Lighthouse (Fixed), Illaunamid, Co. Galway
Co. Galway |
Transport Infrastructure
On a small island off the Connemara coast, a fixed lighthouse marks the waters around Illaunamid, one of the quieter navigational structures in Galway Bay.
Unlike the more celebrated rock lighthouses that dominate Irish maritime history, fixed lights of this kind were typically simpler, unattended structures, designed not to rotate or flash but to hold a steady beam, orienting vessels through a particular channel or past a specific hazard. Their modesty is part of the point. They did their work without ceremony, and many have slipped from general awareness as a result.
Illaunamid itself is a small island whose name reflects the Irish tradition of descriptive place-naming for coastal features. The designation of a fixed light here points to the practical demands of navigation along this stretch of the western seaboard, where islands, rocks, and shifting conditions made reliable markers genuinely necessary for local fishing boats and coastal traffic alike. Fixed lights were a common solution in areas where a full lighthouse station, with its keepers and supply infrastructure, would have been disproportionate to the scale of the hazard being marked. Beyond that, the specific history of this structure, its construction date, the authority responsible for it, and any changes made over time, remains to be fully documented in the public record.