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Irish Genealogy Research Service
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From Ireland Home Page >>County Derry page >>Cumber Yeomanry Cavalry 1797 From "Ulster the official publication of the Ulster Tourist Development Association Ltd. 1939" Visit
the ancient and historic City of Londonderry and make a
circuit of its old grey walls, erected in 1617, from which,
in 1689, a King turned away disappointed and broken. Spend
half-an-hour in the venerable Cathedral of St. Columb, erected
in the year 1633, and replete with Memorials of the Siege,
ascend its Tower from which in a clear atmosphere a charming
and comprehensive view of the City and surrounding country
may be obtained. In the Cathedral Churchyard may be seen
the Apprentice Boys' Mound wherein repose the ashes of the
mighty dead. Traverse its streets that once resounded to
the tramp of the thirteen Apprentice Boys who closed the
City Gates against the vanguard of the army of King James.
See where across the flowing Foyle was stretched the Boom
of timber and chains designed to bar the passage of the
squadron that eventually brought relief to the beleaguered
City. Visit the Guildhall which contains interesting Statuary
and an exceedingly fine range of historical stained glass
windows, also St. Eugene's Roman Catholic Cathedral, one
of the 1argest in Northern Ireland, and the Long Tower Roman
Catholic Church in the churchyard of which is St. Columba's
Stone upon which the Saint is said to have knelt in prayer.
In addition to the foregoing are a number of fine churches
attached to the various denominations. Londonderry
is the centre from which well-appointed Motor Buses radiate,
not only throughout the County Donegal-to the North-West
and Central Highlands of which it forms the gateway-but
also to Belfast, Sligo and throughout the Counties Londonderry
and Tyrone. The
London, Midland and Scottish Railway connects Londonderry
with Belfast, and also with South and West Donegal. LONDONDERRY History. Unfortunately Derry proved attractive to the Danes, both on account of its ecclesiastical treasures and its safe harbourage. The Irish Annals record a number of their onslaughts between 832 and 1100. They also relate the burning of the city on at least seven occasions, by accident or in strife, before the year 1200. After the Danes came the Anglo-Normans, whose mania for plundering churches is frequently referred to by the old annalists. In 1195, 1197 and 1198 John de Courcy and Rotsel Peyton plundered the churches of Derry. But, alas, our own countrymen were little better, for in 1197 a Mac Etig of Co. Derry robbed the altar of the Cathedral of "the four richest goblets in Ireland," and in 1213 Thomas MacUchtry and Rory MacRandal from Coleraine plundered the town. After the de Courcys came in the 13th century de Lacys, and in the 14th de Burgos, who built fortresses - Green Castle, White Castle, etc.- on the shores of Lough Foyle. In
1566, during the Rebellion of Shane O'Neill, Derry was chosen
for the headquarters of the forces sent against him. But
on April 24, 568, the magazine which contained ammunition
for the English Army in the north blew up, destroying the
town and fort, and causing great loss of life. After this
it was abandoned by the military until 1600, when Sir Henry
Docwra, sent by Queen Elizabeth, selected it as the site
of his camp. Docwra built a fort at Culmore, and another
five miles up the river, at Dunnalong, to protect his camp
and the city which he proposed to build. He was actually
constituted Provost for life of the City of Derry in 1604,
by a charter of King James I., but shortly afterwards left
the district. His successor, Sir George Paulett, having
by his injustice and insults goaded Sir Cahir O'Doherty,
the young chief of Inishowen, into rebellion, was surprised
and slain by Sir Cahir, and the city once more laid in ruins.
After the suppression of this rising, King James began to
entertain projects for the plantation of the district with
settlers from England, with the result that in 1613 he formed
by charter a new county, to be called the County of Londonderry,
and to comprise all the old County of Coleraine, part of
the County of The Governor of the Irish Society must be an Alderman of the City of London. The Recorder of London is ex-officio a member of the Society, and the twenty-four Assistants are Aldermen or Common Councillors of the city. The Society divided the agricultural land among twelve great London companies - the Grocers, Merchant Tailors, Drapers, Vintners, Goldsmiths, etc., some of whom sub-divided portions of their shares with the smaller companies so that some 40 London companies were concerned with the plantation of the county. But the Irish Society retained in their own hands the towns of Londonderry and Coleraine and the valuable fisheries on the Foyle and Bann, which they hold to this day. They are the ground landlords of these towns, they own the Walls of Derry, and they visit and inspect their property every year . The building of a city here was no easy task and proceeded slowly. The Walls, happily preserved entire, were completed by 1619 at a cost of £8,357. In 1628 the Irish Society reported that 265 houses had been built. In 1633 S. Columb's Cathedral was completed. In 1641 the country was again in a state of warfare and bloodshed. The city was crowded with refugees. From these and from the inhabitants seven regiments were formed, which kept the enemy at a distance and preserved the country around from the massacres which occurred in other northern counties. In 1649 the city suffered from a siege lasting twenty weeks, being held by Sir Charles Coote for the Parliament, and besieged by Lord Montgomery of the Ardes and General Robert Stewart, leaders of the Royal Forces. Coote hired Owen Roe O'Neill to come to his assistance and compelled the besieging forces to withdraw. In
1688 the Earl of Tyrconnel sent over to England to support
the cause of King James II. the best troops then in Ireland,
among the number, those who garrisoned Derry. Lord Antrim
was ordered to occupy the city with his regiment, but was
delayed by the difficulty of getting sufficient recruits.
Meanwhile the citizens were alarmed by rumours of an impending
massacre, similar to that of 1641.When Lord Antrim's regiment
arrived on December 7th, and was being ferried across the
river, two officers entered the city, demanding admission
and billets for the troops. There was a hot debate in the
Corporation; and considerable delay ensued. The soldiers,
waiting outside, were becoming impatient, when the young
men of the city took the matter into their own hands, overpowered
the guards, locked the gates, and threatened to fire on
the advancing soldiers which caused them hastily to retreat.
After this daring exploit, the citizens took stock, they
found their cannon ill-mounted and without ammunition, they
had only 300 men within the city who had ever borne arms,
and they had few weapons for those who had experience of
war; however, they set to work to repair the fortifications
and to procure what arms, ammunition and assistance they
could. On the 18th of April, 1689, King James and his army
invested the city. James fled, when having advanced contrary
to the terms of an armistice, a cannon fired from the Cathedral
Tower killed an officer and several men near him. Then commenced
what Lord Macaulay terms "the most memorable siege
in the annals of the British Isles." To his history
we must refer those wishing to learn the particulars of
that heroic defence which has made the city famous. The
siege lasted 105 days, 7,000 persons perished within the
walls, and the defenders were reduced to the last extremities
of starvation. On the 28th of July three relieving ships
with the Dartmouth, a man-of-war, entered the river at Culmore,
the Mountjoy leading. An immense boom of floating beams
roped together was cut by the crew of the longboat of the
Swallow, the Mountjoy, striking the severed boom, ran ashore
and was subjected to heavy fire from the forts at each end
of the boom, her commander, Industries. Situation Antiquities The building contains many striking memorials, including the padlocks and keys of the City Gates, locked in the face of King James's soldiers in 1688, and the staves and portions of silk off banners, taken from the French by Colonel Michelburne at the Battle of Windmill Hill, May 6th, 1689. The bells in the tower are of great antiquity, one recast for the Cathedral in 1614, one in 1630, and five of them having been given by King Charles I. in 1638. In 1929 the old peal of eight bells was recast, and five new bells added by the Hon. the Irish Society and others, and in 1933 magnificent entrance gates were presented by the same Society. Just outside the city on the Moville Road, in the garden at Belmont, is St. Columb's stone, which has the sculptured impression of two feet, and is possibly the inauguration stone of the ancient Kings of Aileach. Modern
Buildings. St. Eugene's Cathedral is a very fine Gothic building, dedicated in 1873. It has a beautiful spire, a very sweet Carillion of Bells, and an east window of splendid proportions, 54 feet in height and 23 in breadth. Magee College is an admirably equipped and most flourishing centre of education for those pursuing a University career. Foyle College has a notable record of famous past pupils, among them Lord Lawrence, Sir Henry Lawrence, Sir Robert Montgomery, of Indian Mutiny fame. The Craigavon Bridge, over the Foyle. is by far the largest and finest bridge in Northern Ireland, being 1,200 feet long. It cost over £250,000, and was opened in state by the Lord Mayor of London on July 18th, 1933. Londonderry has long been a garrison city, and now has a spacious and up-to-date barracks. Sport
and Recreation.
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