Straid

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Straid
County Antrim
Cottage at Straid - geograph.org.uk - 636984.jpg
Straid
Location
Grid reference: J337918
Location: 54°45’22"N, 5°55’27"W
Data
Post town: Ballyclare
Postcode: BT39
Local Government
Council: Antrim and Newtownabbey

Straid is a modest village in County Antrim, about three miles east of Ballyclare, and about six miles inland of Carrickfergus. It stands at the centre of the townland of Straidlands, in the Barony of Belfast Lower.

The village has a congregational church, an Orange hall, and a primary school.

History

The village is of pre-Norman antiquity. There was an Iron Age ring-fort in the townland, which was destroyed at some time in the nineteenth century. Other pre-historic earthworks threatened by the expansion of the village.

The name of the village is an Anglicisation of the Irish Gaelic word Sraid, meaning "street", as it was originally just a street. The village has historically developed along Main Street, which contains many original buildings. In recent years development has been concentrated between Main Street and Irish Hill Road. Straid Primary School and Straid Congregational Church are in the village, the inscription on the church reads "Ebenezer, erected 1816, rebuilt and enlarged 1837" There is also a freemasons' hall.

The local river is called the Bryantang, meaning "the fairy-fort of the tongue."[1] This may refer to a fort which was located close to Straid Dam (Straid Fisheries) in the middle of Bryantang townland. A ringfort, or 'rath' here (one of many in the area) was noted in the 1839 Ordnance Survey Memoirs on the land of James Boyd, but by 1875 it was said to have been destroyed.

19th century

Straid was influenced by the 1859 Ulster Revival under the then-pastor James Bain. Tom Shaw writes: "The cockfighting pit, which had been a place for vice of the worst kind, became a preaching point where many were won to Christ. Public bars began to close, and profanity and drunkenness, which characterized many lives, were set aside as the Spirit of God moved through the community."[2] James Bain describes a typical revival Sabbath: "Our Sabbath services are continuous, from nine in the morning until ten at night. We are engaged from nine to twelve in prayer meetings for the young, from twelve to two in public service, from two to four in prayer meetings, from five to eight in the evening service, and finally in our evening prayer meeting. The evening services at the church became so well attended that the only suitable place to assemble was outdoors. At one of these evening gatherings, some of the new converts gave testimony, and Bain preached two sermons. The whole audience was gripped with a sense of intense spiritual anxiety. Numbers cried for mercy, and not a single soul departed from that scene until morning."[3] In June 1859 3000 people gathered for an open-air service in a field adjoining the village.[4]

In 1888, the vilage was described as follows:

STRAID is a village less than 2½ miles east of Ballyclare, in the barony of Lower Belfast. It had a population of 111 in 1881. Bauxite mines are worked in the immediate vicinity. From Straid Hill there is a fine view of the surrounding country. The land is good for dairying. Crops: potatoes, oats, and some flax. Straid is in the postal district of Ballyclare. Letters should be addressed, Straid, Ballyclare[5]

Although a small village, it gave the name "Straidlands" to the townland of the area. Dominating the village is the "Irish Hill" named after an army camp. A mining village for many years, there is an outcrop of bauxite or Aluminium ore in Irish hill. The woods at the top of the hill have a distinctive gap where a hurricane in the early 1920s blew down part of the forest.

In 2003 the village was expanded by 63 houses, creating a new housing estate at "village hill" - Irish Hill Road. For many years the only two shops in the village were a spirit grocer and Wilson’s shop and animal food stuffs. The spirit grocer (a precursor to the modern off licence) was shut when the only alcohol licence for the village was bought by the church to keep Straid "dry" - the nearest pub is slightly over a mile away in the neighbouring village of Ballynure. There was once an art gallery here, Straid Art Gallery, now closed.

Farming

One of the main crops that made the area rich was flax. Cattle are now a common sight in the area, as are sheep. Corn was ground in Straid Corn Mill which was built and operated by the Wilson family. In the 1860s there was also a kiln and flax mill on the site.[6]

To the east of the village towards Carrickfergus, an important part of local heritage was recently destroyed with the demolition of the old flax mill to make way for new housing. This caused some controversy at the time. A famous local group that reflects the agricultural background of the area is "Straid Young Farmers" club.

Fishing

One of the big attractions to the area is fishing - Straid Fishery is one of the top rainbow trout fisheries in Ulster. Based on Straid Dam, which was man-made around 1824 to supply the nearby cottonmill, there are three lakes: 20 acres, 2 acres and 5 acres. Fly fishing on the two lake is complimented by a small coarse lake.

Restrictions on future development

Sign to Straid

The Planning Service in Northern Ireland has listed the following key features which must be taken into account when developing the area of Straid:

The nineteenth century, formal, vernacular buildings in Main Street and the form of adjacent spaces; Straid House, an early nineteenth century two storey dwelling and shop with classical detailing, which stands at a bend in Main Street at the north end of the village, closing the vista from Seskin Road to form a village square; The Gothic inspired Straid Congregational Church (1816); The eighteenth century cottages located along Main Street, opposite the Church; and The cottages and two storey houses, along Seskin Avenue/Seskin Park, set in a mature landscape of gardens and rubble stone boundary walls.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Straid)

References

  1. Bryantang, County Antrim - Placenames NI
  2. Shaw, Tom. "The 1859 Revival in Northern Ireland". http://articles.ochristian.com/article2563.shtml. 
  3. Bain, James. Bain Minute Books. 
  4. "Ballymena Observer, 25th June 1859". 
  5. Bassett, George Henry: 'The Book of Antrim' (1888)
  6. "Valuation Books - PRONI". http://apps.proni.gov.uk/Val12B/Search.aspx.