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Coordinates: 54°15′N 5°48′W / 54.25°N 5.8°W
Ballykinlar or Ballykinler (from the Irish: Baile an Choinnleora meaning "town of the candelabrum") is a village in County Down, Northern Ireland, 12 kilometres south west of Downpatrick, in the parish of Tyrella and Dundrum. In the 2001 Census it had a population of 348 people. It is situated in the Down District Council area. It is a linear settlement running parallel to the Irish Sea coast and bordered by an army camp to the west and south west. It is a residential village with a high level of community facilities and a good bus service.The village is within the Lecale Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The surrounding landscape consists of low drumlins and marshes.
[edit] Places of interest
[edit] History[edit] Internment at BallykinlarThe sprawling site of the army base was pressed into service as an internment camp during the Irish War of Independence in 1919.[2] After partition in Ireland the new Northern Ireland government continued to use the base for internment.[3] There appear to have been attempts by those incarcerated to maintain a normal social structure within the confines of the camp and evidence exists of an orchestra and some examples of typical prisoner art are still available for viewing in museum collections in Ireland, including examples of humorous cartoons.[2] A former IRA prisoner, Louis J Walsh, published a book in 1921 about his experiences in various institutions in Northern Ireland including a chapter about his time in Ballykinlar Camp which describes, amongst other things, having to march for three miles, handcuffed and carrying luggage, only to be placed in bare huts with nothing to sleep in except damp straw. He continues in a second chapter to describe how the prisoners set up their own "Council" which then began to negotiate with the military authorities for better food and conditions within the camp. "The camp regime was notoriously brutal - prisoners were shot dead for minor infractions, such as standing too close to the barbed wire fence that kept them penned in (the camp magazine was titled Barbed Wire)." After peace was declared in 1921 the internees were released but it does appear that their ordeal did not necessarily end after leaving as evidence exists that a train carrying released prisoners from Ballykinlar was attacked at Thurles, County Tipperary injuring three Sinn Fein passengers and several members of the crowd.[4] Some evidence would also suggest that prisoners were interrogated at Ballykinlar in the early 1970s during The Troubles in Northern Ireland. [edit] Military UsesIn World War I the 36th Ulster Division formed from the Ulster Volunteers did much of its training at Ballykinlar.[5] A journalist of the time waxed lyrical about the location describing it as a "camp situated in the centre of picturesque country, with the mountains of Mourne forming an imposing background. On the edge of the camping ground, and within easy walking distance of the tents, is an arm of Dundrum Bay, and here the men will have swimming and bathing drills. Within sight of the camp is the beautifully situated demesne of Tyrella." In World War II the camp continued to be a military training establishment and the North Irish Horse record moving there to take over Valentine Tanks and convert to an armoured regiment.[6] Troops from the United States, including those from the 1st Armored Division[7] also trained at Ballykinlar.[8] As peace has returned to Northern Ireland the British troops based there were withdrawn from the streets with the ending of Operation Banner and are now Garrison troops. In 2008 it was announced that the Battalion of the 2nd Rifles based at Ballykinlar would be deployed to Kosovo to "combat fresh violence between ethnic Albanians and minority Serbs." [9]
See: The Troubles in Ballykinler [edit] Transport
[edit] Sport
[edit] Lottery AwardThe village was selected for an award from the Big Lottery Fund of £128,472 to provide a new children's playgroup area.[14] [edit] See also[edit] References
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