1
Albertville Drive off the Crumlin Road
Image: © Eric Jones
Taken: 21 Jul 2014
0.10 miles
2
Pooley weighing machine, Belfast (3)
See
Image The maker’s name. The plate showing the maximum weight is missing. Full grid reference withheld as a courtesy to the owner who was very helpful.
Image: © Albert Bridge
Taken: 13 Sep 2011
0.10 miles
3
Pooley weighing machine, Belfast (1)
See
Image A surviving (but disused) Pooley weighing machine (of the type once common at railway stations) in Belfast BT14. Full grid reference withheld as a courtesy to the owner who was very helpful.
Image: © Albert Bridge
Taken: 13 Sep 2011
0.10 miles
4
Pooley weighbridge, Belfast
See
Image A surviving (but disused) Pooley weighbridge in Belfast BT14. Full grid reference withheld as a courtesy to a trader who was very helpful.
Image: © Albert Bridge
Taken: 13 Sep 2011
0.10 miles
5
Ewarts Mill, Crumlin Road
Ewarts Mill, in the process of being demolished. Image made from the corner of Cambrai Street, which was also demolished at a later date. Cambrai St, is now part of the Edenderry Industrial complex.
Image: © Wilson Adams
Taken: Unknown
0.10 miles
6
Pooley weighing machine, Belfast (2)
See
Image The maker’s inscription which shows addresses of Liverpool and Glasgow. Full grid reference withheld as a courtesy to the owner who was very helpful.
Image: © Albert Bridge
Taken: 13 Sep 2011
0.10 miles
7
Silvio Street sign, Belfast
The sign at the Crumlin Road end of Silvio Street. Now redeveloped, building of the original street started around 1870 when it had seven houses.
Image: © Albert Bridge
Taken: 1 Sep 2011
0.11 miles
8
Surviving arch next to Barrett's Signs and Joinery
The industrial buildings which this arch provided access to have been demolished.
Image: © Eric Jones
Taken: 21 Jul 2014
0.11 miles
9
Brian Barretts Signs on Crumlin Road
Image: © Eric Jones
Taken: 21 Jul 2014
0.11 miles
10
St Mary's Parish Church CoI, Crumlin Road
Built in the 1860s of sandstone and Mourne granite, St Mary's was designed in the gothic style with an enormous central tower and at a cost £6,500. The parish served an area dependent on the linen industry and suffered a decline when that industry collapsed in the 1960s. One of St Mary's more unusual parishioners was John Graham, Belfast Commander and Northern Director of Intelligence of the IRA in the 1940s. A staunch Protestant he successfully fought against the placing of a picture of the Virgin Mary in the church.
http://www.politics.ie/forum/history/194860-john-graham-protestant-ira-belfast-brigade-commander.html
Image: © Eric Jones
Taken: 21 Jul 2014
0.12 miles