Find Accommodation
ExploreMapSmallIMG
Happy New Year to all our customers
Stay at Derry City Travelodge from £32 per Room!
Derry City Travelodge
Three Star
Great Location in the Heart of Derry City Centre. Book Now!
Room Rates from £49.95. Book Now!
Ramada DaVinci's Hotel. Excellent Value.
Three Star
Newly Refurbished 3 Star Hotel, less than 1 mile from Derry City Centre.
City Centre Location on the River Foyle
The 4* City Hotel
Four Star
2BB & 1 Dinner from £94.00 Per Person Sharing. Book Now!

churches historical derry

Derry Churches Historical
Choose from our selection of churches historical in derry county below - to view details on each, just click 'More'
12 churches historical in derry county
Page 1 of 2
Photo:Unavailable
Coleraine, Derry
In the centre of Coleraine on the original site of St. Patrick's foundation of the 5th Century. Parts of the present church date from 1613 and it contains many fine and moving memorials. To the rear of the church are the remains of the earthen wall or rampart which surrounded Coleraine in the early 1600s....
Welcome Picture of Saint Brecan Church Ruins
Saint Columb's Park, Clooney Road, Waterside, Derry, Derry
St Brecan's Church Ruins reputed to be Derry's oldest building situated in St Columb's Park a quiet woodland by the side of the River Foyle these ruins are said to be the remains of the oldest building in Derry dating back to the 6th century.

Admission: Free

Opening: All year winter daylight hours / Summer 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m....
Photo:Unavailable
Dungiven, Derry
Its earliest part is the nave, probably erected in the 12th century when the Augustinian Canons took over an earlier monastery associated with St Nechtan. The exterior east end of the nave still preserves slight extensions of the north and south walls beyond the gable ends. More unusual is the blind arcading still traceable in the eastern interior corners of the nave, which helps to provide a date no earlier than the second quarter of the twelfth century. Now closed off from the nave by a woo...
Photo:Unavailable
Palace Street, Derry, Derry
Originally the site of an ancient Augustian Abbey this church was erected in 1872 replacing the previous "Chapel of Ease" built by Sir Henry Docwra for the settlers. Architect: JG Ferguson. A neo-Gothic church built of whinstone with sandstone dressings, " it is delightfully situated on the City walls, surrounded by its graveyard and a pretty parish school and hall" (Byrne and Frazer). Hammerbeam roof inside. Listed building.

Sited on the West Wall near Bishop's Gate this beautiful...
Photo:Unavailable
Maghera, Derry
The site of a monastery founded by St Lurach in the 6th century, Maghera was the seat of a bishopric in the 12th/13th centuries. Parts of the now roofless rectangular church may date from before this period, though it is difficult to say how much earlier.

It was extended further to the east at the same time that the most important feature of the church was inserted in the west wall - a doorway dating probably from the episcopate of Muiredach O'Coffy (1152-73). The most important sin...
Photo:Unavailable
Upper Magazine Street, Derry, Derry
The First Derry Presbyterian Church was built with the help of a large sum of money donated by Queen Mary as a reward for the bravery of the Presbyterians during the Siege of 1689.

It has a chaste and handsome front made of Dungiven sandstone a fine portico of four fluted columns with corinthians capitals entablature and pediment and is approached by a broad set of steps. Inside the main space is lofty with a fine coffered timber ceiling and behind the pulpit are stained glass windows...
Photo:Unavailable
Portstewart, Derry
The original church of Portstewart dating from at least the 1300s.

In a field to the East there are the remains of a Stone Age Court Tomb and to the South, a mound marks the spot of the citadel of Congal Clairingneach, King of all Ireland in 161 B.C....
Welcome Picture of Saint Columbas Long Tower
Bishop Street, Derry, Derry
St Columba's 'Long Tower' is another very important Derry church. It was the first Catholic church erected in the city after the momentous events of the reformation and plantation. It is decorated in a brilliant neo-Renaissance style. Built originally in 1784, St Columba's occupies the precincts of another of Derry's famous medieval churches the Tempull Mor or great Church. This was built in the 1160's at a time when a reasonably large township had grown up around the ancient monastery.
...
Welcome Picture of Derry Christ Church
Infirmary Road, Derry, Derry
Christ Church was originally built in 1830 by Bishop Knox and was called the Free Church as it was intended solely for the poorer classes; ironically it later became the most bourgeois of the city congregations. The Church was almost completely rebuilt in 1903 and the name was changed to Christ Church by Bishop Alexander who seemingly disliked saints.

It stands at the foot of Brooke Park facing St Eugene's Cathedral.

Admission: Free

Location: Leading to Northland R...
Photo:Unavailable
Derry, Derry
A long rectangular church which served the parishioners of the Six Towns area during the later medieval period. Surviving decorative stonework suggests that a 13th century church was replace by another in the later medieval period. What is perhaps of greater interest is the collection of 18th century grave-stones well carved in high relief, which are found in and around the church, where more recent burials are absent....
Churches Historical
Derry County
Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more... Click to see more...