Menu

Ireland's sailing, boating & maritime magazine

Maritime Community Save Sections of Historic Sail Cargo Trader ‘De Wadden’ and Return Home to Arklow

10th April 2024
De Wadden: After many months of planning by Wicklow maritime enthusiasts, large sections of the former Arklow general cargo sailing vessel ‘De Wadden’ built in 1919 are now back in the vessel’s Irish home port. AFLOAT adds that the schooner was the last to trade under sail in the Irish Sea, calling to ports on both sides, including Liverpool, with cargoes, chiefly coal, pit props, gravel, and burnt ore from Arklow.
De Wadden: After many months of planning by Wicklow maritime enthusiasts, large sections of the former Arklow general cargo sailing vessel ‘De Wadden’ built in 1919 are now back in the vessel’s Irish home port. AFLOAT adds that the schooner was the last to trade under sail in the Irish Sea, calling to ports on both sides, including Liverpool, with cargoes, chiefly coal, pit props, gravel, and burnt ore from Arklow. Credit: WicklowPeople/facebook

A community of Wicklow maritime enthusiasts, after many months of planning, has secured large sections of Arklow's historic last sail cargo vessel ‘De Wadden’ that were returned to the schooner’s home port, having been a static-ship exhibit in the UK.

In a race against time, Arklow locals implored Wicklow County Council last December to help them save parts of the “last Arklow coastal trading vessel under sail” before the schooner was demolished.

De Wadden was built in 1917 in The Netherlands and, from 1922, had a long serving career and an illustrious association with the port town of Arklow. As Afloat highlights, the port is the homeport of Arklow Shipping Ltd, the Republic’s largest indigenous owned ship company/owner operating an Irish flagged fleet along with a Dutch division based in Rotterdam.

For almost four decades, De Wadden, a three-masted auxiliary schooner, had formed a static exhibit in the National Museum’s Liverpool (Maritime Museum), was slated for deconstruction after their search for a new home for the vessel had proved fruitless.

One of the founders of Arklow Shipping Ltd (which formed as a co-op in 1966) Captain Victor Hall, owned De Wadden, and since 1984, the vessel, along with other vessels, has been exhibited in dry-dock at the Maritime Museum, where an ambitious restoration plan was drawn up. Among the main museum staff members involved in the project was Arklow native, John Kearon.

For more the Wicklow People (Irish Independent) reports, noting that, according to the Maritime Museum’s website, today (10 April) is closed due to industrial action.

Afloat adds the schooner according to the book: ‘Arklow-last Stronghold of Sail’ was the last to trade in the Irish Sea, calling to ports on both sides, with cargoes, chiefly, coal from Scotland, England, and on return passages, pit props, gravel, and burnt ore from Arklow.

Published in Historic Boats
Jehan Ashmore

About The Author

Jehan Ashmore

Email The Author

Jehan Ashmore is a marine correspondent, researcher and photographer, specialising in Irish ports, shipping and the ferry sector serving the UK and directly to mainland Europe. Jehan also occasionally writes a column, 'Maritime' Dalkey for the (Dalkey Community Council Newsletter) in addition to contributing to UK marine periodicals. 

We've got a favour to ask

More people are reading Afloat.ie than ever thanks to the power of the internet but we're in stormy seas because advertising revenues across the media are falling fast. Unlike many news sites, we haven’t put up a paywall because we want to keep our marine journalism open.

Afloat.ie is Ireland's only full–time marine journalism team and it takes time, money and hard work to produce our content.

So you can see why we need to ask for your help.

If everyone chipped in, we can enhance our coverage and our future would be more secure. You can help us through a small donation. Thank you.

Direct Donation to Afloat button