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Keady

Keady
Kinelowen Street, Keady - geograph.org.uk - 1406762.jpg
Kinelowen Street
Keady is located in Northern Ireland
Keady
Keady shown within Northern Ireland
Population 3,036 (2011 Census)
Irish grid reference H844340
District
County
Country Northern Ireland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Postcode district BT
Dialling code 028, 048
Police Northern Ireland
Fire Northern Ireland
Ambulance Northern Ireland
EU Parliament Northern Ireland
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
Northern Ireland
Armagh
54°14′54″N 6°42′17″W / 54.2483°N 6.7046°W / 54.2483; -6.7046Coordinates: 54°14′54″N 6°42′17″W / 54.2483°N 6.7046°W / 54.2483; -6.7046

Keady (from Irish: an Céide, meaning "the flat-topped hill") is a village and civil parish in County Armagh, Northern Ireland. It is south of Armagh and near the border with the Republic of Ireland. It is situated mainly in the historic barony of Armagh with six townlands in the barony of Tiranny. It had a population of 3,036 people in the 2011 Census.

A tributary of the river Callan, known as the Clea, flows from its source in Clea lake through the middle of the village. The river Clea once powered Keady's millwheels. In the middle of the village, on the banks of the river, stands the Old Mill, which has been converted into workshops and offices.

The name Keady is recorded as long ago as 1674 in a letter from Symore Richardson to the Provost of Trinity College, Dublin (the district was part of a grant of county Armagh lands to that college). However, the village did not emerge as an important centre until the mid 18th century when the use of waterpower led to the growth of great linen mills and factories. By 1837, Keady was noted as being the centre of an important flourishing linen trade by Samuel Lewis in his Topographical Dictionary of Ireland. The Keady Monument was erected by the local people to honour William Kirk, who through his mills at Keady and Darkley, provided so much economic prosperity in the area. The village also became a centre of tailoring before World War I, and the arrival of the railway brought the town great commercial benefit, although the lines for both goods and passenger traffic have since closed. Until recently Keady retained its links with clothing manufacture, with a major textiles firm employing many local people, this has since closed. Situated on the river Clea (which flows from Clea Lake to the River Callan), Keady is noted chiefly for the 'Keady trout Lakes'. It is also of interest to the industrial archeologist as the centre of a district with many derelict watermills. Tassagh Glen, just outside the village, has a mill and viaduct of great size. The newly restored mill in the middle of Keady offers the visitor a glimpse into Keady's industrial past.


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