U-35 in Dingle during WW2
at Ballymore, three miles west of Dingle, 4 October 1939, U-35 landed 28 Greek sailors
Journal of Research on Irish Maritime History
at Ballymore, three miles west of Dingle, 4 October 1939, U-35 landed 28 Greek sailors
How Ireland´s Mercantile Marine fared during WWII by Frank Forde, author of "The Long Watch", the standard work on this…
The ferocity of the First World War evokes names like the Somme, Verdun, Paschendale and Mons and maybe Jutland or…
on 13 February 1905. H M Submarine A5 was in the Haulbowline Naval Base, Queenstown,(now Cobh), Co Cork. There was…
The repeated claims that America declared against Germany during WW1 because her citizens and ships had been attacked by German…
Firstly I’d like to look at Howth Head LOP in the general context of the Coast Watching Service and talk…
This paper is an early version of the introduction to the Guarding Neutral Ireland: the coastwatching service and military intelligence…
Eddie Bourke Dainty The early years of the Irish Free State from January 1922 were a time of turmoil after…
More than seven decades after their dangerous enterprise came to an end Dun Laoghaire families with close links to the…
February 1861 will be remembered not only for the loss of a great many ships around Dublin Bay but also…