Laurelvale: Difference between revisions

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Created page with '{{Infobox town |name=Laurelvale |county=Armagh |picture= |picture caption= |os grid ref=J0047 |LG district=Armagh }} '''Laurelvale''' is a village in County Armagh. {{stub}}'
 
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{{Infobox town
{{Infobox town
|name=Laurelvale
|county=Armagh
|county=Armagh
|picture=
|irish= Tamhnaigh Bhealtaine<ref name="pdi1">[http://www.logainm.ie/136051.aspx Placenames Database of Ireland: Laurelvale]</ref>
|picture caption=
|picture=Mullavilly Parish (Cof I) - geograph.org.uk - 1180439.jpg     
|os grid ref=J0047
|picture caption=Mullavilly parish church
|LG district=Armagh
|latitude=54.36876
|longitude=-6.45139
|population = 1,284
|census year=2001
|os grid ref= J006478
|post town=Craigavon
|postcode= BT62
|dialling code=028
|constituency=Newry & Armagh
}}
}}
'''Laurelvale''' is a village in [[County Armagh]].
'''Laurelvale''' is a village in [[County Armagh]]. It is beside the smaller village of '''Mullavilly''' and the two are sometimes referred to as Laurelvale-Mullavilly<ref>[http://www.portadowntimes.co.uk/news/local-news/roads-service-to-deliver-new-traffic-calming-measures-for-laurelvale-1-1648981 "Roads Service to deliver new traffic calming measures for Laurelvale"]. ''Portadown Times'', 21 December 2007.</ref><ref>[http://www.doeni.gov.uk/index/information/foi/recent-releases/publications-details.htm?docid=461 Armagh Area Plan 2004 Adoption Statement 1995]. Department of the Environment (Northern Ireland).</ref> or Mullavilly-Laurelvale.<ref>[http://www.portadowntimes.co.uk/news/local-news/roundabout-on-way-at-laurelvale-accident-hot-spot-1-1653077 "Roundabout on way at Laurelvale accident hot-spot"]. ''Portadown Times'', 2 December 2008.</ref><ref>[http://mullavilly.armagh.anglican.org/Mullavilly%20News%20-%20Sept%202010.pdf ''Mullavilly News'', September 2010 issue].</ref> The village is three miles south of [[Portadown]] and 1½ miles north-west of [[Tandragee]].<ref>[http://www.freemaptools.com/measure-distance.htm Free Map Tools]</ref> It had a population of 1,284 people in the 2011 Census.<ref name=Cen>{{cite web|title=Laurelvale-Mulavilly|url=http://www.nisra.gov.uk/census/2011/results/settlements.html|website=Census 2011 Results|publisher=NI Statistics and Research Agency|accessdate=22 April 2015}}</ref>


{{stub}}
==Name==
Laurelvale is within the [[townland]] of Tamnaghvelton. The name was taken from the name of a mansion that was built in the 19th Century. Mullavilly was named after the townland in which it lies. The name comes from the Irish ''Mullach a' Bhile'', meaning "hilltop of the sacred tree".<ref>[http://www.placenamesni.org/resultdetails.php?entry=11600 Placenames NI: Mullavilly]</ref><ref name="pdi2">[http://www.logainm.ie/56744.aspx Placenames Database of Ireland: Mullavilly]</ref>
 
==History==
Laurelvale was founded in the 1850s by Thomas Sinton JP (1826–1887) to house the workers in his linen mill of ''Thomas Sinton & Co. Ltd'', which was in the village.  At its height, Sintons' Mill had over a thousand workers. The mill has since been demolished. The company remained in family ownership until 1945 when it was taken over by the Ministry of Defence and operated by ''Hoffmans'' (who made ball bearings for gun turrets). The Sinton family also ran mills and bleach-works in [[Tandragee]], [[Killyleagh]], [[Tullylish]] and at Ravarnet outside [[Hillsborough, County Down]].
Thomas Sinton also built a large house in the village, ''Laurelvale House'', which, following the Second World War, was the home of Michael Torrens-Spence, Lord Lieutenant of County Armagh. ''Laurelvale House'' has since been demolished to make way for housing development.
 
==Churches==
* Mullavilly Parish Church
* St Mary's Roman Catholic Church (Laurelvale)
 
==Sport==
Laurelvale F.C. has a ground in the Laurel Park area of the village. Laurelvale Cricket Club has a clubhouse on Mullavilly Road.
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
==Further Reading==
*''Mullavilly - Portrait of an Ulster Parish'', by Brett Hannam, Lulu, 2010.
 
==Outside links==
*[http://www.laurelvalefc.co.uk/ Laurelvale Football Club]
*[http://www.lnisc.co.uk/ Laurelvale Northern Ireland Supporters Club]
*[http://www.sinton-family-trees.com/ft_main.php?rin=202 Thomas Sinton Genealogy]
*[http://www.sinton-family-trees.com/headstones/all-names.php?id=21 Headstone Inscriptions at St Mary's Roman Catholic Church]

Latest revision as of 18:26, 10 November 2015

Laurelvale
Irish: Tamhnaigh Bhealtaine[1]
County Armagh

Mullavilly parish church
Location
Grid reference: J006478
Location: 54°22’8"N, 6°27’5"W
Data
Population: 1,284  (2001)
Post town: Craigavon
Postcode: BT62
Dialling code: 028
Local Government
Parliamentary
constituency:
Newry & Armagh

Laurelvale is a village in County Armagh. It is beside the smaller village of Mullavilly and the two are sometimes referred to as Laurelvale-Mullavilly[2][3] or Mullavilly-Laurelvale.[4][5] The village is three miles south of Portadown and 1½ miles north-west of Tandragee.[6] It had a population of 1,284 people in the 2011 Census.[7]

Name

Laurelvale is within the townland of Tamnaghvelton. The name was taken from the name of a mansion that was built in the 19th Century. Mullavilly was named after the townland in which it lies. The name comes from the Irish Mullach a' Bhile, meaning "hilltop of the sacred tree".[8][9]

History

Laurelvale was founded in the 1850s by Thomas Sinton JP (1826–1887) to house the workers in his linen mill of Thomas Sinton & Co. Ltd, which was in the village. At its height, Sintons' Mill had over a thousand workers. The mill has since been demolished. The company remained in family ownership until 1945 when it was taken over by the Ministry of Defence and operated by Hoffmans (who made ball bearings for gun turrets). The Sinton family also ran mills and bleach-works in Tandragee, Killyleagh, Tullylish and at Ravarnet outside Hillsborough, County Down. Thomas Sinton also built a large house in the village, Laurelvale House, which, following the Second World War, was the home of Michael Torrens-Spence, Lord Lieutenant of County Armagh. Laurelvale House has since been demolished to make way for housing development.

Churches

  • Mullavilly Parish Church
  • St Mary's Roman Catholic Church (Laurelvale)

Sport

Laurelvale F.C. has a ground in the Laurel Park area of the village. Laurelvale Cricket Club has a clubhouse on Mullavilly Road.

References

Further Reading

  • Mullavilly - Portrait of an Ulster Parish, by Brett Hannam, Lulu, 2010.

Outside links