Early town Lisburn's original site was a fort located north of modern-day Wallace Park. In 1609
James I granted Sir Fulke Conway, a Welshman of
Norman descent, the lands of Killultagh in southwest County Antrim. In 1611
George Carew, 1st Earl of Totnes remarked: "In our travel from
Dromore towards
Knockfargus, we saw in Kellultagh upon Sir Fulke Conway’s lands a house of cagework in hand and almost finished, where he intends to erect a bawn of brick in a place called Lisnagarvagh. He has built a fair timber bridge over the river of Lagan near the house." In 1622 the first impressions of Sir Fulke's brother and heir, Edward Conway, was of "a curious place ... Greater storms are not in any place nor greater serenities: foul ways, boggy ground, pleasant fields, water brooks, rivers full of fish, full of game, the people in their attire, language, fashion: barbarous. In their entertainment free and noble." Management of the Conways' Irish estate fell largely to
George Rawdon, a
Yorkshire man, who laid out the streets of Lisburn as they are today: Market Square, Bridge Street, Castle Street and Bow Street. He had a
manor house built on what is now Castle Gardens, and in 1623, a church on the site of the current cathedral. In 1628,
King Charles I granted a charter for a weekly market, which is still held in the town every Tuesday. To populate the town, Rawdon, hostile to the Presbyterian Scots already moving into the area, brought over
English and
Welsh settlers. In 1641 the Irish, rising in the first instance against English, and not Scottish, settlers, were driven back three times from the town. A herd four hundred head of cattle driven against the gates failed to batter them down. The town nonetheless burned. In 1649 the town was secured by forces loyal to
Cromwell's
English Commonwealth, routing an army of Scots
Covenanters, and their
Royalist allies, in the
Battle of Lisnagarvey. The Presbyterians, despite their loyalty to the
Crown, upon its
Restoration continued to be penalised as "dissenters" from the
established Anglican church, the
Church of Ireland. It was not until 1670 that they were permitted a meeting house in town, and that had to be of "perishable materials [...] dark, narrow and devoid of any pretensions to art and comfort. The town was destroyed once again in 1707: the accidental conflagration giving rise to the town's motto
Ex igne resurgam --"Out of the fire I shall arise". Conway's
Manor House was not restored (part of the surrounding wall and its gateway with the date 1677 engraved still stands on the south and east side of Castle Gardens). The Anglican church, designated by
Charles II as
Christ Church Cathedral in 1662, was rebuilt retaining the tower and the surviving galleries in the nave. The distinctive octagonal spire was added in 1804. One of the few buildings spared in the fire of 1707 was the
Friend's Meeting House.
Quakerism had been brought to the town in 1655 by a veteran of Cromwell's army, William Edmundson. In 1766, a prosperous linen merchant, John Hancock, endowed what is now the grammar school known as
Friends' School Lisburn. John Wesley first visited Lisburn in 1756, and thereafter he returned to preach biannually until 1789. The first Wesleyan Methodist Preaching House was established in the town in 1772.
The Huguenot and the linen trade Lisburn prides itself as the birthplace of
Ireland's linen industry. While production had been introduced by the Scots, the arrival in 1698 of Huguenot refugees from France brought more sophisticated techniques, and government support. Even as it raised
duties on Ireland's successful woollen trade (with the concurrence of the subordinate
Irish Parliament), the
English Parliament removed them on all Irish articles of
hemp and flax, and the government gave
Louis Crommelin, "overseer of the royal linen manufacture of Ireland", money to promote their production. The Huguenot retained their own place of worship, the "French Church" in Castle Street, until 1820. The last of its pastors, Saumarez Dubourdieu, was 56 years Master of the Classical School of the Bow Street. His students subscribed to his memorial and bust on the south interior of the cathedral. Large scale manufacture began in 1764 when William Coulson established his first linen looms close by is now the Union Bridge. His mill supplied
damask to the royal courts of Europe and, in the early nineteenth century, was to draw celebrity visitors, among them
Grand Duke Michael of Russia,
Crown Prince Gustaf of Sweden,
Louis Napoléon Lannes duc de Montebello, the
Duke of Wellington and
Lord John Russell. To carry the town's new trade, construction of the Belfast-Lisburn section of the
Lagan Canal began in 1756. Despite problems of low water levels during the summer, the canal (extended in 1794 to Lough Neagh) continued to carry bulk cargoes until 1958. In 1784, the Scotsman John Barbour began spinning linen thread, and in 1831 his son William moved production to what had originally been Crommelin's
bleach green at Hilden. By the end of the century Barbour's Linen Thread Company was the largest mill of its kind in the world employing about 2000 people to work 30,000 spindles and 8,000 twisting machines. The company had built a model village for the workers, with 350 houses, two schools, a community hall, children's playground and a village sports ground.
Irish Volunteers, Croppies and Orangemen '' in honour of the Dungannon Convention1782. Mechanisation, tied first to water, and then to steam, power, drove the growth of industry, but displaced independent weavers. In 1762, over 300 paraded through Lisburn brandishing blackthorn sticks as a protest against the threat of unemployment. The
Volunteer militia movement, formed in response to the defence emergency caused by French intervention in the
American War of Independence, served the town's merchants and tradesmen as an opportunity to protest (with their kindred in the American colonies) the restrictive
English Navigation Acts and to insist on the independence of the
Irish Parliament in
Dublin. In 1783 William Todd Jones, a captain of the Lisburn Fusilier Corps of Volunteers, took this patriot programme (approved at a
convention in Dungannon) a step further. He successfully challenged the parliamentary nominees of the town and district's principal landlord, the Hertfords, on a platform of a representative reform to include votes for Catholics. In the wake of the
French Revolution the cause of religious equality and representative government for Ireland was taken up in a still less compromising form by the
Society of United Irishmen. The society won support of working men in the town, and of its leading Catholic family, the Teelings of Chapel Hill, wealthy linen manufacturers.
Bartholomew Teeling (destined to hang) and his brother
Charles, were an important connection between the largely
Presbyterian "United men" and Catholic
Defenders in rural areas. It is likely, however, that the greater strength in the district was the fraternal
Orange Order, newly formed in defence of the Protestant Ascendancy|Protestant [Church of Ireland] Ascendancy. In 1797 the Order paraded 3,000 loyalists in the town before the British commander
General Lake. The neighbouring military camp at Blaris, ensured that when in 1798 the United Irishmen, decided upon insurrection, there could be no rebel demonstration in the town. Blaris supplied troops that helped ensure defeat for the forces of the "Republic" to the north of the town at the
Battle of Antrim on June 7, and to the south at the
Battle of Ballynahinch on June 12 where the "
Croppies" had been under the command of the Lisburn linen draper,
Henry Munro. For over a month, the severed heads of Munro and three of his lieutenants were displayed on pikes, one on each corner of the Market House.
The Victorian Town , in Castle Gardens, presented in 1858 by former Lisburn MP Admiral
Henry Meynell The county-by-county record of pre-
Famine Ireland, ''Hall's Ireland: Mr and Mrs Hall's Tour of 1840'', found Lisburn recognisable as the settlement Rowden had formed more than two centuries before. Believing that between Drum Bridge and
Lough Neagh the people were "almost exclusively" of English and Welsh extraction, the Halls ventured that in no town in Ireland were "the happy effects of English taste and industry more conspicuous". With the formation in 1836 of the
Lisburn Cricket Club, the Halls might have noted that English taste also extended to sport and leisure. To the visitors the town still appeared in 1840 to consist "principally of one long street" (Bow Street) at the Market Square end of which stood the cathedral. An "interesting and picturesque church", it contained "two very remarkable monuments". One is of "the great and good
Jeremy Taylor" (1613–1667), sometime
Bishop of Down and Conor (reputed "Shakespeare of the Divines" and former chaplain to
Charles I). The other is to the memory of Lieutenant William Dobbs killed in the capture of his vessel,
HMS Drake, by the American privateer
John Paul Jones The Halls would have been able to proceed the eight miles to Belfast on the newly completed
Ulster Railway line. The line from Belfast was continued to
Portadown and, with the completion of the
Boyne Viaduct, connected with Dublin in 1855. A junction out of Lisburn at Knockmore, established further service to
Banbridge and
Newcastle and to
Antrim and
Derry.
Lisburn's present railway station, built for the
Great Northern Railway Company, dates from 1878. The new transportation links encouraged further industrial growth. In 1889, newspapers reported a rival to Barbour's factory: a "splendid new mill" by Robert Stewart & Son to employ over a thousand hands, with the novelty of electric lighting and "toilets on every floor". As had other Protestant-majority districts, Lisburn quickly reconciled to the
union with Great Britain that followed the
1798 rebellion. Support for the Union, seen both as a guarantee of free trade and as security against Catholic-majority rule, spurred the further growth in the town of the
Orange Order and helped return Hertford-approved
Conservative candidates to the
Westminster parliament. The political loyalty of tenants (who were to enjoy a secret ballot only from 1871) was further secured by the relative beneficence of the 3rd Marquess of Hertford. Despite a reputation of being "the most thoroughgoing rogue in the kingdom" and spending almost all of his life on the continent, when cholera struck in 1832
Francis Seymour-Conway (1777–1842) erected a hospital and distributed medicines, blankets, clothing and other necessities throughout the estate. Yet he was to visit it but once, and then with the wish that, "pray God!", he should never have to do so again. When the edge of the
Great Irish Famine reached the valley in 1847 and 1848, the Marquess declined to join the mill owners in subscribing to the relief efforts. Wallace (1818–1890) was created
baronet in 1871 and was the Conservative and
Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) for
Lisburn from 1873 to 1885 (when Lisburn was incorporated into the new
South Antrim constituency). His bequests to the people of Lisburn included
Wallace Park, grounds for the Intermediate and University School (later renamed in his honour,
Wallace High School), and a remodelling of the Market House. (The large residence he built on Castle Street, but never occupied, today houses offices of the
South Eastern Regional College). In 1872 he donated 50
"Wallace" drinking fountains (cast from a sculpture of
Charles-Auguste Lebourg), to Paris (on whose humanitarian relief during the
German siege of 1870–1871 he had already spent a considerable fortune) and five to Lisburn where one is still to be found in Castle Gardens and another in Wallace Park. The town responded with a memorial to Wallace in Castle Gardens. in Castle StreetIn 1852, Lord Hertford's agent, the Reverend James Stannus, the Rector of Lisburn Cathedral, had occasion to write to him suggesting a general increase in rents as punishment for the tenants both for an attack on his person and for their defiance in voting for a dissident Conservative, a free-trade "
Peelite". The following year the tenants sent a delegation to Hertford in Paris in a vain protest.
Ulster Volunteers In July 1914, in the first of many acts of political violence Lisburn was to experience in the new century, the chancel of
Lisburn Cathedral was destroyed by a bomb. It had been placed by
Lilian Metge as part of a broader campaign on behalf of women's suffrage, co-ordinated by
Dorothy Evans of the
Women's Social and Political Union. The previous year, explosives having been found in her Belfast apartment, Evans had created uproar in court when she demanded to know why
James Craig, who at that point had overseen the arming of the
Ulster Volunteers (UVF) with smuggled German munitions, was not appearing on the same charges. Lisburn and neighbouring communities raised three battalions of the UVF, the South Antrim Volunteers. They were a token of the determination of local people (in the words of
Ulster's Solemn League and Covenant) "to stand by one another in defending for ourselves and our children our position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom, and in using all means which may be found necessary to defeat the present
conspiracy to set up a
Home Rule Parliament in Ireland". The
United Kingdom declaration of war upon Germany (August 3), paused resolution of the
Home Rule Crisis, and many of Lisburn's Volunteers would go on to serve with the
36th (Ulster) Division. On July 12, 1916, for the first time since 1797 there was no Orange demonstration of any kind to celebrate the
Williamite victory at the Boyne. The customary midnight drumming parade was abandoned, and no arches or flags were displayed. Most of the mills and factories were closed. The town responded to the news that on the first day of
Somme offensive, July 1, the Ulster Division had lost 5,000 men wounded, 2,069 killed.
The Burnings and Partition In 1920, Lisburn saw violence related to the
Irish War of Independence and
partition of Ireland. On 22 August, the
Irish Republican Army (IRA) assassinated
Royal Irish Constabulary (RIC) Inspector Oswald Swanzy in Lisburn's Market Square, as worshippers left Sunday service in the cathedral. Swanzy was among those a coroner's inquest in Cork had held responsible for the killing of
Tomás Mac Curtain, the city's republican
Lord Mayor. Over the next three days and nights Protestant
loyalist crowds looted and burned practically every Catholic business in the town, and attacked Catholic homes. There is evidence that Ulster Volunteers had helped organise the burnings. Rioters attacked firemen who tried to save Catholic property, and lorries of British soldiers sent to help the police. Some Catholics were severely beaten, and a Catholic pub owner later died of gunshot wounds. Lisburn was likened to "a bombarded town in France" during the war. About 1,000 people, a third of the town's Catholics, fled Lisburn. Many were forced to take the mountain road to Belfast where troops were already blocking off streets with barbed wire cordons, a prelude to still greater violence. Fires soon raged across Belfast and in the next few days thirty people were killed in the city (see
Belfast Pogrom). As a result of the violence, Lisburn was the first town to recruit the
special constables who went on to become the
Ulster Special Constabulary. In October, about thirty special constables faced charges for involvement in the "Swanzy riots". The last
Chief Secretary for Ireland,
Sir Hamar Greenwood, admitted that "some hundred special constables in Lisburn threatened to resign" in protest. Charges were not pursued. Under a marble relief of his final assault on
Delhi's Kashmir Gate, a memorial in the Cathedral credited Nicholson with dealing a "death blow to the greatest danger that ever threatened the British Empire". For
James Craig, now the first prime minister of
Northern Ireland, and for other dignitaries speaking at the unveiling of a new statue in Market Square, the
East India Company Brigadier (depicted with both sword and gun in hand) was "a symbol of the defence of Empire in Ireland as well as India. In April the following year crowds gathered again to dedicate the Victory Memorial in Castle Gardens. Had he not been assassinated by the IRA on his London doorstep, it would have been unveiled by
Sir Henry Wilson, former
Chief of the Imperial General Staff and
MP for North Down.
From town to city As the linen industry was hugely dependent on the export market, Lisburn and the surrounding area was hit hard in the 1930s by the
worldwide economic depression. The pattern of unemployment, half-time contracts and reduced wages was fully reversed only by new wartime mobilisation. While some of the town and region linen mills helped produce material for uniforms, boot laces, kit bags, bandages, tents, and parachutes, others were converted to churning out munitions, with women undertaking much of the work. The
Second World War struck close to Lisburn with the
Belfast Blitz of April and May 1941. The town and the surrounding area was flooded by thousands of evacuees all of whom, as one member of the Lisburn Women's Voluntary Service recalled, had to be "fed, housed, deloused, marshalled, bathed, clothed, pacified and brought back to normal". In the post-war decades the demand for linen declined (precipitously after World War Two) in response to new textiles and changing fashion. With a workforce reduced to just 85, the Barbour mill in Hilden finally closed in 2006. The opening of the M1 motorway in 1962 further integrated Lisburn into the greater Belfast commercial and residential area. In 1989 the new edge-of-town
Sprucefield retail park opened. The centre was virtually destroyed in January 1991 in a
Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) incendiary attack.
Marks and Spencer, the principal anchor was spared, but the three other major stores were destroyed. On what was once known (because of the production of sulphuric acid bleach) as
Vitriol Island in the middle of the River Lagan, the last remnants of the Island Spinning Company were demolished in the early 1990s. The Lagan Valley Island Complex was officially opened by
Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by the
Duke of Edinburgh, in November 2001. A borough since 1973, Lisburn was granted
city status in 2002 as part of
Queen Elizabeth II's Golden jubilee celebrations.
Thiepval Barracks First built in 1940,
Thiepval Barracks is a large military complex on the edge of town was named after the village of
Thiepval in Northern France, the site of the Ulster Division's heaviest losses in 1916 on
the Somme. In early 1970 the Thiepval Barracks became home to
39 Infantry Brigade and provided the headquarters for the locally recruited
Ulster Defence Regiment. From August 1969, the Brigade, as 39 Airportable Brigade, was involved in
The Troubles in Northern Ireland, eventually taking on responsibility, under
HQ Northern Ireland, for an area including
Belfast and the eastern side of the province, but excluding the South Armagh border region. From September 1970, it was commanded by (then)
Brigadier Frank Kitson. In Lisburn's last casualties of the conflict, a soldier was killed and 31 people were injured when the(IRA) exploded
two car bombs in the barracks on October 7, 1996. The barracks remain home to 38th (Irish) Brigade.
The Troubles With communities across Northern Ireland, from the end of the 1960s Lisburn suffered through three decades of political violence, "
The Troubles". For Lisburn the first killings came in 1976: in the course of the year, five Catholic residents died as a result of gun and bomb attacks by the
Ulster Defence Association and (a new)
Ulster Volunteer Force, loyalist paramilitary groups that subsequently entered their own feud. In 1978 the IRA murdered a
Royal Ulster Constabulary officer at his home in front of his family. It was the first in a series of targeted assassinations of security-force personnel in the town that culminated in the
1988 Lisburn Van Bombing: five off-duty British soldiers killed at the end of a charity run in Market Square. The Troubles in the town claimed a total of 32 lives.
Lisburn in the 21st century As elsewhere, private investment in Lisburn has shifted employment away from traditional industries toward services. Just under 10% of the town and district's workforce remains in manufacturing, but it is a dynamic sector that includes precision-engineering exporters. Recent decades have seen very considerable public investment and new public service jobs, now accounting for a third of the district's overall employment. In the third election to new 40-seat
Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council, in May 2023, the twelve seats representing Lisburn returned a reduced unionist majority: four seats for the
DUP (a loss of one) and two for the
UUP (a loss of two) and an independent unionist. The cross-community
Alliance Party held gained one to hold three; the moderate nationalist
SDLP retained a seat, and for the first time Lisburn returned a
Sinn Féin councillor. Following the election, in June 2023 Gary McCleave, who was re-elected to represent the Killultagh DEA became "the first ever Sinn Féin councillor to hold a mayoral position in Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council": he was named deputy mayor. Following the decision of the sitting DUP
MP and party leader,
Jeffrey Donaldson, not to stand in the
2024 United Kingdom general election, Lisburn's
Lagan Valley constituency returned for the first time a non-unionist, a woman, and a person from a Catholic community background, the Alliance Party's
Sorcha Eastwood. == Administration ==