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The
Ulster Folk and Transport Museum covers an area of about two hundred acres, A walk through the grounds of the museum is to be transported back in time, you can easily imagine yourself in countryside of the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries, as you come across farmhouses where the attendants are dressed in period costume, often you can purchase stews and other traditional food cooked on a turf fire. You can experience the sights and smells of agricultural life, animals such as pigs, sheep, cattle and horses are kept on some of the farms. Crops are grown on some of the land using the implements and methods used in the past. Elsewhere you can see craft demonstrations such as spinning and basket weaving The main building which has a rather modern appearance
houses Crossing the main Belfast to Bangor road via a footbridge you will find the Ulster Transport Museum. All facets of transport are covered, we just couldn't begin to list them all, there is everything from the huge steam locomotive Maeve to penny farthing bicycles, and even a Trading schooner 'Result'. The Result was in her time regarded as the most
beautiful and able trading schooners of her time, she was built across
Belfast Lough in Carrickfergus and launched in 1893. Sadly the old sailing fishing vessel 'Mary Joseph' which was an old Nicki Boat, formerly owned by Jim Pat Curran, of Kilkeel Co Down seems to be absent from its former position beside the The Result Illustrated above on the right is a reproduction
of Harry Ferguson's airplane, it was made at Newcastle Co Down by the
late Leslie Hanna a boat builder of renowned ability. If it is your intention to visit County Down, this must surely be the star attraction, my advice to you would be don't miss it.
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