Water pressure fails as church burns

Firefighters struggled to fight a church fire without proper water pressure in the village of Louth yesterday

Firefighters struggled to fight a church fire without proper water pressure in the village of Louth yesterday. The blaze left the 110- year-old church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception, which had a preservation order on it, as a shell.

A water tanker was brought in to supplement the local supply but county councillor Mr Jim Lennon, who lives in the village and watched the attempt to bring it under control, blamed the water supply. "They couldn't get the water, the fire brigades were all here and were left helpless; there was no pressure, there were hydrants but the pressure wouldn't be good enough," he said.

The fire took hold on the church's timber roof which, on a dry and windy afternoon, spread quickly."I am in complete shock," said the parish priest, Father Seán Quinn. "Thankfully no lives were lost and I would hope we can rebuild the church."

In Dundalk, firefighters were working to save business premises in the town centre. The fire was reported in the roof of R.Q. O'Neill's hardware and gift shop about 6.20 p.m. and within the hour it and the next-door premises were gutted.The Northern Ireland Fire Service from Belfast assisted with a hydraulic platform.