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{{Short description|Main road through west Belfast in Northern Ireland}}
{{nofootnotes|date=April 2008}}
{{About|Falls Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland||Falls Road (disambiguation)}}
:''Falls Road also refers to the ], the ]'s line to ].''
{{EngvarB|date=October 2013}}
'''The Falls Road''' (''Bóthar na bhFál'' in ], meaning "road of the hedgerows") is the main road through west ] in ]; from Divis Street in ] to ] in the suburbs. Its name is synonymous with the ] and ] communities in the city. It is easily known as one of the more famous streets in Northern Ireland, drawing many tourists all year round. The neighbouring ] is predominantly ], separated from the Falls Road by ]. The road is usually referred to as ''The'' Falls Road, rather than as Falls Road.
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}
{{Infobox street
| name = Falls Road
| native_name = {{native name|ga|Bóthar na bhFál}}
| alternate_name = {{langx|ga|Bóthar na bhFál}} ]: Faas Raa
| image = Catholicbelfast.jpg
| caption = Falls Road looking towards Divis flats and the city centre
| former_names =
| postal_code = ]
| length_m = 1600
| map_type = United Kingdom Greater Belfast
| length_ft =
| location = ], Northern Ireland
| maint = ]
| coordinates = {{coord|54.59347|N|5.95823|W|type:landmark_region:GB_scale:10000|display=title,inline}}
| known_for = Numerous ]s, ] community
| direction_a = Northeast
| terminus_a = Divis Street
| direction_b = Southwest
| terminus_b = Andersonstown Road
}}

The '''Falls Road''' ({{etymology|ga|] na bhFál|territory of the enclosures}}<ref name="PlaceNames NI">{{Cite web |url=http://www.placenamesni.org/resultdetails.php?entry=6788 |title=PlaceNames NI: Falls |access-date=23 January 2015 |archive-date=5 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305082116/http://www.placenamesni.org/resultdetails.php?entry=6788 |url-status=dead }}</ref>) is the main road through West ], ], running from Divis Street in ] to ] in the suburbs. The name has been synonymous for at least a century and a half with the Catholic community in the city. The road is usually referred to as ''the'' Falls Road, rather than as Falls Road. It is known in Irish as the ''Bóthar na bhFál'' and as the ''Faas Raa'' in ].<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121107052142/http://www.dcalni.gov.uk/index/language-cultural-diversity-r08/irish.htm |date=7 November 2012 }}, dcalni.gov.uk; accessed 30 March 2015.</ref>

==Location==
]
The Falls Road forms the first three miles of the A501 which starts in Belfast city centre and runs southwest through the city forking just after the Falls Park into the B102 which continues for a short distance to ]. The A501 continues as the Glen Road. The area is composed largely of residential housing, with more public sector housing in the lower sections of the road. There are many small shops lining the road as well as schools, churches, hospitals and leisure facilities. Employment in the area was originally dominated by the large linen mills but these have mostly closed. Today, local employment is in the service sector, health and education with additional employment in other parts of the city.

The Falls Road district can be roughly divided into three sections. The Lower Falls which includes Divis Street starts near the city centre and continues to the junction with the ]. The middle Falls district centres on Beechmount. The Upper Falls starts about the Donegall Road and continues into Andersonstown.

The short stretch of the road from the city centre to the start of Divis Street at Millfield is known as Castle Street after the former ] which was built nearby by the ] in the 12th century. Castle Street begins at the junction with ] and Donegall Place, the main shopping district of Belfast. Two large buildings flank either side of the entrance to the street. On one side is the ] and on the other is the former home of the Anderson & McAuley department store.

Near the start of Castle Street is Chapel Lane on which ] is situated. This is the oldest ] church in Belfast and dates from 1784. Nearby on Bank Street is located the historic ] bar which dates from 1720. Opposite was located ''St. Mary's Hall'', a popular social venue which was constructed in 1875 but demolished in 1990.<ref>{{cite web |title=S.Mary's Hall, Belfast |url=https://archiseek.com/2014/1874-catholic-hall-belfast-co-antrim/ |website=archiseek |date=14 May 2014 |access-date=22 June 2020}}</ref> Bank Street begins at Royal Avenue. The ornate building at its entrance was the former home of the ] which was erected in 1869.<ref>{{cite web |title=1869 – Former Bank |url=https://www.archiseek.com/2009/1869-former-first-trust-bank-belfast/ |website=archiseek |date=23 September 2009 |access-date=6 September 2022}}</ref> When it closed in 1989, the building was occupied until 2021 by a ] store.<ref>{{cite web |title=10 of Britain's best listed supermarkets |url=https://thespaces.com/10-of-britains-best-listed-supermarkets/ |website=the spaces |date=30 September 2015 |access-date=23 June 2020}}</ref> It was then refurbished as a social facility by ].<ref>{{cite web |title=2 Royal Avenue |url=https://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/2royalavenue |website=Belfast City Council |access-date=6 September 2022}}</ref>


==History== ==History==
The Falls Road derives its name from the Irish ''] na bhFál'', an Irish ] whose name means "territory of the enclosures".<ref name="PlaceNames NI"/> These enclosures resulted from the ] which occurred from the seventeenth century. This territory was roughly the same as that of the ] of the Shankill, which spanned a large portion of modern-day Belfast.<ref name="PlaceNames NI"/>
The Falls Road was originally a country lane leading from the city centre but the population of the area expanded rapidly in the nineteenth century with the construction of several large ] mills. All of these have now closed. The housing in the area developed in the nineteenth century and was organised in narrow streets of small terraced back-to-back housing. By the 1960s the buildings in the area had decayed considerably and the ] introduced a major development plan which involved wholescale demolition of much of the area and its replacement with a series of flat complexes. The high point of this redevelopment was ].

The Falls Road itself was originally a country lane leading from the city centre but a largely Catholic population—refugees from a rural poverty that been intensified by Belfast's mechanisation of what had been a cottage textile industry and, in the 1840s, by ]—was drawn to the area by the prospects for female and child employment in new linen mills.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kelly |first1=Mary |date=April 2013 |title=Historical Internal Migration in Ireland |url=https://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/~gisteac/proceedingsonline/GISRUK2013/gisruk2013_submission_63.pdf |url-status=live |journal=GIS Research UK |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180817225743/https://www.geos.ed.ac.uk/~gisteac/proceedingsonline/GISRUK2013/gisruk2013_submission_63.pdf |archive-date=17 August 2018 |access-date=17 August 2018}}</ref> All of these mills have now closed or have been repurposed. This original area, which was centred on the junction of modern-day Millfield and College Avenue on what is now Divis Street, was known as Falls and lent its name to the road.<ref>, rushlightmagazine.com; accessed 30 March 2015.</ref> which had previously been called ''The Pound''.<ref>{{cite web| title=Old Pound Loney|url=http://oldbelfastdistricts.rushlightmagazine.com/loney.html|access-date=9 December 2016}}</ref> The housing in the area developed in the 19th century and was organised in narrow streets of small terraced housing. The ] linking the ] and ] motorways now cuts through this area.

==Lower Falls==
]
This section of the road stretches from the junction of Castle Street and Millfield to the Grosvenor Road/] intersection. The lower part of the road is named Divis Street after the ] mountain which overlooks much of West Belfast. The Falls Road proper begins at the junction with Northumberland Street and Albert Street. The area to the south of Divis Street/Lower Falls Road was considered the heart of the district and was initially composed of rows of small terraced houses which were constructed in the mid to late nineteenth century to house mill workers and their families. The area is detailed in the 1931 Ordnance Survey map of the area.<ref>{{cite book |title=Old Ordnance Survey Maps:The Falls 1931 |date=August 1989 |publisher=Alan Godfrey |location=Gateshead |isbn=0-85054-247-2}}</ref> Shortly after Millfield, the road crosses over the Westlink (A12) which links three motorways - the M1 to the southwest of the city, the M2 to the north and the ] to the east. Running alongside the Westlink is Townsend Street which originally marked the end of Belfast. Townsend Street links Divis Street with Peter's Hill at the bottom of the Shankill Road.

===Housing===
The housing in the area developed in the 19th century and was organised in narrow streets of small terraced housing. Many of the streets were named after local mill owners. Alexander Street West was named after John Alexander who was a local mill owner. He also named Milford Street after ] where he had a house.<ref>{{cite web |title=Memories of old St.Peters |url=http://www.belfasthistory.org/memories-of-st-peters/ |website=Belfast history |date=30 May 2012 |access-date=24 June 2020}}</ref> Ardmoulin Street was named after Ardmoulin House, the residence of John Chartres of Falls Flax and Weaving Company. Craig Street was called after the Craig family who owned the New Northern Mill at the corner of Northumberland Street.<ref>{{cite web |title=Belfast History |url=http://joegraham.rushlightmagazine.com/ |website=Rushlight |access-date=24 June 2020}}</ref>
]
By the 1960s the buildings in the area had decayed considerably and the ] introduced a major development plan which involved wholescale demolition of much of the area. Many of the old street names were retained in the new housing development. In the Divis Street area, the housing was replaced with the Divis Flats complex which consisted of twelve blocks of flats built on top of the historic district formerly known as the ''Pound Loney''.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Roy |first1=Megan |title=Divis Flats |journal=Iowa Historical Review |date=2007 |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=1–44 |doi=10.17077/2373-1842.1001 |doi-access=free }}</ref> The high point of this redevelopment was ]. Because of its rapid deterioration, the whole complex, except for Divis Tower, was demolished thirty years later and replaced with blocks of terraced housing.<ref>{{cite web |title=1969 – Divis Flats, Belfast |url=https://archiseek.com/2014/1969-divis-flats-belfast-co-antrim/ |website=archiseek |date=27 February 2014 |access-date=22 June 2020}}</ref>

]
Past Albert Street, more mills were built on the northern side and more streets of small terraced houses on the southern side. The old streets were named after characters and events in the ] (1853–1856) which was occurring at that time.<ref name="PlaceNames NI"/> These include Raglan Street (named after ], commander of British forces in the Crimean War), Garnet Street (after ]), Alma Street (after the ]), Balaklava Street (after the ]), Inkerman Street (after the ]), Sevastopol Street (after the ]), Plevna Street (after the ]), Varna Street (after the ]) as well as Omar Street (after ]) and Osman Street (after ]). There were also streets named after Balkan places such as Bosnia Street, Balkan Street, Roumania Street and ] Street. Other streets were named after contemporary political and royal figures such as Peel Street (after ]) and Albert Street (named after ]).<ref>{{cite book |title=Old Ordnance Survey Maps:The Falls 1931 |date=August 1989 |publisher=Alan Godfrey |location=Gateshead |isbn=0-85054-247-2}}</ref> Marchioness Street and Lady Street are probably named after Lady Dufferin, the ], originally from ], who had been the ] (1884–1888). These street names are recalled in the collection of poetry ''The Irish for No'' by ]. In one of the poems entitled "The Exiles' Club", Carson imagines a group of Belfast exiles:
:''After years they have reconstructed the whole of the Falls Road, and now''
:''Are working on the back streets: Lemon, Peel and Omar, Balaclava, Alma.''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Carson |first1=Ciaran |title=The Irish for No |date=1987 |publisher=Gallery Books |location=Dublin, Ireland |isbn=1-85235-016-4 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/irishforno0000cars }}</ref>

All of these houses have now been demolished and replaced with modern terraced houses.

At the foot of Divis Street is located the Morning Star House. This is a hostel which provides temporary accommodation for homeless people. It is run by the ] and was originally located at the corner of Percy Street.<ref>{{cite web |title=Morning Star House |url=https://belfast.cylex-uk.co.uk/company/morning-star-house-13645740.html |website=Belfast Cyclex |access-date=4 February 2021}}</ref> Additional accommodation for homeless people is provided nearby by First Housing at Ardmoulin Mews, off Ardmoulin Street.<ref>{{cite web |title=Accommodation Services |url=https://www.first-housing.com/node/25 |website=First Housing |access-date=8 February 2024}}</ref>

===Schools===
]
At the foot of Divis Street is located the Millfield campus of ], the largest further and higher education college in Northern Ireland. Nearby was located the original ]. In the 1960s, this school transferred to a greenfield site on the ] in the upper Falls.<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Mary's Christian Brothers Grammar School, Belfast|url=http://www.stmaryscbgs.com//|access-date= 12 November 2016}}</ref> The original school building is now the home of the ]. Opposite is ''St. Mary's Primary School''. Nearby is the location of the ''Árd Scoil'' which was historically the centre for Irish language and culture in the area. Just past it was located the Hastings Street ] station.

There are currently two other primary schools in the Lower Falls district. These are ''St. Peter's''<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Peter's Primary School, Belfast| url=http://www.stpeterspsbelfast.co.uk//| access-date=10 March 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170312054730/http://www.stpeterspsbelfast.co.uk//| archive-date=12 March 2017| url-status=dead| df=dmy-all}}</ref> on Ross Road and ''St. Joseph's''<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Joseph's Primary School, Belfast|url=http://www.stjosephsslatestreet.belfast.ni.sch.uk//|access-date= 10 March 2017}}</ref> on Slate Street. In addition, there is the Irish language ''Gaelscoil an Lonnáin'' which occupies the site of ] at the top end of Leeson Street. St Finian's School and the nearby ''St. Gall's Primary School'' closed in the late twentieth century due to declining student numbers. These schools were run by the ]. The name of the latter school survives in the name of St. Galls' Avenue. ''St Comgall's Public Elementary School'', in Divis Street, opened in 1932 but closed in 1988.<ref>{{cite web |title=St. Comgall's School |url=https://www.28dayslater.co.uk/threads/st-comgalls-school-divis-belfast.110629/ |website=28 Days Later |date=8 November 2017 |access-date=25 February 2020}}</ref> It has been transformed into a community hub for a range of community and business activities and is involved in the development of a ''Visitor Heritage Interpretation Space'' for the area. The centre is named ''Ionad (Centre) Eileen Howell'' after a local community activist.<ref>{{cite web |title=St Comgall's – Ionad Eileen Howell |url=https://fallscouncil.com/causes/st-comgalls/ |website=Falls Community Council |date=14 June 2022 |access-date=2 November 2022}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=McParland |first1=Conor |title=New heritage project at St Comgall's to reconnect Falls and Divis with its local history |url=https://belfastmedia.com/new-heritage-project-at-st-comgalls-receives-over-850-000-funding?utm_campaign=Briefing+-+2024-11-07&utm_content=Story8&utm_medium=Email&utm_source=Mailchimp |access-date=7 November 2024 |work=Belfast Media |date=7 November 2024}}</ref> The ''Falls Community Council'' (Comhairle Phobail na bhFal) is based in the centre. It provides a range of local services and is committed to the regeneration of the area.<ref>{{cite web |title=Community is our Main Goal |url=https://fallscouncil.com/ |website=Falls Community Council |access-date=5 December 2024}}</ref> ''St. Brendan's Primary School'' on nearby Milford Street closed in the 1960s but for two years housed some pupils from St. Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School which at that time had exceeded its capacity in its Barrack Street premises.

The ''Dunlewey Centre''<ref>{{cite web|title=Dunlewey Centre Belfast Belfast|url=http://belfast.cylex-uk.co.uk/company/dunlewey-centre-ltd-15582351.html|access-date=6 November 2016}}</ref> is located near Gaelscoil an Lonnáin. The building was originally the home of the ] and also housed ''St. Vincent's Primary School for Girls''. It is a now the home of a community education centre.<ref>{{cite web|title=New Start Centre|url=https://newstartedu.org.uk|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> Dunlewey Street on which it is located is named after the residence of a local mill owner, William Ross, who owned a house in ], County Donegal. The nearby Ross Road is also named after William Ross.<ref>{{cite web |title=Memories of St. Peters |url=http://www.belfasthistory.org/memories-of-st-peters/ |website=Belfast History |date=30 May 2012 |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref>

===Churches===
]
The churches in the Lower Falls district reflect the changing demographics of the area. There are three Catholic churches in the area. The oldest is ] which opened in 1784 (see above).<ref>{{cite web |title=History |url=http://www.stmarysbelfast.org/history/ |website=St. Mary's Church |access-date=20 February 2023}}</ref> ] is located just off Albert Street. This was originally a parish church built for the expanding Catholic population in the area and opened in 1866. It was designed by Fr Jeremiah Ryan McAulay,<ref>{{cite web |title=1866 – St. Peter's Cathedral, Belfast |url=https://archiseek.com/2016/church-falls-rd-belfast/ |website=Archiseek |date=6 May 2016 |access-date=22 June 2020}}</ref> who had trained as an architect before he became a priest, and built on a site donated by a local baker, ]. It became the cathedral church for the ] and the episcopal seat of the Bishop of Down and Connor in 1986. It is home to St Peter's Schola Cantorum (Choir).<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Peter's Cathedral|url=http://www.stpeterscathedralbelfast.com/|access-date=2 October 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=visit St Peter's Cathedral|url=https://www.inspirock.com/united-kingdom/belfast/st-peters-cathedral-a5141663621|access-date=12 January 2020}}</ref> ],<ref>{{cite web| title=Clonard Monastery|url=http://www.clonard.com/|access-date=2 October 2016}}</ref> the home of the ] religious order, is located near the junction with ]. The church formally opened in 1911 replacing a small church which opened in 1897. Father ] who played an important role in the ] was based here.

There were/are seven Protestant churches which were/are largely located on the edges of the area and their congregations were/are mostly drawn from neighbouring districts. All but one of the older churches have been closed, repurposed or demolished since the onset of the ] and the establishment of the ]. There were three ] churches. ''St. Luke's Church'' (1863–2006) on Northumberland Street, was the ] church for the Lower Falls. When it closed its congregation amalgamated with ''St. Stephen's Church'' in Millfield at the foot of Divis Street.<ref>{{cite web|title=St. Stephen's Church|url=https://connor.anglican.org/parishes/st-stephen-and-st-luke-lower-falls/|access-date=5 July 2019}}</ref> This church which opened in 1856 was designed by ] who also designed ] and many other churches.<ref>{{cite web |title=St Stephen's, Millfield |url=https://connor.anglican.org/2019/10/14/st-stephens-millfield-set-to-celebrate-150-years/ |website=Diocese of Connor |date=14 October 2019 |access-date=20 February 2023}}</ref> ''St Philips Church (Drew Memorial)'' opened on the Grosvenor Road in 1870. It was named after the fiery preacher Rev. Dr. Thomas Drew who hailed from ] and became a very influential clergyman when he moved to Belfast.<ref>{{cite web |title=Staunch and true |url=https://www.orangeheritage.co.uk/post/staunch-true-did-you-know-part-two |website=Museum of Orange Heritage |date=21 May 2020 |access-date=20 February 2023}}</ref> It closed in 1994 and the church congregation merged with that of ''St. Simon's Church'' on the ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Church of Ireland churches|url=http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=353901.0/|access-date=5 July 2019}}</ref> A war memorial from the church is preserved in the Somme Museum, ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Memorial Drew Memorial Church |url=https://www.iwm.org.uk/memorials/item/memorial/82603 |website=Imperial War Museum |access-date=16 February 2024}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Somme Museum |url=https://www.sommeassociation.com/visit/somme-museum |website=Somme Association |access-date=16 February 2024}}</ref> The church was sold to Dwyer's Gaelic Athletic Club who built their clubrooms on the site.
There were two ] churches. The largest was located on the other side of the ] dividing Townsend Street which links Divis Street with Peter's Hill, the lower ]. It opened in 1878 and formally closed in 2022 when it was taken over as a rehearsal space by the ].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Kenwood |first1=Michael |title=Townsend Street Presbyterian Church Hall to become base for Ulster Orchestra |url=https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/news/belfast-news/townsend-street-presbyterian-church-hall-24306202 |access-date=15 January 2023 |work=Belfast Media |date=24 June 2022}}</ref> Nearby was located the ''Soho Foundry'' established by ] in 1846. It is now an enterprise centre.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Wylie |first1=Lorraine |title=Entrepreneurial spirit alive and well for those working in historic Townsend Street area of Belfast |url=https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/features/entrepreneurial-spirit-alive-and-well-for-those-working-in-historic-townsend-street-area-of-belfast-40048176.html |access-date=16 January 2023 |work=Belfast Telegraph |date=4 February 2021}}</ref> There was also a Presbyterian church in Albert Street (1852–1972) where one of the ministers was the Rev. Henry Montgomery who helped establish the Shankill Road Mission in 1896.<ref>{{cite web| title=Rev. Henry Montgomery|date=19 March 2014 |url=http://www.presbyterianhistoryireland.com/2014/03/rev-henry-montgomery-and-the-shankill-road-mission/|access-date=2 October 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Matt |first1=Fox |title=The artists breathing new life into listed building|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c7v5nmg1g23o |access-date=17 August 2024 |work=BBC |date=17 August 2024}}</ref> The ''Maureen Sheehan Centre'' is now located on the site of the church.<ref>{{cite web |title=Maureen Sheehan Centre |url=https://belfasttrust.hscni.net/about/facilities/health-centres/maureen-sheehan/ |website=Belfast Health & Social Care Trust |access-date=12 February 2023}}</ref> The centre is named after a local community nurse who was killed in a nearby car accident.<ref>{{cite news |title=Notorious car criminal dies |url=https://www.irishnews.com/news/northernirelandnews/2019/07/27/news/notorious-car-criminal-dies-1671768/ |access-date=12 February 2023 |work=Irish News |date=27 July 2019}}</ref> Four sculptures from the church are featured in the facade of the centre.<ref>{{cite news |title=Reintroducing the Presbyterian Church to the Falls Road |url=https://belfastmedia.com/albert-street-presbyterian-church |access-date=12 February 2023 |work=Belfast Media |date=11 February 2023}}</ref>

There was also a ] church in Divis Street (1850–1966).<ref>{{cite web| title=Falls Road Methodist Church|url=http://methodisthistoryireland.org/product/falls-road-methodist-church-belfast-one-hundred-years-1854-1954//|access-date=2 October 2016}}</ref> This church was designed by ] and was the original home of the Falls Road ]. Nearby was the Hungarian Flour Mill owned by ]. The mill burned down in a fire in 1966.<ref>{{cite web |title=1884 – Hungarian Flour Mill |url=http://archiseek.com/2017/1884-hungarian-flour-mills-divis-street-belfast/ |website=Archiseek |date=26 January 2017 |access-date=20 March 2020}}</ref>

A recent addition is the ''New Life City Church'' which is located on Northumberland Street on the peace line marking the separation of the Falls Road and the Shankill Road. It is an ].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Campbell |first1=Niamh |title=Shankill Pastor's 'human peace wall' signifies 'one community coming together' |url=https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/northern-ireland/shankill-pastors-human-peace-wall-signifies-one-community-coming-together/135431553.html |access-date=8 April 2023 |work=Belfast Telegraph |date=7 April 2023}}</ref>

===Commercial facilities===
]
The Lower Falls area previously had many linen mills. These have either been demolished or converted for other purposes. The Twin Spires Complex has replaced the demolished massive mill of the New Northern Spinning and Weaving Company (Craig's Mill) which was located at the corner of Northumberland Street. The new complex consists of shops, offices and small industrial units. On the corner of Conway Street was located Greeves' Mill (original owner Thomas Greeves of ], Belfast) and also the Conway Mill (original owner James Kennedy of nearby Clonard). Originally a flax spinning mill, it now houses a community enterprise of small businesses, art studios, retail space and education floor.<ref>{{cite web| title=Conway Mill|url=http://www.conwaymill.org/|access-date=6 November 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=History of Conway Mill |url=https://www.culturenorthernireland.org/article/1118/history-of-conway-mill |website=Culture Northern Ireland |access-date=15 August 2020}}</ref> It also houses the ]. Finally, Ross's Mill was located on Clonard Street with an entrance at the top of Sevastopol Street. It has been demolished and replaced by housing but its name survives in the street name Ross Mill Avenue.

There are still two large flour mills located in the lower Falls district. Near the bottom of Divis Street is located Neill's Flour Mill which is entered via College Square North. This mill was originally a small stone mill but was taken over by James Neill in 1867 who converted it into a roller mill in 1880. This mill grew in size and in the 1960s it became part of Allied Mills which in turn became part of ]. The original mill was then demolished and rebuilt in 1986–7.<ref>{{cite web |title=Neill's Flour |url=https://neillsflour.co.uk/ |website=Neill's Flour |access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> Between Northumberland Street and Percy Street is located Andrews Flour Mill.<ref>{{cite web |title=History |url=https://www.andrewsflour.com/history/ |website=Andrews Flour |access-date=8 April 2023}}</ref> The mill was originally developed in 1895 by the Andrews family from ], County Down. ] was the second Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (1940–1943). Northumberland Street and Percy Street were named after ] who was the ] 1829–1830. Percy Street was badly damaged in the ] (1941) and 30 people were killed when a bomb hit a shelter.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ww2peopleswar/stories/66/a7713966.shtml |title= Memories of the Belfast Blitz|author=Belfast Central Library |date= |website=WW2 People's War |publisher=BBC|access-date=9 April 2023}}</ref> In August 1969, Percy Street and the neighbouring Dover Street were the location for major disturbance when a large crowd of Loyalists from the Shankill Road end attempted to invade Divis Street. Houses in the street were attacked and the residents fled (see ]). These mills recruited workers from both the Falls and Shankill Roads.

===Leisure facilities===
The ''Falls Leisure Centre'' is located in the lower Falls district. It currently offers a range of leisure facilities including a swimming pool, sauna and steam rooms, a gym, and a badminton court.<ref>{{cite web|title=Falls Leisure Centre|url=https://www.better.org.uk/leisure-centre/belfast/falls-leisure-centre|access-date=28 December 2019}}</ref> It was originally the location of the ''Falls Public Baths'' where local residents could avail of washing and swimming facilities.<ref>{{cite web|title=Going for a swim at the Falls Baths|date=19 May 2012 |url=http://www.belfasthistory.org/going-for-a-wash-at-the-falls-baths|access-date=28 December 2019}}</ref> On 16 April 1941, it was the site of a temporary morgue following the ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Falls Road Baths|url=https://wartimeni.com/location/falls-road-baths-falls-road-belfast-co-antrim|access-date=28 December 2019}}</ref> This is described in the novel '']'' by the novelist ].
]
One of three ] built in Belfast is situated in the lower Falls Road. It opened on 1 January 1908 and is the last Carnegie library in Belfast still functioning as a library.<ref>{{cite web|title=Catalogue of the Photographic Exhibition of Irish Carnegie Libraries|publisher=An Chomhairle Leabharlanna (Library Council of Ireland)|url=http://www.librarycouncil.ie/documents/AnTaisceCatalogue3.pdf|access-date=4 September 2012|archive-date=26 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726213327/http://www.librarycouncil.ie/documents/AnTaisceCatalogue3.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref> Opposite was located the ''Clonard Picture House'' which closed in 1966.<ref>{{cite web |title=Clonard Picture House |url=http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/43751 |website=Cinema Treasures |access-date=17 March 2020}}</ref> The ''Diamond Picture House'' at the corner of Cupar Street closed in 1959.<ref>{{cite web |title=Diamond Picture House |url=http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/43752 |website=Cinema Treasures |access-date=17 March 2020}}</ref> The ''Arcadian Cinema'' on Albert Street opened in 1912 but closed in 1960.<ref>{{cite web |title=Old Cinema Memories |url=http://www.thevacuum.org.uk/issues/issues0120/issue01/is01artoldcin.html |website=The Vacuum |access-date=15 August 2020}}</ref>

At the junction with Grosvenor Road is located ]<ref>{{cite web| title=Dunville Park, Belfast|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/parks-openspaces/Park-6634.aspx/|access-date= 12 November 2016}}</ref> which was first opened in 1893. It was funded by Robert G Dunville, the owner of the nearby ] whiskey distillery.<ref>{{cite web|title=Dunville Park – Belfast City Council|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/parks-openspaces/Park-6634.aspxand|access-date=5 July 2019}}</ref> who also funded the large fountain at the centre of the park which was designed by the English sculptor ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Arthur Edward Pearce|url=http://www.glasgowsculpture.com/pg_biography.php?sub=pearce_ae|access-date=5 July 2019}}</ref> Sorella Street at the foot of the park is named after the Sorella Trust which was established by Robert's uncle William Dunville who named the trust after his sister (sorella in Italian) Sarah.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Dunville Family |url=https://www.belfastentries.com/people/the-dunville-family/ |website=Belfast entries |date=24 May 2021 |access-date=21 February 2024}}</ref> The park has recently been refurbished and includes a football pitch. Nearby are located the clubrooms of Davitt's ]<ref>{{cite web |title=History |url=https://www.davitts.org/ |website=Michael Davitts GAC |access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref> and Dwyer's ].

A strong working class community, the Lower Falls has a history of storytelling, music and song which was often enjoyed in the many public houses in the area.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Adams |first1=Gerry |title=Falls Memories: A Belfast Life |date=1982 |publisher=Brandon |location=Dingle, Co. Kerry |isbn=0863220134}}</ref> These included such establishments as the ''Old House'' (famous for its folk music sessions), ''McGeown's'', the ''West End Bar'' (owned by Peter and Molly Murray and famous for its weekend sing-songs),<ref>{{cite book |last1=Murray |first1=Mary Margaret |title=The Murrays on the Falls |date=2022 |publisher=Divis Books |location=Belfast |pages=154 |url=https://lhlibapp.qub.ac.uk/search~S1?/aMurray%2C+Mary+Margaret./amurray+mary+margaret/-3%2C-1%2C0%2CB/frameset&FF=amurray+mary+margaret&1%2C1%2C |access-date=14 February 2024}}</ref> the ''Laurel Leaf'', the ''Centre Half'' and ''Haughey's''. ], who grew up in Peel Street, recalled in his autobiography ''Proved Innocent'' how he could see several pubs just a few yards from his front door:
''I'd watch the men off to the pubs. There were three pubs, Paddy Gilmartin's which was called the Laurel Leaf, Peter Murray's directly opposite, or further down on the right-hand side was Charlie Gormley's, across from Finnegan's the butcher shop.''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Conlon |first1=Gerry |title=Proved Innocent |date=1990 |publisher=Hamish Hamilton |location=London}}</ref> The ''Centre Half Bar'' which was located at the corner of Panton Street and the Falls Road was named by the licensee ] who played for both Belfast Celtic and Glasgow Celtic as well as Manchester United and Manchester City. He captained the Ireland team to their first ] championship win in 1914.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Law |first1=Gary |title=Historic Pubs of Belfast |date=2008 |publisher=Appletree Press |location=Belfast}}</ref> The ''Spanish Rooms'' bar, in lower Divis Street, was famed for selling ], especially to young men on their way to a dance. In the early 1970s it was the largest seller of cider in Britain and Ireland.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Law |first1=Gary |title=The hidden history of Belfast pubs |url=https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/the-hidden-history-of-belfast-pubs/28095072.html |access-date=13 June 2023 |work=Belfast Telegraph |date=6 April 2002}}</ref> Most of these bars were demolished as part of the redevelopment of the area which occurred in the 1970s and 1980s.

Near the foot of Divis Street is located the offices of ''Raidió Fáilte'', an Irish language community radio station.<ref>{{cite web |title=Raidió Fáilte |url=https://raidiofailte.com/?lang=en |website=Raidió Fáilte |access-date=4 February 2021}}</ref> It is housed in a purpose-built facility.<ref>{{cite web |title=Raidió Fáilte |url=https://www.mcgurk-architects.com/raidio-failte/ |website=McGurk Architects |access-date=4 February 2021}}</ref> Nearby, on the Cullingtree Road, is located the ''Frank Gillen Centre'' which offers a range of community services.<ref>{{cite web |title=Frank Gillen Centre |url=http://www.frankgillencentre.com/ |website=Frank Gillen Centre |access-date=8 February 2024}}</ref> Closer to the city centre, in College Court, off Castle Street, was located the ''Astor Ballroom'' which was a very popular dance venue in the 1960s and where such famous bands as ] and ] performed.<ref>{{cite web |title=Astor Ballroom |url=https://www.setlist.fm/venue/astor-ballroom-belfast-northern-ireland-33d208fd.html |website=SetList.fm |access-date=12 June 2023}}</ref>

===Murals and memorials===
On some walls along the main road have been painted large ]. These are representations of local and national political issues and figures. One of the most famous is the large mural of ] on the side wall of the ]'s offices at the corner of Sevastopol Street. It bears the quotation from his writings: ''our revenge will be the laughter of our children''. Further down the road on the corner of Northumberland Street is a series of murals which has come to be called the ''International or Solidarity Wall''. This is a series of images of international figures who have been involved in various liberation struggles. These murals have become a popular attraction for visiting tourists.<ref>{{cite web|title=Murals|url=http://www.librarycouncil.ie/documents/AnTaisceCatalogue3.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110726213327/http://www.librarycouncil.ie/documents/AnTaisceCatalogue3.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-date=26 July 2011}}</ref> The murals are frequently updated to reflect local support for certain individuals and groups (e.g. NHS staff).<ref>{{cite news |last1=McConville |first1=Marie Louise |title=New mural completed in west Belfast in honour of NHS |url=https://www.irishnews.com/paywall/tsb/irishnews/irishnews/irishnews//news/northernirelandnews/2020/04/20/news/new-mural-completed-in-west-belfast-in-honour-of-nhs-1907724/content.html |access-date=3 April 2022 |work=The Irish News |date=20 April 2020}}</ref> In 2023, a panel on the wall calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza was unveiled.<ref>{{cite news |last1=McCann |first1=Joe |title=Support for Gaza mural unveiled on the Falls Road |url=https://belfastmedia.com/new-mural-for-palestine-on-falls-road |access-date=8 November 2023 |publisher=Belfast Media |date=8 November 2023}}</ref> There are many other murals on nearby gable walls frequently exhorting peace and reconciliation between communities. One in Bread Street, off Albert Street, has a quotation from ]: ''It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept and celebrate those differences''.

Opposite the junction with Conway Street is a Garden of Remembrance. This is dedicated to the members of the IRA and the civilians from the Falls Road area who were killed during the Troubles and the prisoners in the H Block at the Long Kesh prison who died while on hunger strike in 1981.<ref>{{cite web|title=Garden of Remembrance |url=https://streetsofbelfast.kabosh.net/garden-of-remembrance.php |access-date=17 August 2024}}</ref>

==Middle Falls==
]
This section of the road centres on the ] district and stretches from the intersection with the Grosvenor Road/Springfield Road to the Whiterock Road. The district takes its name from Beechmount House which was located at the top of a nearby hill surrounded by beech trees.<ref>{{cite web|title=Beechmount|url=http://beechmount.rushlightmagazine.com|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> It was the former home of ]. It is now the site of an Irish Language school.

The Whiterock Road leads to the ] and to ] districts. It also leads to the ] which forms part of the range of hills overlooking Belfast. Across the Falls Road from the Whiterock Road is the Donegall Road. This road leads down to the junction with Broadway and Westlink – M1 motorway and then on down to ] in the city centre. At the junction with Westlink is located the large public sculpture formally called ] but informally known as ''the balls on the Falls''.

Through the area flowed the Clowney Water or River (Irish ''Abhainn na Cluana'' – River of the meadow)<ref>{{cite web |title=palcenamesni.org |url=http://www.placenamesni.org/resultdetails.php?entry=3799 |access-date=5 April 2021}}</ref> which is a tributary of the larger ]. Both have largely been covered over and piped in.<ref>{{cite web |title=Map of Belfast's past |url=https://www.irishecho.com/2011/02/streets-where-we-lived-a-map-of-belfasts-past-2/ |website=Map of Belfast's past |date=16 February 2011 |publisher=Irish Echo |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref>

===Hospitals===
]
There are several large hospitals in the area including the ], the Royal Jubilee Maternity Service, the ] (Children's Hospital), and the Royal Dental Hospital.<ref>{{cite web| title=Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast|url=http://www.belfasttrust.hscni.net/hospitals/RVHIntro.htm/|access-date= 12 November 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200327163228/http://belfasttrust.hscni.net/hospitals/RVHIntro.htm/ |archive-date=2020-03-27}}</ref> These four linked hospitals make up Northern Ireland's biggest hospitals complex. The Royal Victoria Hospital treats over 80,000 people as inpatients and 350,000 people as outpatients every year. The complex is a major training site for medical, dental, nursing and other health students from Queen's University Belfast.<ref>{{cite web|title=Royal Victoria Hospital|url=http://www.belfasttrust.hscni.net/hospitals/RVHIntro.htm|access-date=15 February 2020|archive-date=8 June 2013|archive-url=https://archive.wikiwix.com/cache/20130608040058/http://www.belfasttrust.hscni.net/hospitals/RVHIntro.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> The original hospital opened in 1797 and moved to its present site in 1903.<ref>{{cite web |title=1903 – Royal Victoria Infirmary, Belfast |url=https://archiseek.com/2009/1901-royal-victoria-infirmary-belfast/ |website=archiseek |date=16 September 2009 |access-date=22 June 2020}}</ref> The hospital was designed by Henman and Cooper of Birmingham in 1899, completed in 1906. It was claimed to be the first air-conditioned public building in the world.<ref>{{cite web|title=Historic Hospitals – Northern Ireland|date= 2 April 2018|url= https://historic-hospitals.com/northern-ireland|access-date=15 February 2020}}</ref>

Opposite the Children's Hospital is Mulholland Terrace, a row of terraced houses which were built in the nineteenth century by David Mulholland. He also owned several bars in the area.<ref>{{cite web|title=ancestry,co Mulholland|website=] |url=https://www.ancestry.com/boards/surnames.mulholland/rss.xml|access-date=28 March 2019}}</ref>

===Schools===
There are several educational institutions in the district. At the primary level, ''St. Paul's Primary School'' is located in the Beechmount area.<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Paul's Primary School, Belfast| url=http://www.stpaulsmica.com//| access-date=10 March 2017| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170312100506/http://www.stpaulsmica.com//| archive-date=12 March 2017| url-status=dead}}</ref> There are also two Irish language primary schools. These are ''Gaelscoil na bhFal'' and ''Bunscoil an tSléibhe Dhuibh''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Belfast|url=https://www.comhairle.org/english/schools/belfast/ |website=Comhairle na Gaelscolaiochta |access-date=19 March 2024}}</ref>

At the senior level, there is ]. Beside it was located St. Catherine's Primary School which was also run by the ] but closed in 2005. At the rear was located ] in the Beechmount district which in 2019 was amalgamated with the ] and ] to form ].<ref>{{cite web|title=Edmund Rice Schools Trust – ALL SAINTS COLLEGE / COLÁISTE NA NAOMH UILE|url=http://erstni.org/all-saints-college-colaiste-na-naomh-uile/?doing_wp_cron=1572275277.3409919738769531250000|access-date=30 December 2019|archive-date=19 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210519032942/http://erstni.org/all-saints-college-colaiste-na-naomh-uile/?doing_wp_cron=1572275277.3409919738769531250000|url-status=dead}}</ref>

There were several boys secondary schools in the area which have gone through a process of merging over the past forty years. ''St. Thomas's Boys Secondary School'' on the Whiterock Road opened in 1957. ''St. Peter's Boys Secondary School'' on Brittons Parade opened in the 1960s. In 1988, both of these schools amalgamated with Gort na Móna Secondary School to become ''Corpus Christi College'' which in turn merged (see above). St. Thomas's had a strong literary heritage. For a period, its headteacher was the writer ]. In addition, ] taught here for a while in the 1960s.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Write Off|url=http://www.tacticalmediafiles.net/videos/4542/The-Write-Off_-St-Thomas_s-School_-Belfast|access-date=15 February 2020}}</ref>
<ref>{{cite web|title=Literary geniuses side-by-side in staff-room of local school.
|url=http://belfastmediagroup.com/literary-geniuses-side-by-side-in-staff-room-of-local-school/|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> He references the area in one of his poems:
: ''Is there life before death? That's chalked up''
: ''In Ballymurphy. Competence with pain,''
: ''Coherent miseries, a bite and a sup,''
: ''We hug our little destiny again.''<ref>{{cite book |last1=Heaney |first1=Seamus |title=North |date=1975 |publisher=Faber & Faber |location=London |isbn=057110813X |page=60}}</ref>
], another writer, who attended the school in the 1960s recalled later: ''While on teaching practice, Seamus Heaney came to St Thomas' about October that year (1962). I remember him, his voice grave and resonant, his big, brown shoes, reading from Carrickfergus by Louis MacNeice. He was an enormously decent man with extraordinary antennae.''<ref>{{cite web |title=Literary geniuses side by side |url=http://belfastmediagroup.com/literary-geniuses-side-by-side-in-staff-room-of-local-school/ |website=Best of the West 2020 |publisher=Belfast Media Group |access-date=27 February 2020}}</ref> ], the writer and historian, was also a student at the school when McLaverty was the headteacher. For several years, after the school closed, this building was used by Belfast Metropolitan College for further education courses. After the new Springvale campus of the college was opened the building was demolished.<ref>{{cite web |title=LANDS, & BUILDINGS AT THE FORMER WHITEROCK CAMPUS |url=https://www.propertypal.com/lands-buildings-at-the-former-whiterock-campus-whiterock-road-belfast/608219 |website=Property Pal |access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>

]
] is an Irish language secondary school which is situated near Beechmount, in the former home of the Riddel family. Mo Chara from the Belfast-based hip hop trio ] attended this school.

At the higher education level, there is ] which is part of ]. This was established in 1909 as St Mary's Training College to train women as teachers. It amalgamated with St Joseph's Training College (for male trainee teachers) in 1985. Besides teacher training it now offers a range of degree courses.<ref>{{cite web|title=St. Mary's University College|url= https://www.stmarys-belfast.ac.uk/ |access-date=15 February 2020}}</ref> The college has a substantial programme of community engagement playing host to many local events including many organised by ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Events hosted by the College |url=https://www.smucb.ac.uk/general/collegehostedevents.asp?cid=141813677344&cid=141813677344 |website=St. Mary's University College, Belfast |access-date=18 March 2020}}</ref>

===Churches===
''St Paul's Church'' is located opposite the hospitals on the corner of Cavendish Street. It was built as a ] to St Peter's Cathedral and celebrated its first Mass in July 1887.<ref>{{cite web|title=Irish News|date=2 February 2017 |url=http://www.irishnews.com/news/2017/02/02/news/landmark-statue-of-christ-on-falls-road-removed-after-damage-916662|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> St.Paul's was raised from "a district of St Peters" to the status of a parish in 1905.<ref>{{cite web |title=St. Paul's Church, Belfast |url=http://www.belfastforum.co.uk/index.php?topic=45296.0 |website=Belfast Forum |access-date=9 March 2020}}</ref> ''Broadway Presbyterian Church'' opened in 1891 but closed in 1982. It has since been repurposed as an ] arts and culture centre (see below).<ref>{{cite news |last1=Jackson |first1=Michael |title=Cultúrlann links up with Presbyterians who worshipped at former church to mark 30th birthday |url=https://belfastmedia.com/an-chulturlann-broadway-presbyterian |access-date=23 February 2023 |work=Belfast Media |date=19 September 2021}}</ref>

===Recreation and culture===
Near Beechmount is located Willowbank Park which has a number of playing fields.<ref>{{cite web |title=Willowbank Park |url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/outdoorleisurefacilities/Sports-facilities/SportsRecreationFacility-99874.aspx |website=Sports pitches |publisher=Belfast City Council |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref> It is located on the site of the ''Willowbank Huts'' which in the late nineteenth century housed a small British Army barracks. When the huts were vacated they were used by various groups including ].<ref>{{cite web |title=1916 Trail leaflet |url=http://www.visitwestbelfast.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/1916-trail-leaflet-low-res.pdf |website=Visit West Belfast |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref> ] which is a facility for ] is located on the Whiterock Road. A nearby smaller facility for various sporting activities is McCrory Park.<ref>{{cite web|title=McCrory Park|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/outdoorleisurefacilities/Sports-facilities/SportsRecreationFacility-62255.aspx|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> It was named after Cardinal ] who was ] and then ] in the early part of the twentieth century. During the 1970s it was occupied by the British Army who called it Fort Pegasus. The playing fields of the Davitt's ] are located in Beechmount. The Whiterock Leisure Centre is located off the upper Whiterock Road. It has a community garden and allotment site. Developments include a playground and multi-use games area.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Falls Masterplan |url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/parks-openspaces/falls-masterplan.aspx#Falls3gpitch |website=Belfast City Council |access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref> At the foot of St. James's Road and sandwiched between Rodney Parade and the M1 motorway is located the St. James's Community Farm. This was an abandoned piece of land that was transformed by local residents into a community farm providing facilities for around 50 animals and various gardening initiatives.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Clinton |first1=Orlaith |title=West Belfast community farm thrives |url=https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/news/belfast-news/west-belfast-community-farm-thrives-24416068 |access-date=12 June 2023 |date=10 July 2022}}</ref>

Historically, there has been a continuing interest in the Irish language and culture in the area. In 1936 the ''Cluain Árd'' centre was established in the Beechmount area and became a centre for Irish language enthusiasts.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Anraí Mac an Ultaigh |first1=Anraí Mac an Ultaigh |title=Seal S'Agamsa |date=2019 |publisher=Coiscéim |location=Baile Átha Cliath}}</ref> In the 1960s, there was a resurgence of interest in the Irish language reflected in the development of the ] ] in Andersonstown. Since then, interest has grown, with the approval by Belfast City Council of a ] around the Falls Road in 2002. The ], known colloquially as ''the Cultúrlann'', is an Irish language and arts centre based in the middle Falls area which opened in 1991. It was originally the home of Broadway Presbyterian church.<ref>{{cite web| title=Culturlann Belfast|url=http://www.culturlann.ie/|access-date=2 October 2016}}</ref> The centre also houses the Irish language bookshop ].<ref name="theguardian.com">{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/01/booksellers-northern-ireland|title=Independent Bookshops: A UK Guide — Independent bookshops in Northern Ireland|date=1 October 2011|access-date=30 May 2017|newspaper=The Guardian}}</ref> The ], an annual festival of Irish culture, which was established in 1988 provides a showcase for Irish culture.<ref>{{cite web| title=Feile Belfast|url=http://www.feilebelfast.com|access-date=9 December 2016}}</ref> Nearby, at the corner with Broadway, is the new ''Áras na bhFál'', the home of Iontaobhas na Gaelscolaíochta – the Trust Fund for Irish-Medium Education.<ref>{{cite web |title=Áras na bhFál, Falls Road |url=https://www.pmcarchitects.com/community-projects/aras-na-bhfl-falls-road-belfast |website=Paul McAlister, Architects |access-date=16 May 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Trust Fund for Irish-Medium Education. |url=http://www.iontaobhasnag.com/ |website=Iontaobhas na Gaelscolaíochta |access-date=23 May 2020}}</ref>

]
The ''Áras Uí Chonghaile/James Connolly Visitor Centre'' is located near the top of the ]. This centre is dedicated to the life and work of ] who lived nearby for a period in the early years of the twentieth century.<ref>{{cite web |title=Áras Uí Chonghaile The James Connolly Visitor Centre |url=https://arasuichonghaile.com/ |website=Áras Uí Chonghaile The James Connolly Visitor Centre |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref>

There are several large bars in the middle Falls area. These include the ''Beehive'' and the ''Red Devil – An Diabhal Dearg'', at the top of Broadway, and the ''Rock Bar'' at the top of the Donegall Road. The ''Rock Bar'' is described as the oldest bar on the Falls Road. It was subjected to a loyalist attack with an RPG rocket in 1994 but survived and no customers were injured.<ref>{{cite news |title=Gun victim's mother calls for inquiry |url=https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-30116160.html |access-date=14 February 2024 |work=Irish Examiner |date=6 October 2003}}</ref>

The ''Broadway Cinema'' which was situated near Beechmount was the largest of Belfast's suburban cinemas when it opened in 1936. It closed in 1972 after a bombing.<ref>{{cite web |title=Broadway Cinema |url=http://cinematreasures.org/theaters/26605 |website=Cinema Treasures |access-date=17 March 2020}}</ref> Nearby is the ''Falls Women's Centre/Ionad Mhná na bhFál'' which was established in 1982.<ref>{{cite web |title=About us |url=https://www.fallswomenscentre.org/about-us |website=Falls Women's Centre |access-date=11 February 2024}}</ref>

On the Donegall Road, is the former site of ]. This was originally a football stadium and the home of ] It was also the first ] track to open in Ireland.<ref name=groundtastic>{{cite web|url=http://www.groundtastic.co.uk/archives/belfast_celtic.htm|title=Belfast Celtic|publisher=Groundtastic|access-date=11 February 2009|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080828182014/http://www.groundtastic.co.uk/archives/belfast_celtic.htm|archive-date=28 August 2008}}</ref> The stadium closed in 1983 and is now the site of a shopping centre.

==Upper Falls==
This section stretches from the Whiterock Road to the Andersonstown Road. As its name implies, the Andersonstown Road leads to the Andersonstown district and the on out of the city. At the junction with the Glen Road was located the Andersonstown RUC station which was the most attacked police station in Northern Ireland. It was closed and demolished in 2005.<ref>{{cite news |title=End of a west Belfast emblem |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/news/end-of-a-west-belfast-emblem-1.410663 |access-date=6 March 2020 |publisher=Irish Times |date=29 January 2005}}</ref> The Glen Road runs for almost three miles passing the junction with Monagh By Pass/Kennedy Way, then Shaw's Road and Suffolk Road until it changes name to Colinglen Road. For much of the route in forms the northern boundary of Andersonstown and then Lenadoon.

===Schools===
] which was one of the largest girls schools in Europe with over 2,000 pupils is located in this area.<ref>{{cite web|title='She was the only man on the Falls Road'|website=] |date=21 January 2002 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2002/jan/21/gender.uk|access-date=12 November 2016}}</ref> In 2019, it was decided to admit boys and to reduce the overall student numbers to 1500.<ref>{{cite web|title=St Louise's Comprehensive College in Belfast will now admit boys|date=11 April 2019 |url=https://www.belfastlive.co.uk/news/belfast-news/st-louises-comprehensive-college-belfast-16113433|access-date=30 December 2019}}</ref> Nearby is located ''St. Kevin's Primary School'' which was established in 1933.<ref>{{cite web| title=St. Kevin's Primary School, Belfast|url=https://www.stkevinsprimaryschool.org|access-date= 9 November 2019}}</ref> There is also the St. Maria Goretti Nursery School on the Whiterock Road.<ref>{{cite web |title=St. Maria Goretti Nursery School. |url=https://www.stmariagorettinursery.co.uk/ |website=St. Maria Goretti Nursery School. |access-date=16 February 2020}}</ref>

===Churches===
The ''St. John's RC Church'' is located near the foot of the Whiterock Road.<ref>{{cite web|title=St. John's Falls Road|url=http://www.stjohnsfallsroad.com|access-date=9 December 2016}}</ref> It was originally established in 1928 as the population of the area increased.

''St. Matthias's Church'' is located on the Glen Road not far from Milltown Cemetery. On the site, the original Church of Ireland church was erected in 1892. It formally closed in 1969 but was taken over by the catholic parish of ''St Teresa of Ávila'', the main church of which is located further up the Glen Road. The building reopened as a catholic church under the same name in 1970.<ref>{{cite web |title=History |url=https://www.stteresasparish.church/stmatthias#! |website=St. Matthias's Church |access-date=30 March 2020 |archive-date=18 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201018213903/https://www.stteresasparish.church/stmatthias#! |url-status=dead }}</ref> A new catholic church opened on the site in 2004 and the old tin church, which is listed, is in a state of disrepair.<ref>{{cite web |title=St Matthias' Church |url=https://www.stteresasparish.church/stmatthias |website=Parish of St. Teresa |access-date=30 September 2022 |archive-date=18 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201018213903/https://www.stteresasparish.church/stmatthias |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===Recreation===
]
In the Upper Falls area is located the Falls Park which was established in 1873.<ref>{{cite web| title=Falls Park, Belfast|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/parks-openspaces/Park-6636.aspx|access-date= 12 November 2016}}</ref> The park has many mature trees, flower beds, horticultural displays and grassland areas. The park contains playing fields for Gaelic games and soccer. It has a ], a bowling green and other facilities. Developments include an outdoor gym, a dedicated youth area suitable for a range of uses and a refurbished play park with modern play equipment.<ref>{{cite web |title=Falls Park |url=https://belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/outdoorleisurefacilities/Sports-facilities/SportsRecreationFacility-6984.aspx |website=Belfast City Council |access-date=26 February 2020}}</ref> In 1924, an outdoor swimming pool, known locally as ''The Cooler'', was added to the park. The pool closed in 1979 for public health reasons.<ref>{{cite web|title=Falls Park|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/leisure/parks-openspaces/Park-6636.aspx|access-date=14 February 2020}}</ref> The Féile an Phobail has its closing concert here each year.

Opposite the Falls Park, on Milltown Row, are located the facilities of ]. Further up the Falls Road is located ''The Felons'', a large social club and restaurant. It is located on the site of a former Methodist meeting house.<ref>{{cite news |title=In the club |url=https://www.theguardian.com/theguardian/1999/aug/06/features11.g26 |access-date=6 March 2020 |work=The Guardian |date=6 August 1999}}</ref>

===Cemeteries===
]
]
In the late 19th century, with the rapid increase in the city population, there was an increasing need for cemeteries. At that time, the Upper Falls was a rural area and the city council and the Catholic Church decided to buy large spaces in the area to create cemeteries. The ] which is located at the bottom of the Whiterock Road, is a municipal cemetery maintained by the Belfast City Council and is one of the largest burial sites in the city. It opened in 1869.<ref>{{cite web| title=Belfast City Cemetery|url=http://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/community/cemeteries/belfastcitycemetery.aspx|access-date= 12 November 2016}}</ref> At the junction with the Glen Road, is located ], maintained by the Catholic Church, which opened in the same year.

At the bottom of Milltown Cemetery is the ] which leads onto the M1 motorway. This large wild-life preserve is home to a wide variety of wild flowers, birds and butterflies. Some cattle also graze on the site. It is owned and managed by the Friends of the Bog Meadows and the ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Bog Meadows |url=https://www.ulsterwildlife.org/nature-reserves/bog-meadows |website=Ulster Wildlife |access-date=30 September 2022}}</ref>

==Transport==
]
Originally there was a ] providing public transport on the Falls Road. This was introduced in the late 19th century and replaced by ] in 1938. There were three routes along the road: 11 for Falls Road-Whiterock Road, 12 for Falls Road-Andersonstown Road and 13 for Falls Road-Glen Road. The 77 route from the Gasworks to the Waterworks ran via Albert Street/Northumberland Street and cut across the Falls Road and the Shankill Road.<ref>{{cite web |title=Old cinema memories |url=http://www.thevacuum.org.uk/issues/issues0120/issue01/is01artoldcin.html |website=The Vacuum |access-date=15 August 2020}}</ref> The trolleybuses were replaced by diesel buses in the 1960s. With the outbreak of the troubles, the bus service was withdrawn. The gap in public transport was replaced by black taxis. Since the troubles ended, the public bus service has been re-introduced and expanded. ], a division of ] now operates the bus service. The Falls Road is designated one of the ] (QBCs) within the city with a variety of different routes.<ref>{{cite web |title=Translink |url=https://www.translink.co.uk/getonboard/metroisbelfast |website=Metro is Belfast |access-date=27 March 2020 |archive-date=29 October 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201029144529/https://www.translink.co.uk/getonboard/metroisbelfast |url-status=dead }}</ref>

In 2018, the ] bus service was introduced. It provides a service from ] via the Falls Road-City Centre and Newtownards Road to ]. It was the first cross-city bus service.

===Street names===
Following a decision of ] in 2021, many of the streets in the area now have bilingual (English-Irish) signs.<ref>{{cite news |title=Belfast City Council gives green light to bilingual street signs |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-55580803 |access-date=21 February 2024 |agency=BBC NI News |date=8 January 2021}}</ref> Guidance on the wording of these signs is taken from the Northern Ireland Place Names Project. Examples are ''Ardmoulin Street-Sráid Ard an Mhuilinn'', ''Beechmount Avenue-Ascaill Ard na bhFeá''.<ref>{{cite web |title=West Belfast |url=https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5a992018710699896544a413/t/5a99608d9140b7c6b3cedca5/1520001167104/West+Belfast+%28including+parts+of+Lisburn%29+%28C.+Dunbar%29.pdf |website=Northern Ireland Place Names Project |access-date=21 February 2024}}</ref>


==Politics== ==Politics==
] mural on the Falls Road]] ]
A predominantly working-class community, the area has seen an ongoing contest between various versions of labour/socialist and nationalist/Irish republican ideas for electoral leadership. In the early 20th century, ], the socialist republican, resided in the Upper Falls area for a period<ref>Donal Nevin. ''James Connolly. A Full Life''; (Dublin, 2006, Gill & Macmillan); {{ISBN|0717129624}}</ref> which at that time was generally seen as a bedrock of the ] (IPP). As Belfast branch secretary for the ], beginning in 1911 with ] and from 1912 with ], Connolly sought to organise the millworkers of the Falls in the Irish Textile Workers Union.<ref name=":7">{{Cite book |last=Woggon |first=Helga |url= |title=Silent Radical – Winifred Carney, 1887–1943: A Reconstruction of Her Biography |date=2000 |publisher=SIPTU, Irish Labour History Society |pages= |language=en}}</ref>''{{rp|11–12}}''


In 1913, he stood for Belfast Corporation but lost with a vote of 905 against 1523.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Graham |first1=Joe |title=Myths, Legends And Facts On Olde Belfast |url=http://joegraham.rushlightmagazine.com/histiry.html |access-date=30 March 2024 |work=Rushlight}}</ref> Carney, who had been raised on the Falls, was by Connolly's side in the ] during the ].<ref name=":022">{{Cite book |last=Nevin |first=Donal |title=James Connolly 'A Full Life' |publisher=Gill & Macmillan |year=2006 |isbn=978-07171-2962-1 |location=Dublin |pages=408–412, 657}}</ref><ref> ''The New York Times'', 16 March 2016</ref> Later, in the 1930s, she was to be involved with her husband, George McBride, in socialist and republican politics on the Protestant ].<ref name=":42">{{Cite web |last=Quinn |first=James |date=2009 |title=Carney, Winifred ('Winnie') {{!}} Dictionary of Irish Biography |url=https://www.dib.ie/biography/carney-winifred-winnie-a1489 |access-date=2024-03-09 |website=www.dib.ie |language=en}}</ref> She is buried in Milltown Cemetery,<ref>{{Cite news |title=Milltown: a history of Belfast told through its most famous cemetery |url=https://www.irishtimes.com/ireland/2023/08/26/milltown-a-history-of-belfast-told-through-its-most-famous-cemetery/ |access-date=2024-03-09 |newspaper=The Irish Times |language=en}}</ref> and in 2024 a statue was unveiled to her on the grounds of ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mary Ann McCracken and Winfred Carney statues unveiled on International Women's Day |url=https://www.belfastcity.gov.uk/news/mary-ann-mccracken-and-winfred-carney-statues-unve |access-date=2024-03-09 |website=Belfast City Council |language=en}}</ref>
As a predominantly working class community, the Falls Road has historically had a strong ] tradition. In 1829 The Falls Orange Lodge was formed in Divis Street. ], the Irish socialist resided in the Upper Falls for a period in the early 20th century and was involved in organizing the workers in the linen mills.


The Falls Road forms the centre of the ] although it also includes areas from the neighbouring unionist ] district. In 1909, the constituency was held by ] of the IPP. In the ] a separate ] was created which was again won by Joe Devlin who heavily defeated ] who was standing for ]. After partition, the constituency of Belfast West was reconstituted for the ] and was won by the ] who held it for 11 years until it was won by ], standing for Labour, who held it from 1943 to 1950 and again from 1951 to 1955. It was then held again by the Ulster Unionists until 1966.
In 1964 ] stood as a ] candidate for the ] constituency in the ] election. His office was in Divis Street and illegally displayed the ] alongside the ] of James Connolly's ] in the office window. The public display of the flag of the ] was justly banned by the Northern Ireland government at that time. Protestant preacher ] insisted police remove the flag as not to cause offence. The police feared a backlash from Protestant extremists, and took down the flag. There was unrest and rioting from the Catholic community. This is sometimes considered the start of ].


]
In the late 1960s, many Catholics from across Northern Ireland began to campaign for ]. This included an end to religious discrimination in housing and jobs. The campaign provoked opposition from loyalists as the IRA was involved with the movement. Several streets around the Falls Road were burnt out by loyalists in retaliation in August 1969 during ]. In response to the worsening security situation and the inability of the ] to cope, the Government deployed the ] on to the Falls Road. The troops were initially welcomed by the residents as a source of protection. This attitude, however, quickly turned to anger as they were drawn into conflict with the Army. In 1970, the road was the scene of what became known as the ]. In response to a gun and grenade attack by the ], 3000 British army troops sealed off the streets around the road, home to about 10,000 people. They flooded the area with soldiers in an attempt to recover IRA weapons. After an all day gun battle the Army's actions were justified(predominantly with the ]), ninety rifles were recovered and over the course of the weekend four Catholic militants were killed by the soldiers.<ref>''A Secret History of the IRA'' by Ed Moloney (ISBN 0-141-01041-X), page 91.</ref> This event is widely regarded as the end of the British army's "honeymoon" period with the Irish nationalist community in Northern Ireland. For the following thirty years the British Army and maintained a substantial presence on the Falls Road, with a base on top of the Divis Tower. This was removed in August 2005 as part of the ]'s ''Normalisation'' programme following the ] statement that it was ending its armed activities. In the intervening period, the Falls Road area saw some of the worst violence of ].
In the ], ] stood as a ] candidate for the ]. His office was in Divis Street and the ] alongside the ] of Connolly's ] was displayed in the window. The ] gave the ] the power to remove any flag or emblem from public or private property which was considered to be likely to cause a breach of the peace. This was generally interpreted as any Irish flag since the ] was specifically excluded from the Act. ] insisted the RUC remove the ] or he would organise a march and remove it himself. The police feared a backlash from Loyalists, and removed it, causing unrest and rioting by local residents.<ref>Peter Taylor. ''Loyalists''; {{ISBN|0-7475-4519-7}}, p. 32<!-- publisher needed --></ref> ] standing for the ] was elected to the seat that year but was defeated two years later in 1966 by ] who held the seat for the ] and then the ] for seventeen years until 1983 when ] won the seat for ]. He held the seat for over twenty years (1983–1992 and 1997–2011) with ] of the ] holding it for the intervening five years (1992–1997). ] of Sinn Féin was elected MP in 2011 and has held the seat since but in line with Sinn Féin's abstentionist policy he has not actually taken the seat at Westminster. In 1995, President ] visited the area where he shook hands with the Gerry Adams near the corner with the Springfield Road.


In the ], the ] constituency was won by the ] ] after a bitter contest with ], a supporter of Connolly.<ref name="farrell">], ''Northern Ireland: The Orange State''</ref> In the 1945 election, ] won the seat standing for the ]. He held the seat until 1969 when he was defeated by ] standing for the ]. Devlin, who had once been a member, alongside Diamond, of the Belfast branch of the ], became a founding member of the ] in 1970 and remained a member until ] was ] in 1972.<ref name="Irish Political Studies">Connal Parr (2012): Managing His Aspirations: The Labour and Republican Politics of Paddy Devlin, Irish Political Studies, 27:1, 111–138</ref>
==Culture==
] mural on the 'Solidarity Wall']]


It was replaced by the power-sharing ] in 1973 which only met for one year. After the ] in 1998, a new ] was established. In the ], a total of four Sinn Féin and one ] representatives were elected in the ].
The area has a rich and vibrant culture. Over the past thirty years there has been a substantial revival of traditional culture in terms of Irish language, dancing and music. These are all displayed in the ], which is an annual festival that aims to rival the ]. The road is also home to the Cultúrlann, an Irish cultural centre. In recent times the area has become a tourist destination, with people wanting to see the site of some of the incidents that occurred during ] and the many Republican ] that are now to be seen in the area. A popular destination is the ] shop and office with its mural of ]r ], which is often used by Sinn Féin politicians as a backdrop when giving television interviews. Another popular destination is the 'solidarity wall', which features murals mainly dedicated to peoples/revolutionaries inspired by or with connections to Irish Republicanism (the ], ], ], ] and so on) and is located close to the newly refurbished Falls Road Leisure Centre and the Divis area.


In elections for ], three of the seven wards (Falls Park, Ballymurphy, and Beechmount) within the ] cover the Middle and Upper Falls area, while two of the six wards (Clonard and Falls) within the ] cover the Lower Falls area. In the 2023 district election, six ] and one ] councillors were elected for the ] while two Sinn Féin, three ] and one ] councillors were elected for the ].
==Educational institutions and hospitals==
Several large educational institutions are also located in the area. These include ], ], ], Irish language secondary school ] and ], one of the largest comprehensives in Europe. There were also several primary schools including ] and St. Catherine's Primary School but these latter closed due to falling student numbers while St. Catherines merged with St. John's Girls and St. Gall's Boys to form St. Clares in September 2005 . ] was originally located in Barrack Street off Divis Street in the lower Falls area but transferred to a greenfield site on the ] in the upper Falls area in the 1960s.


==The Troubles==
There are also several large hospitals in the area including the ], the Royal Maternity and the Children's Hospital.
{{main|The Troubles}}
In the late 1960s, many Catholics from across Northern Ireland began to campaign, many with ] (NICRA), against discrimination in housing and jobs, under the banner of a ] campaign, in conscious imitation of the philosophy of, and tactics used by, the ]. Northern Ireland was part of the UK but the voting criteria were different to England, Scotland and Wales where a person could vote as soon as they became 18 years old. In Northern Ireland an 18-year-old could only vote if they were the named owner or named renter of a house. Most of the Catholic houses had three generations living in the same dwelling (because of housing discrimination) so only the mother and father could vote. Furthermore, business owners (depending on the size of the company) were entitled to three to six votes unlike anywhere else in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite book|last=Weiss|first=Ruth|author-link=Ruth Weiss (writer)|title=Peace in Their Time: War and Peace in Ireland and Southern Africa|page=34}}<!--ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>


Many Unionists saw NICRA as an Irish republican ], designed to destabilize Northern Ireland, and force unionists into a united Ireland.<ref>Lord Cameron, ''Disturbances in Northern Ireland: Report of the Commission appointed by the Governor of Northern Ireland'' (Belfast, 1969)</ref><ref>Purdie, Bob. ''Politics in the Streets: the origins of the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland'', The Blackstaff Press; {{ISBN|0-85640-437-3}}.<!-- page(s) needed --></ref> Several streets around the Falls Road were burnt out by armed 'B' Specials (Police Reserve) and loyalists in August 1969, with the murder of six Catholics on the first night marking the start of 'The Troubles.<ref name="Michael McCann 2019">Michael McCann. ''Burnt Out. How the Troubles began''; (Cork, 2019, Mercier); {{ISBN|1781176191}}</ref> In response to the worsening situation, the British Government deployed the ] on the Falls Road to protect the Catholics from further attacks. The troops were initially welcomed by all the Falls residents to protect them, but heavy-handed tactics by the mostly British-born members of the Army who did not know, care or understand the situation would estrange most Catholics and nationalists.<ref>; accessed 31 March 2015.</ref><ref>; accessed 31 March 2015.</ref>
==Notable buildings==

Although the area is largely residential there are several substantial buildings. These include several ] churches such as ] in the Divis Street/Lower Falls area, St. Paul's Church in the mid-Falls area and St. John's Church in the Upper Falls. Nearby is located ], the home of the ] religious order. Two large cemeteries are located at the top of the Falls Road - ] and ]. The most famous of the original Mill Buildings is Conway Mill, originally a flax spinning mill, it now houses a community enterprise of small businesses, art studios, retail space and education floor. The '''Dunlewey Centre''' (Belfast Metropolitan College) is a Community Education Centre in the heart of the lower Falls.
From 3–5 July 1970, the road was the scene of what became known as the ]. 3,000 British troops carried out an operation to search the area for hidden weapon caches, sealing off the streets around the Falls Road. Local youths attacked the troops, who responded by firing 1,600 canisters of ] to disperse the crowds.<ref>{{cite book | last = Dillon | first = Martin | author-link = Martin Dillon | title = The Dirty War | publisher = ] | year = 1991 | page = 232 | isbn = 0-09-984520-2}}</ref> The operation was also opposed by the ] (OIRA), with OIRA gunmen engaging British troops in multiple gun battles across the area. Over the course of the operation, four Catholic civilians were killed by the Army, which recovered ninety rifles.<ref>Ed Moloney. ''A Secret History of the IRA''; {{ISBN|0-14-101041-X}}, p. 91.<!-- publishing info needed --></ref> The operation was widely regarded as the end of the British Army's "honeymoon" period with the nationalist community in Belfast.<ref>Richard English. ''Armed Struggle'' (2003), p. 136<!-- publisher; ISBN needed --></ref>

]]]During the Troubles there were repeated sectarian attacks by loyalists on residents of the Falls Road.<ref name="Michael McCann 2019"/> These attacks increased during the ] when whole streets in the Falls Road area were destroyed by loyalists from the Shankill Road area. ] killed many local residents. Temporary barricades were constructed to provide residents with some security. These developed into peace walls which today separate the Falls Road from the neighbouring Shankill Road. Although the troubles have now ceased, the peace walls still exist in this so-called ].

For the following three decades, the British Army maintained a substantial presence on the Falls Road, occupying a base on top of the Divis Tower. This was removed in August 2005 as part of the ]'s normalisation programme, following the ]'s statement that it was ending its armed activities. In the intervening period, the Falls Road area saw some of the worst violence of ]. The last British soldier to be killed on the road itself was Private Nicholas Peacock, killed by a booby trap bomb left outside the Rock Bar, opposite the top of the Donegall Road on 1 February 1989.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Lost Lives|last=McKittrick, Feeney, Thornton, Kelters|first=David, Brian, Chris, Seamus|publisher=Mainstream Publishing|year=2004|pages=1158, 1248, 1257–58}}</ref>

In 1991, IRA hit squads based in the Upper Falls and Beechmount were involved in attacks against loyalist paramilitaries in the nearby Village area. In September 1991, they shot dead 19-year-old UVF member John Hanna at his home on the Donegall Road, and in November the same year, they shot dead William Kingsberry and his stepson, Samuel Mehaffey, members of the UDA and RHC respectively, in their home on Lecale Street.<ref name=":0"/> The ] was signed in 1998 followed by decommissioning of weapons by the IRA and the formal ending of its campaign in 2005.

==Literary and musical references==
There are many literary references to life on the Falls Road. These include:
* ] (1982). ''Falls Memories.'' Dingle:Brandon.
* ] (1997). ''Star Factory.'' London: Granta Books.
* Liam Carson (2010). ''Call Mother a Lonely Field.'' Bridgend: Seren.
* Eimer O'Callaghan (2014). ''Belfast Days. A 1972 Teenage Diary.'' Sallins: Merrion Press.
* ] (2007). ''Asking for Trouble.'' Belfast: Blackstaff.

The American singer ] sings in her song "It's a hard life wherever you go" which she wrote after visiting Belfast:<ref>{{cite news |last1=McCarthy |first1=James |title=How a tour of Belfast with Nanci Griffith led to Seamie featuring in one of her favourite songs |url=https://belfastmedia.com/nanci-griffith |access-date=1 September 2021 |work=BelfastMedia |date=27 August 2021}}</ref>
: ''I am a backseat driver from America''
: ''They drive to the left on Falls Road''
: ''The man at the wheel's name is Seamus''
: ''We pass a child on the corner he knows''
: ''And Seamus says, "Now, what chance has that kid got?"''
: ''And I say from the back, "I don't know."''
: ''He says, "There's barbed wire at all of these exits''
: ''And there ain't no place in Belfast for that kid to go."''<ref>{{cite web |title=Nanci Griffith It's a Hard Life |url=https://genius.com/Nanci-griffith-its-a-hard-life-wherever-you-go-lyrics |website=Genius |access-date=1 September 2021}}</ref>
], British songwriter and singer for British soft rock group ] attributes his writing of the band's 1986 hit "]" to emotion he experienced while on Falls Road.<ref>{{cite news |title=Gary Kemp: When we played Through the Barricades in Belfast the reaction was incredible |url=https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/entertainment/news/gary-kemp-when-we-played-through-the-barricades-in-belfast-the-reaction-was-incredible-30987593.html |access-date=2 October 2022 |work=Belfast Telegraph |date=12 February 2015}}</ref>

==See also==
*]
*]
*]
*]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}}
<references/>


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category|Falls Road, Belfast|Falls Road}}
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Latest revision as of 21:50, 17 December 2024

Main road through west Belfast in Northern Ireland This article is about Falls Road in Belfast, Northern Ireland. For other uses, see Falls Road (disambiguation).

Falls Road
Irish: Bóthar na bhFál Ulster-Scots: Faas Raa
Falls Road looking towards Divis flats and the city centre
Falls Road, Belfast is located in Greater BelfastFalls Road, BelfastShown within Greater Belfast
Native nameBóthar na bhFál (Irish)
Maintained byBelfast City Council
Length1,600 m (5,200 ft)
LocationBelfast, Northern Ireland
Postal codeBT12
Coordinates54°35′36″N 5°57′30″W / 54.59347°N 5.95823°W / 54.59347; -5.95823
Northeast endDivis Street
Southwest endAndersonstown Road
Other
Known forNumerous murals, Irish republican community

The Falls Road (from Irish túath na bhFál 'territory of the enclosures') is the main road through West Belfast, Northern Ireland, running from Divis Street in Belfast City Centre to Andersonstown in the suburbs. The name has been synonymous for at least a century and a half with the Catholic community in the city. The road is usually referred to as the Falls Road, rather than as Falls Road. It is known in Irish as the Bóthar na bhFál and as the Faas Raa in Ulster-Scots.

Location

The view from the Falls Road to the city centre, 1981

The Falls Road forms the first three miles of the A501 which starts in Belfast city centre and runs southwest through the city forking just after the Falls Park into the B102 which continues for a short distance to Andersonstown. The A501 continues as the Glen Road. The area is composed largely of residential housing, with more public sector housing in the lower sections of the road. There are many small shops lining the road as well as schools, churches, hospitals and leisure facilities. Employment in the area was originally dominated by the large linen mills but these have mostly closed. Today, local employment is in the service sector, health and education with additional employment in other parts of the city.

The Falls Road district can be roughly divided into three sections. The Lower Falls which includes Divis Street starts near the city centre and continues to the junction with the Grosvenor Road. The middle Falls district centres on Beechmount. The Upper Falls starts about the Donegall Road and continues into Andersonstown.

The short stretch of the road from the city centre to the start of Divis Street at Millfield is known as Castle Street after the former Belfast Castle which was built nearby by the Normans in the 12th century. Castle Street begins at the junction with Royal Avenue and Donegall Place, the main shopping district of Belfast. Two large buildings flank either side of the entrance to the street. On one side is the Bank Buildings and on the other is the former home of the Anderson & McAuley department store.

Near the start of Castle Street is Chapel Lane on which St. Mary's Church is situated. This is the oldest Catholic church in Belfast and dates from 1784. Nearby on Bank Street is located the historic Kelly's Cellars bar which dates from 1720. Opposite was located St. Mary's Hall, a popular social venue which was constructed in 1875 but demolished in 1990. Bank Street begins at Royal Avenue. The ornate building at its entrance was the former home of the Provincial Bank of Ireland which was erected in 1869. When it closed in 1989, the building was occupied until 2021 by a Tesco store. It was then refurbished as a social facility by Belfast City Council.

History

The Falls Road derives its name from the Irish túath na bhFál, an Irish petty kingdom whose name means "territory of the enclosures". These enclosures resulted from the Plantation of Ulster which occurred from the seventeenth century. This territory was roughly the same as that of the ecclesiastical parish of the Shankill, which spanned a large portion of modern-day Belfast.

The Falls Road itself was originally a country lane leading from the city centre but a largely Catholic population—refugees from a rural poverty that been intensified by Belfast's mechanisation of what had been a cottage textile industry and, in the 1840s, by famine—was drawn to the area by the prospects for female and child employment in new linen mills. All of these mills have now closed or have been repurposed. This original area, which was centred on the junction of modern-day Millfield and College Avenue on what is now Divis Street, was known as Falls and lent its name to the road. which had previously been called The Pound. The housing in the area developed in the 19th century and was organised in narrow streets of small terraced housing. The Westlink linking the M1 and M2 motorways now cuts through this area.

Lower Falls

Children playing near Falls Road, Belfast, 1981

This section of the road stretches from the junction of Castle Street and Millfield to the Grosvenor Road/Springfield Road intersection. The lower part of the road is named Divis Street after the Divis mountain which overlooks much of West Belfast. The Falls Road proper begins at the junction with Northumberland Street and Albert Street. The area to the south of Divis Street/Lower Falls Road was considered the heart of the district and was initially composed of rows of small terraced houses which were constructed in the mid to late nineteenth century to house mill workers and their families. The area is detailed in the 1931 Ordnance Survey map of the area. Shortly after Millfield, the road crosses over the Westlink (A12) which links three motorways - the M1 to the southwest of the city, the M2 to the north and the M3 to the east. Running alongside the Westlink is Townsend Street which originally marked the end of Belfast. Townsend Street links Divis Street with Peter's Hill at the bottom of the Shankill Road.

Housing

The housing in the area developed in the 19th century and was organised in narrow streets of small terraced housing. Many of the streets were named after local mill owners. Alexander Street West was named after John Alexander who was a local mill owner. He also named Milford Street after Milford Mills, County Carlow where he had a house. Ardmoulin Street was named after Ardmoulin House, the residence of John Chartres of Falls Flax and Weaving Company. Craig Street was called after the Craig family who owned the New Northern Mill at the corner of Northumberland Street.

Divis Street, Belfast, May 2011

By the 1960s the buildings in the area had decayed considerably and the Belfast Corporation introduced a major development plan which involved wholescale demolition of much of the area. Many of the old street names were retained in the new housing development. In the Divis Street area, the housing was replaced with the Divis Flats complex which consisted of twelve blocks of flats built on top of the historic district formerly known as the Pound Loney. The high point of this redevelopment was Divis Tower. Because of its rapid deterioration, the whole complex, except for Divis Tower, was demolished thirty years later and replaced with blocks of terraced housing.

The Crimean War, 1854 – 1856 A morning conference for the allied commanders Lord Raglan, Omar Pasha and Marshal Pelissier

Past Albert Street, more mills were built on the northern side and more streets of small terraced houses on the southern side. The old streets were named after characters and events in the Crimean War (1853–1856) which was occurring at that time. These include Raglan Street (named after Lord Raglan, commander of British forces in the Crimean War), Garnet Street (after Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley), Alma Street (after the Battle of Alma), Balaklava Street (after the Battle of Balaklava), Inkerman Street (after the Battle of Inkerman), Sevastopol Street (after the Siege of Sevastopol), Plevna Street (after the Siege of Plevna), Varna Street (after the Siege of Varna) as well as Omar Street (after Omar Pasha) and Osman Street (after Osman Nuri Paşa). There were also streets named after Balkan places such as Bosnia Street, Balkan Street, Roumania Street and Servia Street. Other streets were named after contemporary political and royal figures such as Peel Street (after Robert Peel) and Albert Street (named after Prince Albert). Marchioness Street and Lady Street are probably named after Lady Dufferin, the Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, originally from Killyleagh, who had been the Vicereine of India (1884–1888). These street names are recalled in the collection of poetry The Irish for No by Ciaran Carson. In one of the poems entitled "The Exiles' Club", Carson imagines a group of Belfast exiles:

After years they have reconstructed the whole of the Falls Road, and now
Are working on the back streets: Lemon, Peel and Omar, Balaclava, Alma.

All of these houses have now been demolished and replaced with modern terraced houses.

At the foot of Divis Street is located the Morning Star House. This is a hostel which provides temporary accommodation for homeless people. It is run by the Legion of Mary and was originally located at the corner of Percy Street. Additional accommodation for homeless people is provided nearby by First Housing at Ardmoulin Mews, off Ardmoulin Street.

Schools

St. Mary's Primary School, Belfast, May 2011

At the foot of Divis Street is located the Millfield campus of Belfast Metropolitan College, the largest further and higher education college in Northern Ireland. Nearby was located the original St. Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School. In the 1960s, this school transferred to a greenfield site on the Glen Road in the upper Falls. The original school building is now the home of the Edmund Rice Schools Trust. Opposite is St. Mary's Primary School. Nearby is the location of the Árd Scoil which was historically the centre for Irish language and culture in the area. Just past it was located the Hastings Street RUC station.

There are currently two other primary schools in the Lower Falls district. These are St. Peter's on Ross Road and St. Joseph's on Slate Street. In addition, there is the Irish language Gaelscoil an Lonnáin which occupies the site of St Finian's Primary School at the top end of Leeson Street. St Finian's School and the nearby St. Gall's Primary School closed in the late twentieth century due to declining student numbers. These schools were run by the De La Salle Christian Brothers. The name of the latter school survives in the name of St. Galls' Avenue. St Comgall's Public Elementary School, in Divis Street, opened in 1932 but closed in 1988. It has been transformed into a community hub for a range of community and business activities and is involved in the development of a Visitor Heritage Interpretation Space for the area. The centre is named Ionad (Centre) Eileen Howell after a local community activist. The Falls Community Council (Comhairle Phobail na bhFal) is based in the centre. It provides a range of local services and is committed to the regeneration of the area. St. Brendan's Primary School on nearby Milford Street closed in the 1960s but for two years housed some pupils from St. Mary's Christian Brothers' Grammar School which at that time had exceeded its capacity in its Barrack Street premises.

The Dunlewey Centre is located near Gaelscoil an Lonnáin. The building was originally the home of the Bon Secours Sisters and also housed St. Vincent's Primary School for Girls. It is a now the home of a community education centre. Dunlewey Street on which it is located is named after the residence of a local mill owner, William Ross, who owned a house in Dunlewey, County Donegal. The nearby Ross Road is also named after William Ross.

Churches

St Peter's Cathedral

The churches in the Lower Falls district reflect the changing demographics of the area. There are three Catholic churches in the area. The oldest is St. Mary's Church which opened in 1784 (see above). St Peter's Cathedral is located just off Albert Street. This was originally a parish church built for the expanding Catholic population in the area and opened in 1866. It was designed by Fr Jeremiah Ryan McAulay, who had trained as an architect before he became a priest, and built on a site donated by a local baker, Bernard Hughes. It became the cathedral church for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Down and Connor and the episcopal seat of the Bishop of Down and Connor in 1986. It is home to St Peter's Schola Cantorum (Choir). Clonard monastery, the home of the Redemptorist religious order, is located near the junction with Springfield Road. The church formally opened in 1911 replacing a small church which opened in 1897. Father Alec Reid who played an important role in the Northern Ireland peace process was based here.

There were/are seven Protestant churches which were/are largely located on the edges of the area and their congregations were/are mostly drawn from neighbouring districts. All but one of the older churches have been closed, repurposed or demolished since the onset of the Troubles and the establishment of the peace lines. There were three Church of Ireland churches. St. Luke's Church (1863–2006) on Northumberland Street, was the Church of Ireland church for the Lower Falls. When it closed its congregation amalgamated with St. Stephen's Church in Millfield at the foot of Divis Street. This church which opened in 1856 was designed by Sir Thomas Drew who also designed St. Anne's Cathedral and many other churches. St Philips Church (Drew Memorial) opened on the Grosvenor Road in 1870. It was named after the fiery preacher Rev. Dr. Thomas Drew who hailed from Limerick and became a very influential clergyman when he moved to Belfast. It closed in 1994 and the church congregation merged with that of St. Simon's Church on the Donegall Road. A war memorial from the church is preserved in the Somme Museum, Newtownards. The church was sold to Dwyer's Gaelic Athletic Club who built their clubrooms on the site.

There were two Presbyterian churches. The largest was located on the other side of the peace wall dividing Townsend Street which links Divis Street with Peter's Hill, the lower Shankill Road. It opened in 1878 and formally closed in 2022 when it was taken over as a rehearsal space by the Ulster Orchestra. Nearby was located the Soho Foundry established by Robert Shipboy MacAdam in 1846. It is now an enterprise centre. There was also a Presbyterian church in Albert Street (1852–1972) where one of the ministers was the Rev. Henry Montgomery who helped establish the Shankill Road Mission in 1896. The Maureen Sheehan Centre is now located on the site of the church. The centre is named after a local community nurse who was killed in a nearby car accident. Four sculptures from the church are featured in the facade of the centre.

There was also a Methodist church in Divis Street (1850–1966). This church was designed by Charles Lanyon and was the original home of the Falls Road Orange Lodge. Nearby was the Hungarian Flour Mill owned by Bernard Hughes. The mill burned down in a fire in 1966.

A recent addition is the New Life City Church which is located on Northumberland Street on the peace line marking the separation of the Falls Road and the Shankill Road. It is an Elim Pentecostal Church.

Commercial facilities

A row of small shops on the Falls Road

The Lower Falls area previously had many linen mills. These have either been demolished or converted for other purposes. The Twin Spires Complex has replaced the demolished massive mill of the New Northern Spinning and Weaving Company (Craig's Mill) which was located at the corner of Northumberland Street. The new complex consists of shops, offices and small industrial units. On the corner of Conway Street was located Greeves' Mill (original owner Thomas Greeves of Strandtown, Belfast) and also the Conway Mill (original owner James Kennedy of nearby Clonard). Originally a flax spinning mill, it now houses a community enterprise of small businesses, art studios, retail space and education floor. It also houses the Irish Republican History Museum. Finally, Ross's Mill was located on Clonard Street with an entrance at the top of Sevastopol Street. It has been demolished and replaced by housing but its name survives in the street name Ross Mill Avenue.

There are still two large flour mills located in the lower Falls district. Near the bottom of Divis Street is located Neill's Flour Mill which is entered via College Square North. This mill was originally a small stone mill but was taken over by James Neill in 1867 who converted it into a roller mill in 1880. This mill grew in size and in the 1960s it became part of Allied Mills which in turn became part of Associated British Foods. The original mill was then demolished and rebuilt in 1986–7. Between Northumberland Street and Percy Street is located Andrews Flour Mill. The mill was originally developed in 1895 by the Andrews family from Comber, County Down. J. M. Andrews was the second Prime Minister of Northern Ireland (1940–1943). Northumberland Street and Percy Street were named after Hugh Percy, 3rd Duke of Northumberland who was the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland 1829–1830. Percy Street was badly damaged in the Belfast Blitz (1941) and 30 people were killed when a bomb hit a shelter. In August 1969, Percy Street and the neighbouring Dover Street were the location for major disturbance when a large crowd of Loyalists from the Shankill Road end attempted to invade Divis Street. Houses in the street were attacked and the residents fled (see 1969 Northern Ireland riots). These mills recruited workers from both the Falls and Shankill Roads.

Leisure facilities

The Falls Leisure Centre is located in the lower Falls district. It currently offers a range of leisure facilities including a swimming pool, sauna and steam rooms, a gym, and a badminton court. It was originally the location of the Falls Public Baths where local residents could avail of washing and swimming facilities. On 16 April 1941, it was the site of a temporary morgue following the Belfast Blitz. This is described in the novel The Emperor of Ice-Cream by the novelist Brian Moore.

Falls Road Library, opened in 1908.

One of three Carnegie libraries built in Belfast is situated in the lower Falls Road. It opened on 1 January 1908 and is the last Carnegie library in Belfast still functioning as a library. Opposite was located the Clonard Picture House which closed in 1966. The Diamond Picture House at the corner of Cupar Street closed in 1959. The Arcadian Cinema on Albert Street opened in 1912 but closed in 1960.

At the junction with Grosvenor Road is located Dunville Park which was first opened in 1893. It was funded by Robert G Dunville, the owner of the nearby Dunville & Co whiskey distillery. who also funded the large fountain at the centre of the park which was designed by the English sculptor Arthur Ernest Pearce. Sorella Street at the foot of the park is named after the Sorella Trust which was established by Robert's uncle William Dunville who named the trust after his sister (sorella in Italian) Sarah. The park has recently been refurbished and includes a football pitch. Nearby are located the clubrooms of Davitt's GAC and Dwyer's GAC.

A strong working class community, the Lower Falls has a history of storytelling, music and song which was often enjoyed in the many public houses in the area. These included such establishments as the Old House (famous for its folk music sessions), McGeown's, the West End Bar (owned by Peter and Molly Murray and famous for its weekend sing-songs), the Laurel Leaf, the Centre Half and Haughey's. Gerry Conlon, who grew up in Peel Street, recalled in his autobiography Proved Innocent how he could see several pubs just a few yards from his front door: I'd watch the men off to the pubs. There were three pubs, Paddy Gilmartin's which was called the Laurel Leaf, Peter Murray's directly opposite, or further down on the right-hand side was Charlie Gormley's, across from Finnegan's the butcher shop. The Centre Half Bar which was located at the corner of Panton Street and the Falls Road was named by the licensee Mickey Hamill who played for both Belfast Celtic and Glasgow Celtic as well as Manchester United and Manchester City. He captained the Ireland team to their first Home International championship win in 1914. The Spanish Rooms bar, in lower Divis Street, was famed for selling scrumpy, especially to young men on their way to a dance. In the early 1970s it was the largest seller of cider in Britain and Ireland. Most of these bars were demolished as part of the redevelopment of the area which occurred in the 1970s and 1980s.

Near the foot of Divis Street is located the offices of Raidió Fáilte, an Irish language community radio station. It is housed in a purpose-built facility. Nearby, on the Cullingtree Road, is located the Frank Gillen Centre which offers a range of community services. Closer to the city centre, in College Court, off Castle Street, was located the Astor Ballroom which was a very popular dance venue in the 1960s and where such famous bands as Thin Lizzy and Them performed.

Murals and memorials

On some walls along the main road have been painted large murals. These are representations of local and national political issues and figures. One of the most famous is the large mural of Bobby Sands on the side wall of the Sinn Féin's offices at the corner of Sevastopol Street. It bears the quotation from his writings: our revenge will be the laughter of our children. Further down the road on the corner of Northumberland Street is a series of murals which has come to be called the International or Solidarity Wall. This is a series of images of international figures who have been involved in various liberation struggles. These murals have become a popular attraction for visiting tourists. The murals are frequently updated to reflect local support for certain individuals and groups (e.g. NHS staff). In 2023, a panel on the wall calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza was unveiled. There are many other murals on nearby gable walls frequently exhorting peace and reconciliation between communities. One in Bread Street, off Albert Street, has a quotation from Audre Lorde: It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept and celebrate those differences.

Opposite the junction with Conway Street is a Garden of Remembrance. This is dedicated to the members of the IRA and the civilians from the Falls Road area who were killed during the Troubles and the prisoners in the H Block at the Long Kesh prison who died while on hunger strike in 1981.

Middle Falls

Rise Belfast

This section of the road centres on the Beechmount district and stretches from the intersection with the Grosvenor Road/Springfield Road to the Whiterock Road. The district takes its name from Beechmount House which was located at the top of a nearby hill surrounded by beech trees. It was the former home of Eliza and Isabella Riddel. It is now the site of an Irish Language school.

The Whiterock Road leads to the Ballymurphy and to Turf Lodge districts. It also leads to the Black Mountain which forms part of the range of hills overlooking Belfast. Across the Falls Road from the Whiterock Road is the Donegall Road. This road leads down to the junction with Broadway and Westlink – M1 motorway and then on down to Shaftesbury Square in the city centre. At the junction with Westlink is located the large public sculpture formally called RISE but informally known as the balls on the Falls.

Through the area flowed the Clowney Water or River (Irish Abhainn na Cluana – River of the meadow) which is a tributary of the larger Blackstaff River. Both have largely been covered over and piped in.

Hospitals

Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast

There are several large hospitals in the area including the Royal Victoria Hospital, the Royal Jubilee Maternity Service, the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children (Children's Hospital), and the Royal Dental Hospital. These four linked hospitals make up Northern Ireland's biggest hospitals complex. The Royal Victoria Hospital treats over 80,000 people as inpatients and 350,000 people as outpatients every year. The complex is a major training site for medical, dental, nursing and other health students from Queen's University Belfast. The original hospital opened in 1797 and moved to its present site in 1903. The hospital was designed by Henman and Cooper of Birmingham in 1899, completed in 1906. It was claimed to be the first air-conditioned public building in the world.

Opposite the Children's Hospital is Mulholland Terrace, a row of terraced houses which were built in the nineteenth century by David Mulholland. He also owned several bars in the area.

Schools

There are several educational institutions in the district. At the primary level, St. Paul's Primary School is located in the Beechmount area. There are also two Irish language primary schools. These are Gaelscoil na bhFal and Bunscoil an tSléibhe Dhuibh.

At the senior level, there is St Dominic's Grammar School for Girls. Beside it was located St. Catherine's Primary School which was also run by the Dominican nuns but closed in 2005. At the rear was located St Rose's High School in the Beechmount district which in 2019 was amalgamated with the Christian Brothers School, Glen Road and Corpus Christi College to form All Saints College / Coláiste na Naomh Uile.

There were several boys secondary schools in the area which have gone through a process of merging over the past forty years. St. Thomas's Boys Secondary School on the Whiterock Road opened in 1957. St. Peter's Boys Secondary School on Brittons Parade opened in the 1960s. In 1988, both of these schools amalgamated with Gort na Móna Secondary School to become Corpus Christi College which in turn merged (see above). St. Thomas's had a strong literary heritage. For a period, its headteacher was the writer Michael McLaverty. In addition, Seamus Heaney taught here for a while in the 1960s. He references the area in one of his poems:

Is there life before death? That's chalked up
In Ballymurphy. Competence with pain,
Coherent miseries, a bite and a sup,
We hug our little destiny again.

Brendan Hamill, another writer, who attended the school in the 1960s recalled later: While on teaching practice, Seamus Heaney came to St Thomas' about October that year (1962). I remember him, his voice grave and resonant, his big, brown shoes, reading from Carrickfergus by Louis MacNeice. He was an enormously decent man with extraordinary antennae. Joe Graham, the writer and historian, was also a student at the school when McLaverty was the headteacher. For several years, after the school closed, this building was used by Belfast Metropolitan College for further education courses. After the new Springvale campus of the college was opened the building was demolished.

St Mary's University College

Coláiste Feirste is an Irish language secondary school which is situated near Beechmount, in the former home of the Riddel family. Mo Chara from the Belfast-based hip hop trio Kneecap attended this school.

At the higher education level, there is St Mary's University College which is part of Queen's University Belfast. This was established in 1909 as St Mary's Training College to train women as teachers. It amalgamated with St Joseph's Training College (for male trainee teachers) in 1985. Besides teacher training it now offers a range of degree courses. The college has a substantial programme of community engagement playing host to many local events including many organised by Féile an Phobail.

Churches

St Paul's Church is located opposite the hospitals on the corner of Cavendish Street. It was built as a chapel of ease to St Peter's Cathedral and celebrated its first Mass in July 1887. St.Paul's was raised from "a district of St Peters" to the status of a parish in 1905. Broadway Presbyterian Church opened in 1891 but closed in 1982. It has since been repurposed as an Irish language arts and culture centre (see below).

Recreation and culture

Near Beechmount is located Willowbank Park which has a number of playing fields. It is located on the site of the Willowbank Huts which in the late nineteenth century housed a small British Army barracks. When the huts were vacated they were used by various groups including Fianna Éireann. Corrigan Park which is a facility for Gaelic games is located on the Whiterock Road. A nearby smaller facility for various sporting activities is McCrory Park. It was named after Cardinal Joseph MacRory who was Bishop of Down and Connor and then Primate of All Ireland in the early part of the twentieth century. During the 1970s it was occupied by the British Army who called it Fort Pegasus. The playing fields of the Davitt's GAC are located in Beechmount. The Whiterock Leisure Centre is located off the upper Whiterock Road. It has a community garden and allotment site. Developments include a playground and multi-use games area. At the foot of St. James's Road and sandwiched between Rodney Parade and the M1 motorway is located the St. James's Community Farm. This was an abandoned piece of land that was transformed by local residents into a community farm providing facilities for around 50 animals and various gardening initiatives.

Historically, there has been a continuing interest in the Irish language and culture in the area. In 1936 the Cluain Árd centre was established in the Beechmount area and became a centre for Irish language enthusiasts. In the 1960s, there was a resurgence of interest in the Irish language reflected in the development of the Shaw's Road Gaeltacht in Andersonstown. Since then, interest has grown, with the approval by Belfast City Council of a Gaeltacht Quarter around the Falls Road in 2002. The Cultúrlann McAdam Ó Fiaich, known colloquially as the Cultúrlann, is an Irish language and arts centre based in the middle Falls area which opened in 1991. It was originally the home of Broadway Presbyterian church. The centre also houses the Irish language bookshop An Ceathrú Póilí. The Féile an Phobail, an annual festival of Irish culture, which was established in 1988 provides a showcase for Irish culture. Nearby, at the corner with Broadway, is the new Áras na bhFál, the home of Iontaobhas na Gaelscolaíochta – the Trust Fund for Irish-Medium Education.

The Beehive Bar, Falls Road

The Áras Uí Chonghaile/James Connolly Visitor Centre is located near the top of the Donegall Road. This centre is dedicated to the life and work of James Connolly who lived nearby for a period in the early years of the twentieth century.

There are several large bars in the middle Falls area. These include the Beehive and the Red Devil – An Diabhal Dearg, at the top of Broadway, and the Rock Bar at the top of the Donegall Road. The Rock Bar is described as the oldest bar on the Falls Road. It was subjected to a loyalist attack with an RPG rocket in 1994 but survived and no customers were injured.

The Broadway Cinema which was situated near Beechmount was the largest of Belfast's suburban cinemas when it opened in 1936. It closed in 1972 after a bombing. Nearby is the Falls Women's Centre/Ionad Mhná na bhFál which was established in 1982.

On the Donegall Road, is the former site of Celtic Park. This was originally a football stadium and the home of Belfast Celtic F.C. It was also the first greyhound racing track to open in Ireland. The stadium closed in 1983 and is now the site of a shopping centre.

Upper Falls

This section stretches from the Whiterock Road to the Andersonstown Road. As its name implies, the Andersonstown Road leads to the Andersonstown district and the on out of the city. At the junction with the Glen Road was located the Andersonstown RUC station which was the most attacked police station in Northern Ireland. It was closed and demolished in 2005. The Glen Road runs for almost three miles passing the junction with Monagh By Pass/Kennedy Way, then Shaw's Road and Suffolk Road until it changes name to Colinglen Road. For much of the route in forms the northern boundary of Andersonstown and then Lenadoon.

Schools

St. Louise's Comprehensive College which was one of the largest girls schools in Europe with over 2,000 pupils is located in this area. In 2019, it was decided to admit boys and to reduce the overall student numbers to 1500. Nearby is located St. Kevin's Primary School which was established in 1933. There is also the St. Maria Goretti Nursery School on the Whiterock Road.

Churches

The St. John's RC Church is located near the foot of the Whiterock Road. It was originally established in 1928 as the population of the area increased.

St. Matthias's Church is located on the Glen Road not far from Milltown Cemetery. On the site, the original Church of Ireland church was erected in 1892. It formally closed in 1969 but was taken over by the catholic parish of St Teresa of Ávila, the main church of which is located further up the Glen Road. The building reopened as a catholic church under the same name in 1970. A new catholic church opened on the site in 2004 and the old tin church, which is listed, is in a state of disrepair.

Recreation

The Falls Park

In the Upper Falls area is located the Falls Park which was established in 1873. The park has many mature trees, flower beds, horticultural displays and grassland areas. The park contains playing fields for Gaelic games and soccer. It has a 3G pitch, a bowling green and other facilities. Developments include an outdoor gym, a dedicated youth area suitable for a range of uses and a refurbished play park with modern play equipment. In 1924, an outdoor swimming pool, known locally as The Cooler, was added to the park. The pool closed in 1979 for public health reasons. The Féile an Phobail has its closing concert here each year.

Opposite the Falls Park, on Milltown Row, are located the facilities of St. Gall's GAC. Further up the Falls Road is located The Felons, a large social club and restaurant. It is located on the site of a former Methodist meeting house.

Cemeteries

Belfast City Cemetery
Belfast Milltown Cemetery

In the late 19th century, with the rapid increase in the city population, there was an increasing need for cemeteries. At that time, the Upper Falls was a rural area and the city council and the Catholic Church decided to buy large spaces in the area to create cemeteries. The Belfast City Cemetery which is located at the bottom of the Whiterock Road, is a municipal cemetery maintained by the Belfast City Council and is one of the largest burial sites in the city. It opened in 1869. At the junction with the Glen Road, is located Milltown Cemetery, maintained by the Catholic Church, which opened in the same year.

At the bottom of Milltown Cemetery is the Bog Meadows which leads onto the M1 motorway. This large wild-life preserve is home to a wide variety of wild flowers, birds and butterflies. Some cattle also graze on the site. It is owned and managed by the Friends of the Bog Meadows and the Ulster Wildlife Trust.

Transport

GliderBus-Belfast

Originally there was a tram service providing public transport on the Falls Road. This was introduced in the late 19th century and replaced by trolleybuses in 1938. There were three routes along the road: 11 for Falls Road-Whiterock Road, 12 for Falls Road-Andersonstown Road and 13 for Falls Road-Glen Road. The 77 route from the Gasworks to the Waterworks ran via Albert Street/Northumberland Street and cut across the Falls Road and the Shankill Road. The trolleybuses were replaced by diesel buses in the 1960s. With the outbreak of the troubles, the bus service was withdrawn. The gap in public transport was replaced by black taxis. Since the troubles ended, the public bus service has been re-introduced and expanded. Metro, a division of Translink now operates the bus service. The Falls Road is designated one of the quality bus corridors (QBCs) within the city with a variety of different routes.

In 2018, the Glider bus service was introduced. It provides a service from Poleglass via the Falls Road-City Centre and Newtownards Road to Dundonald. It was the first cross-city bus service.

Street names

Following a decision of Belfast City Council in 2021, many of the streets in the area now have bilingual (English-Irish) signs. Guidance on the wording of these signs is taken from the Northern Ireland Place Names Project. Examples are Ardmoulin Street-Sráid Ard an Mhuilinn, Beechmount Avenue-Ascaill Ard na bhFeá.

Politics

James Connolly statue, Belfast

A predominantly working-class community, the area has seen an ongoing contest between various versions of labour/socialist and nationalist/Irish republican ideas for electoral leadership. In the early 20th century, James Connolly, the socialist republican, resided in the Upper Falls area for a period which at that time was generally seen as a bedrock of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP). As Belfast branch secretary for the Irish Transport and General Workers' Union, beginning in 1911 with Marie Johnson and from 1912 with Winifred Carney, Connolly sought to organise the millworkers of the Falls in the Irish Textile Workers Union.

In 1913, he stood for Belfast Corporation but lost with a vote of 905 against 1523. Carney, who had been raised on the Falls, was by Connolly's side in the GPO during the 1916 Easter Rising. Later, in the 1930s, she was to be involved with her husband, George McBride, in socialist and republican politics on the Protestant Shankill Road. She is buried in Milltown Cemetery, and in 2024 a statue was unveiled to her on the grounds of Belfast City Hall.

The Falls Road forms the centre of the Belfast West (UK Parliament constituency) although it also includes areas from the neighbouring unionist Shankill Road district. In 1909, the constituency was held by Joe Devlin of the IPP. In the 1918 United Kingdom general election a separate Belfast Falls (UK Parliament constituency) was created which was again won by Joe Devlin who heavily defeated Éamon de Valera who was standing for Sinn Féin. After partition, the constituency of Belfast West was reconstituted for the 1922 United Kingdom general election and was won by the Ulster Unionist Party who held it for 11 years until it was won by Jack Beattie, standing for Labour, who held it from 1943 to 1950 and again from 1951 to 1955. It was then held again by the Ulster Unionists until 1966.

President Bill Clinton shaking hands with Gerry Adams

In the 1964 United Kingdom general election, Billy McMillen stood as a Republican Clubs candidate for the Belfast West. His office was in Divis Street and the Irish tricolour alongside the Starry Plough of Connolly's Irish Citizen Army was displayed in the window. The Flags and Emblems Act gave the RUC the power to remove any flag or emblem from public or private property which was considered to be likely to cause a breach of the peace. This was generally interpreted as any Irish flag since the Union Jack was specifically excluded from the Act. Ian Paisley insisted the RUC remove the Irish tricolour or he would organise a march and remove it himself. The police feared a backlash from Loyalists, and removed it, causing unrest and rioting by local residents. James Kilfedder standing for the Ulster Unionist Party was elected to the seat that year but was defeated two years later in 1966 by Gerry Fitt who held the seat for the Republican Labour Party and then the SDLP for seventeen years until 1983 when Gerry Adams won the seat for Sinn Féin. He held the seat for over twenty years (1983–1992 and 1997–2011) with Joe Hendron of the SDLP holding it for the intervening five years (1992–1997). Paul Maskey of Sinn Féin was elected MP in 2011 and has held the seat since but in line with Sinn Féin's abstentionist policy he has not actually taken the seat at Westminster. In 1995, President Bill Clinton visited the area where he shook hands with the Gerry Adams near the corner with the Springfield Road.

In the 1929 Northern Ireland general election, the Belfast, Falls constituency was won by the Nationalist Richard Byrne after a bitter contest with William McMullen, a supporter of Connolly. In the 1945 election, Harry Diamond won the seat standing for the Socialist Republican Party. He held the seat until 1969 when he was defeated by Paddy Devlin standing for the Northern Ireland Labour Party. Devlin, who had once been a member, alongside Diamond, of the Belfast branch of the Irish Labour Party, became a founding member of the Social Democratic and Labour Party in 1970 and remained a member until Parliament was prorogued in 1972.

It was replaced by the power-sharing Northern Ireland Assembly in 1973 which only met for one year. After the Good Friday Agreement in 1998, a new Northern Ireland Assembly was established. In the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election, a total of four Sinn Féin and one People Before Profit representatives were elected in the Belfast West (Assembly constituency).

In elections for Belfast City Council, three of the seven wards (Falls Park, Ballymurphy, and Beechmount) within the Black Mountain (District Electoral Area) cover the Middle and Upper Falls area, while two of the six wards (Clonard and Falls) within the Court (District Electoral Area) cover the Lower Falls area. In the 2023 district election, six Sinn Féin and one SDLP councillors were elected for the Black Mountain (District Electoral Area) while two Sinn Féin, three DUP and one TUV councillors were elected for the Court (District Electoral Area).

The Troubles

Main article: The Troubles

In the late 1960s, many Catholics from across Northern Ireland began to campaign, many with Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA), against discrimination in housing and jobs, under the banner of a civil rights campaign, in conscious imitation of the philosophy of, and tactics used by, the American Civil Rights Movement. Northern Ireland was part of the UK but the voting criteria were different to England, Scotland and Wales where a person could vote as soon as they became 18 years old. In Northern Ireland an 18-year-old could only vote if they were the named owner or named renter of a house. Most of the Catholic houses had three generations living in the same dwelling (because of housing discrimination) so only the mother and father could vote. Furthermore, business owners (depending on the size of the company) were entitled to three to six votes unlike anywhere else in the United Kingdom.

Many Unionists saw NICRA as an Irish republican Trojan horse, designed to destabilize Northern Ireland, and force unionists into a united Ireland. Several streets around the Falls Road were burnt out by armed 'B' Specials (Police Reserve) and loyalists in August 1969, with the murder of six Catholics on the first night marking the start of 'The Troubles. In response to the worsening situation, the British Government deployed the British Army on the Falls Road to protect the Catholics from further attacks. The troops were initially welcomed by all the Falls residents to protect them, but heavy-handed tactics by the mostly British-born members of the Army who did not know, care or understand the situation would estrange most Catholics and nationalists.

From 3–5 July 1970, the road was the scene of what became known as the Falls Curfew. 3,000 British troops carried out an operation to search the area for hidden weapon caches, sealing off the streets around the Falls Road. Local youths attacked the troops, who responded by firing 1,600 canisters of CS gas to disperse the crowds. The operation was also opposed by the Official IRA (OIRA), with OIRA gunmen engaging British troops in multiple gun battles across the area. Over the course of the operation, four Catholic civilians were killed by the Army, which recovered ninety rifles. The operation was widely regarded as the end of the British Army's "honeymoon" period with the nationalist community in Belfast.

Garden of Remembrance, Falls Road.

During the Troubles there were repeated sectarian attacks by loyalists on residents of the Falls Road. These attacks increased during the 1969 Northern Ireland riots when whole streets in the Falls Road area were destroyed by loyalists from the Shankill Road area. Loyalists paramilitaries killed many local residents. Temporary barricades were constructed to provide residents with some security. These developed into peace walls which today separate the Falls Road from the neighbouring Shankill Road. Although the troubles have now ceased, the peace walls still exist in this so-called Interface area.

For the following three decades, the British Army maintained a substantial presence on the Falls Road, occupying a base on top of the Divis Tower. This was removed in August 2005 as part of the British government's normalisation programme, following the Provisional Irish Republican Army's statement that it was ending its armed activities. In the intervening period, the Falls Road area saw some of the worst violence of the Troubles. The last British soldier to be killed on the road itself was Private Nicholas Peacock, killed by a booby trap bomb left outside the Rock Bar, opposite the top of the Donegall Road on 1 February 1989.

In 1991, IRA hit squads based in the Upper Falls and Beechmount were involved in attacks against loyalist paramilitaries in the nearby Village area. In September 1991, they shot dead 19-year-old UVF member John Hanna at his home on the Donegall Road, and in November the same year, they shot dead William Kingsberry and his stepson, Samuel Mehaffey, members of the UDA and RHC respectively, in their home on Lecale Street. The Good Friday Agreement was signed in 1998 followed by decommissioning of weapons by the IRA and the formal ending of its campaign in 2005.

Literary and musical references

There are many literary references to life on the Falls Road. These include:

  • Gerry Adams (1982). Falls Memories. Dingle:Brandon.
  • Ciaran Carson (1997). Star Factory. London: Granta Books.
  • Liam Carson (2010). Call Mother a Lonely Field. Bridgend: Seren.
  • Eimer O'Callaghan (2014). Belfast Days. A 1972 Teenage Diary. Sallins: Merrion Press.
  • Patricia Craig (2007). Asking for Trouble. Belfast: Blackstaff.

The American singer Nanci Griffith sings in her song "It's a hard life wherever you go" which she wrote after visiting Belfast:

I am a backseat driver from America
They drive to the left on Falls Road
The man at the wheel's name is Seamus
We pass a child on the corner he knows
And Seamus says, "Now, what chance has that kid got?"
And I say from the back, "I don't know."
He says, "There's barbed wire at all of these exits
And there ain't no place in Belfast for that kid to go."

Gary Kemp, British songwriter and singer for British soft rock group Spandau Ballet attributes his writing of the band's 1986 hit "Through the Barricades" to emotion he experienced while on Falls Road.

See also

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