This year marks the 150th Anniversary of the inaugural use of Dublin Port's pioneering diving bell, and Thursday 27th May will see the first of three 40-minute online lectures (the other two are on 3rd June and 10th June) organised by the Port's Heritage & Communications Group to celebrate and detail the city-port's remarkable expansion in the latter half of the 19th Century.
Much of it was made possible by the ingenuity of the Harbour Engineer, the magnificently named Bindon Blood Stoney (1828-1909), who was of an Offaly family. His inventiveness was such that his development of the North Quays really was award-winning – he received the highly-regarded Telford Medal for the creative work done here, using his own-designed diving bell (it was built in Drogheda in 1866) and enormous concrete blocks built on site.
At the time, it was all state-of-the-art cutting edge work on a major scale, and in the inaugural session, Dr Ron Cox of Trinity College will set Bindon Stoney's engineering achievements in context. The two subsequent talks will see Dublin Port Chief Executive Eamonn O'Reilly exploring the vibrant links between the port and the city on Thursday, June 3rd, and then on Thursday 10th June, Jim Kelleher – head of Special Projects at Dublin Port – will explain the intriguing details of the Diving Bell itself.
Further information and registration details here