People have lived in Ballyclare for six thousand years. The earliest evidence of people in this area is a hoard of flint
arrow heads found when houses were being built north of the river in November 1968. There were a total of thirty-nine flints discovered – some perfectly finished and others are blank indicating an 'industry' and trading here near the river crossing over four thousand years ago. When the
Normans built the
castle at
Carrickfergus they placed a line of outposts along the river which was then called the "Ollar" – River of the Rushes. In time the soldiers making the journey from Carrickfergus to
Antrim reached the river at this spot when they had travelled six miles so began to call the Ollar the
Six Mile Water. One of these mottes is close by the river in the War Memorial Park in Ballyclare. There are two on opposite sides of the river at
Doagh and one at Antrim. The village grew after the
Plantation of Ulster and was granted permission by King
George II in 1756 to hold two fairs each year making it an important market centre. At the same time as the
Pilgrim Fathers landed in what is now the
United States, Ballyclare was settled by Scots
planters.
Jonathan Swift preached in Ballyclare and it was from the town that the families of
Mark Twain,
Sam Houston and General
Alexander Macomb left for America. The people of Ballyclare and the surrounding villages played a part in the
Irish Rebellion of 1798, and fought in the
Battle of Antrim. At the beginning of the 20th century Ballyclare was a growing industrial town with an
urban district council and became the largest paper producer in Ireland. As part of the
1947 Grand Prix season, which constituted the first full season of the
FIA's
Formula One motor racing, the
1947 Ulster Trophy race took place at Ballyclare. ==Climate==