Skip Channel4 main Navigation
Explore Channel4
Food
Homes
Film
4Car
News
See All

HISTORY
1798 and After
 
Credits
The United Irishmen
The Liberator
The Great Famine
Linen Mills and Shipyards
Aims
Programme Outline
Timeline
Key Questions
The Ulster Crisis
Notes on Activities
TV Transmissions
Curriculum Relevance
Feedback
Print Version

Please use the menu on the left to navigate through this resource

Linen Mills and Shipyards

Timeline

  • 1800 — Belfast is a port with a population of 20,000, one-sixth of whom are Catholic.
  • 1828 — Mulholland’s cotton mill is burnt down and rebuilt as Belfast’s first outlet for factory-produced cotton.
  • 1831 — Serious cholera epidemic in Belfast.
  • 1832 — First serious sectarian violence in the city.
  • 1837 — 2,724 ships use Belfast docks.
  • 1848 — Both cholera and typhus spread rapidly in the city.
  • 1849 — A deep water channel is completed, enabling Belfast to grow as a port.
  • 1850 — Belfast has 29 spinning mills. The population has risen to 100,000.
  • 1851 — The Harland and Wolff shipyard founded.
  • 1861 — Belfast has 32 linen mills and is the world’s leading producer of linen. The population has risen to 127,000, a third of whom are Catholic.
  • 1867 — 7,817 ships use Belfast docks. The Fenian Rising is put down.
  • 1870 — Home Rule Movement launched by Isaac Butt.
  • 1877 — Michael Davitt begins organising the Land League to protect tenants’ rights.
  • 1879 — ‘New Departure’ formed: an alliance of revolutionary nationalists, Land Leaguers and Home Rulers under the leadership of Charles Stewart Parnell.
  • 1885 — Gladstone introduces the First Home Rule Bill to Parliament. It is defeated by strong organised opposition in Ulster and sectarian violence in Belfast.
  • 1901 — Belfast’s population reaches 350,000.