Jump to content

St Mary's Isle

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 213.137.5.50 (talk) at 07:46, 29 August 2008 (External links). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

File:St Mary's Isle at extremely low water, Douglas, Isle of Man.jpg
St Mary's Isle at extremely low water, Douglas, Isle of Man

St Mary's Isle (Conister Rocks or Tower of Refuge) is part of a reef in the Isle of Man.

Conister is a corruption of the Manx [Kione y skeyr] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) meaning the 'end of the reef'.

It is a partially submerged rock at the tip of a reef in Douglas Bay. This reef is mostly obscured now by development into the sea, using the reef as a foundation.

Conister itself is fully submerged at exceptional spring high tides, and can be accessed very briefly on foot at the corresponding low tides.

The Tower of Refuge

The Tower of Refuge is the structure built upon it by Sir William Hillary (who helped to found the Royal National Lifeboat Institution) in 1824. Having witnessed several shipwrecks upon the semi-submerged rock, he intended it as a refuge for survivors until help could arrive. He helped secure public contributions for funding the building and contributed a high proportion of the costs personally. The islet itself was privately owned, but was contributed by its owner. In the years shortly after its construction, it continued to be well stocked with provisions such as bread and fresh water.[1]

St Mary's Isle during the day, from the old lighthouse

The refuge is designed to look like a castle, by architect John Welch (also responsible for the design of other landmark buildings on the Isle of Man). The tower originally housed a bell for summoning of help and was stocked with dry provisions for the use of casualties. It is not far from the current ferry terminal and its eastern base (the Conister Shoals) had to be blasted away when the harbour had a new breakwater built in the early 1980s.

St. Mary's Isle from the Ben-my-Chree

References