
Castleconnell and Worldsend, Co Limerick (OSI 6″ ~1840)
The authors of a book called Village by Shannon, about Castleconnell, Co Limerick, say that the area of Worldsend, at the northern end of Castleconnell, derives its name from Worrall’s Inn, an establishment operated by a Mr Worrall in the early eighteenth century.
That may be so, but the book’s accounts of river-borne traffic — to a quay at the inn — do not seem to accord with what is known about the history of the Shannon navigation, and in particular of the Limerick Navigation between the city and Killaloe. Here are some of the problems.

Posted in Ashore, Built heritage, Canals, Charles Wye Williams, Drainage, Economic activities, Engineering and construction, Extant waterways, Forgotten navigations, Historical matters, Industrial heritage, Ireland, Irish inland waterways vessels, Operations, Passenger traffic, People, Shannon, Sources, Steamers, waterways, Waterways management
Tagged Castleconnell, convicts, Errina, inn, Killaloe, Limerick, Limerick Navigation, O'Briensbridge, Plassey, Shannon, steamer, World's End, Worldsend, Worrall