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Great South Wall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Great South Wall (Irish: Balla an Bhulla Theas) (also sometimes called the South Bull Wall), at the Port of Dublin, extends from the tip of the Poolbeg peninsula more than four kilometres out into Dublin Bay. It was the world's longest sea wall at the time of its construction and remains one of the longest in Europe. It faces the newer Bull Wall, and has one of four port lighthouses at its end.

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  • The Great South Wall and Poolbeg Lighthouse, Ringsend
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  • The Pigeon House, Ringsend

Transcription

The Great South Wall and Poolbeg Lighthouse, Ringsend For many centuries, ships had problems getting into Dublin port. First of all it had dangerous sandbanks. Then its shipping channels were not deep enough and kept filling up with sand, and finally there was no shelter against winds. In the eighteenth century the merchants of the city needed a better protected harbour for their trade so it was decided to build a wall to keep the sand out and give shelter to the ships. First they built a barrier made from wood some way out from Ringsend along the sandbank known as the South Bull. Bull is an old word for ‘strand’. At the end of it they put a floating lighthouse. But the barrier was not strong enough so they built a strong longer wall with massive granite blocks. Each block weighed a ton. This is about 1,000 kilograms, or a thousand packets of sugar; all packed into one block! The blocks were brought across the bay on boats from Dalkey and Dun Laoghaire harbours. It took more than 30 years to build what was to be called the Great South Wall and it was finally finished in 1795. At that time it was one of the longest sea walls in the world. The floating lighthouse had been replaced with the Poolbeg Lighthouse which is still there today. Lighthouses send out a bright flashing light to guide ships at night or in fog and to warn them about sandbanks or rocks. In the beginning turf or coal were used for the light. Poolbeg Lighthouse was the first to be lit with candle light and then, in 1786, with oil. While the Great South Wall protected the ships entering the harbour from wind and high waves, it could not stop the sand from filling up the shipping channels. So in 1801 Captain Bligh, the famous captain of the Bounty, suggested the construction of another wall on the northern side of Dublin Bay. The Bull Wall, as it is commonly known, was finished around 1824 and from then on, Dublin Port never filled up with sand again.

History

Background

Dublin Bay had a long-running problem with silting, notably at the mouth of the River Liffey, and held major sand banks, notably the North Bull and South Bull (both hard sand dry at low water[1]), to either side of the Liffey mouth, along with the Kish Bank over 11 km out to sea. Between the North and South Bulls, a sand bar existed, rising over time, limiting access to the city quays.

Furthermore, the shape of the Liffey estuary was rather different from the present day, with the river channel not fully enclosed, much of Pearse Street (then Lazey Hill) running along the shore, which then bent sharply south, running in a diagonal to Irishtown, with Ringsend being a narrow sand spit projecting north into the bay.

To Ringsend

Reclamation of the lands between the city and Ringsend progressed during the 17th and early 18th century, accelerated by the foundation of the Ballast Office in 1707, and by the granting of an estate there to Sir John Rogerson in 1713. Rogerson paid for a massive quay, all the way to a new mouth for the River Dodder, adjacent to Ringsend.

A look along the wall from near Poolbeg Power Station

Commencement

Years of primitive dredging were succeeded by an attempt to maintain a clear main channel to Dublin more effectively when, in 1715, the Dublin City Assembly authorised the building of an embankment from Ringsend along the north aspect of the South Bull sandbank. The first piles of what was to become the South Bull Wall were driven that year, and major work commenced in 1717, with what was then known simply as The Piles completed in 1730 to 1731. Construction involved driving of oaken piles into the boulder clay of Dublin Bay, with these anchored by baskets of gravel, and woven wattles.

A stone wall linking The Piles to the quays, The Ballast Office Wall, was completed in 1756, and the first Pigeon House at the shoreward end of the piles was built around 1760 as a residence for a caretaker. Over a period, a bank of sand and other debris, the White Bank, developed adjacent to the wall about 800m seawards of the Pigeon House.

The driven-pile barrier was breached by storm action after reported rotting and tidal stress, and in 1761, a stone pier was commenced, working from the Poolbeg Lighthouse (commenced in 1761, operational 1767) back to shore. The construction, of massive granite blocks, brought from quarries at Dalkey, was completed in 1795. The final wall dimensions were 32 feet at the base, tapering to 28 feet at the top.

In the meantime, in 1791, the Pigeon House Harbour was planned, while in 1793, a gun battery, named the Half-Moon Battery for its shape, was built about 800m shorewards of the lighthouse. Also around 1793, a hotel, the Pigeon House Hotel was opened.

Following temporary military arrangements after the 1798 Rebellion, the Pigeon House Fort was created, maintained from 1814 to 1897. At its peak, it included gates with trenches crossed by drawbridges at the beginning of the wall, quarters for officers and men, a hospital, armoury, magazine and stores. In 1897, the complex was sold to Dublin Corporation for development to include the city’s first major electricity generating station and a sewage processing facility, as well as reuse of the hospital. This followed the installation, between 1878 and 1881, of a sewage pipe along the wall, discharging at the White Bank.

Structure and access

Much of the wall is now encompassed by port facilities or lies within the Poolbeg Generating Station complex. Public access now generally begins with the part of the wall just beyond the power station, which has parking adjacent. The area is no longer served by public transport since changes to Dublin Bus routes in mid-May 2012 saw the limited service to Poolbeg Power Station discontinued. The last bus operated on the morning of Saturday 12 May 2012.[2]

Isle of Man passenger ship, Lady of Mann, passes behind Poolbeg Lighthouse, 2004

At the seaward end of the wall stands the red-painted Poolbeg Lighthouse, standing in its current form since 1820, having replaced an earlier light tower, which in turn replaced a 1782 light-ship. The Ordnance Survey, and later Ordnance Survey Ireland, used the low water mark of the spring tide on 8 April 1837 at the lighthouse as the standard height datum for Ireland until 1958.[1]

External sources

  • Ball, Francis Elrington: Dublin, Ireland: A History of the County Dublin, Vol. 2 (Parishes of Donnybrook)
  • Joyce, Weston St. John: Dublin, Ireland, 1920: "The Neighbourhood of Dublin", Chapter II, "The Poolbeg Lighthouse and the South Wall Extension, etc."

Notes and references

  1. ^ Dublin, Ireland: Collins, Greenville Capt., Map, 1686, surveyed after 1681
  2. ^ "Changes to Routes 1, 2, 3, 16, 16a, 44, 44b and 47 - Dublin Bus". Archived from the original on 9 May 2012. Retrieved 4 May 2012.

This page was last edited on 9 January 2024, at 16:51
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