I don't know how
much thought you give to the environment you are cycling through.
Perhaps if it is for the first time, your senses and interest are
piqued and you take more of your surroundings in. Cycling through
the same environment on a regular basis, whether transiting through,
to get to an area you wish to ride in, or just using your bicycle as
transport to get from A to B, the familiar just blurs into the
background. It is after an absence of decades and the many changes
wrought to the landscape in the intervening years, that you begin to
notice the landscape again, this time seeking the familiar in all the
many changes. This is how I found myself in the urban landscape of
summer, enjoying riding my bicycle in Belfast. I fondly remember the
school visit to the Harland and Wolff shipyard as part of my
Engineering Drawing studies decades ago. A guided tour through the
yard to see the erecting shops, foundry and the dock under the giant
cranes 'Goliath' and 'Samson' where the sections of ship's hull were
transported to be welded into position, the quayside from which the
hulls were moored for fitting out. Several bulk oil carriers,
christened 'Supertankers' at the time, were under construction.
Shipbuilding on such a scale is now only a fading memory. I was
intrigued to see how much of Belfast's maritime past still exists.
The
development known as Clarendon Dock at the bottom of Princes Dock St
and can be accessed as part of NCN 91/9. Cheek by jowl with the
little square as you enter the gate is the Rotterdam Bar.
This tiny
bit of old Belfast is is very much down at heel, but is mentioned by
the author Eric Newby in his 1956 book 'The Last Grain Race',
published by Secker & Warburg Ltd, about his 1938 voyage on the
Gustav Erikson owned S.V. Moshulu. The crew went to the Rotterdam
Bar for a 'liddle trink' to say goodbye to the crewmen returning to
Moshulu's home port of Mariehamn, Finland. There are some
photographs of the old port of Belfast taken in 1938 by Eric Newby
which were published in his 1999 book, 'Learning the Ropes: An
Apprentice in the last of the Windjammers'. The Moshulu sailed from
Belfast on 18th October 1938 just after the Munich Crisis
of the month previous and harbinger of the impending world war.
Further
along the route are the twin graving docks of Clarendon Dock and then
the Belfast Harbour Commissioners Offices. The route then rejoins
the road, past the Royal Mail sorting Office at Tomb Street, before
continuing towards the substantial Custom House.
The back of the
building faces the River Lagan and the front steps have been a
meeting place for demonstration and protest for over a century. The
Custom House Square is now used each year for an open air pop music
festival. As you continue towards the Queen's Bridge the premises of
James Tedford, Ship Chandlers, Sail and Tent Makers, is located on the right hand side.
The sail loft was located at the top of the building, parts of which is believed to date back
to the 18th century. The business is one of the last
long established Ship Chandlers in existence in the UK and Ireland and in 1991 vacated the building to move to a new premises. The original building is now an up-market
restaurant. The community of Dockers who worked in the port, lived
in the terraced streets off Corporation Street. The area was known
as 'Sailortown' and has largely gone in the re-development of
Belfast. The old terraced housing, the hard graft, uncertain pay, of
the stevedore was not mourned by many, but rather the break up and
loss of the small, self reliant, tight knit community forged in
adversity has been a source of regret. Such is the march of 'progress'. Time and tide wait for
no man.