From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greenore Location
Greenore (Irish: An Grianfort) is a small town and deep water port on Carlingford
Lough in County
Louth, Ireland. The population of Greenore
and the surrounding rural area (electoral area) was 898 in the 2002
Irish census.
Greenore Hotel and Port
Greenore has the only privately owned port in Ireland. It has
three berths and can handle vessels of up to 39,999 gross tons. In
1964 the port was used to fit out the ships used for the pirate radio stations
Radio Caroline
and Radio
Atlanta (later Radio Caroline South). In the 1970s there was
regular freight shipping from the port to Bristol. In 2005 Greenore was Irelands's 10th
port with 649,000 tonnes of goods handled.
Economy
Greenore is also a brand of whiskey produced by the
nearby Cooley Distillery.
Transport
- A lighthouse was built on Greenore Point in the early 19th
century.
- The Dundalk and Greenore Railway Act of 1863 authorised the
construction of the port and railway. The port was constructed in
1867 to provide links to Heysham and Fleetwood. The village was constructed to
provide homes for the dock and railway workers.
- From 1873 to 1951 there was a ferry service between Greenore and Holyhead. The London and North Western
Railway constructed a substantial hotel and railway station to
serve passengers using the ferry. The original railway line ran
from Dundalk to Greenore and
the first service was 1 May 1873 when the station opened. In 1876
the railway line was extended to Newry. In the 19th century there was a ferry from
Greencastle to Greenore. The railway and the station closed on 1
January 1952[1] and was
replaced by bus services to Dundalk and Newry.
Sport
In 1896 the Greenore Golf Club was founded. As of 2009 it is a
6,647 yard course, with a par of 71.
People Of
Note
His Excellency: Most Rev Dr Michael Desmond Hynes OMD Irish
Orthodox Catholic and Apostolic Church Archbishop for Ulster and
Cooley and Worldwide Chancellor of Order Mater Dei (OMD)is from
Greenore and now resides in the village. website: http://welcome.to/archbishophynes
See also
References
- ^
"Greenore station" (PDF).
Railscot - Irish Railways. http://www.railscot.co.uk/Ireland/Irish_railways.pdf. Retrieved
2007-10-15.
External
links
- Radio Caroline - The Early
Years.
- Dáil Éireann, Committee on Finance, Debate on 21 February,
1952. Includes discussion of Greenore Port and Hotel.
- DUNDALK, NEWRY AND GREENORE RAILWAY (ABANDONMENT) WARRANT,
1953. 22 Dec 1953. [1]
- Dundalk and Greenore Railway Act, in Acts of the Parliaments of
the United Kingdom Part 53 (1863) [[2]]
- Greenore Golf Course [3]
- Photograph of Greenore school in 1881, from the National
Railway Museum in UK. This is now the local pub (public house). [4]
- The Chester and Holyhead Railway Co, & London and North
Western Railway Co Rail & Shipping History [5]. Describes
services from Greenore.
- The Dundalk, Newry and Greenore Railway. [6]
- Dundalk 2000 and Beyond - a vision for economic development,
Dundalk Chamber of Commerce. [7]
- A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland, Samuel Lewis, 1837. [8]
- Statistics of Port Traffic, Central Statistics Office / An
Phriomh-Oiig Staidrimh, 29 June 2006 [9]
- Census 2002, Volume 1 Population Classified by Area. Central
Statistics Office, Dublin, July 2003. ISBN 0-7557-1507-1
Coordinates: 54°02′N 6°08′W / 54.033°N
6.133°W / 54.033;
-6.133