Carrickfergus

Carrickfergus is a large town 12 miles northeast of Belfast, historically in County Antrim. The counties of Northern Ireland have been abolished so since 2015 the town has been part of Mid and East Antrim District. It's often abbreviated to "Carrick" but that's a common place name in Ireland, so always specify "Carrickfergus" when organising transport.

Understand
Carraig Fhearghais means "The rock of Fergus" - Fergus the Great (430-501 AD) was King of Dál Riata and it's said his ship hit a rock here. It became a substantial walled town in the Norman period, acquiring the fine castle which today is the main reason to visit. It long pre-dates Belfast, which only outgrew it in the 18th and 19th centuries as metal-bashing industries developed, and ships needed deeper harbours. Until then, Carrickfergus was the place you had to capture to land your troops in Ulster, and the English, Scots and Irish took turns doing so. King William of Orange landed here to campaign against James II / VII, and in 1760 the town was even seized for a few days by French privateers.

The modern town's fortunes have ebbed and flowed with those of industry and civil stability in Northern Ireland. It's become a commuter town for the city, with a population in 2011 of 27,998. The TIC is within the Museum & Civic Centre, see below.

Get in
See Belfast for long-distance travel from Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland.

Trains run every 30 min from Belfast Great Victoria Street via other city stations, Yorkgate (for ferry port) and Whiteabbey (for Newtownabbey), taking 35 min to Carrickfergus; a walk-up adult single is about £5. Most trains continue to Larne.

Carrickfergus is north side of town centre. Trains also stop at Clipperstown a quarter of a mile west, and Downshire half a mile east towards Larne.

Ulsterbus 563 runs from Belfast Laganside bus station via High St, Ulster University, Yorkgate, Skegonell, Greencastle, Whiteabbey and Greenisland, taking 40 min to Carrickfergus and continuing up Larne Road to Kilroot. It's every 30 min M-Sa and every 90 min or so on Sunday.

By road from Belfast follow M2 onto M5 then A2 the Shore Road.

There's free parking at Harbour Car Park next to the castle.

Get around
The town is walkable, but you'll be wanting a car to explore Islandmagee and the Antrim glens.

See

 * Carrickfergus Museum is in the Civic Centre behind Town Hall. It's open M-F 10AM-5PM, Sa 10AM-4PM.
 * St Nicholas Church (Church of Ireland) near Town Hall was established by the Normans but the present building is from the 19th century.
 * is a village at the entrance to Belfast Lough that developed as a seaside resort in the 1890s. Not much has happened here since so it retains its period atmosphere, and it's an access point for The Gobbins and Islandmagee. See Larne.
 * is a village at the entrance to Belfast Lough that developed as a seaside resort in the 1890s. Not much has happened here since so it retains its period atmosphere, and it's an access point for The Gobbins and Islandmagee. See Larne.
 * is a village at the entrance to Belfast Lough that developed as a seaside resort in the 1890s. Not much has happened here since so it retains its period atmosphere, and it's an access point for The Gobbins and Islandmagee. See Larne.

Do

 * Cinema: Omniplex is within Rogers Quay shopping centre.
 * Carrick Rangers play soccer in the NIFL or Danske Bank Premiership, Northern Ireland's top tier. Their home ground is Taylors Avenue, capacity 6000, half a mile east of the railway station.
 * Amphitheatre Wellness Centre is on Prince William Way between the golf course and the railway tracks.
 * Golf: Carrickfergus Golf Club is on North Rd, quarter of a mile north of the railway station. White tees 5713 yards, par 68.
 * Slieve True is a 312-m (1024-ft) hill three miles northwest of town. Park on Slievetrue Rd to its east and walk up the firm track to the telecoms mast near the summit, reckon 15 min each way. Half a mile southwest of the top are the "Three Brothers" standing stones, but they've been incorporated into a field wall.

Buy
The main shopping centre is Rogers Quay by the harbour, with Sainsbury's open M-Sa 8AM-10PM, Su 1-6PM.

Eat

 * Little India is at 75A Belfast Rd, west of the marina. It's open Su-Th 4-10PM, F Sa 4-11PM..
 * Little India is at 75A Belfast Rd, west of the marina. It's open Su-Th 4-10PM, F Sa 4-11PM..
 * Little India is at 75A Belfast Rd, west of the marina. It's open Su-Th 4-10PM, F Sa 4-11PM..

Drink

 * Central Bar at 13 High St is a JD Wetherspoon, open Su-Th 8AM-midnight, F Sa 8AM-1AM.
 * Jacques Bar on North St has live TV sport and is open M-Sa 11:30AM-11:30PM.

Connect
As of Feb 2021, the town and highway from Belfast have 4G with EE, O2 and Vodafone, but a poor signal from Three. 5G has not reached this area.

Go next

 * Belfast is a fascinating city that needs several days to explore.
 * Larne town is ugly and industrial, but you go that way for the scenic Antrim glens.