Man Of War in North County Dublin could be better described as a hamlet rather than a village. It consists today of a crossroads with a few houses and a pub, appropriately named the Man Of War Inn.
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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 Wreck of the Bolivar
The Country had been in the grip of freezing conditions for the entire month of February 1947 with snowstorms, and accompanying snowdrifts, which blanketed the countryside and made all movement extremely difficult. Power failures were frequent and added to the general misery. It was against this background that the M.V.BOLIVAR was making her way across the Irish Sea on the morning of Tuesday, March 4th, bound for Dublin Port with a badly needed cargo of grain and other essential items. Like many another fine ship before her, although Dublin Bay was in sight, the BOLIVAR would never reach that port and would leave her bones in the sands of that treacherous graveyard of ships that spans the entrance to Dublin Bay waiting to ensnare the unwary, the Kish Bank.
The Ketch Ilen : Ireland’s Sole Surviving Sail Trader
MEMBERS of les GLÉNANS & FRIENDS 2013/14 LECTURE SERIES The Ketch Ilen Ireland’s Sole Surviving Sail Trader by Gary McMahon Thursday 7 November 2013 at 20:00 in Poolbeg Yacht and Boat Club, Ringsend Entry €5 in aid of RNLI The 56-ft sailing ketch Ilen was built in 1926 in the Baltimore Fishery School Boatyard for… Continue reading The Ketch Ilen : Ireland’s Sole Surviving Sail Trader