The fall of the Shannon is concentrated between Killaloe, at the
bottom of Lough Derg, and Limerick, at the head of the Shannon
Estuary. It is that fall, of almost 100 feet, that made possible the
construction of the hydroelectric power station at Ardnacrusha in the
1920s. Its designers were not the first people to realise the
usefulness of the water-power of the Shannon in that area, but they
were almost the first to use it: there were few mills between Killaloe
and Plassey, and that at O’Briensbridge used water from the Bridgetown
direction rather than from the Shannon.

There were, however, two bleach mills, one at Doonass on the County
Clare side of the Shannon and one at Castleconnell on the Co Limerick
side. The Doonass mill seems to have been set up, around 1760, by
Hercules Browning or Brownriggs. There is little trace of the mill
itself, but its intake and outlet canals are still to be seen. The
really interesting thing is that there are two outlets: the shorter
returns to the Shannon almost immediately below the mill while the
longer runs for almost half a mile, behind a hill, before it rejoins
the river.

I don’t know why it has two outlets. It is possible that the system
catered for much higher water levels with greater variation between
summer and winter. It is conceivable that the longer arm might have
been used to carry the produce of the mill downstream, although I have
no evidence for that and I’m not sure where the goods would have gone
after the outlet rejoined the river. The watercourse is referred to
locally as Conway’s Canal, but I don’t think that is evidence that it
ever carried anything.

Anyway, here http://wp.me/Ppxzo-CQ are maps, photos and as much
background information as I could find. Comments, suggestions and
explanations will be welcome.

bjg

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