Portadown | |
Scots: Portadoun[1] or Portadoon[2] | |
Irish: Port an Dúnáin | |
St Mark's Church of Ireland in central Portadown |
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Portadown shown within Northern Ireland |
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Population | 22,000 (estimate based on 2001 Census, see below) |
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Irish grid reference | J008537 |
- Belfast | 23 mi (37 km) |
- Dublin | 74 mi (119 km) |
District | Craigavon |
County | County Armagh |
Country | Northern Ireland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | CRAIGAVON |
Postcode district | BT62, BT63 |
Dialling code | 028 |
Police | Northern Ireland |
Fire | Northern Ireland |
Ambulance | Northern Ireland |
EU Parliament | Northern Ireland |
NI Assembly | Upper Bann |
Website | [5] |
List of places: UK • Northern Ireland • Armagh |
Portadown (from Irish: Port a' Dúnáin meaning "port of the small stronghold") is a town in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. The town sits on the River Bann in the north of the county, about 23 miles (37 km)[3] south-west of Belfast. It is in the Craigavon Borough Council area and had a population of about 22,000 at the 2001 Census.
Although Portadown can trace its origins to the early 17th century, it was not until the Victorian era and the arrival of the railway that it became a major town. Portadown is known as "the hub of the North", due to it being a major railway junction in the past; where the Great Northern Railway's line diverged for Belfast, Dublin, Armagh and Derry.
In the 1990s, Portadown was drawn to the attention of the world's media by the "Drumcree standoff". This is the latest part of a long-running dispute over parading that began in the 19th century and has led to numerous riots and deaths.[4]
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Little is known of the area now called Portadown prior to 1610 except that the area was sparsely populated by Irish Gaels.[5] The dominant local clann was the Mac Cana (McCanns),[5] known as the "Masters of Clann-Breasil" (Clanbrasil), who had been in the area since the 13th century. The Mac Cana were a sept of the Uí Néill (Ó Neills).[5] The stronghold referred to in the Irish name Port an Dúnáin was likely the stronghold of the Mac Cana.
From 1594 until 1603, the Uí Néill and an alliance of other clanns fought a Nine Years' War against the English conquest of Ireland. This ended in defeat for the Irish clanns, and much of their land was seized by the English. In 1608, James I of England began the Plantation of Ulster – the organised colonisation of this land by settlers from Great Britain.
In 1610, the lands of Portadown were granted to a William Powell.[5] In 1611, he sold his grant of land to a Reverend Richard Rolleston, who in turn sold it in two portions to Richard Cope and Michael Obins.[5] Obins built a large tower house and bawn and settled about twenty English tenants on the land around it.[5] This was in the area of the present-day People's Park. Today this park is bounded on either side by Obins Street and Castle Street, both of which are reminders of "Obin's Castle".
In 1631, Obins was granted a licence for a "fair and market" which led to the building of the first bridge across the River Bann shortly thereafter.[5]
During the Irish Rebellion of 1641, Obins Castle was captured by a force of dispossessed Irish led by the McCanns (Mac Cana), the Magennises (Mac Aonghusa) and the Ó Neills.[5] In November 1641, Irish rebels forced almost 100 captured English colonists off the Bann bridge and they either drowned or were shot. This became known as the "Portadown Massacre".
The Irish Confederate troops abandoned the tower house during the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland, and Hamlet Obins (who had survived its capture) repossessed it in 1652.[5] It was then passed to his son Anthony Obins.[5]
In 1741, Anthony Obins was involved with the development of the Newry Canal.[5] He was succeeded by Michael Obins in 1750. It was he who set up a linen market in Portadown in 1762 and this laid the foundations of Portadown's major industry.[5]
Michael Obins died in 1798 and left a son, Michael Eyre Obins, to succeed him. In 1814, Eyre Obins took holy orders and sold the estate to the Sparrow family of Tandragee.[5] George Montagu, 6th Duke of Manchester (known as Viscount Mandeville) married Millicent Sparrow in 1822 and came into possession of the estate.[5] This family's legacy to the town includes street names such as Montagu Street, Millicent Crescent and Mandeville Street, as well as buildings such as the Fergus Hall (formerly the Duke's School and Church Street PS), and the Carlton Home (the Duke's former townhouse, latterly a maternity hospital/nurses accommodation and now private apartments).
The Blacker family, descended from Danes who entered Ireland in the 9th century,[6] founded an estate at Carrick, on the Portadown–Gilford road. The land had been bought by Colonel Valentine Blacker from Sir Anthony Cope of Loughgall.[6] It became known as Carrickblacker, and is now the site of Portadown Golf Club. One of the notables in the Blacker family, Colonel William Blacker, High Sheriff of Armagh[7] took part in the "Battle of the Diamond" and was a founding member of the Orange Order.[8] This, and subsequent events like the setting up of a 'provisional' Grand Lodge in the town after the 'voluntary' dissolution of the Order in 1825, led to the town being known as 'The Orange Citadel' and becoming infamous as a center of sectarian strife for two centuries.[9] Many of the Blacker family were soldiers or churchmen. The family estate was purchased in 1937 by Portadown Golf Club,[10] who demolished Carrickblacker House in 1988 to make way for a new clubhouse.
A large prisoner-of-war camp or POW camp was built at Portadown during World War II.[11] It was at the site of a former sports facility on what was then the western edge of town. This area is now covered by housing from Fitzroy Street and the Brownstown Estates. The camp housed (mostly) German POWs. For a time these POWs were guarded by Welsh servicemen who had been transferred from Germany (known as "Bluecaps") and who were billeted at St Patrick's Hall in Thomas Street. Many of the Welsh soldiers chose to be demobilized to Portadown as they had formed relationships there and this accounts for some of the Welsh surnames in the town.
In 2005, a public air raid shelter was uncovered during excavation works near the riverbank just outside the town centre. One of ten built by the council during World War II, it is the only one now remaining and a rare example of public air raid shelters in Northern Ireland.[12]
In 1969, Northern Ireland was plunged into an ethno-political conflict known as the Troubles. This led to violence between Northern Ireland's nationalist/republican community (who mainly self-identified as Irish and/or Catholic) and its unionist/loyalist community (who mainly self-identified as British and/or Protestant). Portadown had long been a mainly unionist town and before the conflict began, the two communities had lived alongside one another. However, as the violence worsened, the town underwent major population shifts.[13] The result was segregation – the northwestern part of the town became almost wholly Catholic and nationalist, while the rest of the town became almost wholly Protestant and unionist.[13] A separation barrier (or "peace line") was built along Corcrain Road and it remains to this day.
The Troubles also intensified the long-running Drumcree parade dispute. There were 43 killings in Portadown in relation to this dispute and to the Troubles in general.[14]
Community leaders in Portadown have been involved with the Ulster Project since it began in 1975. The project involves teenagers from both of Northern Ireland's main communities. The goal is to foster goodwill and friendship between them. Each year, a group of teenagers are chosen to travel to the United States, where they stay with an American family for a few weeks.
Portadown sits in a relatively flat part of Ireland, near the southern shore of Lough Neagh. There are two small wetland areas on the outskirts of the town; one at Selshion in the west and another at Annagh in the south. The Ballybay River flows into the town from the west before joining the River Bann.
Most of the town is built on the western side of the River Bann, and owes much of its prosperity to the river. It was the construction of the Newry Canal (linking Carlingford Lough with Lough Neagh) in 1740, coupled with the growth of the railway in the 19th century, which put Portadown at the hub of transport routes.
There are three bridges across the river at Portadown. Bridge Street and Northway are both road bridges and there is a railway bridge beside the Northway. The 'Bann Bridge' on Bridge Street is the oldest. The story of this bridge is unusual in that it was built without a river running underneath it. After building was complete, the course of the River Bann was diverted by some 100 yards to straighten a meander. The old riverbed was then built upon. An archeological dig in the area of the old riverbed uncovered the bones of some of those drowned in the 1641 massacre. The current bridge has been widened twice since it was built.
Like the rest of Ireland, the Portadown area has long been divided into townlands, whose names mostly come from the Irish language. Portadown sprang up along a road (High Street/Market Street) that marked the boundary between two of these – Tavanagh and Corcrain. Over time, the surrounding townlands have been built upon and they have given their names to many roads and housing estates. The following is a list of townlands within Portadown's urban area, alongside their likely etymologies:[15][16][17][18]
West bank of the River Bann (parish of Drumcree):
East bank of the River Bann (parish of Seagoe):
Climate data for Portadown | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Average high °C (°F) | 7 (45) |
8 (46) |
9 (48) |
12 (54) |
15 (59) |
18 (64) |
19 (66) |
20 (68) |
17 (63) |
13 (55) |
9 (48) |
7 (45) |
12.8 (55.0) |
Average low °C (°F) | 3 (37) |
4 (39) |
5 (41) |
6 (43) |
7 (45) |
9 (48) |
11 (52) |
12 (54) |
11 (52) |
9 (48) |
6 (43) |
3 (37) |
7.1 (44.8) |
Precipitation cm (inches) | 8.23 (3.24) |
6.45 (2.539) |
5.04 (1.984) |
6.68 (2.63) |
6.36 (2.504) |
5.32 (2.094) |
5.74 (2.26) |
5.33 (2.098) |
5.99 (2.358) |
9.97 (3.925) |
8.96 (3.528) |
8.28 (3.26) |
82.35 (32.421) |
Source: MSN.com[19] |
For census purposes, Portadown is not treated as a separate entity by the NI Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA). Instead, it is combined with Craigavon, Lurgan and Bleary to form the "Craigavon Urban Area". A fairly accurate population count can be arrived at by combining the data of the electoral wards that make up Portadown. These wards are Annagh,[20] Ballybay,[21] Ballyoran,[22] Brownstown,[23] Corcrain,[24] Edenderry,[25] Killycomain[26] and Tavanagh.[27]
On the day of the last census (29 April 2001) the combined population of these wards was 22,203.
Portadown is part of the Upper Bann constituency for elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly and Parliament of the United Kingdom. The boundaries of the Assembly constituency and Parliament constituency are identical. This has long been a safe unionist seat.[28]
Portadown came under the governance of Portadown Borough Council following the Local Government (Ireland) Act 1898. This was abolished with the Local Government (Boundaries) Act (Northern Ireland) 1971 and the Local Government Act (Northern Ireland) 1972. Henceforth, the town has been under the jurisdiction of the larger Craigavon Borough Council. Councillors are elected to the council every four years by proportional representation.
Portadown sits on the boundary between two parishes. This boundary is the River Bann. The part of the town on the west of the Bann is in Drumcree parish, while the part of the town on the east of the Bann is in Seagoe parish.
A Methodist Chapel was built in 1790. The site of this church has moved several times and it now stands in Thomas Street where it was rebuilt in 1860. There is also a Methodist chapel in the Edenderry area of the town and another smaller Epworth Methodist church.[29]
In 1826, Saint Martin's Church of Ireland was built, and later renamed Saint Mark's.[30] Before this, Church of Ireland members attended either Drumcree Parish Church or Seagoe Parish Church.[31] This church has a tall clock tower and stands in a commanding position at the centre of the town. Another Church of Ireland church is Saint Columba's on the Loughgall Road which was built in 1970.
There are two Presbyterian churches, First Portadown (aka Edenderry) Presbyterian Church (1822) and Armagh Road Presbyterian Church (1859). These two churches hit the headlines in recent years, with Armagh Road appointing its first woman minister (the Rev Christina Bradley) and the Edenderry minister (the Rev Stafford Carson) refusing to allow her to occupy his pulpit for a sermon because she is a woman. The sermon in question was a yearly joint Christmas service between the two congregations, which dates back at least 60 years. The issue remains unresolved within the Presbyterian Church in Ireland's General Assembly. Mr Carson was Moderator of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, June 2009 – June 2010.
There are also Baptist meeting halls on Thomas Street and Killicomaine Road; an Elim church on Clonavon Avenue; a Quaker meeting hall on Portmore Street; a Free Presbyterian church in Levaghery and meeting hall on Fitzroy Street. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (though not Protestant) has a chapel on Brownstown road.
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Saint John the Baptist's Church was built in the townland of Ballyoran in 1783. The original church sat in the middle of what is now a large graveyard. A second Catholic church, Saint Patrick's, was built on William Street in 1835.
In the 1970s, Saint John's was taken down brick-by-brick, moved and rebuilt at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum in Cultra, County Down.[32] A new Saint John's church was built close to where the original stood; it sits where the Garvaghy Road meets the Dungannon Road.
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A combination of road, canal and rail links all converging on Portadown gave it the nickname "Hub of the North" and this created employment through mass industry as well as helping the traditional agronomy of the area. The Newry Canal, opened in 1742, linked Carlingford Lough and the Irish Sea with Lough Neagh. It joined the River Bann a couple of miles to the southeast of Portadown. The canal opened up waterborne trade and left Portadown ideally situated to take full advantage of the trading routes. However, the canal went into decline with the growth of the railway network and it closed to commercial traffic in the 1930s.
With the establishment of the Great Northern Railway the overland trading routes were extended and delivery times shortened. The town's first railway station opened in 1842 in Edenderry.[33] At Portadown the line went in four directions – one went northeast toward Belfast, one northwest toward Dungannon, one southwest to Armagh and one southeast toward Newry and onward to Dublin. Today only the Belfast–Dublin line remains. Repair yards were opened in 1925[33][34] and these large concrete buildings dominated the skyline on the west of the town centre. In 1970 the current station opened. The old Edenderry station, on the other side of the river, was demolished.
The Northway bypass road opened around this time, linking Portadown more directly with the "new town" of Craigavon. This meant building a new road bridge across the river. The road runs parallel with the railway line for most of its length.
Portadown has a manufacturing sector that has grown beyond its roots in linen production to include carpet-weaving, baking and engineering.
There are a number of companies that have been a major part of Portadown's history:
Other industries have vanished from the town such as; whisky distilling and brewing, cider making by Grews in Portmore Street, milling of animal feed by Clows and Calvins in Castle Street, iron and brass manufacturing from Portadown Foundry and other smaller firms, ham/bacon curing by McCammons and Sprotts. Several nurseries were established in the town, most notably Samuel McGredy & Son Ltd., and James Walsh Ltd., these too have gone. There were also a number of small industries related to farming and agriculture, like packing and distribution of eggs, butter, poultry and apples. But these firms have been replaced by large scale employers like Moypark, who process chickens on a modern industrial scale and employ around 600 in the town, as well as Almac, a pharmaceutical firm that employs around 1,000.
Much of the town's industry in the 19th and 20th century was centred around the linen trade. The 1881 edition of Slater's Directory (a comprehensive listing of Irish towns) gives the following as manufacturing employers in Portadown at that time:[39]
Some of these linen mills survived as manufacturers and major employers into the 1960s, such as Robbs and Achesons but all eventually closed as the demand for Irish Linen fell due to the manufacture of cheaper, man made, fabrics.
Many of Portadown's streets have widely used but unofficial nicknames, some of which date back from the town's early days. These are:
Official name | Nickname | Etymology |
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Watson Street | Was known as Railway St. | As the main station was at the bottom of the street. |
Annagh Hill | Bucket Row | Water had to be drawn from a pump well into 1960s. |
Lurgan Road | Guinea Row | The weekly rent was twenty one shillings. |
Armagh Road | Rheumatism Row | The houses were always said to be damp due to flooding from a nearby river |
Obin Street | The Tunnel | The pedestrian underpass leading to it and the fact that the road was excavated underneath a railway bridge. |
Fowlers Entry | The Orange Cage | Strong association with Orangemen. |
William Street | Chapel Street | Site of a Roman Catholic church |
Charles Street | Charlie's Walls | Site of a boundary wall built by Charles Wakefield around his 'Corcrain Villa'. |
Woodhouse Street | Dungannon Street | It led to Dungannon. |
Garvaghy Road | The Walk | Formed part of the route Orangemen took on their annual "walk" to Drumcree Church. |
Country Comes to Town[40] is a flagship festival held on the third week of September since 1998. Its future is uncertain due to funding difficulties.[41]
Portadown Town Hall, in Edward Street, was once the seat of the town's local government until reform of local government in 1972. It is an 1890 Victorian building that has been extensively refurbished and offers an in-house theatre and conference facilities.[42]
Millenium Court Arts Centre[43] contains two galleries allowing local artists to exhibit their work.
Ardress House is a 17th-century farmhouse that was remodelled in Georgian times and is today owned by the National Trust. It is open to the public offering guided tours, local walks, and recreations of farmyard life.[44][45]
The Newry Canal Way is a fully accessible restored canal towpath now usable as a bicycle route between Newry Town Hall and the Bann Bridge in Portadown. The Canal was the first summit level canal in Britain and Ireland and has 14 locks between its entrance at Carlingford Lough and Lough Neagh.[46] One of the attractions on the Newry Canal Way is Moneypenny's Lock, a site that includes an 18th century lock-keeper's house, stables and bothy. This provided accommodation for workers on the canal and their horses in the days when the canal was part of the industrial transport network. Today it is administered jointly by the Museum Services and the Lough Neagh Discovery Centre at Oxford Island.[47][48][49]
McConville's Hotel/Public House on Mandeville/West Street dates back to 1865 but moved in 1900 to its current corner location. The pub is fully preserved with original wooden snugs inside, etched glass windows at ground floor level, original gas light fittings which now run on bottled gas and an iron door canopy and lantern. Local legend has it that some of the Russian Oak fittings in the bar were made to the same design as those used on the Titanic.
Located just outside the town off the Dungannon Road is the only fully restored Royal Observer Corps Cold War Nuclear Monitoring Bunker in Northern Ireland. Opened in 1958 it, plus a further 57 other bunkers spread throughout Northern Ireland, would have been used to monitor and report the effects of a Nuclear Attack. The bunker was restored and opened as a museum in 2010 by members of the Royal Observer Corps Association.[50][51]
Harris Boyle (1953–1975) was a high-ranking Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) member who was blown up when he and another member planted a bomb onto the Miami Showband's minibus.
Sir Robert Hart (1835–1911) was a British consular official in China, who served from 1863–1911 as the second Inspector-General of China's Imperial Maritime Custom Service (IMCS).[52]
Marion Greeves MBE (1894–1979) was the first of only two female members of the Senate of Northern Ireland.[53] She served as an independent from June 1950 until June 1969.[54][55]
George Gilmore (1898–1985) was a Protestant Irish Republican Army (IRA) leader during the 1920s and 1930s. In 1934 he left the IRA and helped to set up the Republican Congress and the Connolly Column. Thereafter, Gilmore remained a significant left wing figure within the republican movement.
Eric Mervyn Lindsay OBE (1907–1974) was an astronomer who was instrumental in setting up Armagh Plantetarium. He was also responsible for persuading the Irish government and Harvard University to found a telescope at Boyden Station in South Africa for the purpose of charting the southern skies. He has a crater on the moon named after him.
Alexander Walker (1930–2003) was a film critic who worked for the Birmingham Post in the 1950s and the London Evening Standard from 1960 until his death. He was a highly influential figure within the film industry and also wrote a number of books on the topic.
Billy Wright (1960–1997) was a loyalist paramilitary leader who spent much of his life in Portadown. He led the Mid Ulster Brigade of the UVF before founding a breakaway group called the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF) in 1996. He was assassinated by the Irish National Liberation Army (INLA).
Rachelle Liggett (born 1990) crowned Miss Ireland 2011, is the only girl hailing from the town to have won the title.
Gloria Hunniford (born 1940) is a TV and radio presenter and formerly a singer. She is the mother of Caron Keating, who died of breast cancer in 2004.
Victor Sloan MBE (born 1945) is a photographer and artist who lives and works in Portadown. Employing primarily the medium of photography, he manipulates his negatives and reworks his prints with paints, inks, toners and dyes. In addition to photography, he also uses video, and printmaking techniques.
David Simpson (born 1959) is the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) Member of Parliament for Upper Bann.
Breandán Mac Cionnaith (aka Brendan McKenna) is an Irish republican politician and spokesman of the Garvaghy Road Residents' Coalition. He was a Sinn Féin political advisor until 2007 and became General Secretary of éirígí in 2009.
Les Binks is a drummer who is best known for having been the drummer of Judas Priest between March 1977 and July 1979.
Aaron McCusker (born 1978) is an actor most famous for playing Jamie Maguire in Channel 4's comedic drama series Shameless.
Paddy Johns (born 1968) was an Irish rugby union player from 1990 until 2000 who represented Ulster and Ireland. He played at the 1995 Rugby World Cup finals and the 1999 Rugby World Cup finals. Ryan Harpur is a young professional footballer currently with Glenavon F.C..[56]
Colin Turkington (born 1982) is an auto racing driver and is the reigning British Touring Car Champion.
Adam Carroll (born 1982) is also an auto racing driver[57] who is currently signed to race for A1 Team Ireland in the A1 Grand Prix series. Carroll has also raced for FMS International in the GP2 Series.
Leigh Alderson (born 1986) is an award-winning male ballet dancer, model, actor and choreographer. Alderson was nominated for The Arts Personality Of The Year Award in the Ulster Tatler Awards in two consecutive years , 2009 and 2010
Newton Emerson is a journalist and founder of the satirical online newspaper Portadown News.
Ashley Wood is an internationally famed Make Up Artist and Beauty Specialist, having his work featured in Ulster Tatler on a number of occasions. Also, having completed work for Irish TV station TV3 in addition to working for a number of celebrities from Ireland and America.
Caroline McCall is a costume designer who in 2011 won an Emmy for her work in the ITV drama Downton Abbey.
Portadown boasts a large selection of academic institutions, past and present. Today, schools in Portadown operate under the Dickson Plan, a transfer system in north Armagh that allows pupils at age 11 the option of taking the Eleven Plus exam to enter grammar schools, with pupils in comprehensive junior high schools being sorted into grammar and non-grammar streams. Pupils can get promoted to or demoted from the grammar stream during their time in those schools depending on the development of their academic performance, and at age 14 can take subject-based exams across the syllabus to qualify for entry into a dedicated grammar school to pursue GCSEs and A-levels.[58]
The state-run Thomas Street Primary School, and Church Street Primary School, formerly the "Duke's School", were both incorporated into Millington Primary School 1970.[59] Other state primary schools include Ballyoran Primary School, Bocombra Primary School,[60] Edenderry Primary School, Hart Memorial Primary School,[61] Moyallan Primary School,[62] Portadown Primary School,[63] Richmount Primary School,[64] and Seagoe Primary School.[65]
Derrycarne Primary School is now used as an Orange Hall by the Orange Order.[66]
Primary schools managed by the Council for Catholic Maintained Schools are Presentation Convent Primary School,[67] St. John the Baptist Primary School (Irish: Bunscoil Eoin Baiste),[68] which has both English-medium and Irish-medium units within it,[69] and St. John's Primary School.[70] St Columba's Primary School in Carleton Street is now closed.
There is a multi-denominational or integrated primary school in the town, Portadown Integrated Primary School, which opened in 1990.
The town is home to Portadown College, a grammar school which was opened in 1924. Other state-run secondary schools in the town are Clounagh Junior High School, Craigavon Senior High School,[71] Drumcree College, Killicomaine Junior High School,[72] and Portadown Independent Christian School.
Secondary schools in the Catholic maintained sector are St Bridgit's Secondary School for girls and St Malachy's Secondary School for boys.
Portadown Technical College, later Portadown College of Further Education, was merged with Lurgan CFE and Banbridge CFE to form the Upper Bann Institute of Further Education. Further Education in the region was consolidated again when the institute was merged with other FE colleges in Armagh, Newry and Kilkeel to form the Southern Regional College.[73]
Access to a GP is provided at Portadown Health Centre.[74] Hospital care and Accident and Emergency services are available at Craigavon Area Hospital, built 1972 on the outskirts of town as part of the Craigavon development. This replaced Lurgan Hospital and the Carleton Maternity Hospital in Church Street as the primary source of care for the town. It serves approximately 241,000 people from Mid Ulster and is one of the main cancer treatment centres outside Belfast.
Association football or soccer is played by Portadown F.C. who play in the Irish League, Annagh United, and Hanover F.C. who play at Brownstown Park. Gaelic football is played by Tír na nÓg GAA Club.[75][76] Portadown Boat Club is located on the River Bann. It is the town's oldest sports club and holds an annual regatta as part of the Irish Rowing Union calendar. Rugby is played by Portadown Rugby Club which has many notable capped alumni, including Charlie Murtagh.
Portadown Cricket Club is a member of the NCU Senior League.
Portadown's main local newspaper is the Portadown Times, which is published by Johnston Publishing (NI). Although the newspaper focuses on the Portadown area, it also serves towns and villages across north Armagh. It was founded in 1924 and is issued weekly.
Between 2001 and 2005, Portadown resident Newton Emerson ran a controversial satirical online newspaper called the Portadown News. The website, which was updated biweekly, attracted media attention by poking fun at Northern Ireland politics and culture.[77]
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