Barry's_Amusements

Barry's Amusements

Barry's Amusements

Amusement park in Northern Ireland


Barry's Amusements was an amusement park in Northern Ireland. Located in the centre of Portrush, County Antrim, on the north coast, it was founded in 1925. The owners offered it for sale in 2019 and it was reported to be sold for redevelopment in 2021. In April 2022, it reopened under lease as Curry's Fun Park.

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Park

The amusement park occupies 2.23 acres (0.90 ha) in the center of Portrush;[1] as of 2013 it was the largest amusement park in Northern Ireland.[2] It has a mixture of traditional and modern amusements and was normally open from Easter Monday until the first week in September.[2][3] Barry's employed many teenagers and university students from the area.[4]

History

Barry's was founded in 1925 by the married couple of Francesco Trufelli, a former trapeze artist and manager of the Royal Italian Circus, and Evelyn Chipperfield of the Chipperfield's Circus family,[5] and remained a family business; as of 2006, when the BBC broadcast a documentary on the park,[6] it was run by sisters Lisa and Kristina Trufelli, the fourth generation. It became the longest-running amusement park in Northern Ireland.[1] The couple toured with the circus and then opened the amusement park in 1926 after being invited by the local railway company to permanently locate on a site beside the railway station; according to the company history, rather than use either of their family names, they named it 'Barry's' after the first supplier to arrive on-site, Barr.[5] The family at one time also operated Barry's amusement parks in Belfast and Bangor.[7]

The park was offered for sale in November 2019 as a going concern,[4] but was unable to open for the 2020 season because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In May 2021 it was offered for sale as a development opportunity.[1] An online petition was launched protesting against development.[8] In early August, Barry's was reported sold to property developer Michael Herbert.[1][5] In September 2021, the new owner sought a tenant to operate it as an entertainment or leisure venue;[9] in March 2022 the Curry family, who operate Curry's Fun Park in Salthill, in County Galway, announced that they had signed a long-term lease and planned to reopen Barry's at Easter, also as Curry's Fun Park Portrush.[10][11] It reopened on 9 April 2022.[12][13]

Attractions

Incomplete list

Current Attractions

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Former attractions

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Barry's Amusements, specifically The Big Dipper and Ghost Train, was featured in season 3, episode 3 of television series Derry Girls. This was prior to its closure in 2019 and before the redevelopment of the park.

See also


References

  1. "Barry's Amusements: Sun due to set on NI's longest-running amusement park" (video, 1  min 59  secs). BBC News Northern Ireland. 3 August 2021.
  2. "Barry's". Coleraine Borough Council. Archived from the original on 16 March 2013.
  3. "Opening times". Barry's Amusements. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  4. Amy Stewart (16 November 2019). "Barry's: 'I found the love of my life on the dodgems'". BBC News Northern Ireland. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  5. "BBC Northern Ireland - Autumn highlights 2006" (press release). BBC. 7 September 2006. Retrieved 4 August 2021.
  6. "Your Place & Mine: Dodgem Days". BBC Northern Ireland. 16 October 2014 [2007]. Retrieved 3 August 2021.
  7. Damian Mullan (10 April 2022). "Curry's Fun Park opens in Portrush". Antrim Guardian.
  8. "The Carousel". Barry's Amusements. Archived from the original on 20 September 2003.

Further information

  • James Fairley (2006). Fun is Our Business: The Story of Barry's Amusements. Newtownards: Colourpoint Books. ISBN 9781904242710.
  • Marie Irvine (producer) (2006). Barry's. BBC Northern Ireland.

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