Thomas Sinton

Thomas Sinton

Thomas Sinton JP (February 1826 - 20 August 1887) was an Irish industrialist and magistrate. Sinton made a significant impact upon the Irish linen trade; not least establishing the village of Laurelvale, County Armagh.

Thomas Sinton was born in Tamnaghmore House, [ [http://www.ehsni.gov.uk/content-databases-buildview?id=5922&js=true Tamnaghmore House at the Environment and Heritage Service Listed Buildings Database] ] Tandragee, County Armagh, the son of David Sinton and Sarah Green. The Sintons, like so many of Northern Ireland's linen families were Quakers, in this case of Scottish descent; although the Sintons had been settled at Tamnaghmore for several hundred years. Thomas Sinton was sent to board at Friends' School, Lisburn - a Quaker school. In 1859 he married Elizabeth Bridget Hesilridge Buckby (1835-1900), her family lived at Prospect House, Tandragee. He had eight children by his wife;
*"(William) Maynard Sinton, JP" (High Sheriff and Unionist County Councillor for County Armagh [Unionist Politics and Protestant Society in Edwardian Ireland, Alvin Jackson, The Historical Journal, Vol. 33, No. 4. (Dec., 1990), pp. 839-866. Stable URL: [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0018-246X%28199012%2933%3A4%3C839%3AUPAPSI%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T] ] - lived at [http://www.stauros.com/images/ballyards_front.gifBallyards Castle] ),
*"David Arthur Sinton" (of Stramore House, Gilford)
*"Dorothy Hesilridge Sinton",
*"Elizabeth Sinton",
*"Thomas Greville Sinton" (High Sheriff, lived at Laurelvale House),
*"Alfred Henry Hesilridge Sinton" (of Hill House, Laurelvale)
*"Frederick Buckby Sinton" (of Banford House, Tullylish, Gilford)
*"Jemima Sarah Isabella Sinton"

Sinton died at his home, Laurelvale House (later the home of Michael Torrens-Spence), and was buried at [http://www.quakers-in-ireland.ie/meetings/pics/moyalnsm.jpgMoyallon] Friends' Burial Ground, Gilford. His effects were valued, in 1887, at over £100,000. Sinton was a great-uncle of the soldier and doctor John Alexander Sinton.

Linen Factory

Sinton built the model village of Laurelvale (named due to the abundance of laurel bushes in the area), also known as Laurel Vale, to house workers at his large linen factory - "Thomas Sinton & Co., Ltd." The factory was started in the early 1850s and by the 1880s it employed around 700 workers, responsible for manufacturing very high grade heavy linen. The company was responsible for almost all of the houses built in the village, especially those for family members and factory managers.

He also owned factories in Tandragee, by the River Cusher, and at Killyleagh, County Down. His brother, John, owned a factory near Hillsborough, County Down and his descendants would also acquire the Banford Bleachworks, at Tullylish.

The Laurelvale factory closed in 1944 when it was acquired by the Ministry of Defence and used by the Hoffman company for the manufacture of ball bearings for tank turrets etc. In the 1970s it was destroyed in a fire, and together with his house the area has recently been cleared for a housing development. All that remains of Laurelvale House and the factory now is an old wall, which was part of the stable block.

The Tandragee Factory was still in production, employing 200 people, until the 1996. [ [http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/imported/article1084968.ece The Belfast Telegraph; "Tandragee to Get Mill Back in Action"] ] There were then plans afoot to convert the mill, which remained the Sinton family's property, into a tourist and retail facility, with the hope of a £7-8 million investment. [ [http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/imported/article1057569.ece The Belfast Telegraph; Tourist Plan For Old Mill] ] Planning permission was granted for this, however, the building was put up for sale by Thomas (Tim) Sinton (the subject's great-grandson) in 2003. [ [http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/imported/article854061.ece The Belfast Telegraph; "Surprise as Mill up For Sale"] ]

ee also

* [http://www.banbridge.com/template1.asp?parent=206&parent2=212&pid=386&area=1 From banbridge.com, discussing the great linen houses, includes Banford and Stramore]
* [http://www.bob-sinton.com/ft_main.php?rin=202 Thomas Sinton, of Laurelvale]
* [http://www.irishgenealogy.net/cp/forum/viewtopic.php?p=1877&sid=89871fae3c1342b094ea270330dc812b Slater's Directory]
* [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~donaghmore1/armagh/sithe.html Armagh Landowners]
*"The linen houses of the Lagan valley: the story of their families", By Kathleen Rankin


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  • Walton, Ernest Thomas Sinton — ▪ 1996       Irish physicist (b. Oct. 6, 1903, Dungarvan, County Waterford, Ireland d. June 25, 1995, Belfast, Northern Ireland), was corecipient, with Sir John Douglas Cockcroft of England, of the 1951 Nobel Prize for Physics for their… …   Universalium

  • Walton , Ernest Thomas Sinton — (1903–1995) Irish physicist Walton, who was born at Dungarvan in Ireland, studied at the Methodist College, Belfast, where he excelled at mathematics and science. In 1922 he entered Trinity College, Dublin, graduating in mathematics and… …   Scientists

  • Walton, Ernest Thomas Sinton — ► (1903 95) Físico irlandés. Fue premio Nobel de Física en 1951, con J. D. Cockcroft, por la creación del primer acelerador de partículas, con el que consiguieron la desintegración del litio y la primera reacción nuclear artificial …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Ernest Thomas Sinton Walton — noun Irish physicist who (with Sir John Cockcroft in 1931) first split an atom (1903 1995) • Syn: ↑Walton, ↑E. T. S. Walton, ↑Ernest Walton • Instance Hypernyms: ↑nuclear physicist …   Useful english dictionary

  • Sinton — Recorded in at least three spellings including Sinton, Senten and Senton, this surname is of Anglo Scottish pre 7th century origins. It is a locational name either from Sinton in Worcestershire, England, or from Sinton near Selkirk, in Scotland,… …   Surnames reference

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