The Wreck of the Bolivar

The Wreck of the Bolivar by Cormac F Lowt Eternal Father strong to save, Whose arm hath bound the restless wave Who bid’st the mighty ocean deep, It’s own appointed limits keep, O hear us when we cry to thee, For those in peril on the sea. The early months of the year 1947 were

Morven Disaster. December, 1906

Morven Disaster. December, 1906. The Morven was bound from Portland, Oregon to Liverpool with a cargo of about three thousand tons of grain for the Messrs Bannatyne. The place where the wreck occurred is a little promontory locally known as “Horse Island”. The Morven was a splendid four masted ship of 2000 tons built about

Demeray: Treasure Ship

Demeray: Treasure Ship By Edward J Bourke First published in the Journal of the Wexford Historical Society 2008. Introduction The Demerary has survived in memory in the Kilmore area because of a tomb at Cill Park, Cullenstown. Moreover there were tales of treasure recovered after the wreck related by storytellers in more recent years. In

SS Lochgarry

History of the SS Lochgarry One of Ireland’s most Popular Recreational Diving Wrecks By Martin Baillie-Johnston The first time I dived the wreck of the SS Lochgarry it was a hot day in June and I was sweating in my dry suit as I waited for the skipper to give us the signal to roll in. There

Fethard Lifeboat Disaster

Fethard Lifeboat Disaster 15 December 2009 A Chara, Last weekend in  Rosslare, County Wexford, Ireland a booklet was launched on the Fethard Lifeboat Disaster. David Maloney (Launch Secretary)Rosslare Lifeboat launched the booklet on behalf of the O’Rourke family and the event was covered by the press. The occasion was the gathering of the O’Rourke Family

Irish Poplar

ABANDONED SHIP GAVE BIRTH TO IRISH SHIPPING’S WARTIME FLEET This article was first published in the Sunday Express on 19 February 1967.  It was reprinted in the Winter 2004 edition of Iris na Mara On the broad chest of the Atlantic the tramp steamer was at first only a speck to the German bomber crew.

M.V. Kilkenny Shipwrecked

An account of the events of the night of 21st November 1991 Austin Gill, A.B., M.V. Kilkenny. The events of that night are still very vivid in my mind after more than 20 years although I often forget things that happened last week. To start my account I will give you a little background about myself. I

Crescent City – Mexican Silver Dollars

Mexican Silver Dollars at Galley Head P.O’Sullivan, Bandon – 1 November 2006 Mexican Silver Dollars at Galley Head In 1870, The Liverpool and Mississippi Steamship Company took possession of a new ship, The Crescent City, which had been built at McMillan’s yard in Dumbarton near Glasgow. The Crescent City and her contemporaries had some very unusual features that

Slave Ship Amity (1701)

Paddy O’Sullivan 19 November 2009 The Dunworley Slave Ship: Amity 1701 “Trade Goods” The history of slavery is probably as old as that of mankind itself. Hundreds of thousands of slaves built such classical civilisations as Greece, Egypt and Rome. Viking Dublin was a major slave trading port in its heyday. However, for the purposes of this

The Vasa, 50 years later

THE VASA, FIFTY YEARS ON Illustrated Lecture, (abridged) given to the Maritime Institute of Ireland, by Cormac F. Lowth, in the Stella Maris Club,Thursday, October 20th 2011. Vasa, from port (photo: Peter Isotalo) 2011 is the fiftieth anniversary of the successful raising of the almost intact early seventeenth- century Swedish warship Vasa from the mud