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Howth Harbour Lighthouse

AC with 0 elementsHowthLighthouses completed in 1818Lighthouses in the Republic of IrelandLighthouses on the National Inventory of Architectural Heritage
Howth Harbour Lighthouse, Howth Harbour
Howth Harbour Lighthouse, Howth Harbour

The Harbour lighthouse in Howth is an historic aid to navigation situated on the East pier of the harbour. It was built in the early 19th century to help guide shipping into the newly constructed harbour, which acted as the terminus for the packet service between Ireland and England. In 1982 it was decommissioned and replaced by a modern pole light on an adjacent extension of the pier.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Howth Harbour Lighthouse (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Howth Harbour Lighthouse
East Pier, Fingal

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Wikipedia: Howth Harbour LighthouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.39323 ° E -6.06672 °
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Address

Howth Lighthouse

East Pier
D13 H2V4 Fingal (Ben Eadair A ED)
Ireland
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Howth Harbour Lighthouse, Howth Harbour
Howth Harbour Lighthouse, Howth Harbour
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Nearby Places

Ireland's Eye
Ireland's Eye

Ireland's Eye (Irish: Inis Mac Neasáin) is a small long-uninhabited island off the coast of County Dublin, Ireland. Situated directly north of Howth village and harbour, the island is easily reached by regular seasonal tourist boats, which both circumnavigate it and drop off day trippers. There is a yacht anchorage to the north of it, and kayakers also land. The island is formed from quartzite and greywackes, and some sandstone, and has soils based on glacial drift. It is home to nationally significant bird populations, notably of guillemots, razorbills, kittiwakes and cormorants, as well as gulls, and also including modest numbers of puffins and peregrine falcons. There is a colony of grey seals, and surrounding waters also host harbour seals and harbour porpoise, while on land there are rats and rabbits. There is a range of plants, including some rare species and some specific to vegetated cliffs. The island has been essentially uninhabited for centuries but holds the ruins of an early church, and a Martello tower. The Eye is the basis for both a Special Area of Conservation and a Special Protection Area, and is incorporated within the Howth Special Amenity Area, and the Dublin Bay Biosphere, among other designations. It is part of Fingal for administrative purposes, having been moved to County Dublin along with Howth, Sutton, Baldoyle and Kilbarrack, from the jurisdiction of Dublin. The island was for centuries a possession of the archdiocese of Dublin, and then a component of the Howth Estate. It was sold to the Tetrarch investment group as part of a deal finalised in 2019.