Online Encyclopedia

DUNDALK

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 672 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DUNDALK  , a seaport of Co .

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Louth, Ireland, in the north
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parliamentary division, on the Castletown
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river near its mouth in Dundalk
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Bay . Pop. of urban
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district (1901), 13,076 . It is an important junction on the
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Great
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Northern railway, by the main
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line of which it is 54 M . N. from
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Dublin . The
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company has its
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works here, and a line diverges to the north-west of Ireland . Dundalk is connected with the
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port of
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Greenore (for Holyhead) by a line owned by the
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London & North-Western railway company of England . The parish church is an old and spacious edifice with a curious wooden steeple covered with copper; and the
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Roman Catholic
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chapel is a handsome
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building in the style of King's College chapel, Cambridge . There are ruins of a Franciscan priory, with a lofty tower . Adjacent to the
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town are several
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fine parks and demesnes . Until 1885 a member was returned to parliament . A brisk trade, chiefly in agricultural and
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dairy produce, is carried on, and the town contains some manufactories .

Distilling and

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brewing are the
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principal
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industrial works, and there are besides a
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flax and jute-spinning mill, salt works, &c . The port is the seat of a considerable trade, mainly in agricultural produce and live stock . It is also the centre of a sea-fishery district and of salmon
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fisheries . Dundalk was a borough by
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prescription, and received charters from
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Edward III. and successive monarchs . Edward Bruce, having invaded Ireland from Scotland in 1315, proceeded south from his landing-place in Antrim, ravaging as he came, to Dundalk, which he stormed, and proclaimed himself king here . In this neighbourhood, too, he was defeated and killed by the
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English under
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Sir John de Bermingham in 1318, and at Faughart near Dundalk, near the ruined church of St'Bridget, he is buried .

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