Luke Livingston Macassey


Luke Livingstone Macassey was an Irish civil engineer and barrister, notable for his contributions to public health by improving the water supply in parts of Ulster in the north of Ireland. In 1874 he was appointed consultant hydraulic engineer by the Belfast Water Commissioners, in which capacity he was instrumental in finding new sources of water for the expanding town, later city, of Belfast. He proposed use of a 9,000-acre catchment area in the Mourne Mountains and a three stage project:
  1. The first stage was to divert water from the Kilkeel and Annalong rivers through the newly constructed Mourne Conduit to a reservoir at Carryduff. These water pipes were capable of supplying 10 million imperial gallons of water per day. Work was completed in 1901.
  2. The second stage was to build a storage reservoir, the Silent Valley Reservoir, across the Kilkeel River. Design work on this phase began in 1910, but procurement of the work was delayed by World War I. A contract was eventually awarded in 1923 to S. Pearson & Son and work continued until 1933.
  3. The third stage was planned to be another storage reservoir in Annalong to impound the Annalong River. However, after the difficulties encountered in building the Silent Valley dam this second dam was not built.
He also was the first to propose a direct rail link connecting Scotland with Ireland.
Macassey is the subject of an Ulster History Circle blue plaque in Belfast.

Selected publications

Report of the proposed Railway Tunnel between Scotland and Ireland. With plan, etc. Belfast, 1868. Hints on the Water Supply of Small Towns and Villages. London & Belfast, 1877.The Law relating to Civil Engineers, Architects and Contractors. Primarily intended for their own use. Stevens & Sons, London, 1890.