Английская Википедия:Ballycraigy

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Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox settlement

Файл:Ballycraigy Bonfire - geograph.org.uk - 491803.jpg
Ballycraigy Bonfire Entrance to Ballycraigy housing estate in Antrim with the famed 11th of July bonfire ready to be lit.

Ballycraigy (Шаблон:Irish derived place name)[1] is a townland and housing estate in Antrim town, Northern Ireland.[2] According to the census for Ballycraigy ward the estate has approximately 865 residents.[3]

The Ballycraigy estate is almost wholly Protestant, and the estate is associated with Ulster loyalism. Ballycraigy has its own loyalist marching band, "Ballycraigy Sons of Ulster", with purple/lilac attire for their uniform. Every Eleventh of July, many Protestants celebrate by lighting a bonfire in the centre of the estate.[4] In 2007 there was a legal threat over the inclusion of hundreds of tyres in the bonfire with the fear that excessive toxic fumes would be emitted; however it was not possible to establish who had been involved in placing them there, and the bonfire was allowed to go ahead.[5]

On the Ballycraigy estate is a memorial garden dedicated to Billy Wright, leader of the Loyalist Volunteer Force paramilitary organisation.[6]

There are two other townlands named Ballycraigy in County Antrim. One is in Larne and is the site of Ballycraigy Manor, a country house with a tower and battlements built in 1869, the residence of James Chaine,[7] a businessman involved in shipping and a Conservative Party politician.[8] The other is in the parish of Carnmoney.[9]

References

Шаблон:County Antrim