Donegal, County Donegal may not have the skyscrapers and the population of "you know where" but what it might lack in numbers it makes up for in rugged beauty and long history. Clearly a view not of the town but taken from the quayside looking out across a lough. it looks like a day for fishing rather than swimming but there's a boat handy should you feel the urge?
Photographer:
Unknown
Collection:
Eason Photographic Collection
Date: between 1900-1939
NLI Ref:
EAS_1077
You can also view this image, and many thousands of others, on the NLI’s catalogue at
catalogue.nli.ie
Info:
Owner:
National Library of Ireland on The Commons
Source:
Flickr Commons
Views: 6658
derangedlemur
Teelin Pier, I reckon. goo.gl/maps/JXmLyrpRkLeYqWjt9 Weren't we here before at the post office?
derangedlemur
www.flickr.com/photos/nlireland/50397031392/in/photolist-...
ɹǝqɯoɔɥɔɐǝq
Flickr is sometimes amazing! I can't decide which, so ... In January 2007 via https://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/[email protected]/1815407634/ And in October 2019 via https://www.flickr.com/photos/kentwang/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/kentwang/48936545838/in/photostream/
John Spooner
Difficulties in the construction of Teelin Pier were mentioned in the House of Commons, reported in Derry Journal - Monday 04 August 1884. It seems that part of it was constructed on hard bedrock, but a 20ft length was on softer material and
(Derry Journal - Friday 10 August 1883)
had given waythe pier ended up shorter than envisaged. Construction must have finished by August 1883, because that's when the contractor was selling off all his stuffsuckindeesel
on the 6" arcg.is/XPnPr0
Niall McAuley
I can't remember if the Eason collection is anyway close to chronological, but nearby in the catalogue is Eas 1074 of the Church of the Four Masters in Donegal, which the NIAH tells us was finished in 1935.
silverio10
Buenas fotos antiguas .