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Islandmagee
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Islandmagee (from Irish Oileán Mhic Aodha, meaning 'Magee’s island/peninsula')[1] is a peninsula and civil parish on the east coast of County Antrim, Northern Ireland, located between the towns of Larne and Whitehead. It is part of the Mid and East Antrim Borough Council area and is a sparsely populated rural community with a history since the Mesolithic period. The population is approximately 2,500 (excluding the village of Whitehead).[citation needed] In the early medieval period it was known as Semne, a petty-kingdom within Ulaid.
Key Information
It is the site of Northern Ireland's main power station Ballylumford and the endpoint of the Scotland-Northern Ireland gas pipeline.
History
[edit]The name comes from Mac Aodha (Magee) a prominent Irish family in the area. An earlier Irish name was Rinn Seimhne (peninsula of (the district of) Seimhne) from an original tribal name.[1] The Bissett family held the tenancy of the peninsula in Elizabeth I's reign (1558 - 1603), their rent being an annual offering of goshawks, birds which bred on the rugged white chalk cliffs nearby.
In November 1641, roughly a month after the outbreak of the Irish Rebellion of 1641, a number of Catholic civilians living in Islandmagee were killed by troops from the nearby garrison at Carrickfergus. Despite claims by an anonymous 17th-century author that the dead amounted to "above 3,000 men women and children",[2] the true figure is now thought to have been two dozen.[3] This is alleged to be the first massacre to take place during the rebellion and the War of the Three Kingdoms.[4]
In 1711, the Islandmagee witch trial resulted in eight women being convicted of witchcraft and sentenced to a year's imprisonment. The last such trial to take place in Ireland, it is hoped to include these in a new historical tour.[5] A local councillor objected it would be a 'shrine to paganism'.[6] Others have said it should go ahead. One historian citing "It's a dark event in our history - but it happened. People are fascinated by what happened at the Islandmagee witch trials, and the council could get a lot more tourism value from their interest".[7]
Archaeology
[edit]- Islandmagee is the home of the Ballylumford Dolmen. Known locally as the "Druid's Altar", this megalithic monument could date to 2500 BC (The Early Bronze Age), or be the remains of an earlier Neolithic simple passage tomb dating to c. 4000 BC. It consists of four upright stones, with a heavy capstone and a fallenstone within the structure. The fallenstone may have been put there to block the entrance to the tomb.[8]
- Neolithic houses have been excavated at Ballyharry, on the Islandmagee peninsula.[9] Finds included Neolithic pottery, flint arrowheads, javelin heads, polished stone axe fragments and quernstones.[10]
- Dinosaur remains were found in the area in the 19th century and in the 20th century. These were the first find of dinosaur fossil bones ever found in Ireland.[11]
Gas storage project
[edit]The gas storage project, owned by famous ship building firm Harland & Wolff, will consist of seven caverns storing up to 500 million cubic meters of gas and is the only one in North West Europe to have 'Project of Common Interest' status from the European Union.[12] The facility is expected to provide 25% of the UK's gas capacity when it is completed.[13]
The project has been the subject of objections, citing "concerns of harm to dolphins, porpoise and whales". This caused the Environment Agency to extend the response time for consultation.[14][15] In January 2022, the group "No Gas Caverns Islandmagee" confirmed that they have mounted a legal challenge against the project.[16][17]
Sport
[edit]- Islandmagee F.C. plays in the Northern Amateur Football League. Their home is Wilbourne Park and Michael Moore is the current manager.
Civil parish of Island Magee
[edit]The peninsula is part of the parish of Island Magee. The boundaries of the parish and the peninsula match.
Townlands
[edit]The civil parish contains the following townlands:[18]
Notable people
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Island Magee". Place Names NI. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- ^ John Gibney, ‘What about Islandmagee?’ Another version of the 1641 rebellion (History Ireland, 2013)
- ^ McGee, Owen (2014). "Interpreting Islandmagee". History Ireland. 22 (3). Retrieved 24 May 2022.
- ^ "Interpreting Islandmagee". History Ireland. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Gobbins tour guides 'not ordered to avoid witch trials'". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Gobbins tour guides 'not ordered to avoid witch trials'". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Gobbins tour guides 'not ordered to avoid witch trials'". Belfast Telegraph. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
- ^ "Ballylumford Dolmen". Discover Northern Ireland. Retrieved 5 December 2007.[permanent dead link]
- ^ O'Sullivan, Aidan; Breen, Colin (2007). Maritime Ireland. An Archaeology of Coastal Communities. Stroud: Tempus. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-7524-2509-2.
- ^ "Investigations at Ballyharry Farm, Ballyharry, County Antrim" (PDF). Centre for Archaeological Fieldwork. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 5 December 2009.
- ^ "Dinosaur bones discovered in Ireland for the first time in history". The Irish Post. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Isandmagee Energy- About Us". Isandmagee Energy. 21 August 2021. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
- ^ Preston, Allan (13 August 2021). "Former naval chief joins board of Harland & Wolff owners". The Belfast Telegraph. London.
- ^ "Extension for responses to consultation on Islandmagee Gas Storage Project". The Irish News. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ "Islandmagee gas cavern project raises fears over wildlife impact". Belfast Live. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
- ^ MacDara, Conroy. "Campaigners to Mount Legal Challenge Over Approval for Islandmagee Gas Project". Afloat.ie. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ Corr, Shauna. "No Gas Caverns Islandmagee intend legal action against Edwin Poots over Harland & Wolff gas project near Game of Thrones filming site". Belfast Live. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
- ^ "Islandmagee". IreAtlas Townlands Database. Retrieved 4 May 2015.
- "Your Area: Islandmagee". Culture Northern Ireland. Archived from the original on 9 June 2008. Retrieved 28 December 2009.
External links
[edit]Islandmagee
View on GrokipediaGeography
Location and Topography
Islandmagee is a peninsula on the east coast of County Antrim, Northern Ireland, extending northward into the North Channel of the Irish Sea.[8] It lies between the towns of Larne to the north and Whitehead to the south, with its base connecting to the mainland just north of Carrickfergus.[8] The peninsula measures approximately 6 miles in length and 2 to 3 miles in width, forming a narrow strip of land.[9] The topography of Islandmagee features a rugged coastal landscape with dramatic basalt cliffs rising up to 60 meters in height along parts of its eastern shore, particularly evident in areas like the Gobbins.[10] Inland, the terrain consists of gently rolling fields and low hills, with an average elevation of about 23 meters above sea level.[11] The western side borders Lough Larne, a sheltered inlet, while the eastern coastline includes sandy beaches, coves, and headlands exposed to the open sea.[12] This configuration contributes to a varied microclimate, with the peninsula's exposure to Atlantic weather systems influencing local erosion patterns and supporting diverse coastal habitats.[1] The underlying geology of Antrim basalt, formed from volcanic activity millions of years ago, shapes the steep cliffs and columnar formations visible along the shore.[2]Geology
The geology of Islandmagee is characterized by a stratigraphic sequence of Mesozoic sedimentary rocks overlain by Palaeogene flood basalts of the Antrim Lava Group, with notable exposures along the eastern coastline revealing complex structural relationships between these units.[13] Sedimentary strata range from Triassic to Cretaceous age, including the Jurassic Waterloo Mudstone Formation, Cretaceous chalk formations such as the Glenarm Chalk Member and White Limestone Formation, and siltstone members like the Island Magee Siltstone Member, which serves as a reference locality.[14] [15] These sediments exhibit faulting and landslipping, particularly at sites like Cloghfin Port, where Triassic to Cretaceous rocks are exposed.[16] Palaeogene igneous activity dominates the surface geology, with thick basalt lavas forming dramatic cliffs up to 60 meters high along the east coast, including at The Gobbins, where columnar jointing is prominent.[17] [18] Intrusions associated with these basalts have caused contact metamorphism in underlying chalk, producing skarn mineral assemblages with andradite and magnetite near Portmuck, first documented in the mid-20th century.[19] Faulted contacts between marls, limestones, and basalts are evident at Brown's Bay, sometimes incorporating blocks of basalt, chalk, and flint suggestive of vent agglomerates.[13] Subsurface geology includes Permian evaporite formations, such as the Belfast Harbour Evaporite Formation, which underlie the basalt and have been targeted for salt cavern development in gas storage projects, with drilling logs indicating strata extending back over 250 million years.[20] [21] Geophysical surveys, including gravity and electrical resistivity tomography, confirm the basalt thickness and deeper sedimentary layers, aiding in understanding the regional stratigraphy north of Belfast.[22]History
Prehistory and Archaeology
Excavations in the Ballyharry townland have revealed evidence of Neolithic settlement, with two well-preserved houses dating to between 4000 and 2501 BC.[23] The first house featured a subrectangular post-constructed structure with three internal chambers, later rebuilt as a rectangular building incorporating wall trenches, plank walls, and an adjacent wattle-and-daub animal pen; signs of deliberate burning, including burnt-tipped arrowheads, suggest possible conflict, while artifacts in post-holes indicate ritual offerings.[24] The second house was partially excavated, showing similar post-and-trench construction.[24] Associated finds include over 2500 fragments of undecorated Neolithic pottery, lithic tools such as scrapers, knives, and arrowheads, porcellanite axes, an ard point, and quern stones evidencing agriculture and food processing; materials from Great Langdale in Cumbria point to long-distance exchange networks.[24] Bronze Age activity is represented by the Ballylumford Dolmen, a single-chambered portal tomb located near the northwest tip of the peninsula, constructed around 2000–1600 BC.[25] The structure consists of four upright orthostats supporting a large capstone, with a fallen stone possibly serving as an entrance blocker; it stands as a State Care Historic Monument amid evidence of broader Bronze Age occupation in the area.[25] A mound at Kilcoan Gardens, surveyed in 2018, is interpreted as a potential prehistoric ring barrow, a form associated with burials from the Neolithic through Iron Age, situated on the western slope of the peninsula's central ridge in the townland of Kilcoan Beg.[26] The site features a possible disturbed circular ditch and lies within a landscape rich in Neolithic and Bronze Age remains, warranting further geophysical or excavation-based investigation despite modern disturbances like tree planting.[26] Additional scatters of flint tools and burnt mounds attest to localized prehistoric resource use, though systematic surveys remain limited.Early Settlement to 17th Century
The peninsula of Islandmagee, anciently termed Rinn Seimhne (the point or peninsula of Seimhne), derived its early name from the Seimhne, an ancient population group associated with the east Ulster region within the kingdom of Ulaid during the early medieval period.[27] Control of the territory fell to the Mac Aodha (Magee) sept, a Gaelic Irish kin-group originating from the Uí Tuirtre, who established dominance there by the late first millennium and imparted the modern name Oileán Mhic Aodha, signifying "the island/peninsula of the Magee."[28] This family served as hereditary stewards (erenaghs) of local ecclesiastical lands, reflecting the integration of secular and early Christian authority in Gaelic society.[29] In the mid-13th century, the Bissett family—Anglo-Norman settlers from Scotland—secured a lease on Islandmagee as part of their broader territorial acquisitions in northeast County Antrim, including the Glens and Route, under grants from Henry III.[30] The Bissetts exploited the area's strategic coastal position for trade and falconry, with goshawks from the cliffs serving as a notable resource. Their hold persisted into the late medieval era but eroded amid Gaelic resurgence and incursions by mercenary warbands. By the close of the 14th century, the MacDonnell clan, Scottish Gallowglasses initially invited as mercenaries, displaced the Bissetts through military conquest and intermarriage, incorporating Islandmagee into their Antrim lordship.[31] The MacDonnells, under figures like Sorley Boy MacDonnell, fortified regional control against Tudor incursions, blending Scottish feudalism with Gaelic customs until the late 16th century.[32] The 17th century brought administrative consolidation and violent upheaval. In 1638, the fragmented parishes of Islandmagee—previously divided among multiple ecclesiastical units—were unified under the Church of Ireland, streamlining governance amid growing Protestant influence.[33] The Irish Rebellion of 1641, sparked by Sir Phelim O'Neill's uprising on October 23, triggered retaliatory atrocities; English and Scottish settlers from nearby Carrickfergus raided Islandmagee, massacring unarmed Irish civilians in a spasm of ethnic reprisal, though exact casualty figures remain undocumented and contested in scale.[34] This episode, occurring amid the broader Ulster Plantation's private settlements in Antrim (exempt from the official 1609 scheme but shaped by earlier MacDonnell-led Scots influxes), accelerated the displacement of native Gaelic elements and entrenched Protestant settler demographics by century's end.[35]Witch Trials of 1711
The Witch Trials of 1711 in Islandmagee arose from allegations of witchcraft leveled against local residents by Mary Dunbar, an 18-year-old woman from Castlereagh who had relocated to the area in late 1710 to assist her aunt, Ann Haltridge. Haltridge died in February 1711 following reported supernatural disturbances, including hauntings by a demonic figure. Dunbar soon exhibited severe symptoms, including convulsions, vomiting of unnatural objects such as pins and feathers, spectral visions of tormentors, and claims of levitation, which she attributed to bewitchment by eight Presbyterian women of Scots descent from Islandmagee and nearby areas. These accusations echoed contemporary beliefs in demonic possession prevalent in Presbyterian communities influenced by Scottish traditions, where witchcraft was viewed as a literal pact with Satan supported by biblical precedents.[6][36][37] The trials commenced under Ireland's Witchcraft Act of 1586, which criminalized consultations with or practices of witchcraft but prescribed punishments short of mandatory execution, unlike harsher Scottish laws. On 31 March 1711, during the Spring Assizes at Carrickfergus County Court, the eight women faced indictment for bewitching Dunbar; evidence included her testimony of apparitions and physical manifestations, corroborated by witnesses and examinations deeming her affliction supernatural rather than medical. The accused maintained their innocence, but the jury convicted them based on the spectral and testimonial claims. A ninth individual, William Sellor—a man related to two of the women—was accused subsequently and tried in September 1711 during the Summer Assizes in Carrickfergus, amid ongoing scrutiny of the case's evidentiary basis, which relied heavily on Dunbar's declarations without corroborative physical proof beyond her symptoms.[6][37][36] The eight women received sentences of one year's imprisonment and four public pilloryings, reflecting the Act's penalties for proven witchcraft without capital punishment. Sellor was also convicted, though records indicate he may have faced execution, potentially marking one of the rare lethal outcomes under Irish law; Dunbar's death prior to his full proceedings possibly influenced the final disposition. These events represented Ireland's final mass witchcraft prosecutions, occurring in a tight-knit community of about 300 Scots-Presbyterian inhabitants on the Islandmagee peninsula, where fears of maleficium—harmful magic—persisted despite Enlightenment skepticism elsewhere in the British Isles. Primary trial documents, including indictments and testimonies, preserve the proceedings but highlight reliance on uncorroborated possession narratives, underscoring the role of communal panic in sustaining such beliefs into the early 18th century.[6][37][36]19th and 20th Century Developments
In the 19th century, Islandmagee functioned primarily as a rural agricultural community, with many residents working as small-scale farmers or laborers on modest holdings, reflecting broader patterns of subsistence farming in coastal Antrim.[38] Maritime activities also played a role, as the peninsula's location along Larne Lough supported fishing and seafaring, contributing to a tradition of skilled sailors emerging from the area.[2] Geological exploration added to scholarly interest, with fossil bones unearthed in the late 19th century near the coast, later analyzed and confirmed in the 20th century as the first dinosaur remains identified from Ireland, including specimens from a basal thyreophoran ornithischian and an indeterminate neotheropod.[39][40] The early 20th century marked a shift toward tourism and infrastructure, highlighted by the construction of the Gobbins Cliff Path along the peninsula's dramatic basalt cliffs. Engineered by Berkeley Deane Wise, the path—featuring iron bridges, tunnels blasted through rock, and suspended walkways—was built starting in 1901 by the Belfast and Northern Counties Railway Company to attract visitors, opening its initial section in August 1902 as an Edwardian-era marvel drawing thousands annually for its perilous views over the Irish Sea.[41][42] This development boosted local access and economy through railway-linked excursions, though the path fell into disrepair and closed after World War II, remaining inaccessible until restoration efforts in the 21st century.[17] Maritime heritage persisted, with Islandmagee supplying master mariners who served in global ports, underscoring the area's seafaring legacy into the interwar period.[2] Mid-20th-century changes included the establishment of Islandmagee New Cemetery in 1925, serving the growing need for burial facilities amid stable rural populations.[2] Further paleontological work in the 1980s by local collector Roger Byrne yielded additional Jurassic-era bones from the same coastal strata, reinforcing Islandmagee's significance in Irish natural history upon their formal identification in 2020.[43][44] Overall, the period saw limited industrialization compared to urban Antrim centers, with the economy anchored in agriculture, fishing, and transient tourism, punctuated by infrastructural and scientific milestones.[45]Demographics and Administration
Population Trends
The population of Islandmagee, encompassing its civil parish and modern electoral ward boundaries, peaked in the early 19th century before experiencing decline associated with the Great Famine and emigration patterns common to rural Ulster areas. The 1841 census recorded 2,782 inhabitants in the parish.[31] By the 1851 census, this had fallen to 2,704, reflecting a loss of approximately 3% amid widespread agricultural distress and overseas migration.[31] [46] Subsequent censuses indicate continued gradual reduction through the late 19th and early 20th centuries, consistent with depopulation in coastal parishes dependent on fishing and subsistence farming. The 1901 census enumerated 2,429 residents.[47] This trend stabilized post-independence and amid mid-20th-century economic shifts, with limited industrialization limiting influxes seen in urbanizing regions.| Census Year | Population | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1841 | 2,782 | Parish total; pre-Famine peak.[31] |
| 1851 | 2,704 | Post-Famine decline.[31] |
| 1901 | 2,429 | Continued rural depopulation.[47] |
| 2011 | 2,568 | Ward level; modest recovery.[48] |
| 2021 | 2,554 | Stable, with 1,031 households in 2011 rising slightly amid low-density settlement.[49][48] |
Civil Parish and Governance
Islandmagee forms a civil parish in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, located within the historic barony of Belfast Lower and the province of Ulster.[50][51] The parish historically aligned with the Poor Law Union of Larne for administrative purposes such as poor relief and vital records.[50] It comprises 25 townlands spanning approximately 28.9 km², serving as a unit for genealogical and land records rather than active local decision-making.[52][53] In modern local governance, Islandmagee is administered by the Mid and East Antrim Borough Council, established under Northern Ireland's 2014 local government reforms that consolidated 26 districts into 11 unitary authorities responsible for services including housing, environmental health, and recreation.[54] The area corresponds to the Islandmagee electoral ward within this council, which elects representatives via proportional representation in multi-member districts.[55] This structure devolves powers from central government while maintaining oversight from the Northern Ireland Assembly and UK Parliament, with Islandmagee voters participating in council, Assembly, and Westminster elections.[54] Civil parishes like Islandmagee retain utility for mapping townlands and historical boundaries but hold no independent governance authority, subsumed into district-level administration since the 19th-century reforms under the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898, which introduced rural and urban districts.[50] The Mid and East Antrim Council, headquartered in Ballymena, coordinates with statutory bodies for regional planning, ensuring alignment with County Antrim's broader administrative framework under the UK sovereign state.[55]Settlements and Townlands
Major Communities
Islandmagee exhibits a predominantly rural character with settlements dispersed across its 25 townlands spanning 28.9 km².[52] The peninsula lacks large towns, featuring instead small villages and hamlets that function as local hubs for agriculture, fishing, and residential life. Ballystrudder, a townland in the northern portion, represents one of the primary clustered communities, encompassing residential properties amid farmland.[56] Mullaghboy, situated in the northeast near coastal paths, is a quiet village known for its proximity to natural attractions like Portmuck Harbour, supporting limited local amenities and scenic walks.[12] Portmuck, a coastal townland at the peninsula's tip, includes a historic harbour developed for limestone export and fishing, with remnants of a coastguard station and pier contributing to its role as a maritime outpost.[51] These communities reflect the area's historical self-sufficiency, with 19th-century records indicating a total parish population of 2,610 inhabitants engaged in linen production, weaving, and coastal trade.[51]Townland List and Characteristics
The civil parish of Islandmagee consists of 25 townlands spanning 7,145.6 acres of primarily rural terrain. These divisions reflect traditional Irish land units used for administrative, taxation, and local identification purposes since medieval times. The townlands exhibit characteristics typical of a coastal peninsula, including fertile soils supporting agriculture and pastoral farming, interspersed with rocky shorelines, basalt cliffs, and small bays that have historically facilitated fishing and trade. Inland townlands emphasize arable land and livestock rearing, while coastal ones feature natural harbors and exposure to North Channel winds, contributing to scenic landscapes and occasional erosion challenges.[52] The townlands, listed alphabetically with Irish names where attested, are:- Balloo (Baile Lugha)
- Ballycronan Beg
- Ballycronan More
- Ballydown
- Ballyharry
- Ballykeel
- Ballylumford (Baile an Longfoirt)
- Ballymoney (Baile Muine)
- Ballymuldrogh
- Ballyprior Beg
- Ballyprior More
- Ballystrudder (Baile Strudair)
- Ballytober
- Carnspindle
- Castletown
- Cloughfin
- Drumgurland
- Dundressan
- Gransha
- Kilcoan Beg
- Kilcoan More
- Mullaghboy
- Mullaghdoo
- Portmuck (Port Muc)
- Temple-Effin

