Annalong
has been a fishing port and harbour since the time of the Vikings. Then their boats found refuge in the ‘wee
hole’ at the mouth of the Annalong
River where the harbour
was later built. Indeed until the gravel
bar was breached at Kilkeel in the 1870s Annalong was the principal harbour
along the Mourne coast. Walter Harris
wrote of it in the eighteenth century: ‘of harbours along the Mourne coast that of Islealong is the best,
though it will not receive any vessel but what are under 20 tons.’ We know that the breach of the bar at
Cranfield opened up Carlingford Lough as far as Newry to large sea-going
ships.
Prior
to 1800 granite kerbstones known as kribbens were being exported from Annalong
to the west coast ports of Britain in converted fishing boats. A reader here recently asked about the supply
of Newry granite for the construction of the Church at Skibbereen in the last
century, and though we do not know for sure, it seems likely this stone found
its way there by a similar route.
As
the granite industry developed purpose-built schooners were used and by 1900 a
fleet of over thirty such vessels operated from the harbour. The demand for granite has changed and now
large blocks of different coloured granites are imported from all over the
world (mainly from China!) to be cut and polished in the village.
During
the building of the Silent
Valley reservoir
practically all the material used was imported through Annalong from where it
was transported by a purpose-built standard gauge railway to the site. Up until the Second World War Annalong had a
sizable fishing fleet but the harbour was too small to accommodate the larger
vessels and they moved to Kilkeel though the inshore fishermen continued to
operate from Annalong where much of the catch is processed for export.
Annalong
means Ford of the Ships. A corn mill near the harbour has recently
been restored to working order and a fishing vessel on dry land near the marina
will become the nucleus of a future Maritime
Museum. The ship’s davit erected nearby is said to be
from the Lusitania, the passenger ship sunk
off Cork in
1915.