Greenore Lifeboat Station

Greenore Lifeboat Station
Greenore lifeboat house in 2018
Greenore Lifeboat Station is located in Ireland
Greenore Lifeboat Station
Greenore, County Louth
General information
StatusClosed
TypeRNLI Lifeboat Station
LocationThe Lifeboat House
AddressShore Road
Town or cityGreenore, County Louth
CountryIreland
Coordinates54°01′54.0″N 6°07′50.9″W / 54.031667°N 6.130806°W / 54.031667; -6.130806
Opened1894
Closed1920

Greenore Lifeboat Station was located at Shore road, in the village and deep-water port of Greenore, on the south side of Carlingford Lough, in County Louth, Ireland.[1]

A lifeboat was first stationed at Greenore by the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) in 1894.[2]

After only 10 calls in 26 years, and none for the last nine years, the Greenore Lifeboat Station was closed in 1920.[3]

History

The RNLI decided to establish a lifeboat station at Greenore, following representation from officials and local residents, who considered the establishment of a lifeboat station as "a necessity, as an additional safeguard for life-saving purposes for that part of the coast, the adjacent Life-boats being Newcastle in Dundrum Bay on the north, and Giles' Quay (Dundalk) on the south, and there being considerable steamboat and other traffic in and out of the Lough."[2]

In 1894, a 37-foot self-righting 'Pulling and Sailing' (P&S) lifeboat, one with sails and 12 oars, double banked, and of the most modern design, with water-ejection, ballast tanks and drop keels, was sent to Greenore, in County Louth. A boathouse had been constructed next to the coastguard station, at a cost of £541, on land granted by Mrs Purcell.[2]

The boat, costing £493, was funded by donations from Post Office staff, in memory of the late Sir Stevenson Arthur Blackwood KCB, (1832–1893), Secretary-General of the General Post Office, and was duly named Sir Arthur Blackwood (ON 373).[4][2]

Greenore lifeboat house in 2007

The first service for the lifeboat was on 2 March 1896, when she was launched to the steamship Rosstrevor, of the London and North Western Railway Company. Just leaving Greenore at 18:00, the vessel ran aground on a rock. After firing distress signals, the lifeboat was launched by 19:00. 17 women and children were taken off by the lifeboat, and landed at Greenore. The remaining passengers were transferred to a sister vessel, the Severn. With the assistance of the Severn and the Tugboat Violet, the vessel was beached before she sank. The boat was repaired and refloated a few days later.[5][6]

The greatest shipping disaster to befall the area, was on 3 November 1915. In gale-force conditions, the passenger ferry SS Connemara, bound from Greenore to Holyhead, collided with the SS Retriever of the Clanrye Steamship company of Newry, at the entrance to Carlingford Lough. Both vessels sank within minutes. There was only one survivor of the 98 passengers and crew. There is no record that the lifeboat was ever called.[7]

On 24 June 1911, the Greenore lifeboat would be called for the last time. Four people were rescued from the yacht Volga, which had been drifting and dragging her anchor in Carlingford Lough.[4][8]

At a meeting of the RNLI committee of management on Friday 19 July 1920, it was decided to close Greenore Lifeboat Station. The lifeboat had not been called in nine years, but in the 26 years on service, it had been launched 10 times, and saved 31 lives.[4]

The lifeboat house still stands. The lifeboat, Sir Arthur Blackwood (ON 373), was transferred to the RNLI relief fleet, serving for a further six years, before being sold in 1926. No further records of the boat are available.[9][4]

Greenore lifeboat

ON[a] Name On Station[9] Class Comments
373 Sir Arthur Blackwood 1894−1920 37-foot Self-righting (P&S) [Note 1]
  1. ^ ON is the RNLI's Official Number of the boat.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 37-foot x 9-foot (12-oared) self-righting (P&S) lifeboat, costing £493

References

  1. ^ "Louth - Sheet 9 & 9A". Maps. National Library of Scotland. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
  2. ^ a b c d "Additional Stations and New Life-Boats". The Lifeboat. XVI (175): 6–7. 1 February 1895. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
  3. ^ Leonard, Richie; Denton, Tony (2025). Lifeboat Enthusiasts Handbook 2025. Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society. p. 124.
  4. ^ a b c d McKenna, Patsy (1995). from the Boynes to the Mournes. A History of the County Louth Lifeboats 1856. Direct Print (Dublin) Ltd. pp. 30–31. ISBN 0952223503.
  5. ^ Patton, Brian (2007). Irish Sea Shipping. Kettering: Silver Link Publications. pp. 178–184. ISBN 9781857942712.
  6. ^ "Rosstrevor". The Lifeboat. XVI (182): 653. 2 November 1896. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
  7. ^ McCullagh, John (6 June 2019). "1916 Shipping Disaster". Retrieved 6 June 2024.
  8. ^ "Volga". The Lifeboat. XXI (243): 636. 1 February 1912. Retrieved 23 July 2025.
  9. ^ a b Leonard & Denton 2025, pp. 30–31.