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Buildings(v1.0)

Historic Building Details


HB Ref No:
HB26/39/017


Extent of Listing:
Boundary post


Date of Construction:
1900 - 1919


Address :
Parliamentary boundary post Ligoniel Road (opposite Wolfhill Road) Belfast County Antrim


Townland:
Legoniel






Survey 2:
B2

Date of Listing:
02/09/2014 00:00:00

Date of De-listing:

Current Use:
Boundary Marker

Former Use
Boundary Marker

Conservation Area:
No

Industrial Archaeology:
No

Vernacular:
No

Thatched:
No

Monument:
No

Derelict:
No




OS Map No:
129-07

IG Ref:
J2926 7811





Owner Category




Exterior Description And Setting


A cast-iron administrative marker post of 1918 marking the outer extent of the jurisdiction of Belfast Corporation (as Belfast City Council was then known), and of Shankill Division and Shankill Ward electoral areas within it. Situated on the N side of the main road, directly opposite its junction with Wolfhill Road and over a culverted stream which flows under the road at this point and which marked the administrative boundary. Directly behind the post is a low random rubble bridge parapet wall that has the cast iron octagonal cap bedded into its coping. The location is entirely rural, with fields all around. Of slightly tapered cylindrical profile, it bears the shield of Belfast Corporation’s coat of arms, below which is a plaque reading “Parliamentary/ and Municipal/ Boundary of/ Belfast/ Shankill Division/ Shankill Ward/ 1918”. The plaque is affixed to the post with four large countersunk screws. It has an octagonal banded base and oversailing flat octagonal top with slightly smaller fluted circular cap. There was formerly a post on the opposite side of the road (on the E side of the road junction), of which no traces survive.

Architects




Historical Information


The County of the Borough of Belfast was created under the Local Government Act 1898 and enacted the following year. The new borough was divided into four constituencies for the purposes of parliamentary elections to the Westminster House of Commons (this was pre-Partition and creation of Stormont) – North, East, West and South. Each division had its own Member of Parliament. Under the Redistribution of Seats (Ireland) Act 1918, the existing four constituencies were abolished and their number increased to nine - Cromac, Duncairn, Falls, Ormeau, Pottinger, St Anne’s, Shankill, Victoria, and Woodvale. Each new parliamentary division had its own MP and encompassed one or several municipal wards; the latter were used for elections to Belfast Corporation. Shankill Division encompassed the municipal ward of Shankill and part of Clifton. As its legend states, this particular post marks the boundary of that particular parliamentary division, and of the ward of the same name within it. These new constituencies were first used in the General Election of 14 December 1918, just over a month after the cessation of the First World War. This particular election took place under the Representation of the People Act 1918 (also known as the Fourth Reform Act). It is of special significance in that, for the first time, all men over 21 years of age and all women over 30 could vote; it was also the first election to be completed within the one day. Previously, only male property owners but no women could vote, and the election was spread out over several weeks. With the inception of the devolved parliament for Northern Ireland in 1922, the number of Westminster MPs was greatly reduced. The Shankill parliamentary constituency, created only four years previously, was abolished and the previous seat of North Belfast restored. However, the municipal wards continued to be used for local elections, although some, including Shankill, have since been reconfigured and renamed. The boundary of the County Borough of Belfast is clearly marked on the 1902 OS map, but there are no boundary posts hereabouts. This particular marker is first denoted (as ‘B.P.’) on the 1921 OS maps and on all subsequent editions, along with a second one on the opposite site of the road. Belfast Corporation was superseded by Belfast City Council in 1973 and its jurisdiction extended beyond its former borough boundary. This post now lies within Oldpark District Electoral Division (as used for Council elections), and is in Ligoniel Ward. References – Primary Sources: 1. Local Government Act 1898. 2. PRONI OS/10/1/56/15/1. OS 25-inch map, Co Antrim sheet 56 (1901). 3. Representation of the People Act 1918 (7 & 8 Geo. 5 c.64). 4. Redistribution of Seats (Ireland) Act 1918 (7 & 8 Geo. 5 c.65). 5. PRONI OS/10/1/56/15/2. OS 25-inch map, Co Antrim sheet 56 (1921). 6. PRONI OS/10/1/56/15/3. OS 25-inch map, Co Antrim sheet 56 (1931). 7. PRONI OS/10/1/56/15/4. OS 25-inch map, Co Antrim sheet 56 (1937). 8. PRONI OS/11/129/7/1. OS 1:2500 IG map sheet 129-07 (1963-66).

Criteria for Listing


Architectural Interest

A. Style B. Proportion C. Ornamentation J. Setting K. Group value

Historic Interest

R. Age S. Authenticity T. Historic Importance X. Local Interest



Evaluation


A cast-iron administrative marker post of 1918 marking the outer extent of the jurisdiction of Belfast Corporation (as Belfast City Council was then known), and of Shankill Division and Shankill Ward electoral areas within it; it sits at the T junction where Wolfhill Road meets the Ligoniel Road. This boundary post exhibits a degree of decoration beyond that necessitated of its utilitarian function. Its cast-iron construction reflects the need for durability. Its setting is also of significance insofar as it denotes an invisible political boundary at this particular spot. It also has group value with other such posts in the Greater Belfast Area. Belfast has what is probably the most complete group of administrative markers anywhere in the Province. It is from the historical viewpoint that this post is of most interest. It is a tangible reminder of the first election in Britain and Ireland when nearly everyone (bar women under 30) had the right to vote, which took place on 14 December 1918. It is also of interest in marking a short-lived period in the province’s political development from 1918 until the creation of the Stormont Parliament in 1922. Many of these posts have succumbed to road widening and random removal (as happened to the post opposite this one), so this particular example is now a comparatively rare survival.

General Comments




Date of Survey


08 March 2014