- Lough Swilly
Lough Swilly ("Loch Súilí" in Irish) in
Ireland is afjord -like body of water lying between the western side of the Inishowen Peninsula inCounty Donegal and the Fanad Peninsula with the rest of northern Donegal. It is also known as the lake of shadows or eyes.At the northern extremeties of the lough are Fanad Head with the famous lighthouse and Dunaff Head. Towns situated on the Lough include
Buncrana on Inishowen andRathmullan on the western side. At the southern end of the Lough liesLetterkenny .Steeped in history the Lough and An Greinán Fort (early fortification and palace dating from 2000- 5000 BC) at its southeastern bend was recorded on Ptolomy's map of the world. It has numerous early stone age monuments and Iron Age fortifications along its shores as well as a number of shell midden finds dated to approx. 7000 BC. It is most famous for its part in hosting what is known as
Flight of the Earls . After a failed general uprising, in September1607 ,Hugh O'Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone andRory O'Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell the last Gaelic chieftans and upholders of Brehon law in Ireland at that time, set sail fromRathmullan with ninety of their followers. During the late 1700s a French fleet carryingWolfe Tone of The United Irishmen fame and troops to assist in 1798 rebellion was intercepted and defeated in a naval battle at the entrance to Lough Swilly in October1798 . Subsequently Tone was captured and taken ashore at Buncrana on the east side of the Swilly.Due to its natural shelter and impressive depth the Lough was always an important naval port from earliest times. Following the capture of Tone and the real threat of a French invasion under napoleon, a series of fortifications were built from 1800-1820 guarding the different approaches and landing points within the Lough. During
World War I , the lough was used by theRoyal Navy as an anchorage for the North Atlantic Fleet under Admiral Jellico and a gathering/staging point for North Atlantic convoys. During this period a boom was placed across the Lough supported by a number of trawlers to prevent U-Boat attacks. Immediately prior to the great war the British also improved the Napoleonic forts and their armaments as well as adding an additional fort at the entrance to the lough at Lenan Head with 9 inch guns( 12 mile range) - the largest in Ireland at the time. The remains of these fortifications can still be inspected at Lenan Head, Dunree (now a military and wildlife museum), neds point- Buncrana, Inch Island and on the west coast at Rathmullan, Knockalla and Macamish point. After the Black and Tan war the Lough was also one of the Treaty Ports specified in theAnglo-Irish Treaty until its final handing over at Fort Dunree in 1938.The Lough is also famous for its wildlife watching (dolpins, porpoise, sea birds, migratory geese and swans) and diving on the numerous ship wrecks, including the S.S. Laurentic sunk by a German mine (possible torpedo) which went down with 3211 ingots of gold of which 3191 were recovered.
In the south of the Lough a number of Islands (Burt, Inch, Coney, Big Isle) were pouldered and the land reclaimed during the 1800s for agriculture and the lough swilly to Derry city Railway embankments. These reclaimed lands are now regarded as one of Ireland's premier wetlands for wildlife conservation and bird watching, supporting over 4 thousand whooper swans and thousands of Greenland white front, barnacle, greylagg and brent geese.
The lough now hosts a 250 berth Marina and Sailing Club at Fahan as well as a RNLI all weather life boat station at Buncrana.
ee also
*
List of Irish loughs
*Londonderry and Lough Swilly Railway
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