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Braid River

Rivers of Northern IrelandUnited Kingdom river stubs
The Braid near Ballymena (3) geograph.org.uk 423830
The Braid near Ballymena (3) geograph.org.uk 423830

The Braid River (Irish: Abhainn na Brád) is a river in the borough of Mid and East Antrim, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It is a tributary to the River Main. Historically, the valley in which the river flows divided the boundaries between the parishes of Skerry and Rathcavan in the 19th century. Flowing in a south-easterly direction for the entirety of its course, the river rises in the Antrim Hills and follows the A42 road through Broughshane to Ballygarvey; it then flows through Ballymena before flowing into the River Main near the Tullaghgarley townland. On 10 February 2018, a five-year-old boy died after falling into the river and being swept four miles downstream. He died in hospital.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Braid River (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Braid River
Riverdale,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Braid RiverContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 54.84788 ° E -6.31437 °
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Address

Galgorm Castle Golf Club

Riverdale
BT42 1HJ
Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
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The Braid near Ballymena (3) geograph.org.uk 423830
The Braid near Ballymena (3) geograph.org.uk 423830
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Nearby Places

Galgorm Parks
Galgorm Parks

Galgorm is a townland in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, about 1 km west of Ballymena. It is part of the civil parish of Ahoghill. Administratively, it is in the Borough of Ballymena. The townland encompasses the village of Galgorm and much of the area between Ballymena and Galgorm itself. It is bordered by the townlands of Artibrannan to the north, Lisnafillon and Fenaghy to the west and Ballykennedy to the south. It is on the River Main. The village itself sits predominantly where the Galgorm Road, Sand Road and Fenaghy Roads meet and it has a small number of independent businesses and shops On the outskirts of Galgorm and just prior to the old Moravian settlement of Gracehill sits the old Gallahers/JTI plant, which when vacated became an extension of Wrightbus, a major employer in the Ballymena Area. Wrightbus was taken over by JCB in early 2020 and remains a large employer in the area The majority of the townland is from a Protestant background and for the best part is a residential extension of Ballymena, a central Northern Ireland shopping town. The townland has two separate Orange Order lodges, Galgorm Loyal Orange Lodge and Galgorm Parks Loyal Orange Lodge The boundaries for the townland are the previous estate boundaries of Galgorm Castle which was constructed in 1618 by Sir Faithful Fortescue and is recognised as one of the finest examples of early Jacobean architecture in Ireland. Fortescue sold it in 1645 to Dr. Alexander Colville, from whom it passed to his son Sir Robert Colville, and later by descent to Earl Mount Cashell. The grounds and castle have been used for filming and TV projects, including The Frankenstein Chronicles featuring Sean Bean. The castle itself is now on the site of Galgorm Castle Golf Club, home to the Northern Ireland Open. In September 2020, the course hosted the Irish Open after the event was rescheduled and moved from Mount Juliet Golf & Spa Hotel during the COVID-19 pandemic.