Beyond
Borders - THE WHITE HOUSE
Newtownabbey and Drogheda Inter-community Partnership
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Newtownabbey
Community Development Agency
The Mill
Rathcoole
The White House
Beyond
Borders
Newtownabbey
Drogheda
Whitehouse
The
White House dates to the 16th century and was originally a four-
or five-storey fortified dwelling. This stone house was given
to a Mr Brunker in 1574 by Elizabeth I in recognition of his military
service in the Spanish Wars.
It
was included in the area granted to Sir Arthur Chichester by the
Queen in 1604 and was occupied by George Martin, Sovereign of
Belfast, in 1649. It is said that William III met General Schomberg
at the White House as a prelude to his Williamite wars in Ireland,
which included the defeat of James II at the Boyne on 1st July
1690. The remains of an ancient quay at Whitehouse point are described
in the Ordnance Survey Memoirs, 1839.William landed a portion
of his army here, or nearby on an artificial island known as 'Donald's
Island', in June 1690*. This quay was destroyed in the late 1970s
when the M5 motorway was built. During the 19th century the White
House was used for stabling and, in more recent times, as a Gospel
Hall before becoming the home of the Abbey Historical Society.
Ordnance
Survey Memoirs, 1838-39, Parishes of County Antrim 1, Vol. 2,
pp71-72.
DIRECTIONS
Take the M2 motorway leaving at Junction 2 (Greencastle). Turn
right onto the A2 (Greencastle/Rathcoole) and continue along the
Shore Road. Just after the Abbey Centre turning and Merville Garden
Village on the left, turn right into Whitehouse Park.
Project
Part Financed by the European Union Peace and Reconciliation Programme
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End