meant the inclusion of 92 irrespective of whether the number was your exchange or not However it did omit the need to include the area code when calling other areas of the province 127 Today Nowadays when with the expansion of the area more local numbers have been introduced Here is a list of first 4 5 digits of the local number and area it covers 920x xxxx Greater Lisburn Recently introduced when 921x xxxx Greater Lisburn Recently introduced 925x xxxx Greater Lisburn Recently introduced 9261 xxxx Moira and Upper Lower Ballinderry 9262 1xxx to 9262 2xxx Mazetown and Long Kesh 9262 8xxx to 9262 9xxx Greater Lisburn 9263 0xxx to 9263 7xxx Greater Lisburn 9263 8xxx to 9263 9xxx Baillies Mills and Temple 9264 0xxx to 9264 7xxx Greater Lisburn 9264 8xxx Stoneyford 9265 xxxx Aghalee Aghagallon and Gawley s Gate 9266 xxxx Greater Lisburn 9267 xxxx Greater Lisburn 9268 xxxx Hillsborough Culcavy and Annahilt 9269 xxxx DromoreTownlandsTownlands are traditional land divisions used in Ireland As well as Lisnagarvy Lisburn covers all or part of the following townlands 128 County Antrim Aghalislone from Irish Achadh Lios Luain field of Luan s fort 129 Aghnahough from Achadh na hUamha field of the cave 130 Ballymacoss or Ballymacash from Baile Mhic Coise MacCoise s townland 131 Clogher from Clochar stony place 132 Knockmore from An Cnoc Mor the great hill 133 Lambeg from Lann Bheag little church 134 Lissue or Teraghafeeva from Lios Aedha Aed s fort and Tir Atha Fiodhach wooded land of the ford 135 Magheralave from Machaire Shleibhe plain of the mountain grass or Machaire Leimh plain of the elms 136 Old Warren Tonagh from An Tamhnach the grassy field 137 County Down Blaris from Blaras a field or battlefield 138 Ballintine from Baile an tSiain townland of the fairy mound 139 Ballymullan from Baile Ui Mhaolain O Mullan s townland 140 Largymore from An Leargaidh Mhor the big slope 141 Magherageery from Machaire na gCaorach plain of the sheep 142 ClimateAs with the rest of the British Isles Lisburn experiences a maritime climate with cool summers and mild winters The nearest official Met Office weather station for which online records are available is at Hillsborough 143 Averaged over the period 1971 2000 the warmest day of the year at Hillsborough will reach 24 3 C 75 7 F 144 although 9 out of 10 years should record a temperature of 25 1 C 77 2 F or above 145 Averaged over the same period the coldest night of the year typically falls to 6 0 C 21 2 F 146 and on 37 nights air frost was observed 147 Typically annual rainfall falls just short of 900 mm with at least 1 mm falling on 154 days of the year 148 Water can be supplied from Dams and nearby rivers thanks to the rainfall and mountains In the 19th Century Duncan s Dam provided the town with water and now serves as a free public park 149 Climate data for Hillsborough climate station 91m elevation 1981 2010 averagesMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 14 7 58 5 15 8 60 4 19 4 66 9 22 8 73 0 23 8 74 8 28 1 82 6 29 5 85 1 28 4 83 1 24 5 76 1 21 1 70 0 15 8 60 4 14 5 58 1 29 5 85 1 Average high C F 7 1 44 8 7 3 45 1 9 2 48 6 11 4 52 5 14 4 57 9 16 8 62 2 18 6 65 5 18 2 64 8 16 0 60 8 12 6 54 7 9 4 48 9 7 4 45 3 12 4 54 3 Average low C F 1 7 35 1 1 5 34 7 2 7 36 9 3 8 38 8 6 2 43 2 9 0 48 2 10 9 51 6 10 8 51 4 9 1 48 4 6 6 43 9 3 9 39 0 2 0 35 6 5 7 42 3 Record low C F 12 2 10 0 7 8 18 0 10 0 14 0 4 9 23 2 3 3 26 1 0 0 32 0 2 5 36 5 1 8 35 2 1 2 29 8 4 5 23 9 8 3 17 1 11 5 11 3 12 2 10 0 Average rainfall mm inches 83 5 3 29 58 9 2 32 70 7 2 78 59 1 2 33 60 3 2 37 67 8 2 67 71 4 2 81 85 4 3 36 76 0 2 99 92 8 3 65 90 1 3 55 85 6 3 37 901 8 35 50 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 14 4 11 6 13 9 11 5 11 8 11 7 12 2 12 8 12 0 14 4 14 1 14 4 154 8Mean monthly sunshine hours 46 0 71 9 105 9 151 7 195 4 165 3 158 3 151 1 123 0 96 5 61 3 38 4 1 364 8Source 1 metoffice gov uk 150 Source 2 KNMIHealth careThe main hospital in the city is the Lagan Valley Hospital which provides Accident and Emergency services to the area The hospital lost its acute services in 2006 Residents now must travel to Belfast for acute surgery The Lagan Valley lost its 24 hour A amp E from 1 August 2011 due to a shortage of Junior Doctors It will now instead be open 9 00 am 8 00 pm and will be closed on weekends This has caused much controversy as residents of the city will now have to travel to Belfast or Craigavon 151 Primary care in the area is provided by the Lisburn Health Centre which opened in 1977 152 The city lies within the South Eastern Health and Social Care Board area 153 SportIn November 2012 the Award of 2013 European City of Sport was officially handed over to Lisburn at a presentation ceremony at the European Parliament in Brussels 154 Football Lisburn Distillery is an association football club playing in the NIFL Championship and based at Ballyskeagh on the outskirts of the city 155 Ballymacash Rangers F C play in the Mid Ulster Football League 156 Lisburn Rangers F C play in the Northern Amateur Football League 157 Downshire Young Men F C play in the Northern Amateur Football League 158 Other sports Lisburn Cricket Club 159 Lisburn Racquets Club 160 St Patrick s GAA 161 Down Royal Racecourse is located near the city 162 PeopleAcademia and science Robert McNeill Alexander 1934 2016 zoologist 163 David Crystal 1941 Linguist and author 164 Margarita Dawson Stelfox 1866 1971 botanist 165 Arts and media Vivian Campbell 1962 singer songwriter and musician 166 William H Conn 1895 1973 Irish cartoonist illustrator water colourist and poster artist 167 Sam Cree 1928 1980 playwright 168 Anna Cheyne 1926 2002 artist and sculptor 169 Richard Dormer 1969 actor playwright screenwriter 170 Duke Special 1971 singer songwriter 171 Samuel McCloy 1831 1904 Irish painter 172 Stefana McClure 1959 visual artist 173 Kristian Nairn 1975 film actor DJ 174 Dennis H Osborne 1919 2016 artist 175 Donna Traynor 1965 television journalist 176 Sir Richard Wallace 1818 1890 Lisburn and district landlord MP art collector the Wallace Collection London 177 Business John Doherty Barbour 1824 1901 industrialist and politician 178 Michael Deane 1961 chef restaurateur 179 Henry Musgrave 1827 1922 industrialist and philanthropist 180 John Grubb Richardson 1813 1891 linen merchant industrialist and philanthropist 181 Alexander Turney Stewart 1803 1876 American retail entrepreneur 182 William Workman 1807 1878 Canadian entrepreneur philanthropist 183 Government and politics David Adams 1953 senior Ulster Democratic Party leader 184 William Armstrong 1782 1865 U S Representative from Virginia 185 John Milne Barbour 1868 1951 Ulster Unionist Northern Ireland cabinet minister 186 Humphrey Bland 1686 1763 Lieutenant General 187 Ernest Blythe 1889 1975 Irish Republican Brotherhood Irish Free State cabinet minister 188 Samuel Cowan 1941 Quartermaster General to the Forces writer 189 Robert Lindsay Crawford 1868 1945 first Grand Master Independent Orange Order Irish Free State trade representative New York 190 William Crossley 1844 1911 engineer and Liberal MP 191 Jim Hanna 1947 1974 senior Ulster Volunteer Force leader 192 John Jeffers 1822 1890 member of the Wisconsin State Assembly 193 Gertrude Keightley 1864 1929 Poor Law guardian and magistrate 194 Gary McMichael 1969 Ulster Democratic Party leader 195 John McMichael 1948 1987 senior Ulster Defence Association leader 196 St Clair Augustine Mulholland 1839 1910 Union officer American Civil War 197 Henry Munro 1758 1798 executed United Irish leader 198 Francis Seymour 1813 1890 Crimean War veteran and royal courtier 199 Ray Smallwoods 1949 1994 assassinated senior Ulster Defence Association leader 200 Malcolm Stevenson 1878 1927 colonial governor 201 Batholomew Teeling 1774 1798 executed United Irish leader 202 Charles Teeling 1778 1848 United Irishman and journalist 203 Robert Traill 1793 1847 clergyman relief organiser in the Great Famine 204 David Trimble 1944 2022 Ulster Unionist First Minister of Northern Ireland Conservative Peer 205 Sport Damien Johnson Northern Irish international footballer 206 Mary Peters athlete 207 Jonny Ross bowler 208 James Tennyson professional boxer 209 Alan McDonald Northern Irish international footballer 210 See alsoLisburn Courthouse List of localities in Northern Ireland by populationReferences a b Lisburn Lios na gCearrbhach Archived 24 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine Placenames Database of Ireland a b Census 2011 Population Statistics for Lisburn City Settlement 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June 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2022 External links Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lisburn Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Lisburn Lisburn at Curlie Lisburn com directory of shops amp services with extensive history of the city Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lisburn amp oldid 1149741693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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