Derry or
Londonderry ( ) often called the Maiden
City, (a reference to its walls remaining unbreached during
the Siege of Derry in 1689) is a city in Northern
Ireland
. It is the second largest city in Northern
Ireland
and the fourth largest city on the island of
Ireland
. The old walled
city of Londonderry lies on the west bank of the River Foyle
with the location of old Derry on the east bank,
the present city now covers both banks (Cityside to the
west and Waterside to the east) and
the river is spanned by two bridges.
The city district also extends to rural areas to the southeast of
the city. The population of the city proper (the area defined by
its 17th century charter) was 83,652 in the 2001 Census, while the
Derry Urban Area had a population
of 90,663.
The wider Derry City Council
area had a population of 107,300 as of June
2006. The district is administered by Derry City
Council
and contains both Londonderry Port and City of Derry
Airport
.
The
Greater Derry area, that area within about of the city, has a
population of 237,000 and comprises the Derry City Council area,
the Borough of Limavady
, the
District of Strabane (excluding the Castlederg area), and parts of
North-East Donegal in the Republic of Ireland
, namely Inishowen
, Letterkenny
, the Finn Valley (which
includes Ballybofey/Stranorlar and Lifford
) and The
Laggan district (which includes Raphoe
and St. Johnston
).
The City
of Derry is situated close to the border with County Donegal
in the Republic of Ireland
. The city has had a very close association
with County
Donegal
for many centuries. The person traditionally
seen as the 'founder' of the original Derry is
St. Columba (also known as Colm Cille or St.
Columb), a holy man and royal prince from
Tír Chonaill, the old name for almost all
of modern County Donegal (of which the west bank of the Foyle was a
part before c. 1600).
Derry and the nearby town of Letterkenny
form the major economic core of northwest
Ireland.
Name
According to the city's
Royal Charter
of
10 April 1662 the
official name is
Londonderry. This was reaffirmed
in a High Court decision in January 2007 when Derry City Council
sought guidance on the procedure for effecting a name change. The
council had changed its name in 1984, the court case was seeking
clarification as to whether this had also changed the name of the
city. The decision of the court was that it had not but it was
clarified that the correct procedure to do so was via a petition to
the
Privy Council. Derry City Council
have since started this process and are currently involved in
conducting an equality impact assessment report.
Despite the official name, the city is more usually known as simply
Derry, which is an
anglicisation of the old Irish
Daire,
which in modern Irish is spelt
Doire, and translates as
'
Oak-grove'. The name derives from the
settlement's earliest references,
Daire Calgaich ('oakwood
of Calgach'). The name was changed from Derry in 1613 during the
Plantation of Ulster to reflect
the establishment of the city by the London guilds.
The name "Derry" is preferred by
nationalists and it is broadly used
throughout Northern Ireland's Catholic community, as well as that
of the Republic of Ireland, whereas many
unionists prefer "Londonderry"; however
in everyday conversation Derry is also used frequently by
Protestants. Apart from this local government decision, official
use within the UK the city is usually known as Londonderry. In the
Republic of Ireland, the city and county are almost always referred
to as Derry, on maps, in the media and in conversation. In April
2009, however, the Republic of Ireland's Minister for Foreign
Affairs,
Micheál Martin,
announced that Irish passport holders who were born there could
record either Derry or Londonderry as their place of birth. Whereas
official road signs in the Republic use the name
Derry,
those in Northern Ireland bear
Londonderry (sometimes
abbreviated to
L'Derry), although some of these have been
defaced with the reference to
London obscured. Usage
varies among local organisations, with both names being used.
Examples
are City of Derry
Airport
, City of Derry
Rugby Club, Derry City FC and the
Protestant Apprentice Boys of
Derry, as opposed to Londonderry
Port and Londonderry Chamber Of Commerce. The council
changed the name of the local government district covering the city
to Derry on 7 May 1984, consequently renaming itself Derry City
Council. This did not change the name of the city, although the
city is coterminous with the district, and in law the city council
is also the "Corporation of Londonderry" or, more formally, the
"Mayor, Aldermen and Citizens of the City of Londonderry". The form
"Londonderry" is used for the
post town by
the
Royal Mail, however use of Derry will
still ensure delivery.
The city is also nicknamed the Maiden City by virtue of the fact
that its walls were never penetrated during the
siege of Derry in the late 17th century. It
is also nicknamed '
Stroke City'
by local broadcaster,
Gerry
Anderson, due to the 'politically correct' use of the oblique
notation Derry/Londonderry. A recent addition to the landscape has
been the erection of several large stone columns on main roads into
the city welcoming drivers, euphemistically, to "the walled
city."
The name Derry is very much in popular use throughout Ireland for
the naming of places, and indeed there are at least 6 towns bearing
that name and at least a further 79 places. The word Derry often
forms part of the place name, for example Derrymore, Derrybeg and
Derrylea
[1023].
The name Derry/Londonderry is not limited to Ireland. There is a
town called Derry situated right beside another town called
Londonderry in New Hampshire in the United States of America. There
are also Londonderrys in Yorkshire, England, in Vermont, USA, in
Nova Scotia, Canada, and in northern and eastern Australia.
Londonderry Island is situated off the Tierra Del Fuego in
Chile.
Derry is also a fictional town
in Maine used in some Stephen King novels.
City walls
Derry is
the only remaining completely intact walled city in Ireland
and one of
the finest examples of a walled city in Europe. The walls
constitute the largest monument in State care in Northern Ireland
and, as the last walled city tobe built in Europe, stands as the
most complete and spectacular.
The Walls were built during the period 1613-1618 by
The Honourable The Irish
Society as defences for early 17th century settlers from
England and Scotland. The Walls, which are approximately
1 mile (1.5 km) in circumference and which vary in height
and width between 12 and 35 feet (4 to 12 metres), are completely
intact and form a walkway around the inner city. They provide a
unique promenade to view the layout of the original town which
still preserves its Renaissance style street plan. The four
original gates to the Walled City are Bishop’s Gate, Ferryquay
Gate, Butcher Gate and Shipquay Gate to which three further gates
were added later, Magazine Gate, Castle Gate and New Gate, making
seven gates in total. Historic buildings within the walls include
the 1633 Gothic cathedral of St Columb, the Apprentice Boys
Memorial Hall and the courthouse.
It is one of the few cities in Europe that never saw its
fortifications breached, withstanding several sieges including one
in 1689 which lasted 105 days, hence the city's nickname, The
Maiden City.
History
The city has long been a focal point for important events in
Irish history, including the
1688-1689
siege of Derry and
Bloody Sunday on 30 January 1972.
Early history
Derry is one of the oldest continuously inhabited places in
Ireland.
The earliest historical references date to
the 6th century when a monastery was
founded there by St. Columba or Colmcille, a
famous saint from what is now County Donegal
, but for thousands of years before that people had
been living in the vicinity.
Before leaving Ireland to spread
Christianity elsewhere, Columba founded a
monastery in the then Doire Calgach, on
the east side of the Foyle. According to oral and documented
history, the site was granted to Columba by a local king. The
monastery then remained in the hands of the federation of Columban
churches who regarded Colmcille as their spiritual mentor. The year
546 is often referred to as the date that the original settlement
was founded. However it is accepted that this was an erroneous date
assigned by medieval chroniclers. It is accepted that between the
6th century and the 11th century, Derry was known primarily as a
monastic settlement.
The town became strategically more significant during the Tudor
conquest of Ireland and came under frequent attack, until in 1608
it was destroyed by
Cahir O'Doherty,
Irish chieftain of Inishowen.
Plantation
Planters organised by London
livery
companies through
The Honourable The Irish
Society arrived in the 1600s as part of the
plantation of Ulster, and built the
city of
Londonderry across the Foyle from the earlier
town, with walls to defend it from Irish insurgents who did not
welcome the occupation. The aim was to settle Ulster with a
population supportive of the Crown.
This Derry was the first
planned city
in Ireland: it was begun in 1613, with the walls being completed 5
years later in 1618. The central diamond within a walled city with
four gates was thought to be a good design for defence. The grid
pattern chosen was subsequently much copied in the colonies of
British North America. The charter initially defined the city as
extending three
Irish miles (about
6.1 km) from the centre.
The modern city preserves the 17th century layout of four main
streets radiating from a central Diamond to four
gateways — Bishop's Gate, Ferryquay Gate, Shipquay Gate
and Butcher's Gate.
The city's oldest surviving building was
also constructed at this time: the 1633 Plantation Gothic cathedral of
St Columb
. In the porch of the cathedral is the
inscription:
17th century upheavals
During the 1640s, the city suffered in the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms, which
began with the
Irish Rebellion
of 1641, when the Gaelic Irish insurgents made a failed attack
on the city. In 1649 the city and its garrison, which supported the
republican Parliament in London, were besieged by
Scottish
Presbyterian forces loyal to
King
Charles I. The
Parliamentarians besieged in Derry were relieved by a strange
alliance of
Roundhead troops under
George Monck and the Irish Catholic
general
Owen Roe O'Neill. These
temporary allies were soon fighting each other again however, after
the landing in Ireland of the
New Model
Army in 1649.
The war in Ulster was finally brought to an
end when the Parliamentarians crushed the Irish Catholic Ulster
army at the battle of
Scarrifholis in nearby Donegal
in 1650.
During
the Glorious Revolution, only
Londonderry and nearby Enniskillen
had a Protestant garrison by November 1688.
An army of around 1,200 men, mostly "
Redshanks" (
Highlanders), under Alexander Macdonnell,
3rd Earl of Antrim, was slowly organised (they set out on the week
William of Orange landed in England). When they arrived on 7
December 1688 the gates were closed against them and the
Siege of Derry began. In April 1689, King
James came to the city and summoned it to surrender. The King was
rebuffed and the siege lasted until the end of July with the
arrival of a relief ship.
18th and 19th centuries

The war memorial in The Diamond,
erected 1927
The city was rebuilt in the 18th century with many of its fine
Georgian style houses still
surviving. The city's first bridge across the River Foyle in 1790.
During the 18th and 19th centuries the port became an important
embarkation point for Irish emigrants setting out for North
America.
Some of these founded the colonies of
Derry and Londonderry in the state of
New
Hampshire
.
Also during the 19th century, it became a destination for migrants
fleeing areas more severely affected by the
Irish Potato Famine.
Partition
During the
Irish War of
Independence, the area was rocked by sectarian violence, partly
prompted by the guerilla war raging between the
Irish Republican Army and British
forces, but also influenced by economic and social pressures. In
July 1920 there was severe sectarian rioting in the city. Many
lives were lost and in addition many Catholics and Protestants were
expelled from their homes during this communal unrest. After a
week's violence, a truce was negotiated by local politicians on
both unionist and republican sides.
In 1921,
following the Anglo-Irish Treaty
and the partition of Ireland, it unexpectedly became a border city,
separated from much of its natural economic hinterland in County
Donegal
.
During the
Second World War the city
played an important part in the
Battle of the
Atlantic. Ships from the
Royal Navy,
the
Royal Canadian Navy, and
other Allied navies were stationed in the city and the United
States military established a base. The reason for such a high
degree of military and naval activity was self-evident: Derry was
the United Kingdom's westernmost port; indeed, the city was the
westernmost Allied port in Europe: thus, Derry was a crucial
jumping-off point, together with Glasgow and Liverpool, for the
shipping convoys that ran between Europe and North America. The
large numbers of military personnel in Derry substantially altered
the character of the city, bringing in some outside colour to the
local area, as well as some cosmopolitan and economic buoyancy
during these years. At the conclusion of the Second World War, some
19 U-boats of the German
Kriegsmarine
came into the city's harbour at
Lisahally
to offer their surrender.
Troubles

The Bogside area viewed from the
walls
Catholics
were discriminated against under
Unionist government in Northern Ireland
, both politically and economically. In the
late 1960s the city became the flashpoint of disputes about
institutional
gerrymandering.
Political scientist John Whyte explains that:
All the accusations of gerrymandering, practically all
the complaints about housing and regional policy, and a
disproportionate amount of the charges about public and private
employment come from this area. The area – which consisted of
Counties Tyrone and Fermanagh, Londonderry County Borough, and
portions of Counties Londonderry and Armagh - had less than a
quarter of the total population of Northern Ireland yet generated
not far short of three-quarters of the complaints of
discrimination...The unionist government must bear its share of
responsibility. It put through the original gerrymander which
underpinned so many of the subsequent malpractices, and then,
despite repeated protests, did nothing to stop those malpractices
continuing The most serious charge against the Northern Ireland
government is not that it was directly responsible for widespread
discrimination, but that it allowed discrimination on such a scale
over a substantial segment of Northern Ireland.
Civil rights demonstrations led by the
Northern
Ireland Civil Rights Association were declared illegal and then
suppressed by the
Royal Ulster
Constabulary and
Ulster
Special Constabulary.
The events that followed the August 1969
Apprentice Boys parade resulted in
the Battle of
the Bogside
, when Catholic rioters fought the police, leading
to widespread civil disorder in Northern Ireland and is often dated
as the starting point of the
Troubles.
On Sunday
January 30, 1972, 13 unarmed civilians were shot dead by British
paratroopers during a civil rights march in the Bogside
area. Another 13 were wounded and one
further man later died of his wounds. This event came to be known
as
Bloody
Sunday.
Violence eased towards the end of the Troubles in the late 1980s
and early 1990s. Irish journalist Ed Maloney claims in "The Secret
History of the IRA" that republican leaders there negotiated a
de facto ceasefire in the city as early as 1991. Whether
this is true or not, the city did see less bloodshed by this time
than Belfast or other localities.
The city
was famously visited by a killer whale in November 1977 at the
height of the troubles and was dubbed Dopey Dick
by the thousands who came from miles around to see
him.
Governance
The local
district council is Derry City Council
, which consists of five electoral areas: Cityside,
Northland, Rural, Shantallow and Waterside. The council of 30 members
is re-elected every four years, though the 2009 election is
expected to be postponed until 2011, when a new council for Derry
and Strabane is planned to replace existing councils . As of the
2005 election, 14
Social Democratic and Labour
Party (SDLP) members, ten
Sinn
Féin, five
Democratic
Unionist Party (DUP), and one
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) make up
the council. The mayor and deputy mayor are elected annually by
councillors, and SDLP councillor Gerard Diver's term as mayor began
in June 2008.
The local
authority boundaries correspond to the Foyle
constituency
of the Parliament of the United
Kingdom
and the Foyle constituency of the
Northern Ireland
Assembly. In European Parliament
elections, it is part of the Northern
Ireland constituency.
Coat of arms and motto

Derry's coat of arms
The
devices on the city's arms are a skeleton and a three-towered
castle on a black field, with the chief or top third of
the shield depicting the arms of the City of London
: a red cross and sword on white. In the
centre of the cross is a gold harp.The
blazon
of the arms is as follows:
Sable, a human skeleton Or seated upon a mossy stone proper and
in dexter chief a castle triple towered argent on a chief also
argent a cross gules thereon a harp or and in the first quarter a
sword erect gules
According
to documents in the College of Arms
in London and the Office of the Chief Herald
of Ireland in Dublin, the arms of the city were confirmed in
1613 by Daniel Molyneux, Ulster King
of Arms. The College of Arms document states that the
original arms of the City of Derry were
ye picture of death (or
a skeleton) on a moissy stone & in ye dexter point a
castle and that upon grant of a charter of incorporation and
the renaming of the city as Londonderry in that year the first
mayor had requested the addition of a "chief of London".
Theories have been advanced as to the meaning of the "old" arms of
Derry, before the addition of the chief bearing the arms of the
City of London:
- A
suggestion has been made that the castle is related to an early
14th century castle in nearby Greencastle
belonging to the Anglo-Norman Earl of Ulster Richard de Burgh.
- The most popular theory about the skeleton is that it is that
of a Norman De Burgh knight who was starved
to death in the castle dungeons in 1332 on the orders of his cousin
the above mentioned Earl of Ulster.
Another explanation put forward was that it depicted Cahir O'Doherty (Sir Charles O'Dogherty),
who was put to death after Derry was invested by the English army
in 1608. During the days of Gerrymandering and discrimination against the
Catholic population of Derry, Derry's Roman Catholics often used to
claim in dark wit that the skeleton was a local waiting for help
from the council bureaucracy.
In 1979, Londonderry City Council, as it was then known,
commissioned a report into the city's arms and insignia, as part of
the design process for an
heraldic
badge. The published report found that there was no basis for
any of the popular explanations for the skeleton and that it was
"purely symbolic and does not refer to any identifiable
person".
The 1613 records of the arms depicted a harp in the centre of the
cross, but this was omitted from later depictions of the city arms,
and in the
Letters Patent confirming
the arms to Londonderry Corporation in 1952. In 2002 Derry City
Council applied to the College of Arms to have the harp restored to
the city arms, and
Garter and
Norroy & Ulster Kings of
Arms accepted the seventeenth century evidence, issuing letters
patent to that effect in 2003.
The motto attached to the coat of arms reads in Latin, "Vita,
Veritas, Victoria". This translates into English as, "Life, Truth,
Victory".
Geography
Derry is characterised by its distinctively hilly topography.
The
River
Foyle
forms a deep valley as it flows through the city,
making Derry a place of very steep streets and sudden, startling
views. The original
walled city
of Londonderry lies on a hill on the west bank of the River Foyle.
In the past, the river branched and enclosed this wooded hill as an
island; over the centuries, however, the western branch of the
river dried up and became a low-lying and boggy district that is
now called the Bogside.
Today, modern Derry extends considerably north and west of the city
walls and east of the river. The half of the city the west of the
Foyle is known as the Cityside and the area east is called the
Waterside.
The Cityside and
Waterside are connected by the Craigavon Bridge
and Foyle
Bridge
. The district also extends into rural areas
to the southeast of the city.
This much larger city, however, remains characterised by the often
extremely steep hills that form much of its terrain on both sides
of the river. A notable exception to this lies on the north-eastern
edge of the city, on the shores of Lough Foyle, where large
expanses of sea and mudflats were reclaimed in the middle of the
nineteenth century. Today, these slob lands are protected from the
sea by miles of sea walls and dikes. The area is an internationally
important bird sanctuary.
Other important nature reserves lie at Ness Wood, east of Derry;
and at Prehen Wood, within the city's south-eastern suburbs.
Climate
Demography
Derry
Urban Area (DUA), including the city and the neighbouring
settlements of Culmore
, Newbuildings
and Strathfoyle
, is classified as a city by the Northern Ireland
Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) since its population exceeds
75,000. On census day (29 April 2001) there were 90,736
people living in
Derry Urban Area.
Of these, 27.0 percent were aged under 16 years and 13.4 percent
were aged 60 and over; 48.3 percent of the population were male and
51.7 percent were female; 77.8 percent were from a
Roman Catholic background and 20.8 percent
were from a
Protestant background; and
7.1 percent of people aged 16–74 were unemployed.
The
mid-2006 population estimate for the wider Derry City
Council
area was 107,300. Population growth in
2005/06 was driven by natural change, with net out-migration of
approximately 100 people.
The city was one of the few in Ireland to experience an increase in
population during the
Irish Potato
Famine as migrants came to it from other, more heavily affected
areas.
Protestant minority
Concerns have been raised by both communities over the increasingly
divided nature of the city. During the course of the Troubles, it
is estimated that as many as 15,000 Protestants moved from the city
side. Fewer than 500 Protestants are now living on the west bank of
the River Foyle, compared to 18,000 in 1969, with most on the
Fountain Estate and it is feared that the city could become
permanently divided.
However, concerted efforts have been made by local community,
church and political leaders from both traditions to redress the
problem. A conference to bring together key actors and promote
tolerance was held in October 2006. The Rt. Rev. Dr. Ken Good, the
Church of Ireland Bishop of Derry and Raphoe, said he was happy
living on the cityside. "I feel part of it. It is my city and I
want to encourage other Protestants to feel exactly the same", he
said.
Support for Protestants in the district has been strong from the
former SDLP city Mayor
Helen Quigley.
Cllr Quigley has made inclusion and tolerance key themes of her
mayoralty. The Mayor Helen Quigley said it is time for "everyone to
take a stand to stop the scourge of sectarian and other assaults in
the city." This referred to assaults on citizens from both
communities.
Economy
History
The economy of the district was based significantly on the textile
industry until relatively recently. For many years women were often
the sole wage earners working in the shirt factories while the men
predominantly in comparison had high levels of unemployment. This
led to significant male emigration.
The history of shirt making in the city
dates back as far as 1831 and is said to have been started by
William Scott and his family who first exported shirts to Glasgow
. Within 50 years, shirt making in the city
was the most prolific in the UK with garments being exported all
over the world. It was known so well that the industry received a
mention in
Das Kapital by
Karl Marx, when discussing the
factory system:
The industry reached its peak in the 1920s employing around 18,000
people. In modern times however the textile industry declined due
to in most part cheaper Asian wages.
A long-term foreign employer in the area is
Du
Pont, which has been based at Maydown since 1958, its first
European production facility. Originally
Neoprene was manufactured at Maydown and
subsequently followed by
Hypalon. More
recently
Lycra and
Kevlar production units were active. Thanks to a
healthy worldwide demand for Kevlar which is made at the plant, the
facility recently undertook a £40 million upgrade to expand its
global Kevlar production. Du Pont has stated that contributing
factors to its continued commitment to Maydown are "low labor
costs, excellent communications, and tariff-free, easy access to
the Britain and European continent."
Inward investment
In the last 15 years there has been a drive to increase inward
investment in the city, more recently concentrating on digital
industries. Currently the three largest private-sector employers
are American firms. Economic successes have included call centres
and a large investment by
Seagate, which has
operated a factory in the Springtown Industrial Estate since 1993.
Seagate currently employs over 1,000 people in the Springtown
premises, which produce more than half of the company's total
requirement for
hard drive read-write
heads.
A recent but controversial new employer in the area is
Raytheon, Raytheon Systems Limited, was established
in 1999, in the Ulster Science & Technology Park, Buncrana
Road. Although some of the local people welcomed the jobs boost
while others in the area objected to the jobs being provided by a
firm involved heavily in the
arms trade.
Following four years of protest by the Foyle Ethical Investment
Campaign, in 2004 Derry City Council passed a motion declaring the
district a "A 'No – Go' Area for the Arms Trade".
Significant multinational employers in the region include
Firstsource of India,
DuPont,
INVISTA, Stream International,
Seagate Technology, Perfecseal,
NTL,
Raytheon and
Northbrook Technology of the United
States, Arntz Belting and Invision Software of Germany, and
Homeloan Management of the UK. Major local business employers
include Desmonds, Northern Ireland's largest privately-owned
company, manufacturing and sourcing garments, E&I Engineering,
St. Brendan's Irish Cream Liqueur
and McCambridge Duffy, one of the largest insolvency practices in
the UK.
Even though the city provides cheap labour by standards in Western
Europe, critics have noted that the grants offered by the Northern
Ireland Industrial Development Board have helped land jobs for the
area that only last as long as the funding lasts. This was
reflected in questions to the
Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Northern Ireland,
Richard Needham, in 1990. It was noted that
it cost £30,000 to create one job in an American firm in Northern
Ireland.
Critics
of investment decisions affecting the district often point to the
decision to build a new university building in nearby
(predominately Protestant) Coleraine
rather than developing the University of Ulster
Magee Campus. Another major
government decision affecting the city was the decision to create
the new town of Craigavon
outside Belfast, which again was detrimental to the
development of the city. Even in October 2005, there was
perceived bias against the comparatively impoverished North West of
the province, with a major civil service job contract going to
Belfast.
Mark Durkan, the
Social Democratic and Labour
Party (SDLP) leader and
Member
of Parliament (MP) for Foyle was quoted in the
Belfast
Telegraph as saying:
In July 2005, the Irish Minister for Finance,
Brian Cowen, called for a joint task force to
drive economic growth in the cross border region. This would have
implications for Counties Londonderry, Tyrone, and Donegal across
the border.
Shopping
The city
is the north west's foremost shopping district, housing two large
shopping centres along with numerous shop packed streets serving
much of the greater county, as well as Tyrone and Donegal
. While retail developments in Letterkenny
have lessened cross-border traffic from north
County Donegal, the weakness of the pound
sterling over the course of 2009 has made border towns such as
Derry attractive to shoppers from south of the border.
The city centre has two main shopping centres; the
Foyleside Shopping Centre which
has 45 stores and 1430 parking spaces, and the
Richmond Centre, which has 39 retail
units. The Quayside Shopping Centre also serves the city-side and
there is also Lisnagelvin Shopping Centre in the Waterside. These
centres, as well as local-run businesses, feature numerous national
and international stores. A recent addition was the Crescent Link
Retail Park located in the Waterside with many international chain
stores, including Homebase, Currys, Carpet Right, PC World, Argos
Extra, Toys R Us, Halfords, DW Sports (formerly JJB Sports), Pets
at Home, Tesco Express and M&S Simply Food . In the short space
of time that this site has been operational, it has quickly grown
to become the second largest retail park in Northern Ireland
(second only to Sprucefield in Lisburn).
The city
is also home to the world's oldest independent department store;
Austins
. Established in 1830, Austins predates
Jenners
of Edinburgh
by 5 years, Harrods
of London by 15 years and Macy's
of New York
by 25 years. The store's five-story
Edwardian building is located within the walled
city in the area known as The Diamond.
Landmarks
There is a distinct architectural quality compared with other Irish
cities. This quality can be primarily ascribed to the formal
planning of the historic walled city of Derry at the core of the
modern city. This is centred on the Diamond with a collection of
late
Georgian,
Victorian and
Edwardian buildings maintaining the
gridlines of the main thoroughfares (Shipquay Street, Ferryquay
Street, Butcher Street and Bishop Street) to the City Gates.
St Columb's
Cathedral
does not follow the grid pattern reinforcing its
civic status. This
Church of
Ireland Cathedral was the first post-
Reformation Cathedral built for an
Anglican church.
The construction of
the Roman Catholic St Eugene's
Cathedral
in the Bogside in the nineteenth-century was
another major architectural addition to the city. The more
recent infill buildings within the walls are of varying quality and
in many cases these were low quality hurriedly constructed
replacements for 1970s bomb damaged buildings. The Townscape
Heritage Initiative has funded restoration works to key listed
buildings and other older structures.
In the three centuries since their construction, the city walls
have been adapted to meet the needs of a changing city. The best
example of this adaptation is the insertion of three additional
gates — Castle Gate, New Gate and Magazine
Gate — into the walls in the course of the nineteenth
century. Today, the fortifications form a continuous promenade
around the city centre, complete with cannon, avenues of mature
trees and views across Derry. Historic buildings within the city
walls include St Augustine's Church, which sits on the city walls
close to the site of the original monastic settlement; the
copper-domed Austin's department store, which claims to the oldest
such store in the world; and the imposing Greek Revival Courthouse
on Bishop Street. The red-brick late-Victorian Guildhall, also
crowned by a copper dome, stands just beyond Shipquay Gate and
close to the river front.
There are
many museums and sites of interest in and around the city,
including the Foyle Valley Railway Centre, the Amelia Earhart Centre And Wildlife Sanctuary,
the Apprentice Boys
Memorial Hall, Ballyoan Cemetery,
The Bogside, numerous murals by the Bogside Artists, Derry Craft Village,
Free Derry Corner, O'Doherty Tower
(now home to part of the Tower Museum), the Guildhall, the Harbour
Museum, the Museum of Free Derry, Chapter House Museum, the
Workhouse Museum, the Nerve Centre, St.
Columb's Park and Leisure Centre, St Eugene's Cathedral
, Creggan Country
Park, The Millennium Forum
and the Foyle
and Craigavon
bridges.
Future projects include the Walled City Signature Project, which
intends to ensure that the city's walls become a world class
tourist experience.
The city has seen a large boost to its economy in the form of
tourism over the last few years. Cheap flights offered by budget
airlines have enticed many people to visit the city. Tourism mainly
focuses around the pubs, mainly those of Waterloo Street.
Other
attractions include museums, a vibrant shopping centre and trips to
the Giant's
Causeway
, which is approximately away.
Transport
The transport network is built out of a complex array of old and
modern roads and railways throughout the city and county.
The
city's road network also makes use of two bridges to cross the
River
Foyle
, the Craigavon Bridge
and the Foyle Bridge
, the longest bridge in Ireland. Derry also serves as
a major transport hub for travel throughout nearby County
Donegal
.
In spite of it being the second city of Northern Ireland (and it
being the second-largest city in all of
Ulster), road and rail links to other cities are
below par for its standing. Many business leaders claim that
government investment in the city and infrastructure has been badly
lacking. Some have stated that this is due to its outlying border
location whilst others have cited a
sectarian bias against the region west of the
River Bann due to its high proportion of
Catholics.
There is no direct motorway link with
Dublin
or Belfast
. The rail link to Belfast has been
downgraded over the years so that presently it is not a viable
alternative to the roads for industry to rely on. There are
currently plans for £1 billion worth of transport infrastructure
investment in and around the district.
Buses
Most public transport in Northern Ireland is operated by the
subsidiaries of
Translink. Originally the
city's internal bus network was run by
Ulsterbus, which still provides the city's
connections with other towns in Northern Ireland. The city's buses
are now run by
Ulsterbus Foyle, just
as
Translink Metro now provides the
bus service in Belfast. The Ulsterbus Foyle network offers 13
routes across the city into the suburban areas, excluding an
Easibus link which connects to the Waterside and Drumahoe, and a
free Rail Link Bus runs from the Waterside Railway Station to the
city centre. All buses leave from the Foyle Street Bus Station in
the city centre.
Long distance buses depart from Foyle Street Bus Station to
destinations throughout Ireland.
Buses are operated by both Ulsterbus and Bus
Éireann on cross-border routes and also by Lough Swilly buses to
Co.
Donegal
. There is a half-hourly service to Belfast
every day, called the Maiden City Flyer, which is
the Goldline Express flagship route. There are hourly
services to Strabane
, Omagh
, Coleraine
, Letterkenny
and Buncrana
, and eleven services a day to bring people to
Dublin
.
There is
a daily service to Sligo
, Galway
, Shannon
Airport
and Limerick
.
Railways
Northern Ireland Railways (N.I.R.)
has a single route from Londonderry railway station
(also known as Waterside Station) on the
Waterside to Belfast
via Bellarena
, Castlerock
, Coleraine
, Ballymoney
, Cullybackey
, Ballymena
, Antrim
, Mossley West and Whiteabbey
. The service, which had been allowed to
deteriorate in the 1990s, has since been boosted by increased
investment.
Currently, a plan has been put in place by
the Department for Regional Development, for relaying of the track
between Derry and Coleraine
by 2013, which will include a passing loop, and the
introduction of two new train sets. The £86 million plan
will reduce the journey time to Belfast by 30 minutes and allow
commuter trains to arrive before 9 a.m. for the first time.
However, many still do not use the train, due to the fact that at
over two hours it is slower centre-to-centre than the 100-minute
Ulsterbus Goldline Express service.
Railways history

Railways in Ireland, 1906.
At one
time, the city was served by four different systems which stretched
throughout Northern Ireland and County Donegal
and deep into southern Ireland. Indeed, for
a long time, Derry served as the main railway hub for County
Donegal.
At the turn of the last century, Clones
was one of
the major junctions from Derry, Omagh
, and
Belfast
to north Leinster, in particular, the major market
towns of Athlone
, Cavan
, and
Mullingar
. This back-bone rail infrastructure was
administered by Midland
Great Western Railway which also linked to other major centres
namely, Sligo
, Tullamore
, via Clara
, other
destinations such as Dublin
, Limerick
, and other market centres of the south
coast.
Construction of the standard gauge Londonderry and Enniskillen
Railway (L&ER) began in 1845 with the station on the City
side of the Foyle, and reached Strabane
in 1847. By 1852 it had extended to Newtownstewart
and Omagh
and its
terminus in Enniskillen
was reached in 1854. The company was
absorbed into the
Great
Northern Railway in 1883.
Road network
The road network has historically seen under-investment and has
lacked good road connections to both Belfast and Dublin for many
years.
Long overdue, the largest road investment in
the north west's history is now taking place in the district with
the construction of the 'A2 Broadbridge Maydown to City of Derry
Airport dualling' project and the announcement concerning the 'A6
Londonderry to Dungiven Dualling Scheme' which will help to reduce
the travel time to Belfast
. The latter project brings a
dual-carriageway link between Northern Ireland's two largest cities
one step closer. The project is costing £320 million and is
expected to be completed in 2016. In October 2006, the
Irish Government announced that it was to
invest
€1 billion in Northern Ireland; and one
of the planned projects will be 'The A5 Western Transport
Corridor', the complete upgrade of the A5
Derry-Omagh-Aughnacloy(-Dublin) road, around 90 km
(56 mi) long, to dual-carriageway standard.It is yet unknown
will these two separate projects interconnect at any point,
although there has been calls for some form of connection between
the two routes.In June 2008,
Conor
Murphy, Minister for Regional Development, announced that a
study looking into the feasibility of connecting the A5 and A6 will
occur. Should it proceed, the scheme would most likely run from
Drumahoe to South of Prehen along the South East of the City.
Air
City of Derry
Airport
, the council-owned airport near Eglinton
, has been growing in recent years with new
investment in extending the runway and plans to redevelop the
terminal. It is hoped that the new investment will add to
the airport's currently limited array of domestic and international
flights and reduce the annual subsidy of £3.5 million from the
local council.
Work has
just commenced to turn the A2
from Maydown to Eglinton and
the airport into a dual carriageway, with completion estimated by
2010. City of Derry airport is the main regional
airport for County
Donegal
, West Tyrone and the west of County Londonderry, as well as Derry City
itself.
There are
scheduled flights to Dublin
, London
Stansted
, Liverpool
, Glasgow Prestwick Airport
, Birmingham International
Airport
and Luton
all year
round with a summer schedule to Alicante
and summer charter flights to Majorca
and Barcelona
in Spain and Varna
in
Bulgaria.
Sea
Londonderry Port at
Lisahally is the United Kingdom's most westerly
port and has capacity for 30,000-ton vessels. Recently the
Londonderry Port and Harbour Commission has announced record
turnover, record profits and record tonnage figures for the year
ended March 2008. The excellent figures are as a result of a
significant capital expenditure programme for the period 2000 to
2007 of Circa £22 Million. Tonnage handled by
Londonderry Port and
Harbour Commissioners (LPHC) increased by almost 65 per cent
between 2000 and 2007, according to the latest annual results. The
port played a vital part for the Allies in World War II during the
war's longest running campaign, the
Battle of the
Atlantic, and saw the surrender of the German U-Boat fleet at
Lisahally on 8 May 1945.
Education

Derry is home to the
Magee Campus of the
University of Ulster, which was
formerly Magee College. However the Lockwood decision in the 1960s
to place Northern Ireland's 2nd University in Coleraine rather than
in Derry, despite the fact that Magee College (formerly part of
Trinity College Dublin) was already 100 years old, was a major
catalyst in the formation of the civil rights movement which
ultimately led to
The Troubles. In the
mid 1980's a half-hearted attempt was made at rectifying this
mistake by forming Magee College as a campus of the
University of Ulster but this has
failed to stifle calls for the establishment of an independent
University in Derry that can grow to it full potential. The campus
has never thrived and currently only has 3,500 students out of a
total
University of Ulster
student population of 27,000. Ironically, although Coleraine is
blamed by many in the city for 'stealing the University', it has
only 5,000 students, the remaining 19,000 being based in
Belfast.
The
North West
Regional College
is also based in the city. In recent years
it has grown to almost 30,000 students no doubt driven in part by
the lack of adequate local University places.
Secondary schools include St. Columb's College, Oakgrove
Integrated College
, St Cecilia's
College,St Mary's College,
St. Joseph's Boys' School,
Lisneal College, Foyle and
Londonderry College
, Thornhill
College, Lumen Christi
College and St. Brigid's
College. There are also numerous
primary schools.
Sports
The city is home to sports clubs and teams. Both
association football and
Gaelic football are popular in the area.
In
association football, the city's main team (in terms of supporters
) is Derry City who play in the
national league of the
Republic of
Ireland
. Also playing in the city are
Institute and
Oxford United Stars, of the
Irish League. In Gaelic football
Derry GAA are the county team and play in
the
Gaelic Athletic
Association's
National Football League,
Ulster Senior
Football Championship and
All-Ireland Senior
Football Championship. They also field
hurling teams in the equivalent tournaments. There
are many Gaelic games clubs in and around the city, for example
Na Magha CLG,
Steelstown GAC,
Doire Colmcille CLG,
Seán Dolans GAC, Na Piarsaigh CLG Doire
Trasna and
Slaughtmanus GAC.
In addition to the Derry City, Institute and Oxford United Stars,
who all play in national leagues, other clubs are based in the
city. The local football league is the
Derry and District League and
teams from the city and surrounding areas participate, including
Lincoln Courts,
Don Boscos and
Trojans, also North West teams like
BBOB (Boys Brigade Old Boys). The
Foyle
Cup youth soccer tournament is held annually in the city. It
has attracted many notable teams in the past, including
Werder Bremen,
IFK Göteborg and
Ferencváros.
There are many boxing clubs, the most well-known being
The Ring
Boxing Club, which is associated with
Charlie Nash and
John
Duddy, amongst others.
Rugby Union is also quite popular in the
city, with the
City of Derry
Rugby Club situated not far from the city centre. City of Derry
won both the Ulster Towns Cup and the Ulster Junior Cup in
2009.
Londonderry YMCA RFC is another rugby club
and is based in Drumahoe
which is just outside the city.
The city's only basketball club is
North Star Basketball Club which
has teams in the
Basketball
Northern Ireland senior and junior Leagues.
Culture
In recent years the city, and surrounding countryside, has become
well-known for its artistic legacy producing such talents as the
Nobel Prizewinning poet
Seamus Heaney,
the poet
Seamus Deane, the playwright
Brian Friel, the writer and music critic
Nik Cohn, the artist
Willie Doherty, the socio-political
commentator and activist
Eamonn McCann
as well as bands such as
The
Undertones. The large political gable-wall murals of
Bogside Artists,
Free Derry Corner, the Foyle Film
Festival, the Derry Walls, St Eugene's and St Columb's Cathedrals
and the annual Halloween street carnival are popular tourist
attractions.
Media
The local papers the
Derry
Journal (known as the
Londonderry Journal until
1880) and the
Londonderry
Sentinel reflect the divided history of the city: the
Journal was founded in 1772 and is Ireland's second oldest
newspaper; the
Sentinel newspaper was formed in 1829 when
new owners of the
Journal embraced
Catholic Emancipation, and the editor
left the paper to set up the
Sentinel. There are numerous
radio stations receivable: the largest stations based in the city
are
BBC Radio Foyle and the
commercial station
Q102.9. There is a locally
based television station,
C9TV, which is one of
only two local or 'restricted' television services in Northern
Ireland.
Night-life
The city's night-life is mainly centred on the weekend, with
several bars and clubs providing "student nights" during the
weekdays. Waterloo Street and the Strand Road are central to the
City's nightlife. Waterloo Street is a steep street lined with
various pubs, both Irish traditional and modern. Live rock and
traditional music can frequently be heard emanating from the
pub-doors and windows whilst walking up or down the street at
night. The city is renowned for producing talented musicians and
many bands perform in venues around the city, for example the
Smalltown America duo,
Fighting with Wire and
Jetplane Landing. Numerous other young
local and indeed international bands perform at the
Nerve Centre.
Events
- The "Banks of the Foyle Hallowe’en Carnival" (known in Irish as Féile na Samhna) in Derry are a huge
tourism boost for the city. The carnival is promoted as being the
first and longest running Halloween carnival in the whole of
Ireland, It is called the largest street party in Ireland by the
Londonderry Visitor and Convention Bureau with more than 30,000
ghoulish revellers taking to the streets annually.
- In March, the city hosts the Big Tickle Comedy Festival, which
in 2006 featured Dara Ó Briain
and Colin Murphy. In April
the city plays host to the City Of Derry Jazz And
Big Band Festival and in November the Foyle Film Festival, the
biggest film festival in Northern Ireland.
- Every summer the city hosts Tomo-Dachi, Ireland's largest Anime convention, which in July 2006 was
held at Magee College, University of Ulster.
- The Siege of Derry is
commemorated annually by the fraternal organisation the Apprentice Boys of Derry in the
week long Maiden City
Festival.
- The Instinct Festival is an annual youth festival celebrating
the Arts. It is held around Easter and has proven a success in
recent years.
- Celtronic is a major annual electronic dance festival held at
venues all around the city. The 2007 Festival featured the DJ,
Erol Alkan.
- The Millennium Forum is the
main theatre in the city, it holds numerous shows weekly.
- On 9 December 2007 Derry entered the Guinness Book of Records
when 13000 Santas gathered to break the world record beating
previous records held by Liverpool and Las Vegas.
- Winner of the 2005 Britain in
Bloom competition (City category). Runner-up 2009.
References in popular music
Notable people
Notable people who were born or have lived in Derry include:
See also
References
- DERRY REGIONAL CITY - Business Investment
Retrieved 2008-11-01
- Statistical Classification and Delineation of
Settlements - February 2005
- http://www.qub.ac.uk/cibr/WPpdffiles/MFWPpdf/w14_ac.pdf
-
http://www.discovernorthernireland.com/Greater-Derry-Interactive-Map-A1606
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/6213890.stm
-
http://www.derrycity.gov.uk/Press%20Releases/250107-name.htm
- Equality Impact AssessmentsDerry City Council
website
- Derry-born can choose city's name on passport. Available:
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2009/0409/1224244287427.html
- Change of District Name (Derry) Order 1984
- Sections 7, 8 and 132 of the Local Government Act (Northern
Ireland) 1972 (Eliz II 20 & 21 c.9)
-
http://www.brilliantireland.com/products/inc_productdetails.cfm/product_key/46
-
http://www.roughguides.com/website/Travel/Destination/content/default.aspx?titleid=160&xid=idh168000912_0583
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http://www.irelandwide.com/regional/ulster/county_derry/index.htm
- Historic Walls of DerryDiscover Northern
Ireland website
- Page 67 "Derry beyond the walls" by SDLP politician John
Hume
- Letters Patent certifying the arms of the City of Londonderry
issued to Derry City Council, sealed by Garter and Norroy and
Ulster Kings of Arms dated April 30, 2003
- Genealogical Office, Dublin: GO Ms 60, Sketches of arms by
Richard Carney, fol. 47
- College of Arms, London: The Arms of Peers of Ireland and
some Commoners, fol. 133d (c.1652)
- L E Rothwell, An inquiry initiated by Derry City Council
into the ensigns armourial and related matters of the City of
Londonderry
- Letters Patent ratifying and confirming the arms of the City of
Londonderry sealed by Garter and Norroy & Ulster Kings of Arms
dated April 28, 1952
-
http://www.austinsstore.com/Pages/about_us/austins_in_brief
- The Industry Website of the Northern Ireland Tourist Board.
Retrieved 10 September 2006.
-
http://roadimprovements.roadsni.gov.uk/index/schemes/broadbridge/a2_broadbridge_exhibition_panels_2.htm
-
http://roadimprovements.roadsni.gov.uk/index/schemes/londonderry-dungiven.htm
-
http://www.roadsni.gov.uk/contractadverts-details.htm?id=192&referrer=ContractListing.asp?type=Current
- A History of Magee CollegeUniversity of Ulster
website
- A history of Irish TheatreGoogle books]
- Northern Ireland during the
1960swww.irelandseye.com
- Derry needs big idea to get over
depressionIrish News website 2009-02-01
- University of
UlsterUniversity of Ulster website
- The North West Region Profile - Derry and
DonegalIreland Northwest website
- Ring
ABC
- The Ring abc Videos
- City
of Derry Rugby Club Official Website
- North Star Basketball Club Official Website
External links