Murlough Bay Antrim
Murlough Bay is one of the most remote and most beautiful bays on the Antrim coast, a sheltered crescent of beach and grassland enclosed between the Fair Head basalt headland and the lower ground of the Torr coast in a setting of complete isolation accessible only by a steep and winding road descending from the clifftop above. The combination of the dramatic headland of Fair Head rising 180 metres from the sea to the north, the views across the North Channel to the Mull of Kintyre barely twenty kilometres away and the quiet of this remarkably undisturbed bay makes Murlough one of the most rewarding and least visited destinations on the Causeway Coast.
The bay has strong associations with the Irish cultural revival through the graves of Roger Casement and several members of the MacQuillan family of Bun-a-Margy in the ruined chapel above the beach. Roger Casement, the humanitarian activist and Irish nationalist who was hanged for treason in 1916 following his attempt to land German arms for the Easter Rising, was repatriated and buried in the ruined Carey Church above the bay in 1965, fulfilling his wish to be buried in this corner of Antrim that he loved. The grave has become a place of quiet pilgrimage.
The woodland and scrub behind the beach provide habitat for a range of birds and the rocky shore below supports the marine life of the North Channel in the clear cold water typical of this exposed coastline. The walking from the bay north along the cliff toward Fair Head provides increasingly dramatic views of the great basalt columns of the headland and the sea below, one of the finest short cliff walks on the entire Antrim coast.