Portrait of an Industrial City: ‘Clanging Belfast’ 1750-1914 by Stephen A. Royle
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Overview: Clanging: Belfast in its industrial pomp must have been noisy: shipyards manipulating sheets of metal, the constant riveting being only one source of racket; the endless clatter from linen mills, the screeching of trams on unyielding rails, sirens and hooters marking time at the factories. There were steam trains and steam engines in addition to horses’ hooves beating on the streets. The rumbustious, often riotous, eternally spirited Belfast people packed into the terraced houses as well as the alleys would have added their din, especially around the drinking dens. The noise is gone, one aspect of the urban past that cannot be recreated.
However, the industrial city has left other remembrances, from many buildings which still grace the post-industrial city, to the humdrum details of citizens’ lives revealed in newspapers, to more formal sources such as the corporation’s minute books, the deliberations of the Linen Merchants’ Association and the sometimes shocking revelations in parliamentary reports.
Genre: Non-Fiction > History
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