Hannahstown heritage quilt

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About Hannahstown Community Association

Hannahstown Heritage Quilt

Hannahstown Community Association was formed in the 1990s to raise money for a new community centre. This was because the old hall within the grounds of Hannahstown Church, which was used for dances, plays and other community gatherings, was not up to modern standards. The Community Association leased land from the Church and set about raising money for the new building. It successfully obtained funding from the National Lottery and Belfast Regeneration Office, along with generous donations from the local community, enabling the new centre to be built. The Hannahstown Community Centre was officially opened in February 2005 and provides a vital hub for the local community. Another important aspect of community life in Hannahstown is Lámh Dhearg CLG which was founded in 1903 and promotes the development of gaelic games.

For further information please contact: Hannahstown Community Association 23 Hannahstown Hill Belfast BT17 0LT Tel: 028 9030 9795

Flora and fauna Hannahstown is found at the base of Black Mountain within the Belfast Hills and provides a haven for a wide variety of wildlife. The Irish Hare can still be seen here, distinguishable from rabbits by its large size and long powerful back legs. Wildflowers such as orchids, devil’s-bit scabious and cuckoo flower flourish in the grasslands, and attract a variety of butterflies including the Meadow Brown. Towards dusk you might glimpse a badger or a bat emerging on their nightly hunt. Peregrine falcons and buzzards also feed in this area, so it is always worthwhile keeping a watchful eye on the sky above.

Folklore Fairy thorn/The gentle bush In the townland of Tornaroy, which is just adjacent to Hannahstown, stands an ancient thorn bush known locally as the gentle bush (often called a fairy thorn in other parts of the world). It is said that on occasions it is illuminated at night and different sorts of music and rejoicing can be heard emitting from it.

Standing stones Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland - Parishes of County Antrim II 1832 – 1838 records the presence of three standing stones in Tornaroy. Local opinion was that they were three finger stones cast there by two giants. The memoirs observe that the stones were substantial in size and didn’t match the local stone of the area so “were evidently erected for some particular purpose”.

“The hills around dear Hannahstown, so beautiful and wild, Where in happy vein through sun and rain I wandered when a child” Memories of Boyhood


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