
The quay offers limited protection and should be considered only in settled conditions. It is exposed to everything from northeast round to northwest; it is particularly vulnerable in a northwesterly, during which options further upriver should be sought. Although shielded from the south, the pier becomes awash in very strong southerly conditions, especially at high water. Fishing boats do weather out a southerly here, but it is completely inaccessible when the pier is awash. The wide, unhindered and well-marked Waterford Harbour estuary provides safe access, night or day and at any stage of the tide.
Keyfacts for Arthurstown
Nature
Considerations
Protected sectors
Summary* Restrictions apply
An exposed location with straightforward access.Nature
Considerations
Position and approaches
Haven position
At the end of the pier
What is the initial fix?
52° 10.740' N, 006° 56.320' W What are the key points of the approach?
Not what you need?
- Ballyhack - 0.6 nautical miles WNW
- Passage East - 0.7 nautical miles W
- Duncannon - 1.2 nautical miles SSE
- Seedes Bank - 1.4 nautical miles NW
- Buttermilk Point - 1.6 nautical miles NW
- Cheekpoint - 2.5 nautical miles NW
- Dollar Bay - 3.1 nautical miles SSE
- Creadan Head - 3.5 nautical miles S
- Templetown Bay - 4.1 nautical miles SSE
- Little Island - 4.1 nautical miles W
- Ballyhack - 0.6 miles WNW
- Passage East - 0.7 miles W
- Duncannon - 1.2 miles SSE
- Seedes Bank - 1.4 miles NW
- Buttermilk Point - 1.6 miles NW
- Cheekpoint - 2.5 miles NW
- Dollar Bay - 3.1 miles SSE
- Creadan Head - 3.5 miles S
- Templetown Bay - 4.1 miles SSE
- Little Island - 4.1 miles W
What's the story here?
Arthurstown Pier Image: Michael Harpur
Arthurstown is a small village situated on the east bank of the River Suir, 3 miles below its junction with the Barrow. It is located directly east from Passage East, about a mile above Duncannon and 7 miles within Waterford Harbour.
The village has a small drying fishing pier with a rocky bottom that is less than ideal for drying out on. With an ample rise of tide, the outer end of the pier offers a temporary berth with depths of 2 to 3 metres.
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How to get in?
Arthurstown PierImage: Michael Harpur
The ‘Passage Spit’ marker, opposite ArthurstownImage: Michael Harpur
Arthurstown will be found opposite the Passage Spit port hand marker, to the starboard side and 100 metres off the channel on the Wexford shoreline. The pier has a street light at its head and conspicuously extends out from the south side of the recess that is King’s Bay.
Approaching Arthurstown Pier from the channelImage: Burke Corbett
Alternatively, in settled conditions anchor 200 metres off the head of the pier.
Why visit here?

It was during the first quarter of the 1800s that Anglo-Irish soldier, politician and courtier Arthur Chichester, the First Baron Templemore (1797-1837), built Dunbrody Park and the estate village of Arthurstown, providing the village with his name. Samuel Lewis’s ‘A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland’, published in 1837, says: “ARTHURSTOWN, or KING’S-BAY contained 170 inhabitants. It is situated on Waterford harbour, three miles below the junction of the rivers Barrow, Suir, and Nore, and derives its origin and name from its proprietor Arthur, the present Lord Templemore whose seat is here, and who has been mostly responsible for the estate and the building that has taken place within the last few years.”
Arthurstown’s pier was constructed in 1829Image: Michael Harpur
The village became a hub around which other services developed, including a hospital, police barracks, courthouse and coastguard station. Estate revenue was earned via tolls on village markets for agricultural produce. With the aid of a Fishery Board grant, Chichester constructed Arthurstown’s pier in 1829. This was to facilitate trade and to encourage his tenants to become involved in the fishing industry. The pier provided additional estate revenue via tolls levied on all pier transactions; these were principally coal from South Wales, slates from Bangor, and the exportation to Waterford of corn, pigs, butter, eggs, honey and poultry.
Arthurstown Pier has changed little since constructionImage: Michael Harpur
Samuel Lewis astutely observed at the time: “It has a commodious quay, with a gravelly strand open to Waterford harbour; and a pier of millstone grit found in the quarries here, 306 feet in length, and originally intended for the accommodation of the boats employed in the fishery. Vessels of 100 tons’ burden can come up close to the pier, but the entrance has lately become partially choked with an accumulation of mud, which requires speedy removal, and the adoption of a plan calculated to prevent a recurrence of the obstruction. The bay is subject to a heavy sea during the prevalence of south, southwest, and northwest winds.” Advice as good then as it is today.
Arthurstown as seen from the pierImage: Michael Harpur
Today Arthurstown is a quaint holiday village that noticeably increased in size during Ireland’s Celtic Tiger years, with the addition of several holiday homes. Dunbrody House, also referred to as Dunbrody Country House Hotel and Restaurant, was occupied by the Chichesters until they sold it in the late 20th century. Set upon 200 acres of parkland, the beautiful Irish Georgian manor is just a 10-minute walk from the pier.
From a boating perspective, it is a pleasant beach and offers a quiet spot to stop off. There is a pub a short stroll from the pier and a coastal walk to Ballyhack. Arthurstown does have excellent road access, making it an ideal set down and collection point. However, the car ferry traffic uses this route from Wexford and it can be busy.
What facilities are available?
Apart from a pier with a high tide slipway (and its excellent R733 regional road, which runs along the eastern shore of the Waterford Harbour estuary), there are no other services available at Arthurstown.Any security concerns?
There are no reported security issues in the area.With thanks to:
John Carroll, Ballyhack, County Wexford, Ireland. Photography with thanks to Humphrey Bolton, Burke Corbett and Michael Harpur.
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