Iron Age people established a
promontory fort overlooking the sea at Shanoon (referred to in 1832 as meaning the 'Old Camp' but more likely Canon Power's , "Old Cave") at a point known for centuries as Black Nobb, where the old
pilot station now stands, and underneath which a cave runs. Henceforth the place was referred to as , meaning the "Great Fort". It is described as the property of Lord Power of
Curraghmore. In , Lord Power of Curraghmore, who owned a large amount of property in the area, built a castle on the cliff overlooking the strand about two hundred metres from St. Andrew's Church. The castle was falling into ruin by the 1750s and now just one tower remains. The old church of Killea ( meaning "Aodh's church") and one wall still stands. It is situated opposite the
Roman Catholic church of the Holy Cross. In Smith's history of Waterford, the village was mentioned as being a fishing port about the year 1745. The fishermen's homes were situated in the Lower Village near the Strand Inn and boats were launched from the slip at Lawlor's Beach before the harbour was built. There is mention of a fleet of fifty fishing boats working from Dunmore East in 1776. In 1812, a decision was made at Westminster to create an entirely new landing point for passengers and the
Royal Mail coming to Ireland from London and southern England. The location selected for the erection of a pier was Dunmore East. In 1818, significant changes took place when
Alexander Nimmo, the Scottish engineer (builder of
Limerick's
Sarsfield Bridge), commenced work on the new harbour at Dunmore. The work consisted mainly of a large pier or quay with a lighthouse at the end. While Nimmo's original estimate had been £20,000, at the time of his death in 1832 about £93,000 had been spent and the final cost was £108,000. By then (1837), the harbour had started to silt up, and the arrival of steam meant that the winding river could be negotiated easily, so the packet station was transferred to Waterford. The sheltered harbour then constructed meant that Dunmore East was to gradually become an important fishing port. It also then developed into a popular tourist resort and it is now a port of call for large cruise liners visiting the south-east of Ireland. The Haven Hotel, formerly the Villa Marina, was a home built by David Malcomson of the
Malcomson family of Portlaw. David Malcomson married Nanette King of Waterford and he brought his new bride to live in their family home at Dunmore East. The Fisherman's Hall in the village was also built by Nanette Malcomson in memory of her son Joseph who had been a fisherman and died at a relatively young age. She donated the land for the building and established a deed of trust to build and maintain the hall. On her instructions, no alcohol could be sold or consumed in the Fisherman's Hall. In addition, a fire was to be kept lit to warm and dry any of the fishermen who arrived to read the newspapers which were replenished daily in the reading room which is the present-day library. ==Sport==