Online Encyclopedia

CARRICKFERGUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 407 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CARRICKFERGUS  , a seaport and watering-

place of Co . Antrim, Ireland, in the east
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parliamentary division; on the
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northern
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shore of
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Belfast Lough, 91 m . N.E. of Belfast by the Northern Counties (Midland) railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 4208 . It stretches for about 1 m. along the shore of the Lough . The
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principal
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building is the castle, originally built by John de Courci towards the close of the 12th century, and subsequently much enlarged . It stands on a projecting rock above the sea, and was formerly a place of much strength . It is still maintained as an
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arsenal, and mounted with heavy guns . The ancient donjon or keep, 90 ft. in height, is still in good preservation . The
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town walls, built by
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Sir Henry Sidney, are still visible on the west and north, and the North
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Gate remains . The parish church of St Nicholas, an antiquated cruciform structure with curious Elizabethan
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work in the north transept, and monuments of the
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Chichester
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family, was originally a
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chapel or oratory dependent on a Franciscan monastery . The entrance to a subterranean passage between the two establishments is still visible under the communion-table of the church .

The

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gaol, built on the site of the monastery above mentioned, was formerly the county of Antrim prison . The court-house, which adjoins the gaol, is a
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modern building . The town has some trade in domestic produce, and in leather and
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linen manufactures, there being several
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flax spinning-mills and bleach-
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works in the immediate neighbourhood . Distilling is carried on . The harbour admits vessels of 50o tons . The
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fisheries are valuable, especially the
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oyster fisheries . At Duncrue about 2 M. from the town, rock salt of remarkable purity and in large quantity is found in the Triassic
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sandstone . The neighbouring country is generally hilly, and Slieve True (1100 ft.) commands a magnificent prospect . In 1182, John de Courci, to whom Henry II. had granted all the parts of Ulster he could obtain possession of by the sword, fixed a colony in this district . The castle came in the 13th century into possession of the De Lacy family, who, being ejected, invited
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Edward Bruce to besiege it (1315) . After a desperate resistance the garrison surrendered . In 1386, the town was burned by the Scots, and in 1400 was destroyed by the combined Scots and Irish .

Subsequently, it suffered much by

famine and the occasional assaults of the neighbouring Irish chieftains, whose favour the townsmen were at length forced to secure by the payment of an
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annual tribute . In the reign of Charles I. many Scottish
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Covenanters settled in the neighbourhood to avoid the persecution directed against them . In the
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civil
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wars, from 1641, Carrickfergus was one of the chief places of
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refuge for the Protestants of the county of Antrim; and on the loth of
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June 1642, the first
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Presbytery held in Ireland met here . In that
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year the garrison was commanded by General Robert Munro, who, having afterwards relinquished the cause of the
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English parliament, was surprised and taken prisoner by Sir Robert Adair in 1648 . At a later period Carrickfergus was held by the partisans of James II., but surrendered in 1689 to the forces under King William's general Schomberg; and in 1690 it was visited by King William, who landed here on his expedition to Ireland . In 176o it was surprised by a French
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squadron under Commodore Thurot, who landed with about r000 men, and, after holding the place for a few days, evacuated it on the approach of the English troops . Eighteen years later Paul Jones, in his
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ship the " Ranger," succeeded in capturing the " Drake," a
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British
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sloop-of war, in the neighbouring
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bay; but he
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left without molesting the town . In the reign of Queen Elizabeth the town obtained a charter, and this wag confirmed by James I., who added the
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privilege of sending two burgesses to the Irish parliament . The corporation, however, was superseded, under the provisions of the Municipal Reform Act of 184o, by a board of municipal commissioners . Carrickfergus was a parliamentary borough until 1885; and a county of a town till 1898, having previously (till 185o) been the county town of county Antrim . But its importance was sapped by the vicinity of Belfast, and its
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historical associations are now its chief
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interest .

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