The risks to fishermen in Galway Bay during the first world war is theme of a Heritage Week talk by Donncha Ó hÉallaithe this Sunday evening.
Ó hÉallaithe will be followed by Dr Micheál Ó Fathartaigh of the Dublin Business School, who will examine the policies adopted by the new Irish state to promote the fishing industry.
He will also refer to episodes such as the Cleggan disaster, when 45 fishermen lost their lives off the Galway coast during a strong gale on October 27th, 1927.
The talks hosted by the Galway Hooker Sailing Club are free. The two talks will begin at 7 pm, with a short break between each, on Sunday evening, August 21st, in the Claddagh Hall on Nimmo’s Pier.
There will also be a photo exhibition which will feature the Truelight, the hooker built in Galway in 1922, along with historic images of the Claddagh.
The Truelight was built near the Spanish arch by Reaney boatbuilders in 1922, and it survived the Cleggan disaster of 1927 which Dr Ó Fahartaigh's presentation will refer to.
More information is here