Magheramorne

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Magheramorne
County Antrim
Magheramorne Presbyterian church - geograph.org.uk - 176720.jpg
Magheramorne Presbyterian Church
Location
Grid reference: J428981
Location: 54°48’37"N, 5°46’45"W
Data
Local Government
Council: Mid & East Antrim

Magheramorne is a hamlet in County Antrim, about five miles south of Larne on the shore of Larne Lough. It had a population of 75 people recorded in the 2001 census.

Industry

Nearby is an old limestone quarry currently owned by Lafarge (formerly known as Blue Circle). Extraction of limestone from the quarry, for use in the Magheramorne cement plant, ceased in 1980.[1] The high point for limestone extraction at Magheramorne was in the 19th and 20th centuries. In the 19th century a mission church for labourers at the limeworks was established and became a Presbyterian Church.

In September 2009, Lafarge obtained outline planning permission for redevelopment of the quarry and cement works, including a new eco-friendly village and a major cycling centre mainly in the quarry.[1] A regeneration plan will transform the quarry into a nature conservation, leisure and housing area. The 75 hectare quarry will be the home of a World Cycling Centre and the All-Ireland Scuba Diving Centre if the plans go ahead.[2] The area of Larne Lough that was used to ship cement out of Magheramorne is now used as a marina.

Game of Thrones

The abandoned Magheramorne quarry area is used as a filming location for the television series Game of Thrones. Castle Black, Hardhome and The Wall were filmed there, and battlements were built there to serve as the defences of King's Landing during the Battle of Blackwater Bay;[3] scenes shot atop the wall were filmed inside the Paint Hall Studios in Belfast.

The composite set (with both exteriors and interiors) consisted of a large section of Castle Black including the courtyard, the ravenry, the mess hall and the barracks. I The production used the stone wall of the quarry as the basis for the ice wall that protects Westeros. A functional elevator was built to lift the rangers to the top of The Wall. A castle with real rooms and a working elevator were built near a cliff 400 feet high, CGI fills in the rest to make the wall appear 700 feet high.[4] The area around the elevator was painted white to make it look like ice. George R. R. Martin said: "It's a pretty spectacular, yet miserable location. It is wet and rainy, and the mud is thick. I visited there; it really gets the actors in the mood of being at the end of the world in all of this cold and damp and chill".[5]

Miscellany

Comgall, founder of Bangor Abbey in County Down, was born at Magheramorne in the 6th century.[6]

William McConnell of Magheramorne, who died at the age of 102, was one of the last living survivors of the 1916 Battle of the Somme.

Transport

Magheramorne railway station was opened on 1 October 1862.[7]

Culture

The Magheramorne Silver Band was established in 1882 by one of the local Orange Lodges. The band has drawn its membership mainly from the Magheramorne area and surrounding district, including the town of Larne, and continues to undertake a wide range of engagements across East Antrim and further afield.[8]

Sport

  • Newington Rangers F.C. play in the Northern Amateur Football League.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Magheramorne)

References