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Ireland Made - stories of Irish transport Kevin Reid's transport archive, celebrating & preserving stories of Irish transport past & present Press – please contact [email protected]
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We are Ireland Made®

Watch all our video stories including the free-to-view back catalogue www.IrelandMade.ie

The mission of Ireland Made® is to preserve and archive stories of Irish transport past and present for the benefit of future generations.

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Launched in 2018 by visual storytel

ler and classic vehicle enthusiast Kevin Reid, our logo in Saint Patrick's blue is the great Irish Elk, that once roamed the island of Ireland. Through our twice weekly videos and accompanying well-researched articles we have created an ever-expanding story archive recording the character of the Irish people and the vehicles they cherish and preserve. If there is an Irish connection and it has wings, wheels or it floats we want to record that story and archive our ‘living history’ for the benefit of future generations.

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We have a few rules, but not too many:
1. All of our photographs, videos and logos are copyrighted and may not be reproduced without permission from Kevin Reid.
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5. If you try to flog Bitcoin or your t-shirts – we ban you outright. To share your transport story or sponsor this unique Irish channel, please email [email protected]

Best regards

Kevin Reid
Founder & Content Creator

26/09/2025

James Drumm’s 1932 Battery-Powered Train Resurfaces in Ireland’s Green Future | Season 4 - Episode 88

On October 29th 2021, Ireland Made – Stories of Irish Transport brought you our fascinating story, “Irish Invented Battery-Powered Train 85 Years Before Tesla”. In Episode 70 of Season 1, we explored how Irish engineering visionary, Dr James J. Drumm, pioneered and put into service a battery-powered train as far back as 1932.

1932 BATTERY TRAIN
Drumm’s battery-powered train was truly ahead of its time, offering low operating costs of just £1.20 per suburban mile (March 21, 1945), a range of 130 km, a cruising speed of 88 km/h, and a capacity for 140 passengers, with the ability to make 10-15 trips daily. However, as with many innovative Irish railway projects, political and economic challenges hindered its long-term success. After operating for 17 years the trains were withdrawn in 1949 as their batteries reached end-of-life. A lack of political support led to this pioneering technology being abandoned, only to be replaced by steam locomotives and traditional carriages.

Check out our video on Dr James Drumm’s battery-powered train: “Irish invented battery powered trains 85 years before Tesla - https://irelandmade.ie/irish-invented-battery-powered-trains-85-years-before-tesla-season-1-episode-70/

X’TRAPOLIS DART+
In November 2024—75 years after Drumm's pioneering train was withdrawn—a new fleet inspired by his 1932 technology is making a triumphant return. On November 13th 2024, at Inchicore Works, Dublin, Iarnród Éireann unveiled a 1:1 mock-up of the first five-carriage train of the new X’trapolis DART+ Fleet, set to replace polluting diesel locomotives and bring cleaner rail travel back to Ireland.

While these new trains aren’t entirely battery-powered, they operate with a battery-electric hybrid system. The five-carriage X’trapolis DART+ Fleet train (DART: Dublin Area Rapid Transit) marks the first of 185 carriages ordered from rail manufacturer Alstom, set to begin service from early 2026.

Each week we travel to bring you our stories on Irish transport. Please support our travel costs and subscribe via www.irelandmade.ie for just €2, less than the price of a cup of coffee.

The new fleet, funded by the National Transport Authority (NTA) under Project Ireland 2040, is part of the broader DART+ Programme, which plans for up to 750 electric and battery-electric carriages over the next decade at a cost of €2.6 billion.

Chief Executive of Irish Rail Jim Meade said: “Thanks to input from our customers and drivers, and the work of the Irish Rail and Alstom teams, we can now experience what the future of DART+ transport will be like. The sample carriage we see on display is modern, comfortable and customer centred and we look forward to having these carriages in use on our network serving new and existing communities for generations to come.”

BATTERY-ELECTRIC
A total of 155 out of 185 carriages on order are battery-electric, providing increased capacity for commuters ahead of line electrification, with the remaining 30 being electric-only. Each X’trapolis 10-carriage train, formed by joining two five-car sets, will be the longest operable on current infrastructure, with a capacity for at least 1,100 passengers. Alstom’s modular X’trapolis commuter train is highly successful, with over 6,000 railcars sold worldwide. The trains for Dublin are specially tailored for the DART+ programme. The first trains will serve the Drogheda to Dublin Commuter route, with recharging facilities being built at Drogheda Station.

The X’trapolis DART+ features low-floor doors with automatic retractable steps for level access, eliminating the need for “Mind the gap” announcements. It offers wide gangways, improved facilities for wheelchair users, families, and cyclists, with dedicated spaces and charging stations for mobile phones, e-bikes, and e-scooters. Enhanced customer information systems include large displays, real-time updates, door illumination, and sensory-impaired features like hearing loops. Advanced CCTV improves safety and security.

X’trapolis DART+ Specifications (per five-carriage train):
Manufacturer: Alstrom Poland
Operator: Iarnród Éireann
System: DART – Dublin Area Rapid Transit
Capacity: 551 passengers (Seats – 184. Priority seats – 20. Standing – 347)
Dedicated wheelchair spaces: 2
Bike stowage areas: 2
Carriage Length: 82m (same as existing four-car DART service)
Doors: 8 per five-carriage train
Speed: 145 km/h
Pantographs: 2 (rooftop apparatus to collect electricity)
Battery capacity: 840 kWh
Battery range: 80 kms
Carriages ordered: 750 (10-year agreement)

ALSTROM
In addition to supplying the new fleet, Alstom will provide a range of services solutions, including a Technical Support and Spares Supply agreement for the first 15 years of the fleet’s operation, deploying its HealthHub and TrainScanner technologies for predictive maintenance, and providing three train simulators to support driver training.

The initial 185-carriage orders will benefit a number of routes:

• Sixty-five new battery-electric carriages will be deployed first on Drogheda to Dublin Northern Commuter services.

• New electric carriages will be deployed on existing Malahide/Howth to Bray/Greystones DART services, allowing all services to be operated at maximum length.

• The further 90 battery-electric carriages ordered in December 2022 will facilitate the overall DART+ network, with potential to use them on other parts of the rail network in advance of wider electrification, subject to available funding for necessary infrastructure.

The first train in Iarnród Éireann's new fleet, built at Alstom's Chorzów facility near Katowice, Poland, will now undergo a thorough regulatory approval, testing, and commissioning process at Inchicore Works and on the Greater Dublin Area rail network, before entering service in early 2026.

In 2024, after 92 years, we have finally come full circle—realising the brilliance of Dr. James Drumm's 1932 battery-powered train and returning to his visionary technology.

If you have an idea for a story, please email Kevin Reid [email protected]

Sources of Information and Photo Credits:
Alstom
British Pathé
Irish Rail
RTE

23/09/2025

The Spoils of War - Ireland’s WW2 Aircraft Acquisitions 1939 – 1945 | Season 4 – Episode 86

During World War II, although officially neutral, Ireland's stance leaned heavily toward the Allies. The policy of neutrality, championed by Taoiseach Éamon de Valera and his Fianna Fáil government, was adopted at the war's outset. However, when Allied planes crash-landed in Ireland, it was "finders keepers," allowing the Irish Aer Corps to amass an eclectic fleet of aircraft as the spoils of war.

Please SUBSCRIBE - every subscription makes a real difference in helping us capture, preserve, and share Ireland’s transport history for future generations.THE EMERGENCY

In the Republic of Ireland, World War II was known as "The Emergency," a term drawn from the constitutional article used to suspend normal governance. On September 1st 1939, the first day of hostilities, Michael Rynne, a legal advisor at the Department of External Affairs, was reported saying that Irish neutrality to comply with international law meant “complete impartiality…abstaining from any action which might amount to auxiliary aid to one of the combatants”.

COVERT SUPPORT
Despite this official line of “complete impartiality”, covert support for the Allies included allowing military aircraft through the Donegal Corridor, check out our video on these secret flights – “WW2 flying boats, Irish neutrality & secret deals” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jVhIfp7aUcQ&t=50s

G2 the Irish Army Intelligence branch played a crucial role in the Normandy landing by cooperating with Allied forces and providing vital weather reports. On June 3rd, 1944, 21-year-old Maureen Flavin sent a report from Blacksod Bay, County Mayo, Europe’s most westerly weather station warning of an imminent Atlantic storm. Unbeknownst to Maureen her weather data was then fed to General Eisenhower leading him to delay the D-Day landing by 24 hours.

In 1943, the Irish Coast Watching Service built 83 large "EIRE" markers along Ireland's coast, mainly on the west coast near lookout posts. These 12m by 6m signs, made of 150 tons of whitewashed stones set in concrete, were highly visible from the air. In another act of covert support the U.S. and British governments received the coordinates to these signs, but the Germans did not.

SPOILS OF WAR
After a period of several months of internment allied airmen and sailors who crash-landed in Ireland or washed ashore were frequently discreetly es**rted across the border into Northern Ireland. Over the duration of the World War 2 approximately 170 aircraft crashed or force landed in the Republic of Ireland. German, Axis, Canadian and one American soldier were detained at the No. 2 Internment Camp at the Curragh Army Camp in County Kildare. Known as the "K-Lines," the camp was built in 1939 to intern servicemen from either the Axis or Allied forces who were captured on Irish soil.

While Allied personnel were repatriated, their aircraft were often bought from the British government and put into service with the Irish Air Corps.

HAWKER HURRICANE
The Aer Corps' first acquisition of a British aircraft occurred on September 29th 1940, when Pilot Officer Paul Mayhew, piloting a Hawker Hurricane, one of eight that were scrambled from RAF Pembrey in southern Wales, became involved in a dogfight with Luftwaffe Heinkel 111 bombers over the Irish Sea. During the engagement, Mayhew was disoriented from the aerial combat, and unaware of his exact location. Low on fuel and thinking he was over Wales he force-landed in what turned out to be County Wexford.

Mayhew landed his aircraft near Kilmuckridge, County Wexford, where he was captured by the Local Defence Force (LDF). Initially held under guard at Ceannt Barracks, Curragh Camp, he was transferred to the K-Lines internment camp on October 17th 1940, and remained the only British internee there for nearly two months.

A deal was then struck with the British and the government of neutral Ireland purchased the Canadian built P5176 Hurricane. The aircraft was later, repaired and put into service as aircraft No. 93 with the Aer Corps Advanced Training Section.

MILES MASTER I
On December 21st 1940, an RAF Miles Master I departed from RAF Ringway (now Manchester Airport) bound for RAF Jurby on the Isle of Man. Confident in their ability to locate the island in the middle of the Irish Sea, Pilot Officers William Proctor and Aubrey Covington did not prepare a flight plan and after encountering severe weather they quickly became lost.

They landed in County Louth, believing they were in Northern Ireland. After realising their mistake, they attempted to take off again, but the bumpy surface of the field they had landed in caused the propeller to strike the ground, flipping the plane over. The two men were fortunate to escape without serious injury and were arrested and taken to the K-Lines at Curragh Camp to be interned.

A week later, the Miles Master I was dismantled on-site and moved to the nearby Army barracks at Dundalk. Following negotiations with the British, the Air Corps purchased the aircraft and conducted extensive repairs, including work on the port wing, rudder unit, propeller, forward fuselage, elevator and various sub-assemblies. The aircraft was then reassigned to the Aer Corps as No. 34.

Pilot Officer William Proctor was not content to remain interned in County Kildare and escaped in July 1941. Pilot Officer Aubrey Covington was later released in October 1943 as part of a general release.

LOCKHEED HUDSON
The next aircraft to join the Aer Corp as spoils was a Lockheed Hudson P5123 from 233 Squadron, RAF Coastal Command based at Aldergrove, Crumlin, County Antrim. On January 24th 1941, while returning from an Atlantic patrol, the aircraft was forced to land in Sligo due to a lack of fuel.

The Lockheed Hudson was the military version of the Lockheed 14 passenger aircraft and was an ideal reconnaissance plane and highly prized by the RAF. It had taken off earlier that morning from Aldergrove, to provide daylight es**rt for the 10-ship HG50 Convoy, which had sailed from Gibraltar and was en-route to Liverpool. After departing from the convoy to return to base, the Hudson encountered bad weather and lost radio contact.

Volunteers at Aughris Look Out Post (LOP) 67 and Rosskeragh LOP 68 saw the aircraft circling over Sligo Bay from 15:50 hrs. It was reported to have dropped four bombs into the sea before making a forced wheels-up belly landing at 17:00 hrs in the townland of Derk Beg, Skreen in north County Sligo.

The local Garda Sergeant, along with two members of the Irish Army's Military Intelligence (G2) who had arrived from Athlone, searched the aircraft, and confiscated the logbooks. The Army report states that the four crew members were taken to a Sligo hotel to rest before being transferred to Athlone barracks and then interned at the Curragh Camp.

On 26th January, telegrams were sent to the aircrew’s next of kin, notifying them that the four were missing and that further information would be provided. The next day the families each received a telegram stating: "Further information received states that your ... ... previously reported missing is now reported safe and well and interned in EIRE."

An Irish Air Corps salvage team dug trenches to lower the undercarriage and recover the aircraft while negotiations began to purchase the aircraft from the British Government. On March 26th, Aer Lingus pilot Ivan Hammond flew the Lockheed Hudson from the field in Sligo to the Irish Air Corps headquarters at Baldonnel Aerodrome, County Dublin. Lockheed Hudson P5123 was reassigned as Irish Air Corps No. 91 and from May 1942, used for coastal patrols from Baldonnel and Rinneanna airfields.

After the war, the Hudson was sold to Aer Lingus, which intended to use it as a crew trainer. However, civilian registration was denied, and it was later sold to Belgium around 1947. While minimal damage was initially reported after the 1941 landing in Sligo a twisted fuselage was later discovered. Remarkably, this significant structural defect went unnoticed until after the aircraft had been sold from Aer Lingus to John Mahieu Aviation in Belgium, where it remained in service until being scrapped in 1954.

LUFTWAFFE AIRCRAFT DESTROYED
Luftwaffe crews forced to land in Ireland were under standing orders to destroy their aircraft to prevent them from falling into British hands, as Ireland's neutrality was likely one of World War II's worst-kept secrets.

This was the case when on March 3rd 1941, a Heinkel 111 bomber, damaged in an attack on an Allied convoy, made a belly wheels-up landing on Rostoonstown beach, County Wexford. One engine was out, the other damaged, and rear gunner Gefreiter Gerd Rister was killed. After landing, the crew removed Rister's body and destroyed the aircraft with machine gun fire. The four surviving crew members were arrested and taken to K-Lines at the Curragh Camp.

Another Heinkel 111 made a forced landing on 1st April the same year at Dunbratten Head, County Waterford, after being damaged while attacking shipping in the Bristol Channel. With one engine knocked out and no chance of returning to France, the crew opted for Ireland. After landing, the five crew members quickly destroyed the aircraft with machine gun fire and surrendered to the Local Defence Force.

BLENHEIM CRASH TERMONFECKIN
On the evening of March 13th 1941, Sergeant David Southerland was delivering a passenger in his Bristol Blenheim Mk I from RAF Jurby to Squire's Gate, Blackpool. After dropping off his passenger, he took to the air again but became lost due to poor visibility, compass issues and he had no radio. Intending to land in Northern Ireland, he unknowingly flew into neutral Eire and attempted to land at Termonfeckin, County Louth. While trying to land with the undercarriage down his aircraft crashed through a hedge while trying to clear trees, sustaining heavy front-end damage. Southerland broke his ankle in the crash and was taken by ambulance to nearby Gormanstown Military Camp, then to St. Bricin's Military Hospital in Dublin, where he was interned for two and a half years until his release in October 1943. The fate of his twin engine Blenheim is unknown.

BLEMHEIM CRASHES CLONTARF
At this stage in The Emergency, plane crashes were almost becoming a daily occurrence and the following day, March 14th 1941, Sergeant Stanislau Kerniewski stationed at RAF Kemble in England was forced to put down his Blemheim I in the sea off Clontarf in the northern suburb of Dublin. Kerniewski got lost on a training flight, realised he was over Dublin, and safely ditched in the water off Clontarf and swam ashore.

The Irish Independent reported on March 15th that Dublin’s air defences failed to identify the Blenheim and, following protocol, opened fire. However, it remains unclear whether the anti-aircraft fire contributed to the aircraft’s ditching.

BATTLE ON TRAMORE RACECOURSE
On April 24th 1941, a Fairey Battle TT (serial number V1222), on a practice flight out from West Freugh, Scotland, ran low on fuel and had to force-land on Tramore Racecourse in County Waterford. Captain Baronowski was taken to Curragh Camp, Kildare, where he was interned until the general release in October 1943.

His aircraft was later flown to Baldonnel Aerodrome by Lieutenant Des Johnston, who reported it was in poor condition with fumes entering the cockpit. After negotiations with the British, the aircraft was purchased by the Irish government, assigned serial No. 92, and underwent repairs by the Aer Corps.

FATE UNKNOWN
On May 22nd 1941 an RAF Bristol Beaufighter on a flight from Gibraltar to England got into difficulties and Flight Lt Hugh Verity made a forced landing in a field next to the Leopardstown Race Course in south County Dublin – can anyone shed any light on the fate of this aircraft?

MK IIB HURRICANES
In 1941, two Mk IIB Hurricanes were acquired by the Irish government due to their pilots crash landing in Ireland. Following negotiations with the British government they were purchased by the Aer Corps and assigned to the Advanced Training Section as aircraft Nos. 94 and 95. In 1943 the British were still very eager for the return of their two Mk II Hurricanes despite having sold them to the Irish government in 1941. Negotiations began again and a favourable deal was struck to exchange four Hurricane Mk.Is for the two more advanced Hurricane IIBs, which featured 1,280 hp Merlin XX engines and upgraded armament.

AMERICAN MARAUDER
On June 4th 1943, a Martin B-26 Marauder, serial number 34718, with the nickname 'Ridge Runner,' painted on the side made a belly landing at Seapoint, County Louth. The Local Defence Force arrived to find all four crew members unharmed.

The B-26 was brand new and on a delivery flight from the U.S. to Europe, following a southern Atlantic route. After six hours of flight, the crew lost sight of their formation in cloud cover and because of having to maintain operational radio silence they drifted off course and running low on fuel made a forced landing in Ireland.

The Marauder bomber came to a halt on Seapoint beach with minor damage to the underbelly and propeller tips. However, saltwater from the rising tide soon rendered it beyond repair. Over the following days, Irish Air Corps personnel, with help from American contractors, moved the aircraft onto solid ground. On June 30th the dismantled remains of 'Ridge Runner' were transported by truck to a U.S. base in Northern Ireland.

CANADIAN & AMERICAN PILOTS
The first Royal Canadian Air Force member interned in Ireland was Sergeant Ros Tees, who got lost in his Hurricane on August 21st 1941, after taking off from RAF Halvington. His radio failed, and running low on fuel, he made a forced landing near Athboy, County Meath.

The only American interned was Pilot Officer Roland Wolf, who bailed out of his Spitfire P8074 over Moneydarragh, County Donegal, on November 30th 1941. A volunteer with the RAF's No. 133 Squadron, Wolf was interned at The Curragh for two and a half years.

Check out our recent story on 1942 Hijack - Irish Pilot’s Defection Attempt to Germany https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-iTPSn37iY&t=8s

Travel is at the heart of Ireland Made – Stories of Irish Transport. Every story begins with a journey—to meet people, visit places, and capture history before it fades. Dennison Trailers cover our website costs, but rising travel expenses remain our biggest challenge. Your support keeps us on the road, preserving Ireland’s transport heritage one trip at a time—for just €2 a month at www.irelandmade.ie

Sources of Information and Photo Credits:
Aces Flying High
BCATP
Blenheim photo - A Flanaghan
Bristol Beaufighter – page
Dan Steele
Destination Journey
How Irish and British forces worked together during World War II - Eoin Kinsella (Royal Irish Academy)
Ireland’s Military Story – Issue 8 Winter 2017/2018
Manchester Airport website
Plane Historia
Public Records Office - Kew
RTE
Silver Hawk
The Curragh – K-Lines Internment Camp
The Irish Defence Forces 1922 – 2022 – Four Courts Press
War Sailors
Wikipedia

19/09/2025

The Galway Steamboat Company - 80 Years Aran Islands Service | Season 4 – Episode 87

In the early 1870s, marine transport along Ireland's west coast relied on sail-powered vessels, primarily the iconic "Galway Hookers" common to Galway Bay. For inshore transport, lightweight "currachs" — wooden-framed boats covered with animal skins or canvas — were used to ferry passengers, cargo and livestock between the mainland and the Aran Islands.

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In 1871, a new era of steam transport began with the founding of the Galway Steamboat Company. Over the next 80 years, the company’s steam-powered paddle tugs and dedicated crews provided a vital lifeline to island communities, transforming passenger travel, transporting dry goods and livestock, offering towing services, and boosting the Galway Bay area’s economy through early tourism. West of the city of Galway lie the Aran Islands (Irish: Oileáin Árann), a group of three islands. With a population of around 3,000 in the 1870s, they had largely been bypassed by commercial passenger and cargo shipping—until the Galway Bay Steamboat Company began services.

Citie of the Tribes
Registered to the Galway Steamboat Company on December 24th 1872 the paddle steamer ‘Citie of the Tribe’s became the first steam-powered vessel to operate on Ireland's west coast. Built at Yard No. 24 by Joseph T. Eltringham & Co. in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, England and launched on August 17th 1872.

Each week we travel to bring you our stories on Irish transport. Please support our travel costs and subscribe via www.irelandmade.ie for just €2, less than the price of a cup of coffee.

She was a paddle tug measuring approximately 96 feet in length, 18 feet in beam, and 9 feet draught, of 117 gross tonnes. In addition to towing barques and other sailing vessels in and out of Galway Port, she was the first ship to offer a scheduled, though infrequent, time-tabled service to the Aran Islands. These services connected all three main islands, from west to east: Inishmore (Árainn/Inis Mór), the largest; Inishmaan (Inis Meáin), the second-largest; and Inisheer (Inis Oírr), the smallest.

SS Citie of the Tribes Specifications:
Commissioned: The Galway Bay Steamboat Company Co.
Shipyard: Joseph T. Eltringham & Co. South Shields England (Yard No. 24),
Laid down: 1873
Launched: August 17th 1872
Entered service:
Length: 96 ft
Beam: 18 ft
Draught: 9 ft
Tonnage: 117 GRT
Drive: 2 x paddle wheels
Power: 2 x side lever engines

According to the July 1875 timetable, when not occupied with commercial cargo transport and barge towing, she was also used for excursions to Kinvara, Ballyvaughan, the Aran Islands, the Cliffs of Moher, and occasionally to Kilkerrin Pier.

A July 1875 advertisement signed by John Cooley, secretary to the company offered the people of Galway and Dublin; “The cheapest, shortest and most enjoyably route for Tourists and health seekers to the far-famed Spa, Lisdoonvarna and the sublime scenery of the Coast of Clare, is per Dublin, per MGW Railway, Broadstone Station (Dublin) to Galway in about 3.5 hours (by limited mail), from thence per steamer ‘City of the Tribes’ to Ballyvaughan, ten miles, from thence via the Corkscrew road, per well-appointed cars, which run in connection with the steamer to Lisdoonvarna in one hour.

Excursions during the season to the wild and romantic Isles of Arran and the celebrated Cliffs of Moher… passengers will reach Galway in time for the 4.15 train to Dublin.” ** In researching this story, we marvelled at this coordinated transport schedule for 1871 linking Dublin to Lisdoonvarna return. Could such seamless timetabling be achieved in 2025?

The Citie of the Tribes paddle steamer tug served Galway Bay and the Aran Islands for 30 years. In 1903, she was sold to Charles Duncan from Middlesbrough, England, and was eventually dismantled there in 1910.

SS Duras
In 1893, the long-serving Citie of the Tribes was succeeded by a new passenger and cargo vessel, the SS Duras, commissioned for the Galway Bay, North Clare, and Aran Islands trade. Named after the residence of the company's chairman, the Duras was constructed of iron by JP Rennoldson & Sons Ltd in South Shields (Yard No. 146). She was launched on November 24, 1892, and completed in January 1893.

SS Duras Specifications:
Commissioned: The Galway Bay Steamboat Company Co.
Shipyard: JP Rennoldson & Sons Ltd in South Shields (Yard No. 146)
Laid down: 1891
Launched: 24th November 1892
Entered service: January 1893
Length: 95 ft 5”
Beam: 18 ft 1”
Draught: 9 ft 7”
Tonnage: 131GRT
Drive: two paddle wheels
Power: 2-cylinder 42hp steam engine & from 1921 6-cylinder 11 hp Halliday oil engine

During the summer, the SS Duras operated three sailings a week from Ballyvaughan in County Galway to the Aran Islands. The one-way fare to Aran was 3/- for saloon passengers and 2/6 for deck passengers, with bicycles traveling free of charge.

In 1891, the Galway Vindicator and Connaught Advertiser reported that the company was receiving £700 annually from the Congested Districts Board for its regular service to the Aran Islands. Established in 1891 by Arthur Balfour, the Congested Districts Board (C.D.B.) aimed to alleviate poverty and overcrowding in western Ireland. Funded by the Church of Ireland, it supported public works such as piers and ferry services to strengthen local economies and curb emigration.

The SS Duras operated until 1912, after which she was employed in towing sailing vessels out of Galway Bay and assisting with relief work until 1921. That year, she was sold to Frederick Palmer in Boston, Lincolnshire, and later passed through several other owners before being scrapped in Denmark in 1954.

SS Dún Aengus
In 1912, the SS Duras was replaced by the SS Dún Aengus, purchased with a £7,500 loan to the company from the Congested Districts Board. Named after a prehistoric hill fort on the Aran Islands, the SS Dún Aengus was 120 feet long, with a beam of 24 feet and a depth of 10 feet 6 inches. Weighing 234 gross tons, she was powered by a steam engine from Ross and Duncan of Glasgow.

In 1951, the ship was acquired by the semi-state company C.I.E. (Córas Iompair Éireann), which continued the year-round service to the Aran Islands. At that time, the Dún Aengus earned the distinction of being the oldest railway steamer in both Ireland and Britain.

Under the Aran Islands (Transport) Acts of 1936 and 1946, the government reached a deal with The Galway Steamboat Company to waive the outstanding loan amounts, with the condition that the vessel would be transferred to the government if the company stopped operating the service to the Aran Islands. However, this eventuality never occurred, and the SS Dún Aengus continued to operate until 1958.

SS Dún Aengus Specifications:
Commissioned: The Galway Bay Steamboat Company Co.
Laid down: 1911
Launched: 1912
Entered service: 1912
Length: 120 ft
Beam: 24 ft
Draught: 10 ft 6”
Tonnage: 234 GRT
Power: steam engine by Ross and Duncan of Glasgow

In an upcoming episode, we'll share the story of the most famous of all the Aran Island ships, the MV Naomh Éanna ("St. Enda"). Built in 1958 at the Liffey Dockyard in Dublin, the ship served the Aran Islands route between 1958 and 1988 and is still fondly remembered by many today.

If you have an idea for a story, please email Kevin Reid [email protected]

Travel is at the heart of Ireland Made – Stories of Irish Transport. Every story begins with a journey—to meet people, visit places, and capture history before it fades. Dennison Trailers cover our website costs, but rising travel expenses remain our biggest challenge. Your support keeps us on the road, preserving Ireland’s transport heritage one trip at a time—for just €2 a month at www.irelandmade.ie

Sources of Information and Photo Credits:
Chetham Library Manchester
Galway Advertiser
Liffey Ships & Shipbuilding - Pat Sweeney
Limerick City Archives
Galway Bay Boat Tours
National Folklore Collection, UCD - Tomás Ó Muircheartaigh
National Library of Ireland
Steamboats Come to Galway – Tom Kenny
The Days of the MV Naomh Éanna, Ireland – page
Tyne Built Ships

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