PORTADOWN


'Portadown' () is a town in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It has an estimated population around 30,000 which is roughly three quarters unionist and one quarter nationalist. Portadown is situated on the River Bann, in the north of County Armagh. It is part of the Craigavon Borough Council area.
Portadown has a manufacturing sector that has grown beyond its roots in linen production to include carpet-weaving, baking and engineering. These industries all thrive against a backdrop of the traditional rural economy. For decades it has been the home of the Portadown Festival, which brings in thousands of participants in amateur dance, theatre, music and song.
Although the town can trace its origins to at least the 17th century it was not until the Victorian era, and the arrival of the railway that it became a major town. Portadown is known as "The Hub of the North", the origin of this phrase coming from its central position in Northern Ireland and being a major railway junction in the past, where the Great Northern Railway's line diverged for Belfast, Dublin, Armagh and Derry.

Contents
History
The Troubles
Places of interest
People
Education
Transport
Sport
References
See also
External links

History


Portadown was associated with the ancient and powerful local family of McCann who were among the area's earliest settlers. The town was the scene of an infamous massacre during the Irish Rebellion of 1641, when the Catholic insurgents killed around seventy of the Protestant townspeople on the bridge over the River Bann. The construction of the Newry Canal in 1740 and the later development of the railway lines to Belfast and Dublin, put Portadown at the hub of transport routes in Northern Ireland.
There are many companies that have been a part Portadown's history, one being W.D. Irwin & Sons Ltd Irwin's Bakery. Irwin's was established in 1912 by the grandfather (William David Irwin) of the existing joint managing directors, as a grocery retailer. W.D. Irwin's wife and sister-in-law were talented home-bakers, who began to bake cakes and bakery items for the shop. Soon additional bakers were employed to cope with the increasing trade, expanding the bakery out behind the shop. It moved to larger premises at Carn in 1994. The High Street Mall shopping centre currently stands in the place of the old bakery. Today Irwin's bakery is the largest independent bakery in Northern Ireland. Its bakery products are supplied to supermarket chains such as Sainsbury’s, Asda and Tesco, and other grocery chains, right down to small corner shops.
Portadown also boasts a large selection of academia. There are many primary and secondary schools in the area, and the town is home to one the the top Grammar Schools in Northern Ireland, Portadown College, which was opened in 1924.
The Troubles


★ For more information see The Troubles in Portadown, which includes a list of incidents in Portadown during the Troubles resulting in two or more fatalities.

★ Portadown is taking a stand against the Troubles with the Ulster Project. Catholic and Protestant teenagers from Portadown annually travel to Hutchinson, Kansas, in the Midwestern United States to participate in this project. These teenagers are charged with promoting peace amongst the sectarian troubles and violence facing their local communities.

Places of interest


With the establishment of the Millennium Court Arts Centre in 2002, the town has become improved since pre-Troubles times.

People



Victor Sloan: a photographer and artist who lives and works in Portadown. His works are a response to political, social and religious concerns.

Ryan Harpur: a young footballer currently with Everton F.C.

Colin Turkington: a successful young racing car driver who competes in the British Touring Car Championship.

Mary Peters, Olympic medalist.

Joyrider, a 1990s band.

Gloria Hunniford, a BBC television presenter.

Leigh Alderson , A young male ballet dancer, who left Portadown to train at The Royal Ballet School and going on to star in Scottish National Ballet and many BBC Documnetary Films about his life.

Adam Carroll , A young race driver currently competing in the formula one feeder series, GP2

Education



Ballyoran Primary School

Bocombra Primary School

Clounagh Junior High School

Derrycarne Primary School

Drumcree College

Edenderry Primary School

Hart Memorial Primary School

Killicomaine Junior High School

Millington Primary School

Portadiwn Independent Christian School

Portadown Integrated Primary School

Portadown Primary School

Portadown College

Presentation Primary School

Richmount Primary School

Seagoe Primary School

St. John the Baptist Primary School

St. John's Primary School

Upper Bann Institute of Further and Higher Education

Transport



Portadown railway station was opened on 12 September 1842 and closed to goods traffic on 4 January 1965.[1]

Sport



Annagh United

Portadown F.C.

References


1. Portadown


NI Conflict Archive on the Internet

Craigavon Museum

Culture Northern Ireland

See also



List of towns in Northern Ireland

List of villages in Northern Ireland

External links



PortadownNews.com (Local Political Satire) (decommissioned)

Dean Weir's Portadown Photo Pages (Images of Portadown)

Jim Lyttle's 'Photos and Features on Portadown from Past and Present' (Images of Portadown)

Portadown Directory 1910

Portadown Family History Society

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