
Appearing today, Saturday, April 23rd 2016,
The Irish Times have paid tribute to local historian and boat builder Derek Paine.
Having passed away on Sunday, April 10th, Mr. Paine’s passing moved many people in Greystones. And not just those lucky enough to know the man directly.
Having worked tirelessly to improve his hometown, one of his greatest contributions was his archiving – along with his son, Gary – the man
people, landmarks and events in Greystones’ history. Released over seven seminal books, it’s a collection that will live on long after we’ve all moved on.
Reading Derek’s obituary in today’s edition of The Irish Times, it’s easy to see why the man was so loved…
Mrs Emily Paine with Joan, Stan & Derek, and Flo Thompson with Bob & Doreen 1939
Derek Paine, who has died aged 84, led a life intimately and devotedly connected to the sea and to the community in which he lived. He was a renowned builder of boats and a collector of photographs and like ephemera, which he compiled into seven volumes, a unique legacy chronicling the social history of his
beloved Greystones.
Paine’s rear garden in the north Wicklow seaside town at times resembled a small boatyard. From his clutter-filled workshop there emerged a succession of repaired and newly built wooden boats.
At the same time, his house accumulated an ever-growing number of photographs as his interest in local history became more widely
known and people handed over their collections for posterity.
Paine’s deepest maritime affection was for the Water Wag, a 13ft-long clinker-built sailing boat and the oldest ‘one design’
dinghy in existence. Water Wag enthusiasts have been racing the timber boats since 1887 and the class was re-invigorated in the 1980s, largely due to the craftsmanship of Paine, as the Wag Club, based in Dún Laoghaire, acknowledge by declaring him an honorary life member.
Derek Paine was born in the upper bedroom of Glencoe, one of the few homes, then fronting on to Greystones North Beach, to survive the sea storms of 1929-1931. Through the small front bedroom window on the gable, among the first sounds he would
have heard were gulls and waves breaking on the pebbles.
Model boats
His parents were Ernest Paine and Emily (nee Thompson). Ernest was a traveller for Berger Paints but also made
model boats for Helys department store. Paine’s uncle, George Thompson, was a lieutenant commander in the Naval Service and captained the LE Macha when, in 1948, it repatriated to Ireland the remains of W.B. Yeats from France. A grandfather, Robert Thompson, spent 22 years in the Naval Service. Colour blindness prevented Derek following their lead, although he attended the Hibernian Marine School in Clontarf with that in mind. Instead, his working life was in insurance and finance, but retirement in 1986 allowed him to indulge his boatbuilding passion to the full. He built
four new Water Wags and restored to sailing some 15 others, as well as keeping afloat innumerable other small craft.
Greystones postcards
Paine’s other consuming interest germinated from an idle interest in Greystones postcards, and other documents relating to the town, that he began collecting in the 1950s. By the 1970s, he had sufficient to mount photographic exhibitions.
Gradually, Paine assembled a priceless archive of images from the mid-19th century to the early years of the 21st century, covering Greystones, Delgany, Bray, Enniskerry, Kilcoole and Newtownmountkennedy. The archive formed the basis for his Pictorial History Of Greystones series of books, the first of which he published in 1993. In seven volumes (with material for an eight, which son Gary is contemplating), they chronicle the emergence of Greystones from the Victorian and Edwardian era through the 20th century –
a comprehensive social history of a small town.
Paine was active in the Greystones Civic Association, under whose auspices he was instrumental in acquiring the base of the Kish Lighthouse in 1966 to extend and protect the now demolished original Victorian harbour, as well as the two ships’ anchors which survive to this day. He was a founder of Greystones Sailing Club, and had a boat moored in the harbour for many years. He was a devoted family man. A favourite pastime in retirement, when he was not tinkering in his workshop, was walking the coast at Kilcoole or around Bray Head with his dog, Tyson.
Derek Paine is surivived by his wife Hazel and their three children, Linda, David and Gary; six grandchildren; and a brother, Stanley.
You can read The Irish Times obituaries here. Above, Derek on RTE’s Newstime back in 1987, talking about his work with the Water Wags. Catch our boy, happily chiseling away in his Greystones workshop, from the 2.50 mark…