Strabane is a town in County Tyrone in Northern Ireland, and since 2015 part of the Council District of Derry and Strabane. It's an economically depressed market town with a population in 2011 of 13,172. It stands on the east bank of the River Foyle, which forms the border with the Republic of Ireland. Over on the west bank, a 15 min walk across the bridge, is Lifford, a small village yet it's the county town of County Donegal. Its few amenities are also described here.
Strabane has been defined by its three rivers. The River Finn flows out of Donegal to the west, while the Mourne River flows down from Omagh to the south. At Strabane they combine into the River Foyle, which flows 14 miles north to reach the sea at Derry. Fed by the ample Ulster rain, they're fast-flowing and were harnessed for mills, to process flax into linen. But that made them difficult to ford, so at Strabane there was a ferry to Lifford on the west bank, and since 1730 a bridge. There's no other crossing of the Foyle until you reach Derry.
The area has good farmland and its Irish name is An Srath Bán, "the white strath, the grassy water-meadow". It attracted a series of settlers: Celts, Vikings, the O'Neill dynasty of Tyrone, the Plantation Scots. This meant that prehistoric and early Christian sites hereabouts have been lost to the plough, while surviving in wilder country elsewhere. Ulster was organised into counties after the Nine Years' War broke Gaelic resistance to the English, and the Finn and Foyle became the natural boundary between County Donegal on the west bank and County Tyrone on the east. County Londonderry began a few miles north at the tidal and navigation limit of the Foyle. Scottish settlers were already moving in before the war, but 1607 saw the flight of the defeated Earl of Tyrone into exile, and seizure of his estates. In 1608 rebels burned Derry, and London authority was determined to prevent further uprisings, so they began the systematic Plantation of Ulster with loyal Protestants. These became the majority population especially in the industrial east, but Strabane remained mostly Catholic.
In 1921 the prolonged Anglo-Irish conflict led to the partition of Ireland. County Donegal, though geographically in Ulster, was Catholic and joined Southern Ireland, which became an independent Republic. Tyrone and Londonderry were mostly Protestant and joined Northern Ireland, which remained within the United Kingdom. A boundary commission recommended transferring Strabane to the south (along with similar Catholic areas such as south Armagh) but it was politically sabotaged and its report was suppressed until 1969. An international border now separated Strabane and Lifford, blighting transport, trade and industry on both sides.
Strabane was therefore already a depressed place before the "Troubles" of the late 20th century, and economic grievances stoked sectarian tensions. The army and police arrived in force, and then themselves became frequent targets for bombs and shooting. The position of the border wasn't a major political issue, it was the legitimacy of that border and continued British rule in Northern Ireland, but it did not improve local opinion when the boundary commission report was leaked to learn that they might have been in the Republic all along. The town was extensively damaged, and employment and industry fled. And then the river flooded the town in 1987.
The Good Friday Agreement of 1998 led to de-escalation of violence and military presence, and the border on the Foyle river bridge became as insignificant as a parish boundary. Economic regeneration however was slow. The nearby city of Derry successfully re-launched itself as a place worthy of tourism and investment. Strabane grew as a commuter town for Derry but otherwise has struggled to benefit. In 2011 the counties of Northern Ireland were abolished as units of local government, and since 2015 the town has been part of the "super-district" of Derry and Strabane. Since 2020 the big uncertainty has been the effect of Brexit on the Irish border.
Tourist information is available at the Alley Theatre on Railway Street, see below.
Ulsterbus 273 runs from Belfast Europa bus station, hourly M-Sa and every two hours Sunday, via Lurgan, Dungannon and Omagh to Strabane (2 hr 30 min), continuing to Derry.
Goldline Bus X3 runs once or twice a day from Dublin Busáras and Airport via Monaghan and Omagh to Strabane (3 hr) and Derry. Or you could take the X4 from Dublin to Derry and change.
Derry is the nearest railway station, with hourly trains from Belfast. In addition to the inter-city buses, Ulsterbus 98 takes 30 min between Derry and Strabane M-Sa hourly in the morning and late afternoon but with long gaps midday.
Strabane bus station 📍 is south bank of the Mourne River on A5, a short walk from town centre. There's a Lidl, a fast food outlet and a B&B adjacent.
By road from Belfast follow M2 / A6 towards Derry and branch off onto B49 at Claudy.
Lifford is walking distance, and since 1998 there have been no border checks. It's up to you to ensure that you're eligible to cross between UK and Ireland, that you carry any relevant documents with you, and that your car insurance / rental agreement is valid for both countries.
Buses towards Omagh will take you to Sion Mills. You need your own wheels for other out-of-town sites.
National Cycleway 95 runs mostly on-road from Armagh to Dungannon, Cookstown and Strabane. Route 92 runs from Enniskillen to Omagh, Strabane and Derry.
The rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate / Tis God appoints their station and contents them with their fate
Cecil Frances Alexander, nee Humphreys, (1818-1895) was an Anglo-Irish writer of hymns. In Strabane she married the Anglican clergyman who became Bishop of Derry and Archbishop of Armagh. She was involved in many local charitable efforts, funded from the success of her hymns. Best known today are three published in "Hymns for Little Children": All Things Bright and Beautiful, There is a Green Hill Far Away and Once in Royal David's City. Several places claim to be the original inspiration of these, but the scenery of Londonderry, Strabane and the river valley suffuses all of them. They're also an Anglican High Tory rebuke to all those upstart revolutionaries and Fenians.
Strabane and Lifford have 4G from all UK and Irish carriers. The Irish signal is stronger, so take care which network your mobile latches onto, in case of extra charges. As of Aug 2021, 5G has not reached this area.
2nd-order administrative division
Primary administrative division