Old Quay, Oiligh, Co. Mayo
Co. Mayo |
Transport Infrastructure
On the southern shore of Elly Harbour, on the remote Mullet Peninsula in County Mayo, there is almost nothing left to see.
That near-absence is itself the point. What remains, or rather what barely remains, is a quay that once served as the waterside access point for Bingham Castle house, a substantial residence built in the late 1700s or early 1800s. By the time anyone formally looked at it in 1995, the sea had done its work thoroughly, leaving the structure almost completely destroyed by wave action.
The Mullet Peninsula is a narrow finger of land pushing south into the Atlantic, exposed on all sides to weather that has little to interrupt it before it arrives from the ocean. A private quay attached to a house of that period was a practical necessity as much as a status marker; landed families on remote stretches of coastline depended on water access for supplies, correspondence, and movement in a way that roads alone could not support. The Bingham family, whose name the castle house carries, were among the Anglo-Irish landholding class with a long presence in Connacht, though the specific history of this quay's construction and use has not been recorded in detail. What is clear is that the structure and the house it served belonged to the same moment of late Georgian development along the western seaboard, and that the quay's working life has long since ended, overtaken not by neglect alone but by the sustained pressure of Atlantic weather on a coastline that offers very little shelter.