Online Encyclopedia

COLERAINE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 676 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COLERAINE  , a seaport and

market
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town of Co . Londonderry, Ireland, in the north
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parliamentary division, on the
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Bann, 4 M. from its mouth, and 612 m . N.W. by N. from
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Dublin by the
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Northern Counties (Midland) railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 6958 . The town stands upon both sides of the
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river, which is crossed by a handsome stone
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bridge, connecting the town and its suburb, Waterside or Killowen . The
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principal
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part is on the east
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bank, and consists of a central square called the
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Diamond, and several diverging streets . Among institutions may be mentioned the public
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schools founded in 1613 and maintained by the Honourable Irish Society, and the Academical Institution, maintained by the Irish Society and the
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London Clothworkers'
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Company . The
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linen trade has long been extensively carried on in the town, from which, indeed, a
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fine description of
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cloth is known as " Coleraines." Whisky-distilling, pork-curing, and the salmon and
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eel
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fisheries are prosecuted . The mouth of the river was formerly obstructed by a bar, but piers were constructed, and the harbours greatly improved by grants from the Irish Society of London and from a loan under the River Bann Navigation Act 1879 . Coleraine ceased to return one member to the Imperial parliament in 1885; having previously returned two to the Irish parliament until the Union . It was incorporated by James I . It owed its importance mainly to the Irish Society, which was incorporated as the Company for the New Plantation of Ulster in 1613 .

Though fortified only by an earthen

wall, it managed to hold out against the rebels in 1641 . There are no remains of a former priory, monastery and castle . A rath or encampment of large
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size occupies Mount Sandel, 1 m. south-east .

End of Article: COLERAINE
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JOHN COLEPEPER COLEPEPER (or CULPEPPER)
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HARTLEY COLERIDGE (1796-1849)

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