Praeger’s Field backs onto the lovely beach of Cooper’s Bay.
Keeping our beaches clean requires constant work
On the coastal path
Sunset on the Lough is always special!
The Twisel lives up to its name here!
The name “Praeger’s Field” refers to the donation of this little piece of coast by the local artist Rosamond Praeger to the people, specifically the children, of Holywood. Today most children play closely supervised in the play enclosure round the corner in Seapark surrounded by car parks.
The information board at Praeger’s Field tells the origin of the name.
Previous to its formal donation this area was referred to as Cooper’s Bay and was a long established place for locals to bathe. The Twisel burn meets the sea here in a serious of meanders, often disappearing completely into the sand and shells. The back of the beach is gradually becoming colonised by dune vegetation which supports butterflies and other rich wildlife.
Con Auld in his book points out that the people of Holywood could have observed many of the key moments of our maritime history from the elevated field above. These would have included the arrival of King John in 1210 and the departure of the Titanic in 1912.
He ends his essay on Coopers Bay with the following hopeful thought:
Perhaps some day when the quality of sea water in Belfast Lough improves, Cooper’s Bay will again provide a premier bathing beach for the people of Holywood.
Maps and photos note: click or tap to see any maps or photographs below as a high resolution version.
TYPE
Circular urban walks along footpaths between and through Holywood Parks
DISTANCE
5 miles / 8 km
SURFACES
Mostly asphalt paths and roads. Short sections unsurfaced, potentially muddy, paths.
HEIGHT GAIN / LOSS
430 feet climb
HAZARDS
Normal urban walking hazards. Two road crossings with limited visibility where extra care is need. Two short flight of uneven steps. The optional full Glenlyon loop included extended flights of concrete steps.
Three of the Parks have had their old nature based signs beautifully refreshed
The Town of Holywood is well provided with urban parks. However, these are all small and individually only make for short walks. By joining four Parks together via a route which also visits much of the best of Holywood this walk aims to provide exercise, interest and above all beauty.
NB the route does not include Redburn Country Park which sits on the hills above the town).
The walk starts at the Holywood “centre of gravity” the Maypole. This crossroads defined Holywood on old maps in years gone by and today with its Maypole is still the focus of the town’s identity and festivities.
Turn down the Main Street and follow along Holywood’s retail core on the left hand pavement.
You soon come to a flamboyant Victorian Gothic building which currently houses Holywood Library, but was originally the Sullivan Schools.
In front of the Library three artworks neatly summarise 1500 years of Holywood History. The three buildings represented recall the Old Priory, the Norman Motte and the Victorian suburban boom town. However, the pillars themselves echo the elaborate forms of the gateposts of the Victorian Villas. You will pass a fine example of one of these shortly.
Leaving the shops behind, the Church of Saint Colmcille now appears on your left. Again Victorian Gothic architecture features, but here it is complemented by a bold modern building which replaced the body of the church tragically destroyed by fire in 1989.
Crossing My Lady’s Mile road (another reference to Holywood’s long ecclesiastical past) you now come to Number 154 which has preserved its original gate pillars.
Continue and look out across the road for Holywood CoFarm a forward looking community project working to change Holywood’s diet, health and environment for the better!
Now in one way CoFarm is only rediscovering the wisdom of the past.
The natives of this parish live principally by tillage. There are a few weavers and hosiers amongst them, but their employments seem to take up their time only when they cannot employ themselves in agricultural pursuits. Almost every weaver, except those who live in the village, has a piece of ground sufficient to furnish his family with potatoes, oatmeal and milk. This plan of intermixing avocations, although it may not tend to the improvement of trades or agriculture, appears to be highly serviceable to the interest of the individual, both in point of health and general comfort.
Nothing can be more distressing than to see the pale meagre appearance of the town or city artizan, whose constitution is undermined by the sedentary life which he leads, as well as the confined air which he is obliged to breathe, and whose mind is as relaxed as his body, by the dull monotonous exercise of his calling; but when he is transplanted to the country, and employs himself occasionally in cultivating a piece of ground, the exercise and interest he feels in his occupations, give new vigour to his frame, and elasticity to his mind
Parish of Holywood (County and Diocese of Down)by the Rev. William Holmes, Incumbent
Excerpt from No.VII in Mason, William Shaw. A Statistical Account or Parochial Survey of Ireland, Dublin, 1819
Passing CoFarm and the modern Sullivan School you come to the junction with Abbey Ring. You could turn left here on your way to Holywood Nature Park, but there is a much better pedestrian route alternative – so continue on the Belfast Road for a further 150m to a bus stop shelter where you turn left along a “Greenway” to enter the Abbey Ring estate as a foot traveller.
The design of Abbey Ring pre-dates the “car park to car park” concept of the modern housing developer. The sad idea that you invariably step out of your house directly into a car and drive to another car park blights our modern suburbs. Here walking is quick, safe and pleasant. The housing is varied and incorporates private gardens and semi-communal green space.
The Nature Park itself was once a local playing field, but the relentless trend to synthetic pitches, windowless halls and artificial light left it unloved and underused.
So, on meeting Abbey Ring turn left and immediately right and follow West Link and on traffic free paths through the middle of the estate eventually meeting Abbey Ring again where you turn left and right into Abbots Wood.
The north entrance to the Nature Park is 50m down Abbots Wood on the right hand side and is marked by an austere black metal post – in stark contrast to the signs of our other town parks.
The view into Holywood Nature Park from the south entrance marked by another black obelisk
Any good park should permit the visitor a choice of paths and a chance to find their own way. This park started life as a modest rectangular playing field, but its clever re-invention as a wildflower rich meadow fringed with snippets of woodland and the associated surfaced and mowed paths really does invite the wanderer in!
So find your own way to the east gate and out onto Demesne Road. Turn left and follow the road for 450m to where you again cross My Lady’s Mile. On your right you will pass a number of impressive high-set houses looking out over still intact mature gardens to Belfast Lough beyond.
After crossing My Lady’s Mile carefully cross Demesne road and take the second turning on the right into Demesne Avenue. Now turn left into Demesne Grove looking out on the right for the grassy public right of way which leads up to Plas Merdyn.
This short cul-de-sac affords perhaps the best views over Belfast Lough of anywhere in Holywood. Turn left and follow it out to its junction with Church Road.
Now turn left and after 50m carefully cross the busy road to enter Glenlyon car park at the top entrance (this point has clear views up and down hill unlike opposite the lower entrance).
Glenlyon Park is primarily a narrow steep sided river valley with many flights of concrete steps. However the lower section is much flatter and also features sheltered open grassy areas which are particularly pleasant in sunny weather. The suggested route below visits most of the park but if you restrict yourself to the north end all the steps and slopes can be avoided.
Leave the car park by the flight of concrete steps climbing up to the ridge above the Twisel valley beyond. The trees here are mainly mature conifers surrounded by dark thickets of the inevitable invasive cherry laurel. Turn right uphill and continue for 170m and take the second path to your left down a flight of steps to the river. Cross the bridge and turn right upstream.
The vegetation here is more natural and a youngish woodland lines both sides of the valley. There are a number of pools and you will soon come to an attractive small waterfall.
Shortly after this the path swings sharp left uphill ascending a steep flight of steps. The trees here are more mature and hint of the time that the wooded valley was part of the garden of the extensive gardens of Glenlyon House in the late 1800s.
On reaching the top of the steps you then descend almost immediately passing a very substantial mature conifer on your right – almost certainly planted as a Victorian landscape feature.
At the foot of the steps you find yourself back at the footbridge where you cross and turn right downhill. Here you are sandwiched between great fallen trees on your left, evidence of the destructive power of recent storms, and dark thickets on the riverside on your right.
However, you soon exit the dark domains for a flatter area of open grassland and there is a network of smaller informal paths here which facilitate the exploration of the riverside and wooded park edges.
Now return slightly uphill to the right following a path back to the car park.
Leave Glenlyon carefully crossing the road at the lower entrance. From this side there is sufficient view of traffic in both direction, but it is unsafe if crossing the other way. It is necessary to cross as there is no footpath on the other side linking the park to Holywood. Head downhill for 200m and then cross the road again just after the entrance to Newcroft Lodge. Continue downhill and turn right into Church Avenue.
Notice that the street sign here includes “leading to Twisel Bridge” – this is as close as you will get to pedestrian signage on this walk marking Holywood’s secret network of pedestrian rights of way!
Follow Church Avenue to the end of the public road where the Twisel path cuts downhill to the burn. You now have a short waterside walk up hill and across a bridge with steps up onto Victoria Road. Be careful crossing here as visibility to your left is limited by a bend in the road and there are no traffic calming measures to limit speed.
The park sign is located at the car park entrance
Now follow Victoria Road uphill until it meets Croft Road. Cross directly into Woodlands and after 170m enter Ballymenoch Park by its southern pedestrian entrance (C) on the map below).
The park is well worth an exploration and while the path network is limited, walking though the semi-wooded northern part is a good option if the ground is dry. Don’t miss the Giant Redwoods and the big Turkey Oak.
One of the 80-foot-plus high Giant Redwoods which grace the parklandAn information board will help you locate the big Turkey OakThe massive trunk is 23 feet in circumference
There is a separate page on the Places section of this website (Ballymenoch Park) which covers the history and trees in the park in detail.
Exit the Park at the pedestrian gate (B) and turn right along the A2 dual carriageway. The noise of the speeding traffic on this section is unpleasant, but you will soon leave it behind.
After 150m cross the petrol station entrance with care and then use the two pelican crossings linked by a footpath to get across the A2 and turn into Farmhill Road just past a second petrol station. Almost immediately you come to a bridge across the Holywood to Bangor railway. Don’t cross but instead follow the footpath on the left down a ramp and onto the Belfast-bound station platform.
The old station house survives on the other platform. Marino Station was once know for its floral displays and these won 1st prize in a railways competition 21 times between 1886 and 1914.
Continue ahead up the exit ramp to join Old Quay Road and turn right to cross the railway and head downhill toward the Lough. The name “Old Quay” derives from the former moorings on the coast at Cultra which were once an important landing point for coal and other essential goods.
Ancient or modern? Look with care!
After 150m the road swings sharply to the right but you continue straight ahead to a pedestrian entrance to Seapark with a fine view over Belfast Lough.
Seapark is little more than a small grassy area bounded by the North Down Coastal path with a couple of car parks and a large children’s play cage. What makes it is the seaside – beach, sand, waves and a great view across the Lough towards Whiteabbey and the hills beyond. Ice cream is often available from the trailer at the top of the park and coffee from an excellent coffee van.
On a fine summer’s day it gets extremely hot and crowded and the limited car parking, single vehicle access under the railway bridge and a difficult junction with the A2 dual carriageway, leads to long tailbacks coming and going.
Amazing in all this chaos the lovely, well shaded, Ballymenoch park (a mere 300m away) will be largely empty. So, as so often is the case, park and walk (or public transport) is the best policies by far.
On a fine day the regular dog walkers are joined by families paddling and enjoying the beach
When you reach the coastal path turn left and continue around the headland into the next coastal green space, Praeger’s Field.
There is no car park here so even on the hottest day you can find space on the beach or your own patch above on the field with great views over Cooper’s Bay and the Belfast Hills
The information panel here gives a good introduction to the coastal history of Holywood
Turn inland at the panel above and follow the path under the dual carriageway to the old town cemeteries . Here turn right along Priory Park and continue past the ruins of Holywood Old Priory .
You are now at founding site of Holy-Wood (Sanctus Boscus in medieval Latin)- the Old Priory Church. Parts of this building started life as an Augustinian Abbey in the twelfth Century, later became a Franciscan Priory (1840), then a joint Anglican / Presbyterian Parish Church (1615), then an Anglican only Church (1861), then abandoned as place of worship in 1844 and made into a clock tower!
Now join the old Bangor Road and follow it around the corner where it turns into Holywood High Street
On your right you will see a playground guarded by a bronze statue on a rough granite plinth. This is Holywood’s enduring favourite piece of public art “Jonny the Jig” – a poignant link to a less cynical time.
A final 100m and you are back at your start point, the Maypole. Refreshment options abound on all sides!
Maps and photos note: click or tap to see any maps or photographs below as a high resolution version.
Introduction
At the main entrance to the park a decorative structure echoes the Holywood Maypole
Ballymenoch Park is situated on the north eastern edge of Holywood beside the Belfast bound lane of the dual carriageway between Belfast and Bangor. It consists of around 20 acres of woodland and lush parkland which boasts beautiful and ancient trees. It is managed by Ards and North Down Borough Council after the park was left to the people of Holywood in 1953.
It is full of interest throughout the seasons, but perhaps, the best time to visit is in autumn when the many specimen trees put on a majestic technicoloured show – which takes the breath away. It easy to walk round the park in 10-15 minutes, with good hard surfaced paths and only the gentlest of inclines. It is a great place for a family picnic; there is plenty of grass space for a ‘kick around’ and an enclosed playground for younger children.
Pinch or click to zoom in
There are no toilet facilities on the site. There are three entrances to the park, but only one allows vehicle access to a small car park. This is the main entrance which can only be approached by car on the Belfast bound lane of the dual carriageway on the road between Belfast to Bangor. One of the two pedestrian access points is on the main Bangor to Belfast road about 100 metres past the Spar/BP (Tor Grange) shopping centre and the main entrance to the Sir Samuel Kelly Eventide Nursing Home. The other is at the back of the park and is accessed from Woodlands off Croft Road. The park is easily reached on foot by a 10 minute walk from Holywood town centre.
Pedestrian rear entrance off Woodlands Road
Early history and origin of the name Ballymenoch
Originally the park had been part of the Ballymenoch Demesne, which was much larger and crossed the main road between Belfast to Bangor and ran right down to the sea. The townland in which it is situated is known as Ballymenagh which reaches from the coast at Cooper’s Bay and Seapark right up to Ballymiscaw Road. Ballymenagh borders the following other townlands:
Ballymenagh was church land, one of the five townlands (Ballekeille or Ballicruell, Ballimannacke, Ballacultrack or Ballacktragath, Ballaenderrie, Ballaeknocknegonie); it once belonged to Holywood Abbey. John O’Donovan translated this name as Baile Meadhonach (méanach) ‘middle town,’ but apart from the spelling Balle Mena[gh]t appearing on the Raven Map of Clandeboye c.1625 and in the Hamilton Copy Rental c.1681, so much of the early evidence spells –managh (1604 –manock, mannacke) (1604, 1623, 1627, 1630, 1645, 1661, 1662), that it seems far more likely to be Baile Manach, which in Irish means ‘townland of the monks’.
The Abbey (or the Priory as it had now become) owned most of the land around Holywood until it was officially dissolved on 1st January 1541 by the agents of King Henry VIII and its possessions, including Ballymenagh/Ballymenoch, were by law vested in the Crown, although in practice the local Irish chieftains still held control until early in the seventeenth century when James 1, as part of the plantation settlement, granted the Clannaboy district, what is now North Down and part of South Antrim, to Sir James Hamilton and James Montgomery. Hamilton, who has been described as an adventurer from near Dunlop in Ayrshire, received the tract of land stretching from near Donaghadee to Castlereagh.
Ballymenoch House
As noted above Sir James Hamilton acquired lands in the North Down area in the 17th century. A large house and associated gardens are shown on the Raven maps near Bangor. This is likely to have been the structure that the Plantation Commissioners had reported in 1611 as the one that Hamilton had intended to build near Holywood. This became known as Ballymenoch House. A branch of the Hamilton family is said to have lived in the house up until the end of the eighteenth century. The earlier house was two storeys with tripartite windows, bow fronts, portico and urns on the balustrade, with numerous chimneys. However, it subsequently became the residence of the Holmes family who either rebuilt or remodelled the building and it is this Georgian mansion which is depicted in Proctor’s ‘Belfast Scenery’ of 1832.
Ballymenoch House (above) as portrayed in Proctor’s ‘Belfast Scenery’
It dated from the late 18th century. There were two charming lodges, locally known as “ink-wells” owing to their shape. One of them was knocked down in the 1930s; the other in 1971 when the dual carriageway between Belfast and Bangor was built. This also led to a significant loss of land from Ballymenoch Park.
In 1802 Ballymenoch Demesne and House was purchased by Cunningham Greg, a successful Belfast merchant with interests in sugar refining, wine distribution and banking from Macedon in County Antrim. On the death of Cunningham Greg, the house passed to his son Thomas Greg, who is listed as occupier in the Townland Valuation (1828-40).
The Victorian Era
Greg owned substantial property in Belfast and was a traveller and collector. He was most famous for bringing the mummy of Takabuti from Thebes to Ireland. He purchased her in 1834. The unwrapping of Takabuti took place in 1835 and recorded in the Newsletter where they reported Greg “munificently presented” the mummy “to the Museum of the Belfast Natural History Society” (now the Ulster Museum). Incredibly Takabuti continues to be a favourite at the Ulster Museum.
The heavy dotted line shows the driveway which survives to the present day
Use the slider arrows to see the modern landuse
In the maps above you will see a stream prominently snaking through the gardens. Almost certainly this was created by diverting the flow of a burn to the east to flow though the grounds. Today the bed it is still just visible underneath the laurel thickets. However, it is almost completely dry with its water supply routed elsewhere.
The Townland Valuation lists the house, offices, steward and porter’s house at a value of £82. However, by the time of Griffith’s Valuation (1856-64), the house had risen enormously in value to £200, suggesting that it had been rebuilt since the earlier valuation, and indeed the second edition OS map of 1858 shows a building much increased in size from the first edition.
From 1864 Thomas Greg and later, his representatives, let the house to Mary Gordon who was followed in 1890 by Sir Daniel Dixon (1844-1907), timber merchant, shipowner and the First Lord Mayor of Belfast. The valuation records make it unclear whether Dixon bought the property at this time. There is an increase in valuation at the time that Dixon takes over the house which perhaps indicates some additions or improvements and the third edition map of 1900 – 02 shows a house of a slightly altered plan form, now captioned, for the first time, ‘Ballymenoch House’. Dixon also purchased additional land around the house so the estate extended down to Holywood Pier. The house was mentioned in the announcement of Dixon’s baronetcy in 1903:
“The King has been pleased to direct the preparation of Warrants under His Majesty’s Royal Sign Manual, authorising Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal of the United Kingdom, of Great Britain and Ireland, conferring the dignity of a Baronet of the said United Kingdom upon each of the under-mentioned Gentlemen, and the heirs male of their respective bodies lawfully begotten:—
The Right Honourable Sir Daniel Dixon, of Ballymenoch in the Parish of Holywood, in the County of Down, Knight, Lord Mayor of Belfast.”
WHITEHALL, September 7, 1903
Dixon was a major landowner around the area, including Bangor. His younger son, Herbert (who was elevated to the peerage in 1939 as Baron Glentoran of Ballyalloly, County Down) married Emily Ina Florence Bingham of Bangor Castle in 1905.
Sir Daniel Dixon lived in the house until his death in 1907 and it was occupied by his widow for some years afterwards.
Suffragettes and arson
In July 1914 Ballymenoch House was sadly gutted by fire following an arson attack by the Women’s Social and Political Union, a militant ‘suffragette’ organisation originally founded by the Pankhurst sisters in 1903, but a Belfast branch was established in September 1913. When attempts to persuade Edward Carson, the unionist leader, to make good on his pledge for women’s rights failed, a campaign of arson was initiated focusing mainly on unionist-owned property but also including some public buildings across Northern Ireland. Ballymenoch was among eleven buildings to be attacked, due its association with the Dixons, a well-known unionist family, despite Sir Daniel’s death years before this.
However, he was a controversial political figure openly disliked by the Belfast Newsletter and seen as unsympathetic to the Liberal Unionists. Emmeline Pankhurst discusses the background leading to the fire in her memoir ‘My Own Story’ explaining it was a reaction to the treatment of two campaigners, Dorothy Evans and Maud Mauir.
The Belfast Newsletter reported on the incident:
“Ballymenoch House, one of the largest and most stately mansions in Ulster, was totally gutted by fire yesterday – between five and six o’clock yesterday morning it was discovered that the building was on fire. Although the brigade remained on the scene until half-past three yesterday afternoon, they were unable to do any effective work after the water supply failed; and when they left, the whole of the roof collapsed. About four o’clock, when the fire seemed to have spent itself, huge sheets of flame commenced to shoot up from the cellars, and burnt fiercely until everything of a combustible nature had been destroyed.”
Belfast Newsletter
Picture of burnt out Ballymenoch House
The cost of damage was said to be c£20,000. Fortunately the family were away at the time, leaving the house under the watch of two caretakers, John Nevin and Robert Wilson. The destruction of the property is not noted in Valuation Records, but the house value dropped in 1918 due to the removal of the chauffeur’s house and gate lodge from the valuation.
Coal barons to salvationists
The house briefly passed to Nathaniel Tughan, a solicitor of Belfast and Dublin. The site was then purchased by Sir Samuel Kelly who rebuilt the house (on a slightly different site) in the 1920s. In January 1923 the ‘Irish Builder’ invited tenders for “the erection of a residence at Ballymenoch, Holywood, Co Down for Sir Samuel Kelly, JP, CBE, according to plans and specifications prepared by Messrs Blackwood & Jury, architects, Belfast.” The fourth edition of 1919-31 of Ordnance Survey shows how the house was also given a different orientation. A fireplace in the house decorated with the monogram SK and year 1924, suggests the completion date of the house.
Sir Samuel Kelly, son of John Kelly (founder of the John Kelly Coal company) was born in 94 Castlereagh Street, Belfast in 1867. When his father died suddenly in 1904 Samuel took control and continued to expand the Kelly fleet. In 1911 the firm became ‘John Kelly Ltd.’ with a capital of £50,000. In 1922 he was knighted. He was described as ‘a leading merchant, a public benefactor, a consistent and generous supporter of charitable objects’. His many donations included the building of two churches in Holywood.
Sir Samuel was Deputy Lieutenant of County Tyrone, Vice-President of the Belfast Chamber of Commerce and an active member of the Belfast Harbour Commissioners. His extensive business interests included chairmanship of the Ulster Fireclay Company, the Tyrone Brickworks and the Coalisland Weaving Company. He also owned the Cumberland Mine Company and the St Helen’s Colliery. Sir Samuel died on 9 February 1937 from a long-standing heart condition.
After his death his wife made bequests to many causes. In 1950 this included the cost of the Donaghadee lifeboat, which was named the Sir Samuel Kelly. The boat played a major part in the rescue of survivors from the Princess Victoria in January 1953.
Ballymenoch House was donated to the Salvation Army and was renamed the Salvation Army Sir Samuel Kelly Eventide Home. It offered accommodation for 40 elderly men and women.
The site was also divided leaving Ballymenoch House sitting in 2-3 acres of wooded and landscaped gardens, adjacent to the public park which was bequested to the people of Holywood.
In 1997 the Salvation Army Eventide Home was extended to provide 32 bedrooms with small group living settings. In 2019/20 the original ‘old family home’ was refurbished to provide accommodation for 56 residents.
Local memories
In preparation for writing this article I put out a message on social media asking local people if they had any information or stories about Ballymenoch Park. I received a couple of replies. One said:
“ My great uncle Arthur worked in the RAF 55 Maintenance Unit that was there between 40 and 43 I think, he lost two fingers on his right hand on the large hanger door. I can’t find any photos of this maintenance unit. I think it was situated on the flat part, just below the bank.”
A google search revealed the following information from the National Archives: “55 Maintenance Unit, formed at Ballymenoch House, Holywood, Co. Down October 1940; includes 55 Motor Transport Storage Unit; disbanded September 1943 (MU MTSU UK).”
LIDAR surface imagining shows a large rectangular ‘footprint’ in the centre of the park.A large flat rectangular area is still clearly visible
A further response to my request was:
“Remember playing football there 2nd Holywood BB on a Saturday morning before the new road was built the park was longer then.”
Ballymenoch Park has also been used on a regular basis by the Orange Order as a destination for their 12 July demonstration marches. For example, in 2007 it is recorded “Orangemen and women, band members, spectators and traders combined to make up several thousand participants in Holywood for 12th July celebrations involving the North Down Districts of Newtownards, Bangor, Holywood and Upper Ards.”
Ballymenoch Park today
The park has regularly been awarded ‘Green Flag’ status by Keep Northern Ireland Beautiful. To achieve this it is judged against eight criteria which include being a welcoming place, healthy, safe and secure, well maintained and clean and having community involvement. Indeed, there is a Friends of Ballymenoch Park Facebook page which encourages users to comment on aspects of the park and learn about plans for its development. Some of these friends of Ballymenoch Park meet regularly with Council officials to discuss concerns and ideas.
The trees of Ballymenoch
The attractive park sign references trees, roots and bird life
So we know something of the history of house and family – now what about the parkland which surrounds it? In the written survey of the Parish of Holywood carried out as part of the Ordnance Survey of Ireland in 1834 we read:
There are no natural woods nor evidence of any having existed. The shore of the Belfast Lough is very much ornamented with plantations which are for the most part young….
There are no bogs of any consequence, the whole being under cultivation.
It contains 8,067 English acres, all cultivated with the exception of about 30 acres
Lieutenant G F W Bordes, OS Memoirs Co Down II Vol 7, Parish of Holywood
In this time agriculture dominated the rural landscape – trees were only found with the demesnes of the wealthy and these were often young ornamental plantations, often of fashionable, but non-native beech. By this time Ireland had lost almost all of the great forests which once dominated the landscape and even the memory of these (as the quote above suggests) was almost lost. Only the name ‘Holywood’ remained to hint at what had been before.
Prominent tree species of Ballymenoch
The oaks of Ballymenoch
However, it is possible that in the in the original 17th century estates, parts of the ancient woods may have survived. Writing in 1850 Thomas Kelly praised the 330 acre grounds of the adjacent Cultra Manor. He states that it was “thickly wooded in the seventeenth century fashion” and continues:
“Few mansion situations can be more imposing or romantic; it is overshadowed by luxuriant oak trees of gigantic size, the graceful branches sweeping the ground, not unlike the famed banyan groves in the Plains of India. Several rare wild plants decorate the demesne.”
Ballymenoch may well have followed this pattern, or aspired to do so. Consequently when Thomas Greg bought Ballymenoch House and grounds in 1802 his decision to plant the magnificent Turkey oaks we see today rather than the fashionable beech may reflect respect for this heritage. Now the ‘Turkey oak‘ is a non-native alternative to the native Irish (or Sessile) oak but one which may have satisfied both the Victorian taste for imported exotic plants and the nostalgia for the lost woods of the seventeenth century. It also has the considerable advantage for the landscape gardener of of being significantly faster growing than its native cousin!
Con Auld tells us that as the gardens of Cultra and Ballymenoch matured though the 1800s:
“The Park became a tourist attraction for day trippers from Belfast and received many favourable references in the guidebooks of the period. The benevolent proprietors of Cultra and the neighbouring Ballymenoch House encouraged the public to view their beautiful gardens.”
Con Auld, Holywood then and now
In 2018 a Turkey oak in Ballymenoch Park was shortlisted as one of six trees in Northern Ireland in the Woodland Trust’s Tree of the Year Award, Although it did not win, it was a close runner up. The Ballymenoch oak is thought to be among the largest oaks in the country. This magnificent Turkey oak stands 27 metres high. To achieve this size a native Irish oak would need to be around 500 years old!
The massive trunk is 23 feet in circumference
Turkey oak (Quercus cerris) is a deciduous broadleaf tree which can grow to 30m. It was introduced to the UK as an ornamental tree in the 18th century. It has the advantage of growing much faster than native Irish and English oaks, but its timber is prone to crack and split. Unlike plantations of native oaks, these trees were never planted with long term naval construction requirements in mind!
The bark is dark grey, maturing with various plates and deep fissures. On older trees, the trunk fissures are often streaked with orange near the base.
In order to recognise it look out for: the leaf lobes which are deeply cut with short points at the tips. It can be identified in winter by: buds in clusters and the bud scales which extend beyond the bud. Each bud has more than three scales.
Turkey oak leaves
The large acorns mature 18 months after pollination. Acorns are quite distinct – orange at the base, graduating to a green-brown tip, and with a ‘hairy’ acorn ‘cup’, which looks like a hat made of moss.
Turkey oak acorns
Scots pine
Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris) is native to many areas in Northern Europe (but not Ireland) and higher ground in more southern latitudes. thriving on poorer, sandy soils, rocky outcrops, peat bogs or close to the forest limits. It is therefore well suited to the challenging conditions of the highlands of Scotland – hence the popular name. However, on more fertile land it loses out to other native species such as the oak. Its presence in the Irish landscape tends to flag human intervention. Traditionally upland farmers have valued its toughness and used it as part of a ‘shelter belt’ surrounding farm buildings. Today on high ground about abandoned farm dwellings you will still find a few hardy specimens hanging on.
One of the taller (65 foot) Ballymenoch Scots pines
However, for the wealthy landowners these were prized for their straight lofty trunks and distinctive high foliage and often used to line avenues or to structure landscaped gardens. Here in Ballymenoch a few grand specimens survive, hinting at the possible layout of the old garden.
Giant redwoods
The Giant redwood (Sequoiadendron giganteum) occurs naturally only in groves of Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. Soaring in their native environment to 160-280 feet tall, they are the the most massive trees on earth. Victorians greatly prized them greatly and paid large sums to have them imported for their gardens. At Ballymenoch it appears that one was planted almost directly in front the the original house!
At around 80 feet tall the three Ballymenoch sequioas are about half the size of their American cousins, but they still are magnificent and much more accessible to us than those in Muir Woods or Yosemite National Park!
Laurels
The Victorian love of the exotic included rather more modestly sized evergreen rhododendrons and laurels. However, what these shrubs/trees lacked in height they more than made up for in vigorous self propagation and almost total indestructability.
Under the Laurel nothing grows
Here in Ballymenoch as in much of neighbouring Cultra the cherry laurel (Prunus laurocerasus) seems to dominate. Presumably starting life out as the hedging of choice it now forms a dark lifeless monoculture across large areas of the modern park and beyond.
Rhododendron and cherry laurel are extremely invasive plant species, particularly in the more humid western parts of Ireland, forming dense impenetrable thickets. Both species are unpalatable and likely toxic to mammals and probably invertebrates due to the presence of ‘free’ phenols and diterpenes in Rhododendron and cyanide in cherry laurel. They are both avoided by grazing animals, thus giving them significant advantages over native species. The deep shadow cast by the plants and toxic leaf litter accumulating underneath..
from Invasive Species Ireland blog
Its removal would open up the park and provide opportunity to introduce wildlife friendly alternatives.
Seeing the wood AND the trees
The old park sign with full tree canopy, root system and wildlife is strangely right up to date!
There are many other tree species in Ballymenoch to find and enjoy. However perhaps the greatest asset of this park is its natural semi-wooded nature. It is neither formal forestry plantation nor closed canopy dark wood. Modern scholarship is coming to understand the complexity of ancient woodlands and how their semi-open nature allowed trees like the oak which needs space to achieve its full glory to thrive. We are also coming to understand the complexities of soil, roots and the fungal network sometimes called the ‘Wood Wild Web’ – see the link at the end of this post for further details.
Ballymenoch in Autumn
There has been woodland on this site for hundreds of years and through a mixture of good husbandry and happy chance significant parts of this ecosystem have survived the fashions and ‘improvements’ of past times. Today with greatly enhanced ecological knowledge we are uniquely placed to restore and enrich this wonderful place.
Twisel Bridge This bridge and its approaches were erected in 1912 in memory of Richard Patterson Who for many years took an active part in every good work in Holywood
Inscription on granite memorial stone
Many people are commemorated with text on stone, but Richard Patterson has a bridge and winding pathway to remind us of his “good works”. It is used and enjoyed every day by people of all ages – what could be more appropriate!
Rosamond Praeger was the only daughter among the six children of linen merchant William Praeger and his wife Maria (née Patterson). Rosamond was born on 15 April 1867, shortly before the family moved to Woodburn House on Croft Road, Holywood.
The video starts with a short overview of the history of the Dunvilles and Redburn House, this is followed by archive film of the house shortly before its demolition, then follows a series of interviews with local people who worked at the house.
Redburn Country Park A Community Guide
Produced on behalf of Holywood Shared Town, June 2017
Introduction
This guide to Redburn Country Park tells you what you can see, where you can go, and what happened here in the past. Redburn Country Park is managed by the Northern Ireland Environment Agency, and there are also various local community groups encouraging you to visit and use the park.
A Waif, cast in bronze, by the reception desk; (presented by Rosamond to Holywood Urban District Council in 1953, though first exhibited in 1906).
The Praeger Room (Ground floor, Holywood Library)
A display cabinet containing various works, including
three books by Rosamond
The Philosopher in alabaster (first made in 1913)
a bronze bust of Sir Robert Lloyd Patterson (her uncle)
a plaster relief Of Mrs D Weaving
the book Rosamond Praeger by Con Auld
On the wall
two large charcoal drawings by Rosamond (c. 1884), of James Dunlop Barbour and his daughter Gail Hilda Mary Barbour (then at Ardville in Marino)
On the window sill
The Philosopher in painted clay
a bust of an Italian Boy in painted clay
High Street
Johnny the Jig, (on a granite base carved by Holywood sculptor, Morris Harding). This was a copy of the original now in North Down Museum, erected in November 1953 at Rosamond’s wish to mark the playground donated to the town by the McCormick family.
Hibernia Street
A blue plaque erected by the Ulster History Circle on the site of her studio, St Brigid’s, at 33 Hibernia Street (replaced by the premises of the Fold Housing Association and the Ruddy Duck).
King Edward VII Memorial Hall Sullivan Place
Rosamond created the plaque above the main entrance to this 1912 building. It reads ‘Be just, temperate, brave and free’.
St Philip and St James Church Church Road
Her St Brigid plaque is on the west wall; (formerly it was above her Hibernia Street studio).
The Non-Subscribing Presbyterian Church High Street
War Memorial plaque placed (in 1922) in the central foyer of the church, along with other works by Rosamond including Angels in a Tympanum, and memorial to Lt James Dermot Neill. (The Praegers worshipped here, and Rosamond attended the School in the lower part of the Lanyon-designed building.)
The Priory Graveyard
The memorial to Rosamond’s parents (at the farthest east wall).
The Crescent
A blue plaque commemorates the birth place of William Emilius, Robert Lloyd and Sophia Rosamond Praeger. It was the first home of her parents after they married.
Woodburn House Croft Road
The home of the Praeger family from 1868 to 1891 is indicated by a blue plaque; her brothers Harry, Egmont and Owen Praeger were born here.
Praeger’s Field
The open space, inland of the Coastal Path, between Holywood and Seapark (donated by Rosamond).
Sullivan Upper School
Cartouche tablets above the main doors, (based on a bust of the founder Dr Robert Sullivan); other works and a school house named after her. Also twin reliefs over the Girls’ entrance to Sullivan Upper School.
Campbell College
War Memorial (dated 1922).
Riddel Hall Stranmillis Road
A memorial bronze (of 1915) commemorates the founders of this Hall of Residence for women students in Belfast.
Queen’s University
The monumental memorial to Rev Thomas Hamilton in the Great Hall, (who was be President of Queen’s as a College and then the first Vice-Chancellor of Queen’s University).
Ulster Museum
The Fairy Fountain (1901, in white marble); and other works not all of which are on display.
Ulster Hospital Dundonald
Bringing in the Sheaves, (a memorial bronze commemorating the first chairman of the Hospital, Ernest Boas, and his son who was killed at the Somme in 1916).
St Anne’s Cathedral
The memorial to William Reeves, of Down and Connor and Dromore (1886-92), on the north wall of the Cathedral.
North Down Museum
A dedicated display in the museum of Rosamond’s plaster-work sculptures featuring Johnny the Jig (commemorating Boy Scout Fergus Morton) and Spring.
In the Café, there is a frieze in stone called The Shawls, depicting Belfast mill workers.
Further Information
For more information and the life and work of Rosamond Praeger see Praeger in Holywood
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