1870 – Belfast Castle, Co. Antrim
The Chichesters (later the Donegalls) lived in England as absentee landlords but came to live at Ormeau at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
The Chichesters (later the Donegalls) lived in England as absentee landlords but came to live at Ormeau at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
From The Builder, April 9, 1870: “The works for the new municipal buildings Belfast Ireland are being energetically forward;
Small country house on what was then outside of Belfast for James Craig, father of the future Lord Craigavon.
Still standing and largely intact today, the gates to the Milltown Cemetery were completed shortly after it opened.
Recently renovated, the hall is now the main accommodation for Masonic Lodges in the City of Belfast.
Erected in the early 1870s, it was one of the largest Presbyterian churches in all of Ulster.
Now part of the Merchant Hotel along with the former Ulster Bank headquarters next to it.
“The villa which is the subject of our illustration in this number, is to be erected for Mr.
Constructed at the junction of Queen and Mill Streets, demolished in 1915. The arcaded shops were the home of Lennon’s Catholic Repository.
On the corner of Glenravel and Clifton Streets in Belfast, and constructed as a Eye, Ear, and Throat hospital, but known after its benefactors George and Edward Benn.
Map is being rolled out, not all buildings are mapped yet - shows location of buildings on this page.