Great Island Explained

Great Island
Native Name:An tOileán Mór
Native Name Link:Irish language
Map:island of Ireland
Location:Cork Harbour
Coordinates:51.8658°N -8.2672°W
Length Km:8
Length Footnotes: east>west (approx)
Width Km:4
Width Footnotes: north>sth (approx)
Country:Ireland
Country Admin Divisions Title:County
Country Admin Divisions:County Cork
Population:Approximately 14,000[1] [2]

Great Island [3] is an island in Cork Harbour, at the mouth of the River Lee and close to the city of Cork, Ireland. The largest town on the island is Cobh (called Queenstown from 1849 to 1920). The island's economic and social history has historically been linked to the naval, ship-building, and shipping activities in the town's environs.[4]

In the early 21st century, a different marine industry has arisen. Tourism and related services have become a significant part of the local economy, including cruise ships attracted by the Port of Cork berthing facilities on the island. This is the only dedicated cruising ship berth in the Republic of Ireland.[5] [6] [7]

History

The ancient name of the island was Ard-Neimheadh, the "High (or important) island of Neimheadh".[8] According to the 11th-century work Lebor Gabála Érenn, Neimheadh was the leader of a group who invaded the area in prehistoric times.[9] Archaeological evidence of prehistoric and early medieval settlement on Great Island is recorded on the Record of Monuments and Places of the National Monuments Service.[10] This includes records of ringfort, fulacht fiadh, holy well, and bee bole structures.[11] [12]

By the early 13th century, the island was under the control of the Anglo-Norman Hodnett family.[13] [8] The Hodnetts built several structures, including Belvelly Castle, to defend the island and its approaches.[13] The island and its defenses were taken by the de Barra (Barry) family in the 14th century.[14] The Barry family (later Earls of Barrymore) retained power in the area for several centuries, and the island became known as "Barrymore Island" or Oileán Mór an Bharraigh, meaning "Great island of the Barrys".[8]

In the 18th and 19th centuries, due to the strategic importance of the island within Cork Harbour (overlooking the naval berths and military bases at Haulbowline and Spike Island), several coastal defence fortifications were built on Great Island. These included construction by the British of Cove Fort (between Cobh and Cuskinny) in the 18th century and several Martello towers (at Belvelly, Monning and Rossleague) in the 19th century.[15]

The largest settlement on Great Island, Cobh, had significant development during the 19th and early 20th centuries, stimulated by additional expansion in shipping and naval activity in the area.[16]

Location and access

Great Island is located in Cork Harbour on Ireland's south coast, and is made-up of the civil parishes of Clonmel and Templerobin.[17] [18]

The island is connected by road bridge to Fota Island to the north – which, in turn, connects via a causeway to the mainland. This road bridge, Belvelly Bridge, was built in 1803 at one of the narrowest points in the channels around Great Island.[19] More than 200 years old, it is the only road bridge to the island.[20]

A railway bridge and rail line also runs out through Fota Island to Great Island. Railway stations on Great Island include Carrigaloe station and Rushbrooke station, and the terminus at Cobh. A ferry service also connects the island (from a point near Carrigaloe) to the mainland (at a point near Passage West).[21] [22]

During regional windstorms in 2017 (including Storm Ophelia), downed trees and high winds resulted in the closure of the only road bridge to Great Island. Ferry and rail services were cancelled, leaving 12,000 residents stranded on the island.[1] [23] This led to some calls for a review of emergency access provisions and plans for the island.[20]

Land use and economy

In the 19th century Topographical Dictionary of Ireland (published by Samuel Lewis in 1837), Great Island is described as "very fertile" with its "light productive soil" supporting agricultural uses with "two-thirds [of the island] under tillage, and the remainder in pasture or included in demesnes".[8] Lewis describes the island's location, environment and climate as factors "induc[ing] many genteel families to settle here".[8]

As of the 21st century, land use on Great Island remains primarily agricultural and residential in nature. The island has a population of between 12,000 and 14,000.[1] [2] While some of this population work on the island, as of the early 21st century, an increasing percentage of the island's residents commute to Cork city for work, traveling by car, Cork Commuter Rail, and bus services to the city.[6] [24] Residential developments are concentrated mainly around Cobh, with other populated townlands and settlements on the island including Ballymore, Ballynoe, and Belvelly.[17] [18]

Prior to the 21st century, land use included industrial zones, such as the former Irish Fertilizer Industries plant at Marino Point,[25] and the Verolme Cork Dockyard at Rushbrooke.[26] The latter was long the site of construction of vessels for the Irish Naval Service, such as the Eithne. Many of these heavy industries have since closed.[26] [27] Some smaller boatbuilding companies are still based at Cobh.[28]

Tourism is now important to the island economy.[6] As of 2017, Great Island was the location of the only berth in the Republic of Ireland dedicated for visiting cruise ships.[7] This industry has grown in the 21st century.[7]

Ecology

Several proposed conservation sites and green areas are located on and around the island. These include Cuskinny Marsh Nature Reserve (which is managed by BirdWatch Ireland),[29] Marlogue Wood (operated by Coillte),[30] and the Great Island Channel Special Area of Conservation (overseen by the National Parks and Wildlife Service).[31] The latter, the Great Island Special Area of Conservation, proposes conservation controls (including aquaculture limits) to protect the animal and bird habitats of the area's salt marshes.[32]

While larger fish species are less common in the Great Island Special Area of Conservation, a large blue shark was recorded just off the island in mid-2018.[33]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Clean-up to centre on Cobh after 12,000 left stranded. Irish Examiner. irishexaminer.com. 17 October 2017. 4 August 2018. 4 August 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180804045920/https://www.irishexaminer.com/video/news/clean-up-to-centre-on-cobh-after-12000-left-stranded-461032.html. dead.
  2. The island comprises two electoral districts: Cobh Urban (which had a population of 6,525 in the 2016 census) and Cobh Rural (the latter including the separate Fota Island,aka the townland of Foaty (8,353)
  3. Web site: An tOileán Mór. logainm.ie . Placenames Database of Ireland. 1 August 2018.
  4. Web site: Cobh Town Development Plan 2013 – Volume 1: Main Policy Material . Cork County Council . Planning Policy Documents . 2013 . 4 August 2018 . the past [and] future economic prosperity of Cobh is intrinsically linked with the harbour and facilities for ship access . 1 December 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171201040530/https://corkcocoplans.ie/wp-content/uploads/bsk-pdf-manager/2016/07/Cobh-T.C.-Plan-Vol-1-2013.pdf . dead .
  5. Web site: Cork set for €15 million tourism boost this summer as cruise liner grows . Irish Times . irishtimes.com . 24 March 2018 . 2 August 2018 .
  6. Web site: Future of this town has to be in tourism . Irish Examiner . irishexaminer.com . 7 December 2011 . 2 August 2018.
  7. Web site: Port of Cork cruising towards €15m terminal . Irish Examiner . irishexaminer.com . 27 July 2017 . 4 August 2018 . The Port of Cork currently boasts the only dedicated cruise ship berth in Ireland — in Cobh [on Great Island].
  8. Book: Lewis: A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland – Volume 1 . Lewis . Samuel Lewis . London . 1837 . Libraryireland.com .
  9. Book: Geoffrey Keating . The History of Ireland . CELT: The Corpus of Electronic Texts. University College Cork. 1 August 2018 . 1723.
  10. Web site: Recorded Monuments Protected under Section 12 of the National Monuments (Amendment) Act – County Cork . archaeology.ie . Department of The Environment, Heritage and Local Government . 1998 .
  11. Web site: Cuskinny Marsh Nature Reserve – Archaeology . BWI . cuskinnynaturereserve.com . 2 August 2018 . 19 October 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191019083921/http://www.cuskinnynaturereserve.com/Archaeology.htm . dead .
  12. Web site: Cultural Heritage Assessment of proposed works on outfalls at Cobh – Report . Irish Water . Nicholas O’Dwyer Consulting Engineers . June 2016 . 2 August 2018.
  13. Book: The Scenery and Antiquities of Ireland (volume 2). Nathaniel Parker Willis. Joseph Stirling Coyne. George Virtue. 1842.
  14. Web site: Where the Rock of Tuathail towers o'er each breast – A Short History of Carrigtwohill . Tom Barry . 26 May 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130913132154/http://www.carrigtwohillgaa.com/history/book/prologue.html . 13 September 2013 .
  15. Journal of the Cork Historical and Archaeological Society . 1907 . 200 . Notes and queries: The Martello towers of Cork harbour.
  16. Book: History of Great Island : the cove of Cork, and Queenstown . Tower Books . 1990 . Henry Edward Dennehy .
  17. Web site: Civil Parish of Clonmel, Co. Cork . Irish Townlands . Townlands.ie . 2 August 2018 .
  18. Web site: Civil Parish of Templerobin, Co. Cork . Irish Townlands . Townlands.ie . 2 August 2018 .
  19. Web site: Belvelly Bridge, County Cork . National Inventory of Architectural Heritage . 2 August 2018 . buildingsofireland.ie .
  20. Web site: Calls for 'island designation' campaign for Cobh after Ophelia . Irish Examiner . irishexaminer.com . 18 October 2017 . 2 August 2018 . the only bridge leading into Great Island, at Belvelly [Bridge], is 200 years old.
  21. Web site: Cross River Ferries – About . Doyle Shipping Group . crossriverferries.ie . 2 August 2018 .
  22. Web site: Cross River Ferries . irish-ferries-enthusiasts.com . In 1993 Cork County Council and the newly formed Cross River Ferries Ltd [..] started a lower river crossing, linking Carrigaloe, on Great Island with Glenbrook [Passage West/Monkstown] on the opposite side. 1 August 2018 .
  23. Web site: Trees face the chop in order to keep Cobh open . Irish Examiner . irishexaminer.com . council officials have sent warning notices to landowners along the Fota Rd, the sole route which connects the 11,000 inhabitants of Cobh and Great Island with mainland Cork. Following Storm Ophelia, residents in the area were cut off [by] road while train services and the cross-river ferry had been cancelled for safety reasons . 11 January 2018 . 2 August 2018 .
  24. Web site: New Bus service links Cobh with Cork City . TheCork.ie . thecork.ie . 30 October 2017 . 2 August 2018 . [Cobh is] Cork’s largest commuter town.
  25. Web site: A study of land-use change and present habitats at Marino Point – a coastal brownfield site in Cork Harbour . University College Cork . Coastal and Marine Research Centre . 2005 . 2 August 2018 .
  26. Web site: Gathering of Verolme Workers Commemorate 160 Years of Cork Shipbuilding . Afloat Magazine . afloat.ie . 26 August 2013 . 2 August 2018 .
  27. Web site: Cobh boosted by purchase of former IFI site at Marino Point . Irish Examiner . irishexaminer.com . 28 July 2016 . 2 August 2018.
  28. Web site: Irish Boatbuilder Safehaven Set to Launch New UK Royal Navy Vessel . Afloat Magazine . afloat.ie . 7 February 2018 . 2 August 2018 .
  29. Web site: Cuskinny Marsh Nature Reserve . BWI . cuskinnynaturereserve.com . 2 August 2018 . 19 December 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20191219225129/http://www.cuskinnynaturereserve.com/Home.html . dead .
  30. Web site: Marlogue Woods . Coillte . coillte.ie . 2 August 2018.
  31. Web site: https://www.npws.ie/sites/default/files/publications/pdf/Great%20Island%20Channel%20SAC%20(001058)%20Conservation%20objectives%20supporting%20document%20-%20coastal%20habitats%20[Version%201.pdf Great Island Channel SAC (site code 1058) Conservation objectives – Report ]. National Parks and Wildlife Service . npws.ie . 2 August 2018 . May 2014 .
  32. Web site: Assessment of the Conservation Status of the Great Island Channel SAC . Cork County Council . Cork County Council Development Plan . June 2014 . 2 August 2018 .
  33. Web site: Co Cork postman delivers shark to safety . Irish Examiner . 18 July 2018 . 2 August 2018 .