History
Cork
Harbour is a large natural basin at the mouth of the river Lee
on the south coast of Ireland. It has had a long maritime tradition,
with evidence of Mesolithic coastal communities, and with trade
between Ireland, Britain and France dating back to earliest historic
times.

Chart of Cork Harbour by the Rev J.Lindsay (1750)
The booming emigrant trade to America and Australia from the mid-
eighteen hundreds increased the importance of the harbour both
as a point of departure and as the firstlandfall for cross-Atlantic
traffic.

HMS Revenge, Port Guard Ship, Circa 1890

Haulbowline and Spike Island, view showing convicts causeway
to Spike Island.
The
name of Cork Harbour and the town of Cobh (formerly Queenstown)
is probably best known as being the final port of call of the
Titanic in 1912. This unfortunate ship however never actually entered the harbour, but stood offshore while the passengers and mails were ferried out by tender.

View of Cork Harbour by Bartlett
in 1830
The port probably assumed it's greatest
importance during the Napoleonic Wars, when Cork was the
main provisioning port of the Royal
Navy. It was also a major trooping port during conflicts
such as the Boer War.

The
Cunarder Lusitania,sunk off Kinsale in May 1915
Queenstown
again became well known to the public during World War
One, again for tragic reasons. Many of the victims of
the Cunarder Lusitania, sunk nearby off the Old Head of
Kinsale, were brought ashore in May 1915.
With
the advent of the convoy system in 1917, Cork Harbour
became an important assembly point for large groups of
ships destined throughout the world, and received the
survivors of torpedoed and mined ships. It also became an important port of refuge for disabled ships. For an account of the Queenstown Convoys click here.

The arrival of American Forces, May 1917, by British artist
B.Gribble.
Cork
was also the base for the first
American Naval forces in Europe under Admiral Sims, with
a fleet of destroyers and subchasers based in Cork Harbour,
and cruisers and submarines in Berehaven. In 1918 the first US Naval airbase
in Ireland was in Aghada in the eastern part of the harbour.
With
such large amounts of shipping traffic calling to, and passing
the harbour, it was inevitable that there would be strandings
and wreckings. The causes of these varied from mechanical failure,
human error and weather, to wartime actions. Wrecks include
sailing ships, steamships, submarines, and fishing trawlers.
The
two natural hazards at the harbour entrance are the Daunt Rock
on the western approaches, and the Cow and Calf Rocks at Roches
Point on the eastern approaches. The improvements in modern
seafaring technology have not spared shipping to the port, with
the most recent wrecking being of the Tomfield, seen
below, in 1996.

This
shipwreck site represents just some of the many wrecks of Cork
Harbour, and is not meant to be exhaustive. The best source
work for Irish shipwrecks is the three volume set Shipwrecks
of the Irish Coast by Edward.J.Bourke.
It is hoped to add
more wrecks gradually to this site, as information becomes available.
|