DRUMMAUL,
a parish, in the barony of UPPER TOOME, county of ANTRIM,
and province of ULSTER ; containing, with the post-town of Randalstown
(which is described under its own head), 9737 inhabitants.
During the revolution of 1688, this parish was frequently the head-quarters
of the Earl of Antrim's regiment, which marched hence to the attack
of Londonderry; and in the disturbances of 1798, the insurgents were
driven from Antrim into Randalstown,
in this parish, by the king's troops, The parish is situated on the
river Main, and on the northern shore of Lough Neagh;
it is intersected by the road from Belfast
to the eastern parts of the counties of Derry and Tyrone,
and by the mail roads from Belfast to Coleraine, and from
Antrim to Cookstown. It comprises, according to
the Ordnance survey, 32,394 statute acres, of which, 11,472 are in Lough
Neagh, and 171 ¼ in the river Main. The land, with the
exception of a few farms, is in a very indifferent state of cultivation;
the system of agriculture is, however, beginning to improve; there are
bogs containing about 2800 acres.
The beautiful demesne of Shane's Castle, which contains nearly
2000 acres, the property of Earl O'Neill, and for many years
the principal seat of his family, is situated on the margin of Lough
Neagh, and the grounds and plantations extend far on both sides of the
river Main: the mansion was destroyed by fire in 1816, and is now in
ruins; the park, which is well stocked with deer, is ornamented with
fine timber. Millmount, the seat of G. Handcock, Esq.,
agent to Earl O'Neill ; Hollybrook and
Sharoogues are also in this parish.
Coal and
iron-stone were formerly obtained here and there are remains of extensive
forges and smelting-furnaces at Randalstown. There are quarries
of basaltic stone, from which materials are obtained in abundance both
for building and for the roads, The spinning of cotton and weaving of
calico were extensively carried on at Randalstown, there are excellent
sites for bleach-greens and beetling-engines at Hollybrook, and a considerable
quantity of linen is woven in various parts of the parish.
The living, is a vicarage, in the diocese
of Connor, and in the gift of the Marquess of Donegal,
in whom the rectory is impropriate: the tithes amount to £996.
6 shillings 6 pence of which £546. 6 shillings 6 pence is payable
to the impropriator, and £450 to the vicar. The church, which
is at Randalstown, is a neat edifice in the ancient English style,
with an octagonal spire of freestone: it was built in 1832 on the site
of a church erected in 1709, and cost £1800, of which, Earl
O'Neill subscribed £300, besides giving a fine-toned organ;
his lordship has also built a beautiful mausoleum for his family close
to the church, the family burial-place having been at Edenduff-Carrick
since 1722.
In the
R. C. divisions the parish is the head of a union or district,
called Drummaul or Randalstown, comprising the parishes
of Drummaul and Antrim, and parts of Connor, Templepatrick,
Donegore, and Kilbride; there
are three chapels, of which that of Drummaul is a large handsome
building near Randalstown.
In that town there is a Presbyterian meeting-house in connection with
the Synod of Ulster, and one connected with the Seceding Synod, both
of the first class; and the Covenanters have a meeting-house at Craigmore,
There is a parochial school at Randalstown for children of both
sexes, aided by a grant from Earl O'Neill,and six other schools in the
parish; also another school at Randalstown. In these schools about 330
children are educated, besides which about 440 are taught in seven private
schools, and there are also eight Sunday schools.
There are some remains of the ancient church at Drummaul, and
the site of an old church at Edenduff-Carrick, or Shane's-Castle.
Adjoining the gardens of Shanes-Castle are some very fine columnar
masses of basalt, similar to those of the Giant's Causeway, but less
perfect in their form and less regular in their divisions ; they descend
into Lough Neagh, and disappear under the water. There are chalybeate
springs in various parts of the parish.