Tag Archives: lost

The Ulster Canal: the supposed benefits

Here is the latest (and almost the last) in this series of posts: an examination of the expected benefits of the canal to Clones. My conclusion is that the benefits cited are higher than those likely to arise in current conditions.

The Ulster Canal: the costs

The figure of €35 million is widely quoted as the cost of the canal to Clones, but the basis for that figure is not clear. Here are some thoughts on the subject.

The Ulster Canal

The next page of the Ulster Canal series is now up. It is, I’m afraid, rather boring: an account of the various reports (“studies and appraisals”, in the jargon) commissioned since 1994. It may help in sorting out who said what where and when.

Down the Rockville

Some time ago I wrote three pages about the Rockville Navigation, which is linked to Grange on the Carnadoe Waters in Co Roscommon.

I recently revisited the area. I was horrified, first, to find that the bridge — built in June 1765 — has been severely damaged, with large chunks of masonry in the cut beneath and with a crude wooden repair. How many bridges of that age are there in Co Roscommon? How many that are associated with one of the oldest navigations in the country? Please, someone, restore the bridge!

Damage to the bridge

Anyway, the more pleasant part of the day was the four hours that we spend descending, by dinghy and kayak, from the bridge to Grange. The route took us through artificial cuts, small lakes and sections of river, with very clear water and an extraordinary abundance of vegetation. This route would have been easily navigated by large wooden cots or similar boats, and it should be developed today as a canoe-and-small-boat trail. Even with very low water levels, we had no real problems, although someone has to end up with wet feet …. Here is an account of the trip.

Wading in the water

Three German officers …

… didn’t cross the Rine, which is a river in County Clare, flowing into the estuary of the River Fergus which, in turn, joins the estuary of the River Shannon. The Rine is also known as the Quin and the Ardsollus and its downstream end is called Latoon Creek, no doubt because it flows by the townlands of Latoon North (which is to the east) and Latoon South (to the west). There is a quay there, hidden under one of the three road-bridges that cross the Latoon side by side. Sea-manure (seaweed used for fertiliser) was landed there and Samuel Lewis tells us that fifty-ton lighters were used, but more information is needed about their operations.

Read about it here.

Saleen Pier

It’s a long way from Trinity College, Dublin to the pier at Saleen on Ballylongford Creek, on the south side of the Shannon Estuary. But the college owned large amounts of land in the area, including bogs, and turf was one of the cargoes exported from Ballylongford. There was a battery on Carrig Island at the mouth of the creek and a Coast Guard Station at Saleen Pier, which was built by the Commissioners for the Improvement of the Navigation of the Shannon. Read more about Saleen here.

Conway’s Canal and the Doonass bleach mill

The fall of the Shannon is concentrated between Killaloe, at the bottom of Lough Derg, and Limerick, at the head of the Shannon Estuary. It is that fall, of almost 100 feeet, that made possible the construction of the hydroelectric power station at Ardnacrusha in the 1920s. Its designers were not the first people to realise the usefulness of the water-power of the Shannon in that area, but they were almost the first to use it: there were few mills between Killaloe and Plassey, and that at O’Briensbridge used water from the Bridgetown direction rather than from the Shannon.

There were, however, two bleach mills, one at Doonass on the County Clare side of the Shannon and one at Castleconnell on the Co Limerick side. The Doonass mill seems to have been set up, around 1760, by Hercules Browning or Brownriggs. There is little trace of the mill itself, but its intake and outlet canals are still to be seen. The really interesting thing is that there are two outlets: the shorter returns to the Shannon almost immediately below the mill while the longer runs for almost half a mile, behind a hill, before it rejoins the river.

I don’t know why it has two outlets. It is possible that the system catered for much higher water levels with greater variation between summer and winter. It is conceivable that the longer arm might have been used to carry the produce of the mill downstream, although I have no evidence for that and I’m not sure where the goods would have gone after the outlet rejoined the river. The watercourse is referred to locally as Conway’s Canal, but I don’t think that is evidence that it ever carried anything.

Anyway, here are maps, photos and as much background information as I could find. Comments, suggestions and explanations will be welcome.

The Anner canal

Just east of the Bulmers factory in Clonmel, Co Tipperary, the Anner runs southwards to its confluence with the River Suir. A short distance north of the N24 (the road to Waterford), a canal separates off from the river and runs down the far side of a field, passing under the N24 a short distance to the east of the Anner. The bridge under which it passed is (or was, on the 1904 Ordnance Survey map) called Canal Bridge, which is the only information I have to suggest that this watercourse was thought of as a canal. I have a few photos of it here.

The upper Suir: Clonmel to Carrick

I have just put up a page about the Upper Suir navigation, from Clonmel downstream to Carrick-on-Suir. This was an extraordinarily difficult navigation, with a fall of 57′ in about twelve miles — and not a single lock of any kind. There were shallows, rapids and floods: the level of the Suir could change very quickly in response to rainfall, and the currents, bad enough at the best of times, could rapidly become extremely dangerous. It is not surprising, therefore, that the worst accident in Irish inland waterways history was the drowning of over 100 people, most of them women and children, who were travelling downstream from Clonmel to Carrick.

And this navigation was worked entirely by horse power, with up to fifteen horses employed at times to haul the boats upstream.

This account includes extracts from poems and links to old photos, as well as many, many photos of major sections of the navigation. There is also a diversion to cover the millstreams and weirs of Clonmel and there are opinions from the authors of early guidebooks for oarsmen and canoeists. However, there are undoubtedly errors and omissions, and I welcome Comments that might help to improve this account.

The Eglinton Canal in Galway

This short canal, less than a mile long, connected Lough Corrib to the sea at Galway. It had two locks, including a sea lock, five swivelling bridges and a substantial canal basin. It was abandoned in 1954 when the swivelling bridges were replaced by fixed bridges. The last vessel down the canal was the Amo II, a 90′ motor yacht sold by the Guinness trustees to a Galway hotelier. Here is a brief account.