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History of Rathlin Island
See also
Rathlin Island sits off the
north coast of Ireland, its closest point is approx. 2.25 miles
from Fair Head . It is also the closest point to Scotland and
is 11 miles from the Mull of Kintyre . It is roughly ten miles
in length and covers a total area of 3500 acres . Because of
the closeness to Scotland it has often been at the centre of
many an argument over ownership . It was finally settled in
1617 by a simple test that had also been applied to the Isle
of Man, if a snake or other poisonous serpent could survive
on the island it was taken as being part of the mainland . If
it died then Ireland was the owner, Ireland finally was declared
the true owner .

Rathlin was probably the first
Irish island to become inhabited, it is presumed man arrived
here somewhere between 6000 - 5000BC from Scotland . It can
also claim to have a gruesome history as it was the scene of
several major massacres of the population . Another claim for
fame is that it is surrounded by some of the strongest tides,
supported by the large number of boat wrecks lying in the waters
around its coast . By 2500BC the islanders had built up a thriving
export business in axes made from porcellanite . The raw material
was found on the western side of the island and the finished
product was mainly used for forestry type work . Although the
remains of the axe-factory are inaccessible, information can
be obtained about Rathlin's history at the Boathouse Visitor
Centre . Another rare material found in the limestone cliffs
was flint and this contributed to the prosperity of the island,
however things changed in 1800BC with the appearance of copper
axes from Spain .
Folklore is very much in abundance here on
the island, one example is the story of the Enchanted Island
. This island is supposed to appear from the sea once every
seven years . The story says that if you lift some soil or a
pebble from under your feet and can throw it onto the island
then it will never sink back under the sea again .
The
island is associated with innumerable famous figures from Irish
mythology such as the Tuatha de Danaan . In early Christian
times, St. Columba spent time in Rathlin, and perhaps the most
famous of our visitors was Robert the Bruce, who hid here after
being defeated by the English at Perth in 1306, during his struggle
for the Scottish crown . It was in a cave in Rathlin that he
drew inspiration from a spider which tried seven times to bridge
a gap between two rocks in order to complete its web, until
Bruce himself drew fresh courage to make a further attempt at
the crown, eventually succeeding at the Battle of Bannockburn
. Bruce's cave is unfortunately only accessible by boat, but
Rathlin can nevertheless boast the most famous spider in history.
In 1846, with a population of over 1000 on
the Island , nearly 500 people left the island in search of
an easier life across the Atlantic . It was at this time the
potato famine threatened the very existence of many rural communities
throughout Ireland. A commemorative stone has been erected to
their memory high above Church Bay.
I n
more recent times, Rathlin's shores have been dotted with wrecks,
thrown onto the rocks during storms. One of the most famous
was HMS Drake, the flagship of the British Navy during World
War One, which was torpedoed, and sank in Church Bay. In extraordinary
feats of engineering, several spectacular lighthouses were built
amongst the rocky cliffs of the island, and the history of their
construction is explained in detail at the Boathouse Visitor
Centre .
The East Light, high above Bruce's Cave at
Altacarry Head, has been flashing a warning to mariners since
1856 . It is the oldest of the lighthouses and has since been
automated . The particularly impressive West Light was built
between 1912 and 1917 and also required the building of a provisional
pier, a steep cable tramway from the pier to the cliff top and
the road across Kebble.The light at Rue Point has operated since
1921, is located at the southern tip opposite Fair head and
is only 35 feet above sea level.
The
East Lighthouse on Rathlin Rathlin has attracted some famous
visitors in recent times, notably Guglielmo Marconi who was
contracted by Lloyd's Insurers to install a wireless link which
would allow swift announcements of successful trans-Atlantic
crossings by Lloyd's ships. On July 6th 1898 Marconi and his
associates successfully transmitted the first commercial radio
signals across water from Rathlin's East Lighthouse to Ballycastle
on the Northern Irish mainland.
The early owners of the island were the Gage
family and they built a large Georgian House for themselves
. It was known as the Manor House and even after the Land Acts
of the last hundred or so years the Gage family remained there
. They were still in residence until a few years ago when the
house was handed over to the National Trust . As the owners
of the island they were entitled to rent from the rest of the
population . The gathering of Kelp was one of the ways that
paid the rent, there were up to 150 kilns in operation at one
time and this industry continued up to the 1930s . Seaweed
was collected and put into stone kilns and burned until it turned
into a "boiling mass". Kelp was used to produce soda
and iodine.
Rathlin was also famous for smuggling - poteen,
rum, brandy, tobacco, lace, etc . Near Ushet Port on the south-east
tip of the island is a building with recesses in the walls,
said to be used for contraband . The Coastguard filed in Ushet
Port with stones to make it unusable for the smugglers.
Rathlin's
winds are used to drive 3 turbines, Conn, Aedh and Fiachra to
generate two-thirds of the Island's electricity . Prior to their
construction in October 1992 there was no mains electricity
on the island. (The turbines are named after the three sons
of the mythical chieftan Lir . According to legend his 4 children
were turned into swans for 300 years by their stepmother and
roamed the seas around Rathlin . To date only two of the turbines
have ever operated.
Rathlin's most recent famous visitor
was Richard Branson, whose hot-air balloon crashed into the
sea off Rathlin in 1987 after its record-breaking cross Atlantic
flight from Maine, USA. Richard Branson and Per Lindstrom were
rescued from the sea a few miles northwest of Bull Point, Rathlin,
where they were taken to safety. Richard Branson later returned
to Rathlin and presented the Rathlin Island Trust with £25,000
towards the renovation of the Manor House
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