Listooder Explained

Official Name:Listooder
Irish Name:Lios an tSúdaire
Static Image Name:Looking down on Listooder.jpg
Static Image Caption:Looking down on Listooder
Label Position:none
Coordinates:54.4071°N -5.8092°W
Population:31
Population Ref:(2011 Census)
Unitary Northern Ireland:Down
Country:Northern Ireland
Post Town:DOWNPATRICK
Postcode Area:BT
Postcode District:BT30
Dial Code:028

Listooder is a hamlet and townland situated outside Crossgar towards both Ballynahinch and Saintfield in County Down, Northern Ireland. Listooder derives its name from the Irish word Lios an tSúdaire meaning "fort of the leather tanner" or "ring-fort".[1] From the mid 19th century, the hamlet was known as the Cock, while the townland which centres around the fort was called Listooder.

The hamlet has a small working farm, a missionary hall, an Orange Lodge, and a Non-Subscribing Presbyterian church. During the 19th and 20th centuries, Listooder also had a shop, public house, and a primary school. Housing has extended from the crossroads (postbox) towards Saintfield in recent decades. According to the 2011 census, there were then nine houses and 31 people living in Listooder.

Features

A small river runs through Listooder which is a tributary of the Ballynahinch River, which eventually leads into the Quoile River.

Overlooking Listooder lies an old thousand-year-old rath/fort (hence lios) which sits on one of the parish's highest drumlin hills. It has a 360° view across the Down Drumlins as far as the Mourne Mountains.

Less than half a mile outside Listooder, on the border of the two townlands of Listooder and Clontaghnaglar,[2] in a field along Abbeyview Road, sits an 18th-century priest's gravestone with a cross engraved on it and surrounded by a stone wall with a sycamore and beech tree.

On Abbeyview Road, there is also an old railway bridge that goes over the old Downpatrick-Belfast railway line that stopped functioning in 1950. During the world wars, children got off here and stayed at nearby houses for safety.

Buildings & Societies

People

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Loganin. Placenames Database of Ireland. 10 February 2014.
  2. Web site: Davies. Rosalind. Kilmore Parish townlands. ancestry.com. rootsweb. 16 February 2015. Map of Kilmore Parish.
  3. Web site: Rademon Church history . Rademon Church . 16 September 2019.
  4. Web site: True Blues. Listooder. Listooder Flute Band.
  5. Web site: Youth Fellowship. Listooder. Listooder Missionary Hall. 10 February 2012.
  6. News: Callum Bowsie . History of the oldest ploughing society in Ireland - Listooder & Dist . Farming Life . Newsletter . 31 January 2021 . 47-49.
  7. News: Claire. McNeilly. TUV's Jim Allister: I was aghast to see terrorists sitting in government ... being advised by other terrorists. Belfasttelegraph.co.uk. Belfast Telegraph. 13 January 2018.
  8. Web site: History of Listooder Ploughing Society . Crossgar Life . 5 February 2021.