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Whiterock, County Down

Coordinates: 54°28′52″N 5°39′00″W / 54.48111°N 5.65000°W / 54.48111; -5.65000
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Whiterock
Moorings at Whiterock
Moorings, Whiterock, Strangford Lough
Whiterock is located in Northern Ireland
Whiterock
Whiterock
Location within Northern Ireland
Whiterock is located in island of Ireland
Whiterock
Whiterock
Location within County Down
Whiterock is located in County Down
Whiterock
Whiterock
Whiterock (County Down)
Population351 (2001 Census)
Irish grid referenceJ524602
District
  • Ards and North Down
County
  • County Down
CountryNorthern Ireland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townNewtownards
Postcode districtBT23
Dialling code028
UK Parliament
  • Strangford
NI Assembly
  • Strangford
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
Down
54°28′52″N 5°39′00″W / 54.48111°N 5.65000°W / 54.48111; -5.65000

Whiterock is a small village in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is within the townland of Killinakin, in the civil parish of Killinchy and historic barony of Dufferin, on the western shore of Strangford Lough, near to the village of Killinchy.[1] It is in the Ards and North Down Borough. It had a population of 355 people (141 households) in the 2011 Census.[2] (2001 Census: 351 people)

Whiterock is home to two yacht clubs: Strangford Lough Yacht Club and 1.5 km to the north, Down Cruising Club.[3] The latter is based in a moored former lightship, the Petrel, acquired in 1968. The lightship had been built by the Dublin Dockyard Company in 1915 for the Commissioners of Irish Lights and since registered as a National Historic Ship UK.[4][5]

Between the two yacht clubs is Sketrick Castle, a 15th-century tower house on Sketrick Island, now in ruins. To the south of Whiterock is Ballymorran Bay.[3]

History

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The origin of the name "Whiterock" is uncertain, but it may come from a white aplite seam found in the local granite.

Rev. John Livingstone, chaplain to the Countess of Wigtown, was invited to Killinchy by Sir James Hamilton in 1630 and led a congregation at the earlier church on the current Parish Church site. In 1636, he attempted to sail to America on the Eagle Wing but returned and later moved to Stranraer, where his Killinchy congregation visited him from Donaghadee. Michael Bruce, a later minister, was arrested in Scotland for preaching illegally and chose exile in Killinchy, effectively returning home. The church cemetery contains the graves of Bruce’s children and 1798 rebellion figures James McCann and Dr. James Cord. Killinchy Presbyterian Church has a cruciform layout, and nearby Sketrick Castle dates to the 1400s. The area’s history is featured in James Meikle’s 1839 novel Killinchy in the Days of Livingstone [6] and W.G. Lyttle’s 1890 book Daft Eddie and the Smugglers of Strangford Lough[7], which inspired a local restaurant’s name.[8]

Lightship Petrel

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The lightship Petrel, built in 1915, was part of the Seabird-class of lightships and was constructed using riveted iron and steel. Petrel operated primarily at the Blackwater Bank station off the coast of Wexford, where it served as a floating lighthouse. After being decommissioned in 1968, the vessel was sold to Hammond Lane Foundries in Dublin. The Down Cruising Club later purchased the ship for £2,049.50 and moved it to Ballydorn in Strangford Lough. Since then, it has been used as the club’s headquarters. Modifications have been made to support its new function, including the installation of electricity, heating, and communication systems. Petrel remains afloat at this location.[9]

Sketrick Castle Sketrick Castle is situated on Sketrick Island, accessible by a causeway on the west coast of Strangford Lough. Built in the mid-15th century, this large tower house played a role in 16th-century warfare. Originally four storeys high, it featured a boat bay, a subterranean passage, and four ground-level chambers. The largest chamber had a vaulted ceiling supported by wicker centring and contained two ovens, while a small, unlit room may have served as a lock-up or treasury. The structure remained mostly intact until half of it collapsed during a storm in 1896. Remnants of the bawn wall still stand to the north and east of the castle.

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References

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  1. ^ Ordnance Survey Ireland: Online map viewer (choose "historic" to see townland boundaries)
  2. ^ "Whiterock". Census 2011 Results. NI Statistics and Research Agency. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  3. ^ a b Sandford, Ernest (1976). Discover Northern Ireland. NI Tourist Board. p. 198. ISBN 0 9500222 7 6.
  4. ^ "Down Cruising Club". Down Cruising Club. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  5. ^ "Light Ship Petrel". National Historic Ships UK. Retrieved 6 March 2015.
  6. ^ Meikle, J. (1839). Killinchy, Or, The Days of Livingston: A Tale of the Ulster Presbyterians. Ireland: M'Comb.
  7. ^ Lyttle, W. G. (1979). Daft Eddie, Or, The Smugglers of Strangford Lough. Newcastle, County Down, Northern Ireland: Mourne Observer Press.
  8. ^ "Ulster-Scots in Killinchy and Whiterock". Visit Ards and North Down. Retrieved 27 May 2025.
  9. ^ "Whiterock". Visit Ards and North Down. Retrieved 27 May 2025.