| Down - Towns | |||
Towns display are H - K (26 - 30) |
Select from list: | ||
| 490. Helen's bay |
| Choose a subject. |
| Beaches , Bed & Breakfasts |
| 491. Hillsborough |
The village of Hillsborough 10 miles south of Belfast, is something of a showpiece. Many of the Georgian townhouses along the steep main street are craft and antique shops. Across the square with its charming market house, the mansion visible through a pair of magnificent wrought-iron gates is Hillsborough Castle, formerly the residence of the governor of Northern Ireland.
On the other side of the square, beyond an oval lawn, Hillsborough Fort was built by colonel Arthur Hill in 1650 to command the road from Dublin to Carrickfergus.
A prominent feature of the east and south approaches to Hillsborough is a 5-mile wall surrounding this lake and its adjoining forest.
|
| Choose a subject. |
| Angling , Bed & Breakfasts , Bus Hire / Services , Conference Centres , Craft Shops , Forts (Historical) , Heritage Centres , Homes (Historical) , Hotels , Lakes , Pubs , Restaurants , Town Information |
| 492. Hilltown |
| The many pubs of Hilltown eight in the high street are a legacy from eighteenth century smugglers who shared out their contraband here. The village has a livestock market on alternate Saturdays, a picturesque sheep fair and festival in early July and a large sale of rams in September. The Georgian market house opposite St John's parish church (1766) adjoins the old hostelry, the Downshire Arms. The weathervane on the pretty cupola is a fish, a reminder of the good fishing in the Bann and its tributaries. The forge at Katesbridge 10 miles downstream has a similar vane. |
| Choose a subject. |
| Angling , Bed & Breakfasts , Self Catering |
| 493. Holywood |
| The train from Belfast to Bangor stops here and there to deposit commuters in the evening, at Holywood for instance, which is bypassed by the main Belfast road. The clock tower of its old priory, dating from the thirteenth century, is floodlit at night. An abbey founded in woods here in AD620 by St Laiseran was connected with the larger Abbey at Bangor. |
| Choose a subject. |
| Bed & Breakfasts , Craft Centres , Golf , Guest Houses , Hostels , Hotels , Motte (Historical) , Museums , Pubs , Railway Museums , Restaurants , Specialist Food & Drink , Sports Centres , Taxi Services , Town Information |
| 494. Kilkeel |
The harbour at Kilkeel bustling country town with the province's largest fleet, is busiest during landings and at auction time when fish, including herring, are sold on the quay. There are fish-processing factories around the port, pleasure angling off the piers and miles of lobster pots along the coast. The town has winding streets, terraced shops and houses with stepped pavements, and a bend in the middle round the ruins of the Old Church, a fifteenth-century church with a sixth-century predecessor from which the town took its name - cill caol ('church at the narrows').
|
| Choose a subject. |
| Activity Centres , Angling , Beaches , Bed & Breakfasts , Camping & Caravaning , Churches (Historical) , Conference Centres , Craft Centres , Equestrian Sports , Festivals and Fairs , Gallery Graves , Genealogical Centres , Guest Houses , Harbours , Hotels , Library , Monuments , Mountaineering , Pitch & Putt , Self Catering , Sightseeing Tours , Taxi Services , Walks , Water Sports , Wildlife Parks |
|
|
Go Ireland |
Towns K - L (31 - 35)
|
Copyright Touchtel 1995 - 1998 |
||