Downpatrick Courthouse | |
---|---|
Location | Downpatrick, County Down |
Coordinates | 54°19′44″N5°43′08″W / 54.3290°N 5.7190°W |
Built | 1735 |
Architectural style(s) | Neoclassical style |
Website | nidirect |
Listed Building – Grade B+ | |
Official name | Courthouse, English Street, Downpatrick |
Designated | 9 November 1976 |
Reference no. | HB 18/20/002 |
Downpatrick Courthouse is a judicial facility on English Street, Downpatrick, County Down, Northern Ireland. The courthouse, which served as the headquarters of Down County Council from 1878 to 1973, is a Grade B+ listed building. [1]
The site currently occupied by the courthouse is thought to have been previously occupied by St John the Evangelist's Priory, sometimes referred to as "the Monastery of the Irish", which was established by Saint Malachy in the 12th century. [2]
The current building, which was designed by Hugh Darling of Dublin in the Neoclassical style, was completed in 1735. [3] It was substantially rebuilt to the designs of the county surveyor, Henry Smyth, after a major fire in 1855. [4] The design involved a symmetrical main frontage of nine bays facing onto English Street; the central section of three bays, which slightly projected forwards, featured a single-storey porch with a round headed window at the front, doorways on each side and urns on the top; there were sash windows on the first floor and there was a carving depicting the Royal coat of arms flanked by two figures, carved in lead, depicting Justice and Ceres, on the parapet. [3] A tunnel was built from courthouse to the basement of the town gaol (now part of Down High School), about 130 yards (120 m) to the north, in 1857. [5]
The building was originally used as a facility for dispensing justice but, following the implementation of the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898, which established county councils in every county, it also became the meeting place for Down County Council. [6] [7] The county council continued to use the courthouse as its headquarters until the county council was abolished in 1973. [8] In an incident in May 2003, two men being held at the courthouse overpowered a policeman and escaped from the building: [9] both men were subsequently re-arrested. [10]
In May 2012 the justice minister, David Ford, said that he accepted an inspection report recommending that the Downpatrick Courthouse should close in a proposed rationalisation of the court system. [4] [11] In October 2017, it was the venue for the premier of a play, "Lives in Translation", written by the Irish playwright, Rosemary Jenkinson, about a woman, Asha, who was seeking political asylum after fleeing from conflict in Africa. [12]
Downpatrick is a town in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is on the Lecale peninsula, about 21 mi (34 km) south of Belfast. In the Middle Ages, it was the capital of the Dál Fiatach, the main ruling dynasty of Ulaid. Its cathedral is said to be the burial place of Saint Patrick. Today, it is the county town of Down and the joint headquarters of Newry, Mourne and Down District Council. Downpatrick had a population of 11,545 according to the 2021 Census.
County Down is one of the six counties of Northern Ireland, one of the nine counties of Ulster and one of the traditional thirty-two counties of Ireland. It covers an area of 961 sq mi (2,490 km2) and has a population of 552,261. It borders County Antrim to the north, the Irish Sea to the east, County Armagh to the west, and County Louth across Carlingford Lough to the southwest.
Ardglass is a coastal fishing village, townland and civil parish in County Down, Northern Ireland, in the historic barony of Lecale Lower. It is still a relatively important fishing harbour. It is situated on the B1 Ardglass to Downpatrick road, about 6 miles to the south east of Downpatrick, in the Lecale peninsula on the Irish Sea. It had a population of 1,668 in the 2001 Census, and is located within the Newry, Mourne and Down area.
The Downpatrick and County Down Railway (DCDR) is a 5 foot, 3 inch (1,600 mm) gauge heritage railway in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is operated by volunteers and runs passenger trains using steam and diesel locomotives, diesel railcars, and vintage carriages. The railway has approximately three miles (4.8 km) of track in a triangular-shaped layout, which connects the town of Downpatrick with the historical sites of Inch Abbey to the north and King Magnus’ Grave to the south. It also houses a museum of railway artefacts and rolling stock originating from both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, dating from the 1860s to the 1980s.
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