Tyrone Crystal

Tyrone Crystal was a crystal manufacturing company in Dungannon, County Tyrone in Northern Ireland.

Glass making in Tyrone has a history going back as far as 1771, when Benjamin Edwards founded a company in county Tyrone, Ireland. Tyrone Crystal was set up two hundred years later in 1971, by Father Austin Eustace to create employment in the Dungannon area of County Tyrone. There was not a lot of employment in the area at the time and nobody in the area knew anything about making crystal. Therefore an advertisement was put out in a national newspaper to find someone who could train people in the area. Luckily enough two Austrians (a master blower and a master cutter) were hiking across England and read the advertisement and came over to train the employees. Trainees began practising on glass jars and bottles until they became skilled enough to make crystal on their own and they set up a glass blowing shop in Dungannon.

In 1988 the company was awarded an ISO 9000 for quality; the youngest glasshouse in Ireland or the U.K. to gain the recognised standard. A new factory, built in 1990, is also a tourist attraction. Tyrone Crystal acquired Tipperary Crystal in 2000 as part of an investment plan that spent £500,000 on a new visitors' centre that opened in 2001.[1]

The company was acquired by businessmen Peter Maginnis and Nigel Blackburn in 2006.

Since 2005, Tyrone Crystal has manufactured the trophy for the Canadian Grand Prix.[2]

On the 11th March 2010 it was confirmed that the company is to cease operations at its Dungannon factory with the loss of 31 jobs.[3] The factory closed on the 12th of March.[4]

Sources

  1. ^ Sunday Business Post article £500,000 visitors' centre opened at Tyrone Crystal (retrieved 14 September 2006)
  2. ^ http://www.tyronecrystal.com/news/24/ New design for the Canadian Grand Prix
  3. ^ BBC - Tyrone Crystal factory closing after 40 years
  4. ^ Tyrone Crystal closes with the loss of 31 jobs

External links