Online Encyclopedia

DUNGANNON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 679 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DUNGANNON  , a

market
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town of Co . Tyrone, Ireland, in the east
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parliamentary division, on an acclivity 8 m . W. of the south-western
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shore of Lough
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Neagh . Pop. of urban
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district (19o1) 3694 . It is 103 M . N.N.W. from
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Dublin by the
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Great
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Northern railway, and a branch
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line runs thence to
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Cookstown . The only public buildings of note are the parish church, with an octagonal
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spire, and a royal school founded in 1614 and settled in new buildings at the end of the 18th century; it is now managed by the county
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Protestant Board of
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Education . Linens, muslin and coarse earthenware are manufactured, tanning is prosecuted, and there is trade in corn and
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timber . The early
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history of the place is identified with the once powerful
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family of the O'Neills, whose chief residence was here, and a large rath or earthwork north of the town was the scene of the inauguration of their chiefs, but of the castle and abbey founded by this family there are no remains . In Dungannon the independence of the Irish parliament (to which the town returned two members) was proclaimed in 1782 . The town was formerly corporate, and was a parliamentary borough returning one member to the Imperial parliament until 1885 .

End of Article: DUNGANNON
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