Coleraine
Coleraine is a town and civil parish near the mouth of the River Bann in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland, of which it is the county town. It is north-west of Belfast and east of Derry, both of which are linked by major roads and railway connections. It is part of Causeway Coast and Glens district. Coleraine had a population of 24,483 people in the 2021 census.
Geography
Coleraine is at the lowest bridgeable point of the River Bann, where the river is wide. The town square is called 'The Diamond' and is the location of Coleraine Town Hall. The three bridges in Coleraine are the Sandelford Bridge, Coleraine Bridge and the Bann Bridge.The town has a large catchment area and is designated as a "major growth area" in the Northern Ireland Development Strategy.
History
Neolithic period
Coleraine has some of the oldest evidence of human settlement in Ireland. Mount Sandel dates from approximately 5935 BC. The Iron Age souterrain and Ogham Stone and be found just southwest of Coleraine at Dunalis.Early Middle Ages
The 9th Century hagiography, Tripartite Life of Saint Patrick, records how the town got its name. When Patrick arrived in the neighbourhood, he was received with great honour and hospitality by the local chieftain, Nadslua, who offered him a piece of ground on which to build a church. The spot was next to the river Bann and was overgrown with ferns, which were being burned by some boys to amuse themselves. This incident led to the area being called Cúil Raithin, which was later anglicised as Coulrath, Colrain, Colerain and Coleraine. It was translated by Colgan into Latin as Secessus Filicis.The town's main Church of Ireland church, St. Patrick's Church, is named in reference to this history. It was heavily remodelled by the architect Sir Thomas Drew in the 1880s.
Ulster Plantation
The town was one of the two urban communities developed by the London Companies in County Londonderry in the Plantation of Ulster at the start of the 17th century. In particular, The Honourable the Irish Society was made responsible for much of Coleraine and it remains so today.The slightly skewed street pattern of Coleraine's town centre is the legacy of that early exercise in town planning, along with traces of the lines of the ramparts that provided the Plantation town with its defences.
War of the Two Kings (1689–91)
During the War of the Two Kings Coleraine was a centre of Protestant resistance to the rule of James II. Richard Hamilton's Irish Army made an attempt to seize the town but was repulsed. The Protestants were forced to abandon the town shortly afterwards and withdrew to Derry.Later the same year, following the failed Siege of Derry, Sir Charles Carney and his Jacobite garrison fled the town on receiving news of the advance of Percy Kirke's Enniskillen forces and the landing at Carrickfergus of Marshal Schomberg. The Williamites controlled Coleraine for the remainder of the war.
Industrial Era
With some industrialisation, the expansion of the river port, and the development of the railway, the town expanded throughout the 19th century.The population doubled due to a number of factors: major industrial development on extensive suburban sites, including a substantial distillery producing Coleraine Whiskey; the expansion of commerce; and the development of sporting and recreational facilities.
World Wars & the 20th Century
The town sent soldiers to both world wars. The town's population then expanded significantly after the Second World War.In 1968 the New University of Ulster opened in the town and became a major employer. The university also attracted students to the area.
There has been a steady expansion of the urban area from the mid-20th-century compact town of less than, to the present much more dispersed area of about. Since 1980s growth has continued but at a slightly more modest pace. In the twenty years to 2001 the town's population increased by 22% to approximately 25,000 but the rate of increase fell from 12% in the 1980s to 8% in the 1990s.
The Troubles
Pre-1998 Belfast Agreement
During The Troubles 11 people were killed in or near Coleraine prior to 1998.- On 12 June 1973, the Provisional Irish Republican Army detonated a car bomb on Railway Road, with inadequate warning. Six Protestant civilians, all in their sixties and seventies, were killed.
- The second most fatal incident occurred on 2 October 1975 when four members of the Ulster Volunteer Force were killed when their own bomb went off as they travelled through Farrenlester near Coleraine.
- Danny Cassidy, a Sinn Féin electoral worker, was shot dead by the Ulster Freedom Fighters in April 1992.
Post-1998 Belfast Agreement
- In 2001 John Henry McCormick, who was believed to be Catholic, was killed by loyalist paramilitaries in his home. His partner and children were in the house on the Ballysally estate.
- In 2002 a teenager with no paramilitary connections was killed when he picked up a pipe bomb in the Heights estate in the town.
- In 2009 Kevin McDaid, a Catholic community worker, was killed by a loyalist mob in the Heights estate on the Somerset Drive road, a mixed area with tri-colour flags. His wife Evelyn and neighbor Damien were also attacked, along with a pregnant woman who had pleaded with the attackers.
- In 2021, the Police Service of Northern Ireland announced it had set up a special task force due to the rise in paramilitary shootings in the town.
- In 2023, a man in his 30s was shot four times after being hooded and taken out of the town in a planned attack by a gang of masked men.
- In 2024, the Police Service of Northern Ireland appealed for information after shots were fired at a house in the Ballysally estate.
Economy
There are widespread concerns that the high street in Coleraine has seen a steady decline in shops closing.
Historically a number of products were made in the town, such as Coleraine Cheddar and Coleraine Whiskey. However, over the years the production of these goods has moved out of the town:
- Coleraine Cheddar is now made in Portadown;
- Coleraine Whiskey, now made by Irish Distillers in Cork.
Transport
The railway station was closed for goods traffic on 4 January 1965.
Demography
Coleraine has a population of approximately 25,000 people, making it a relatively small town within the official classification of a 'large town'.According to the Causeway Coast & Glens Borough Council, the area is the second poorest in Northern Ireland both in terms of relative poverty and absolute poverty. Northern Ireland itself is one of the poorest countries in Europe, therefore Coleraine being one of the poorest parts of NI means many people in the area face substantial deprivation.
Coleraine is home to one of the largest Polish communities in Northern Ireland.
2021 census
On Census day there were 24,483 people living in Coleraine. Of these:- 18.78% were aged under 16, 63.25% were aged between 16 and 65, and 17.97% were aged 66 and over.
- 51.88% of the usually resident population were female and 48.11% were male.
- 61.72% are or were brought up Protestant, 24.38% are or were brought up Catholic, 1.33% are or were brought up in an 'other' religion, and 12.57% did not adhere to or weren't brought up in any religion.
- 61.91% indicated they had a British national identity, 36.74% indicated they had a Northern Irish national identity, 11.17% indicated they had an Irish national identity, and 8.35% indicated they had an 'other' national identity.
- 15.65% had some knowledge of Ulster Scots and 4.44% had some knowledge of Irish.
Religion
- St. Patrick's, Church of Ireland
- St. Andrew's, Church of Ireland
- Killowen Parish, Church of Ireland
- St. John's
- St. Malachy's
- 1st Coleraine Presbyterian
- Hazelbank Presbyterian Church
- Terrace Row
- New Row
- Ballysally Presbyterian Church
- Coleraine Free Presbyterian Church
- Coleraine Methodist Church
- Coleraine Baptist Church
- Elim Pentecostal Church Coleraine
- RCCG KGG
- Coleraine Congregational Church
- Church Of Christ
- Causeway Coast Vineyard
- North West Fellowship Church
- Mountsandel Fellowship Church
- Coleraine Seventh-day Adventist Church
Culture
Loyalism
Coleraine has a broadly loyalist culture, and contains an Orange Hall and several marching bands:- Coleraine and Casterton Pipes and drums
- Coleraine Fife and Drum Band
- Pride Of The Bann
Farming & country