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Posted in Culture, History, Loyalist, Political, Religion on May 13th, 2009 by admin








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    Building Tourism in North Belfast

    Posted in Culture on September 10th, 2010 by admin
    This is a platform piece�I wrote this week for the North Belfast News.

    Building Tourism in North Belfast

    At this time when countries around the world are facing economic difficulties, it is important to identify those areas in the economy where we can increase activity and employment.

    Some time ago I wrote a platform piece about creative industries and this time I want to comment on another potential growth area, tourism. Visitors stay in hotels, spend money in shops, and eat in restaurants. They put money into the local economy and they create employment.

    People are probably not going to come to Ulster for our sunshine. The weather is one area where we cannot compete with Spain or Italy.�

    However we do have real tourist opportunities and one of them is undoubtedly cultural and historical tourism. One obvious example in Belfast is around the story of the Titanic and our shipbuilding and industrial heritage.�

    But if we want to bring more visitors, encourage them to spend more money, and hopefully get them to come back again, we need to build the tourism product, the things that visitors can see and experience.�

    At present Belfast City Council is preparing a tourism strategy and councillors have been meeting with council staff, commenting on the draft document and contributing ideas to it.�

    It has been an interesting process and it has confirmed that if we work at it we can strengthen the tourism product. However the process has also highlighted a number of other things.�

    The first was that during the process councillors from West Belfast really built up the West Belfast element in the strategy. Fair play to them, they were merely looking after the interests of their area, but it resulted in a draft document that was rather imbalanced. That is unacceptable we need every part of the city, including North Belfast, to get a fair share in the strategy and in the work that flows from it.�

    At the Development Committee I and my DUP colleagues asked for the draft document to be taken back to the party groups for further comment and eventually that was agreed. We needed an opportunity to do what West Belfast had already done and build up the Northern Belfast content. That has now happened.�

    The second was that during that process I was encouraged to see the potential that North Belfast has as regards tourism. For example, with maritime heritage, the Titanic was built in East Belfast but shipbuilding started in Belfast in 1792 on the north side of the river.�

    Moreover we do not need to build a heritage centre. We already have historic and authentic things to see. The old graving docks are still there at Clarendon Dock and the Belfast Harbour Office is a building that should certainly be on the tourist trail.�

    We have the potential and we have the opportunity. Lets make sure that we take it.�


    http://bit.ly/ajqxWQ

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    Back to the Dictionary of Irish Biography

    Posted in Culture on September 9th, 2010 by admin
    Earlier this week I visited Cultra Manor at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum.� The house, which is being refurbished, was built at the start of the 20th century by Sir Robert John Kennedy 1851-1936, a great Ulsterman, a British diplomat and a member of an old Ulster-Scots family.

    Today I looked in the Dictionary of Irish Biography to see what it said about Kennedy but was disappointed to find that he was one of the folk omitted from the DIB.� Neither was here any mention of his uncle Sir Arthur Edward Kennedy 1810-1883, who was a British colonial administrator and served as governor of a number of British colonies -�Sierra Leone, Western Australia, Vancouver Island, Hong Kong and Queensland.��Those are two surprising omssions, especially as there is a good article on Sir Arthur Edward Kennedy in the Dictionary of Canadian Biography.

    I understand that when work on Cultra Manor is ocmpleted there will be an exhibition in it about Sir Robert Kennedy and the Kennedy family and I presume that it will include a section on Arthur Kennedy as well.


    http://bit.ly/9TdnlK

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    Talking to terrorists

    Posted in Culture on September 9th, 2010 by admin
    Recently there has been much comment in the media about the need to talk to dissident republicans.� Should the government enter into discussions, formal or informal, direct or indirect, with dissident republicans?� Some commentators have argued that it is a good thing to do but have failed to produce any substantial evidence or argument.� In that context it is perhaps worthwhile reflecting on what happened in 1972.�

    There was a�secret meetings between the IRA and MI6 in Northern Ireland and these led on to another secret�meeting between two IRA representatives, David O'Connell and Gerry Adams, Frank Steele of MI6 and Philip John Woodfield of the Northern Ireland Office.� The IRA demanded that Adams, who was interned at the time, be released for the meeting.

    This paved the way for another secret meeting but this time�with the Conservative Secretary of State, William Whitelaw, in London.� This took place in the home of another senior Conservative politician, Paul Channon and the IRA was represented by Sean MacStiofain, David O'Connell, Seamus Twomey, Ivor Bell, Gerry Adams and�Martin McGuinness and Mac Stiofain later confirmed that all the representatives were members of the IRA.�
    The meeting took place on 7 July and just a few weeks later, on 31 July, the IRA placed three car bombs in the little village of Claudy and murdered nine civilians.


    http://bit.ly/9U7oNr

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    Untitled

    Posted in Culture on September 9th, 2010 by admin
    Why is the foreign office referring to the Pope as the `Holy Father`? That is to legitimise his claims and titles fb pope catholic

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    They shoot children, dont they?

    Posted in Culture on September 9th, 2010 by admin
    Michael Francis Magee was born on 8 October 1958 in Ballymurphy and joined the republican youth organisation Na Fianna Eireann.� He died 'on active service' on 13 May 1972 when he was accidentally shot dead.� Michael was just 15 years old.

    Michael Sloan was born in West Belfast on 30 July 1956 and joined Na Fianna Eireann.� He was also 'on active service' when he was killed as a result of an accidental shooting during an arms training lecture.� He was just 16 years old.

    These two young Roman Catholics were not shot by the British Army and they were not shot by loyalists.� They were shot with republican guns which were in the hands of republicans.


    http://bit.ly/bKl2sL

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    Off to Ards Historical Society shortly

    Posted in Culture on September 8th, 2010 by admin
    … I'm dusting down my Powerpoint talk on Hamilton & Montgomery the second most important story in ever told. See you at 8pm in the Town Hall Will post a report later on of how it went.


    http://bit.ly/aIllt2

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    Generated feed for “http://www.ulsterscotsagency.com/ulster-scots-publications/oot-an-aboot/”

    Posted in Culture on September 7th, 2010 by admin
    • Courses in… Two courses in Ulster-Scots History and Poetry,…


    http://bit.ly/c1vj2g

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    Declan OLoan

    Posted in Culture on September 7th, 2010 by admin
    It was very disappointing to hear the attack by Declan O'Loan on funding for the Ulster-Scots Academy.� He clearly did not know what he was talking about but did not let ignorance get in the way of making a statement.� He also displayed a cultural prejudice which shows a politican who is locked into the past.

    I intend to respond to his comments in some detail, showing where he has got it wrong and what the role of an academy will be in relation to such things as cultural tourism, creative industries, education and a shared and better future, all of which are priorities for government.

    As a start here is my challenge to Declan – ye wudnae hae a gleed o wut, wud ye – an if he doesnt understand it then perhaps one of his party colleagues from North Antrim can translate it for him.


    http://bit.ly/dnpfVH

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    Ulster Folk Museum

    Posted in Culture on September 7th, 2010 by admin
    During my visit to Cultra this morning we had tea in one of the traditional houses and here are two photographs I took in the house.

    This tile is at the doorway and bears the stamp Caledonia.� I wonder if this means that the tile came from Scotland?

    The other photograph shows a tea pot which was sitting on a piece of furniture in the house.� I am informed by Mark Thompson that this is called wither Torquayware or Cornishware and that Scots phrases were added to local pottery to appeal to the once large Scottish tourist market.� He has some of these at home.� The significant thing is that something aimed at the Scottish market, with a Scots phrase on it,�found its way to Ulster.� 'Straucht frae the coo' – so presumably this was a milk jug.


    http://bit.ly/9A3ISC

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    Cultra Manor

    Posted in Culture on September 7th, 2010 by admin
    Work is underway on the refurbishment of Cultra Manor, at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum. This house was built at the sart of the 20th century by Sir Robert Kennedy, a British diplomat, a great Ulsterman, and a member of an old Ulster-Scots family that settled in the area in the middle of the 17th century.�

    Dan Harvey NMNI chair, Tim Cooke NMNI chief executive & Nelson McCausland

    The refurbishment, which will be finished by next spring, �will cost �2.9m but will provide a high-quality education centre and a facility that can accommodate corporate events.� The work is being carried out by a local building firm, which is good for the construction industry.


    http://bit.ly/9YW0vW

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