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Londonderry Port

Londonderry Port, now operating as Foyle Port, is a port located on Lough Foyle in Northern Ireland. It is the United Kingdom’s most westerly port and an important northerly port on the island of Ireland.[1] The current port is at Lisahally, County Londonderry, though historically the port was upriver in the city of Derry itself. It is operated by the Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners, whose former offices, just north of the city's walls, are now a museum.

The frigate HMS Bentinck docked at Lisahally.

History edit

The River Foyle has been an entryport since before the time of Saint Columba, and was used by the Vikings and the Normans.[2] At the time the river was wider and more shallow, and as ships grew larger, they would anchor close in to shore and unload by lighter. The planting of the walled city on the west bank of the Foyle necessitated a more efficient approach, and the port of Londonderry was created in 1664 by the charter granted by King Charles II to the Londonderry Corporation making them responsible for its regulation and upkeep.[2] The corporation caused a quay to be built into the river for loading and unloading; this was the Shipquay, downhill from the city, giving rise to Shipquay Street and the Shipquay Gate.[3][4]

By the end of the 18th century the city had its first bridge across the river, a new quay, and the shoreline below the Water Bastion had been reclaimed.[4] It was reported that in 1771 that the merchants of the city owned 67 ships, with a capacity of 11,000 tons.[2]

By 1835 wharves extended from the shipquay back to the bridge, on the slob lands (alluvial deposits[5]) south of the city.[4] By the 1840s the port had a thriving shipbuilding business and was known for building clipper ships,[6] though shipbuilding at the port declined after the introduction of iron vessels, and no large ships were built for some decades after 1846. In 1854 the Derry Port & Harbour Commissioners were established to manage the port and oversee its expansion. The Commissioners were also given full control of the waterways from the city to the mouth of Lough Foyle, allowing for strategic planning of the port.[2] An 1868 report describing the city's expansion mentioned the expenditure on the port: New docks and quays built (at a cost of £126,500), a new graving dock (£25,000), flats deepened (£7,000) leading to an expansion in trade of all kinds. Of coastal traffic the total tonnage handled in 1857 had been 148,291 t (for steamers), and 45,676 t (sailing ships); in 1867 it was 134,368 t and 67,304 t respectively. In foreign trade, 1857 saw 27,637 t entering the port; in 1867 it was 40,397 t, while in 1857 transatlantic traffic was non-existent; by 1867 it had grown to 258,086 t. The total trade figures for port were given as 221,604 t, in 1857, compared to 500,373 t ten years later.[7] The Foyle Shipyard, founded in 1882, brought shipbuilding back to the port, but it ceased trading in 1892.[8]

By the 1920s the port boasted two miles of quays, with warehouses, stationary and mobile cranes, and with railways along the entire length connected to the four rail systems serving the city. The port had regular cross-channel services to Great Britain, and steamer services to North America. The Commissioners ensured the channel was dredged and well marked, and also maintained a pilot station at Inishowen Head, and a roadstead at Moville, which was a port of call for transatlantic steamers carrying mail.[9] The port had its own railway yard, under the control of the Derry Port & Harbour Commissioner (LPHC). This railway had connections to the other railways in Derry; The Great Northern and the Northern Counties Committee, both of which were 5ft3 gauge, and thanks to a length of dual gauge, the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee and Londonderry & Lough Swilly Railway, which were 3 ft. Wagons could be shunted across the Foyle by way of the lower deck of the Craigavon Bridge, which was dual gauge. Two of the LPHC locomotives survived into preservation- No. 1, which is at the Ulster Folk & Transport Museum in Cultra, and No. 3, which is owned by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland at Whitehead.

The port saw the transport of many goods over the centuries. Seed potatoes were shipped to places as far away as Egypt. Cattle were regularly shipped to and from Glasgow by the Burns and Laird steamer until the late 1960s. Manufactured items including linen, linoleum and shirts were exported to Great Britain for onward distribution. The McCorkell Line sailed from here.

 
Surrendered German U-boats moored at Lisahally

The outbreak of the Second World War, and the German campaign against Allied shipping, saw the establishment of a naval base, HMS Ferret on the Foyle, with the use of port facilities in the city, and the building of new quays at Lisahally, at the mouth of the river where it enters the lough. Derry Port and the docks at Lisahally gave vital service to the Allies in the longest running campaign of the Second World War, the Battle of the Atlantic. This ended with the surrender of the German U-boat fleet at Lisahally on 14 May 1945. About a dozen boats came alongside for that official surrender, taken by Admiral Sir Max Horton in the presence of US, Canadian and Republic of Ireland commanders;[10] the other U-boats arrived over the next several weeks. Eventually all were dispatched to sea and sunk.[11]

The waterfront area of the city was redeveloped in the 1990s. The cattle holding pens that used to be near where the current British Telecom building stands were demolished along with the transit sheds in order to create a new road and car parking along the banks of the River Foyle. This and with the need for deep water moorings for larger vessels saw the port moved to the docks at Lisahally in 1993. These docks were originally used by DuPont to import raw materials for their manufacturing process and by the nearby Coolkeeragh power station to import fuel oil for their turbines.

In 1995 the port welcomed the cruise ship Southern Cross, with 800 passengers, the first to visit for 40 years.[12]

Foyle Port edit

 
The southern edge of Lisahally Docks

In recent years Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners have established a number of diversified trading divisions marketed under the "Foyle" brand:

  • Foyle Port incorporates the main cargo handling and general port operations;
  • Foyle Marine Services handles the harbour dredging and towage services as well as offering marine services externally to other ports;
  • Foyle Consulting Engineers provided structural and civil engineering services;
  • Foyle Engineering offers a steel fabrication service.

Lisahally Terminal has 440 metres (1,440 ft) of quay and can facilitate vessels up to 62,000 GT. Primarily a bulk port and major importer of oil, coal, animal feed, fertiliser and plywood the port also accepts cruise ships at the city centre berths, at its commercial port at Lisahally as well as the tender port of Greencastle.

In July 2003 Foyle Port installed the first of its two permanent pontoons referred to as the Foyle Port Marina in the heart of the city. The marina facility consists of a 200 metres (660 ft)-long wooden structure (south), later a second pontoon was established close by adding a 140-metre (460 ft) concrete structure (north). Overall, the Foyle Port Marina offers more than 600 metres (2,000 ft) of secure, deep-water berthing.

General information edit

Most of the current Londonderry Port is in the townland of Lisahally (or Lissahawley), a toponym that may be derived from Irish Lios a' Chalaidh 'ringfort of the landing place'.[13]

The port has witnessed mass emigration of Irish and Scots-Irish people over the centuries to North America, Scotland, England and Australia.

Lisahally F.C., which is based at the village of Strathfoyle, was founded by port workers from Lisahally.

Arms edit

Coat of arms of the Londonderry Port and Harbour Commission
Notes
Confirmed 9 February 1858 by Sir John Bernard Burke, Ulster King of Arms.[14]
Crest
A lighthouse standing on a rock Proper.
Torse
Of the colours.
Escutcheon
Or on a cross Gules a tower Proper on a chief Argent the representation of the entrance to a harbour and a ship with three masts sailing on all also Proper.
Supporters
Two dragons with wings expanded Proper each charged on the shoulder with a tower also Proper.
Motto
In Portu Quies

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Foyle Port". www.londonderryport.com. from the original on 26 August 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d "Our History". Londonderry Port & Harbour Commissioners. from the original on 31 December 2017. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  3. ^ Curl, JS (1986). The Londonderry Plantation (1609–1914). Camelot Press. p. 106. ISBN 0-85033-577-9.
  4. ^ a b c Ferguson, WS; Rowan, AJ & Tracey, JJ (1970), List of Historic Buildings, Groups of Buildings, Areas of Architectural Importance in and near the City of Derry, Ulster Architectural Heritage Society, pp. 6–10
  5. ^ Collins English Dictionary.
  6. ^ "Shipbuilding in Londonderry". The Montreal Gazette. 19 May 1913.
  7. ^ "Royal Irish Agricultural Show". The Times. No. 26215. 28 August 1868. p. 8.
  8. ^ Cannon, John (2002) [1997]. "Shipbuilding". The Oxford Companion to British History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860872-1. from the original on 12 July 2010. Retrieved 20 March 2010.
  9. ^ "The Port of Londonderry". The Times. No. 43206. 5 December 1922. pp. xvi, xxii.
  10. ^ "Surrender Of German U-Boats". Britishpathe.com. British Pathé. from the original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  11. ^ Waller, Derek. . Rnsubs.co.uk. Submariners Association, Barrow-in-Furness branch. Archived from the original on 6 August 2014. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  12. ^ "Return Trip". The Times. No. 65328. 25 July 1995. p. 2.
  13. ^ . Placenames NI - The Northern Ireland Place-Name Project. The Crown. 2009. Archived from the original on 31 March 2012.
  14. ^ "Grants and Confirmations of Arms Vol. F". National Library of Ireland. p. 133. Retrieved 29 June 2022.

External links edit

  • Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners
  • Convoy Map taken from a U-boat that surrendered at Lisahally, County Londonderry.
  • HMS Firedrake

55°02′31″N 7°15′47″W / 55.042°N 7.263°W / 55.042; -7.263

londonderry, port, operating, foyle, port, port, located, lough, foyle, northern, ireland, united, kingdom, most, westerly, port, important, northerly, port, island, ireland, current, port, lisahally, county, londonderry, though, historically, port, upriver, c. Londonderry Port now operating as Foyle Port is a port located on Lough Foyle in Northern Ireland It is the United Kingdom s most westerly port and an important northerly port on the island of Ireland 1 The current port is at Lisahally County Londonderry though historically the port was upriver in the city of Derry itself It is operated by the Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners whose former offices just north of the city s walls are now a museum The frigate HMS Bentinck docked at Lisahally Contents 1 History 2 Foyle Port 3 General information 4 Arms 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe River Foyle has been an entryport since before the time of Saint Columba and was used by the Vikings and the Normans 2 At the time the river was wider and more shallow and as ships grew larger they would anchor close in to shore and unload by lighter The planting of the walled city on the west bank of the Foyle necessitated a more efficient approach and the port of Londonderry was created in 1664 by the charter granted by King Charles II to the Londonderry Corporation making them responsible for its regulation and upkeep 2 The corporation caused a quay to be built into the river for loading and unloading this was the Shipquay downhill from the city giving rise to Shipquay Street and the Shipquay Gate 3 4 By the end of the 18th century the city had its first bridge across the river a new quay and the shoreline below the Water Bastion had been reclaimed 4 It was reported that in 1771 that the merchants of the city owned 67 ships with a capacity of 11 000 tons 2 By 1835 wharves extended from the shipquay back to the bridge on the slob lands alluvial deposits 5 south of the city 4 By the 1840s the port had a thriving shipbuilding business and was known for building clipper ships 6 though shipbuilding at the port declined after the introduction of iron vessels and no large ships were built for some decades after 1846 In 1854 the Derry Port amp Harbour Commissioners were established to manage the port and oversee its expansion The Commissioners were also given full control of the waterways from the city to the mouth of Lough Foyle allowing for strategic planning of the port 2 An 1868 report describing the city s expansion mentioned the expenditure on the port New docks and quays built at a cost of 126 500 a new graving dock 25 000 flats deepened 7 000 leading to an expansion in trade of all kinds Of coastal traffic the total tonnage handled in 1857 had been 148 291 t for steamers and 45 676 t sailing ships in 1867 it was 134 368 t and 67 304 t respectively In foreign trade 1857 saw 27 637 t entering the port in 1867 it was 40 397 t while in 1857 transatlantic traffic was non existent by 1867 it had grown to 258 086 t The total trade figures for port were given as 221 604 t in 1857 compared to 500 373 t ten years later 7 The Foyle Shipyard founded in 1882 brought shipbuilding back to the port but it ceased trading in 1892 8 By the 1920s the port boasted two miles of quays with warehouses stationary and mobile cranes and with railways along the entire length connected to the four rail systems serving the city The port had regular cross channel services to Great Britain and steamer services to North America The Commissioners ensured the channel was dredged and well marked and also maintained a pilot station at Inishowen Head and a roadstead at Moville which was a port of call for transatlantic steamers carrying mail 9 The port had its own railway yard under the control of the Derry Port amp Harbour Commissioner LPHC This railway had connections to the other railways in Derry The Great Northern and the Northern Counties Committee both of which were 5ft3 gauge and thanks to a length of dual gauge the County Donegal Railways Joint Committee and Londonderry amp Lough Swilly Railway which were 3 ft Wagons could be shunted across the Foyle by way of the lower deck of the Craigavon Bridge which was dual gauge Two of the LPHC locomotives survived into preservation No 1 which is at the Ulster Folk amp Transport Museum in Cultra and No 3 which is owned by the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland at Whitehead The port saw the transport of many goods over the centuries Seed potatoes were shipped to places as far away as Egypt Cattle were regularly shipped to and from Glasgow by the Burns and Laird steamer until the late 1960s Manufactured items including linen linoleum and shirts were exported to Great Britain for onward distribution The McCorkell Line sailed from here nbsp Surrendered German U boats moored at Lisahally The outbreak of the Second World War and the German campaign against Allied shipping saw the establishment of a naval base HMS Ferret on the Foyle with the use of port facilities in the city and the building of new quays at Lisahally at the mouth of the river where it enters the lough Derry Port and the docks at Lisahally gave vital service to the Allies in the longest running campaign of the Second World War the Battle of the Atlantic This ended with the surrender of the German U boat fleet at Lisahally on 14 May 1945 About a dozen boats came alongside for that official surrender taken by Admiral Sir Max Horton in the presence of US Canadian and Republic of Ireland commanders 10 the other U boats arrived over the next several weeks Eventually all were dispatched to sea and sunk 11 The waterfront area of the city was redeveloped in the 1990s The cattle holding pens that used to be near where the current British Telecom building stands were demolished along with the transit sheds in order to create a new road and car parking along the banks of the River Foyle This and with the need for deep water moorings for larger vessels saw the port moved to the docks at Lisahally in 1993 These docks were originally used by DuPont to import raw materials for their manufacturing process and by the nearby Coolkeeragh power station to import fuel oil for their turbines In 1995 the port welcomed the cruise ship Southern Cross with 800 passengers the first to visit for 40 years 12 Foyle Port edit nbsp The southern edge of Lisahally Docks In recent years Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners have established a number of diversified trading divisions marketed under the Foyle brand Foyle Port incorporates the main cargo handling and general port operations Foyle Marine Services handles the harbour dredging and towage services as well as offering marine services externally to other ports Foyle Consulting Engineers provided structural and civil engineering services Foyle Engineering offers a steel fabrication service Lisahally Terminal has 440 metres 1 440 ft of quay and can facilitate vessels up to 62 000 GT Primarily a bulk port and major importer of oil coal animal feed fertiliser and plywood the port also accepts cruise ships at the city centre berths at its commercial port at Lisahally as well as the tender port of Greencastle In July 2003 Foyle Port installed the first of its two permanent pontoons referred to as the Foyle Port Marina in the heart of the city The marina facility consists of a 200 metres 660 ft long wooden structure south later a second pontoon was established close by adding a 140 metre 460 ft concrete structure north Overall the Foyle Port Marina offers more than 600 metres 2 000 ft of secure deep water berthing General information editMost of the current Londonderry Port is in the townland of Lisahally or Lissahawley a toponym that may be derived from Irish Lios a Chalaidh ringfort of the landing place 13 The port has witnessed mass emigration of Irish and Scots Irish people over the centuries to North America Scotland England and Australia Lisahally F C which is based at the village of Strathfoyle was founded by port workers from Lisahally Arms editCoat of arms of the Londonderry Port and Harbour Commission Notes Confirmed 9 February 1858 by Sir John Bernard Burke Ulster King of Arms 14 Crest A lighthouse standing on a rock Proper Torse Of the colours Escutcheon Or on a cross Gules a tower Proper on a chief Argent the representation of the entrance to a harbour and a ship with three masts sailing on all also Proper Supporters Two dragons with wings expanded Proper each charged on the shoulder with a tower also Proper Motto In Portu QuiesSee also editHMS Ferret 1940 shore establishment References edit Foyle Port www londonderryport com Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 26 August 2018 a b c d Our History Londonderry Port amp Harbour Commissioners Archived from the original on 31 December 2017 Retrieved 30 December 2017 Curl JS 1986 The Londonderry Plantation 1609 1914 Camelot Press p 106 ISBN 0 85033 577 9 a b c Ferguson WS Rowan AJ amp Tracey JJ 1970 List of Historic Buildings Groups of Buildings Areas of Architectural Importance in and near the City of Derry Ulster Architectural Heritage Society pp 6 10 Collins English Dictionary Shipbuilding in Londonderry The Montreal Gazette 19 May 1913 Royal Irish Agricultural Show The Times No 26215 28 August 1868 p 8 Cannon John 2002 1997 Shipbuilding The Oxford Companion to British History Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 860872 1 Archived from the original on 12 July 2010 Retrieved 20 March 2010 The Port of Londonderry The Times No 43206 5 December 1922 pp xvi xxii Surrender Of German U Boats Britishpathe com British Pathe Archived from the original on 8 February 2016 Retrieved 23 July 2013 Waller Derek The U Boats that Surrendered Rnsubs co uk Submariners Association Barrow in Furness branch Archived from the original on 6 August 2014 Retrieved 23 July 2013 Return Trip The Times No 65328 25 July 1995 p 2 Townland of Lissahawley Placenames NI The Northern Ireland Place Name Project The Crown 2009 Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Grants and Confirmations of Arms Vol F National Library of Ireland p 133 Retrieved 29 June 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Londonderry Port Londonderry Port and Harbour Commissioners Convoy Map taken from a U boat that surrendered at Lisahally County Londonderry HMS Firedrake 55 02 31 N 7 15 47 W 55 042 N 7 263 W 55 042 7 263 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Londonderry Port amp oldid 1172610486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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