Portmarnock

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Portmarnock
Port Mearnóg
Village
Martello Tower, Portmarnock
Martello Tower, Portmarnock
Portmarnock is located in Ireland
Portmarnock
Portmarnock
Location in Ireland
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Country Ireland
Province Leinster
County Dublin
Elevation 3 m (10 ft)
Population (2011)[1]
 • Urban 9,285
Irish Grid Reference O238432

Portmarnock (Irish: Port Mearnóg) is a coastal suburban town in North County Dublin, Ireland.

Location

Portmarnock lies on the coast between Malahide and Baldoyle, along the northern commuter railway line out of Dublin (also the Dublin-Belfast line); Portmarnock railway station opened on 25 May 1844,[2] is now on the DART network.[3] The village is served by Dublin Bus routes 102, 32, 32X, 42, 42N (Nitelink) and 142. Owing to its proximity to Dublin city, is a form of dormitory village 15 km (9.3 mi) north-northeast of the city centre. In the 2002 census the population was 8,376 and by 2011 this had climbed to 9,285.

At sea, Portmarnock could be said to border Sutton and perhaps Howth in the form of Ireland's Eye. The beach is monitored by a life guard during the summer season from early April to the start of October.

Portmarnock lies in the Dublin North-East Dáil Éireann constituency and in the modern administrative county of Fingal.

History

The district's name derives from the Irish word port – meaning port – and Saint Marnoch or Mernoc, said[by whom?] to have arrived in what is now Portmarnock in the 5th century AD.

The area had been settled in Neolithic times, with a number of remains of activity in the area still evident today, such as flints and other tools having been excavated at the northern fringe of Portmarnock. Further, the remains of a ring fort are visible from the air at the south of the town. The son of Queen Maedhbh of Connaught – Maine – is also said to have been buried locally.

Notable people

Eamonn Andrews, the broadcaster, lived in Portmarnock from 1969 to his death in 1987.[citation needed] Brian McFadden, musician and former Westlife singer, lived in Portmarnock until 2004, when he emigrated to UK with his Australian fiancée Delta Goodrem.[citation needed]

Education

Portmarnock Strand

File:Portmarnock beach.jpg
Kites in the sky on Portmarnock beach

Adjacent to Portmarnock is a narrow beach which extends onto a sandy peninsula with beaches on all sides. Portmarnock's beach is nicknamed The Velvet Strand due to the beautiful smooth sand along the beach, and is popular with wind- and kite-surfers.

Portmarnock's beach was the starting point for two important pioneering flights. On 23 June 1930 Australian aviator Charles Kingsford Smith and his crew took off in the Southern Cross (aircraft) on the second, westbound transatlantic flight (to Newfoundland, then they continued on to Oakland, California, completing a circumnavigation of the world. The first solo westbound transatlantic flight began from Portmarnock beach as on 18 August 1932 Jim Mollison, a British pilot, took a de Havilland Puss Moth from Portmarnock to Pennfield Ridge, New Brunswick,Canada. (Ref: Shooting Suns and Things:transatlantic fliers at Portmarnock, Desmond Gallagher

Like many of Dublin's coastal settlements, Portmarnock is home to a Napoleonic Martello tower.

Sport

Portmarnock is famous for its world class golf course which formally opened on 26 December 1894, while another links course, opened in the 1990s, was designed by German golfer Bernhard Langer. That golf course and its accompanying hotel are built around the former home of the Jameson distilling family.

  • The sandy peninsula to the south of the village is home to Portmarnock Golf Club, which has hosted many golf tournaments, including the 1991 Walker Cup and the Irish Open on many occasions.
  • There are several active sports clubs, such as Portmarnock Tennis Club, Portmarnock A.F.C., AUL Premier A side Seaview Celtic F.C., and the Portmarnock Sport & Leisure Club which encompasses 16 sporting activities.
  • Naomh Mearnóg is the local Gaelic Athletic Association club.
  • International footballer Stephen Ward grew up in Portmarnock.

See also

References

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  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. See rail transport in Ireland for more.

External links