History of the Tower
Millmount
Fort is without doubt the most dominant features of Drogheda, sited
as it is atop its great mound, and clearly visible from most parts
of the town and the surrounding areas.
One of many legends regarding
the origins of the mound says that it is the burial place of Amergin,
an early Celtic poet, but it has also been suggested that it was possibly
a large passage grave like Newgrange.
It was fortified as a motte by
tile Normans in the 12th century and a castle was later built on its
summit. The fort offered Cromwell the strongest resistance he encountered
during the siege of 1649. About 1808, the old fortifications were demolished
and the present Martello type tower was erected.
The fort was considerably
damaged when it was shelled from the town by Free State forces during
the civil war in 1922 and was finally restored by Drogheda Corporation.
It has been open to the public since June 2000.
The view of modern Drogheda is also superb, if slightly more crowded
than it was when Millmount was first fortified. The development of
the town in its various stages may be clearly traced, from the 14th
Century Magdalene Tower, to the 20th Century Lourdes Hospital. To the
East, The Boyne Viaduct, a great feat of 19th Century engineering,
which carries the Railway from the North into Drogheda, spans the river
Boyne with graceful power.
A view 0f Drogheda town from the Tower
