The Dingle keepers
The Dingle lighthouse and the slightly over-kitsch dwelling house at the entrance to Dingle harbour. Photo Dave Lowcher My previous posts about this picture-postcard lighthouse and other Dingle navigational marks here, here and here failed to touch on the history of the light and the people who manned it. As usual, there are gaps in both chronology and detail that I hope local knowledge might be able to fill. An Irish Fisheries report for 1884-6 mentions that the Dingle fishermen were complaining of the shallowness of the water in mid-channel and the absence of a light at the entrance of the harbour. Combined, this meant they often had to lay their boats to under small canvas at night and wait for daylight before safely landing their catch. The Dingle Harbour Board, good men themselves, sought tenders at the end of October 1886 and the lamp shone forth on 1st April 1887, costing £589, a considerable saving on the £800 tendered. It was a fixed red light, ostens...