Causeway Coast & Glens is to become the latest council in the north to review its bilingual street sign policy. The council currently grants dual language signs on streets that have the support of 66% of residents. It also requires a third of residents to sign a petition to initiate …
Read More »Investigation launched as hundreds of responses to Irish dual language street sign surveys ‘held up by Royal Mail’ – The Irish News
A council investigation is underway into a Royal Mail hold-up of hundreds of residents’ responses to surveys on Irish dual language street signs in Belfast. The probe began after Belfast City Council staff noticed responses to surveys on having new dual language signs was “unusually low”. As a result of …
Read More »Newry.ie – Just Fourteen Hours from Newry to Dublin by Mail Coach
While there has been a postal service available in Newry from as far back as 1564, Newry only became a Post Town in 1784, the year the Irish Post Office separated from the English Post Office. Sometime after 1761, the Post Office was relocated from Market Street to Marcus Square …
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