Stories tagged "Dublin Port": 31
Stories
Réalt na Mara
The statue of Réalt na Mara (Our Lady, Star of the Sea) was erected from subscriptions from dockers, others working around Dublin Port, and a range of companies. It was sculpted by Cecil King and unveiled and blessed on 24 September 1972.
Realt…
The Read Song
This poem looks back at what working life was like for one of the thousands of casual labourers who worked at the Dublin docks in the mid-twentieth century. The foreman, or Stevedore, allocated work to men daily. Those labourers would often be left…
She Swims
Gary's wife used sea swimming as a way to get relief during a stressful personal time, as her mother went through Alzheimer's disease.
The waves in the poem reflect the changing condition of Gary's mother-in-law, and her 'escapes to nowhere', when…
My Liffey Love
The wives and families of dockers had to face deprivations that often went unnoticed or unreported. Because of the dangerous nature of work in and around the docklands areas, work accidents where very common. Almost on a daily basis, men were…
The Kittiwake Lightship
Tethered, tossed and twinkling,A beckoning beacon between bar and bull,Paving pathways in a bending bay of swirlingsurf and smiling shores.Invitation to our harbour of doubtFailte, céad mile, come surge like a stormin our settling stout.
Tested in…
Bindon Blood Stoney’s Diving Bell
Get to bell before the low tideSlow down the pipe mind your stride.Compressed air makes the breathing hardWorking for hours in heat and dark.Levelling out the seabed get it rightQuay stones to be laid before the night.
Six in our gang in our metal…
Dublin Port | Calafort Bhaile Átha Cliath
The modern history of Dublin Port begins in the early 1700s, when a bank was constructed to protect the south side of the channel at the mouth of the harbour, enabling ships to reach the city even in high winds. This was replaced by the South Bull…
A Dublin Docker's Funeral
At one stage in Dublin Port, roughly as many ships were worked outside the dock gates as inside. Ships were worked on the North Wall and along the South Quays.
Cranes would lower their gibs into the ship's hatches, where cargo would be put on…
Dublin Port Emigration in the Early Twentieth Century
Dublin port during the early twentieth century was a place of great business trade and work. Having been refurbished in the 1800s to give way for more shipping of trades and goods, the port had become a huge employment area for most of Dublin.…
The Welsh Chapel in Dublin, 1838 to 1939
The Welsh chapel is a story that connects Dublin with Anglesey.
In the 1830s, Calvinistic Methodists in north Wales decided to build a chapel in Dublin, mainly for visiting Welsh sailors. The Calvinistic Methodists, who were later known as the…