Derry (My Home Town)
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A little history of Derry
The story of Derry is a long and tumultuous one. Set on a hill on the banks of the Foyle estuary, strategically close to the
open sea, it came under siege and attack for over a thousand years.
St Columb came out of Donegal to escape the plague 1,400 years ago and founded his first monastery in the oak grove
(Doire in Gaelic), a gift from his cousin, Prince of Aileach. It was a holy place. The saint said that 'the angels of God sang in
the glades of Derry and every leaf held its angel.'
You can walk along the great 17th-century walls, about a mile round and 18 feet thick, which withstood several sieges and
even today are unbroken and complete, with old cannon still pointing their black noses over the ramparts. The great siege
lasted for 105 days.
The modern city preserves the 17th-century layout of four main streets radiating from the Diamond to four gateways -
Bishop's Gate, Ferryquay Gate, Shipquay Gate and Butcher's Gate. Historic buildings within the walls include the 1633
Gothic cathedral of St Columb. In the porch is an inscription:
'If stones could speake then London's prayse should sound Who built this church and cittie from the
grounde.'
At the time of the plantation of Ulster, the City of London sent master-builders and money to rebuild the ruined medieval
town hence the name Londonderry.
Colonel Baker, a governor of the city who died on the 74th day of the siege, shares a memorial in the cathedral with Captain
Browning who was killed as his ship Mountjoy broke the boom across the river and relieved the city in July 1689. The
chapterhouse displays the keys to the gates that were shut against James II in December 1688.
The Guildhall, looking much like its counterpart in London, is just outside the walls. Its stained glass windows illustrate
almost every episode of note in the city's history. The story flows up the staircase and floods all the chambers with brilliant
light.
The main thoroughfare, Shipquay Street, is very steep, with narrow little streets running off it and a craft village tucked in
behind the O'Doherty tower. From the quay behind the Guildhall hundreds of thousands of Irish emigrants sailed to a new
life in the New World.
Links To Derry
Good link to Derry
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