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- Bahaghs Workhouse, Cahersiveen
originally a lodge owned by the local McCarthy family
this building has first been a workhouse for the destitute before
being converted to a barracks during the Civil War.
- Ballinskelligs Monastery
This monastery was founded for monks who came to the
mainland here from the offshore island of Skellig Michael in the
12th or 13th century. The buildings have been partially eroded
by the sea.
- Ballycarbery Castle
This is the ruin of what was once a magnificent 15th
century Castle, and it still retains some of its grand old features.
- Cahergal Stone Fort
Situated close to Ballycarbery Castel, this ancient
Stone Fort also dates back to the 8th or 9th century. The interior
walls have stone stairs and there is a rectangular house within
the fort.
- Derreen Gardens
The creation of the garden at Derreen began in 1870
after the fifth Marquis of Landsdowne inherited the house and
demesne. It is a paradise of exotic species, especially for rhododendrons.
- Derrynane House
Derrynane House was the ancestral home of Daniel O'Connell,
the Irish statesman who played an important role in gaining Catholic
Emancipation in 1829.
- Derrynane National Historic Park
Today some 120 hectares of the lands of Derrynane, together
with Derrynane House, make up Derrynane National Historic Park.
Plantations and garden walks were laid out in the 18th and 19th
centuries, principally north and west of the house.
- Geokaun Mountain & Fogher Cliffs
Geokaun is the highest mountain on Valentia Island at
888 feet. Fogher Cliffs form the edge between this mountain and
the Atlantic Ocean, offering spectacular viewing areas. Along
the way are 36 information plaques covering 22 topics of social
/ historical interest relevant to Valentia Island and its surroundings.
- Glanleam Gardens
Glanleam is famous for Southern Hemisphere & Asian
plants thriving in the mild climate of Valentia Island.
- Inishfallen Island
On this island is Innisfallen Abbey erected in the 7th
century, remained until the 17th century. The ruins of a twelfth
- century oratory with a Romanesque doorway still stands on the
island.
- Kenmare Heritage Centre
Kenmare was designated a Heritage Town by Fáilte
Ireland, and various aspects of Kenmare’s history and historical
sites and more are part of the exhibits.
- Kenmare Druid Circle
Dating back to the Bronze Age, this is the only monument
of its kind found so close to a town. Many superstitions are attached
to it, which may explain why it has remained undisturbed.
- Kenmare Lace & Design Centre
Antique lace exhibition, lacemaking demonstrations,
lace for sale, lacemaking materials, and demonstrations of Kenmare,
Limerick, Carrickmacross crochet and lace making.
- Kerry Bog Village Museum
The Kerry Bog Village Museum, located between Glenbeigh
and Killorglin, gives people an insight into how people lived
and worked in Ireland in the 18th Century.
- Killarney Fransciscan Church/Friary
The Franciscan Order came in the 1440s to Killarney
and built Muckross Friary, the ruins still stand in the grounds
of Muckross House. The present Friary was built between 1864 and
1867.
- Killarney Model Railway
Scores of trains running on over a mile of track transport
you through the landmarks of Europe.
- Killarney Museum of Irish Transport
The automobile exhibition has 32 motors including the
first and last cars assembled in Ireland The 1904 Germain is a
truly magnificent car still capable of 75mph. The cycle collection
shows one of the first cycles ever manufactured - the pedal-less
hobby horse, or "manumotive machine" of 1820 and the
earliest "safety" cycle in existence - the 1885 "Starley"
Rover. The entire history of cycling is depicted, with exhibits
ranging from the 1825 Hobby Horse, Pennyfarthings and a Starley
Rover to Stephen Roche's racing bicycle.
- Killarney National Park
The National Park comprises of 10,000 hectares (24,700
acres) of beautiful lake and mountain scenery. The Park is famous
for its' native natural habitats and species including oak and
holly woods, yew woods and red deer.
- Killarney St. Mary’s Cathedral
Established between 1846 and 1855, the cathedral was
used as a hospital and shelter during the famine and is considered
as the finest example of revised Gothic Revival in Ireland.
- O’Connell Memorial Church, Cahersiveen
Designed by G.C Ashling of Dublin, and built of Newry
Granite and local black limestone in 1888. It is one of the few
Catholic Churches in the world dedicated to a layman.
- Leacanabuaile Fort
The interior of the fort is one of the best examples
of its kind in Ireland. This is a round stone fort, with walls
of about 10ft thick and has been reconstructed to a height of
about 4ft.
- Muckross Abbey
Founded in 1440 on the site of an earlier monastery,
Muckross Abbey has very extensive late Gothic remains. Three of
Kerry's four great Gaelic poets are buried inside the Abbey and
the fourth in the graveyard
- Muckross House
Muckross House is a magnificent Victorian mansion and
one of Ireland’s leading stately homes. Other parts to the
house are the Muckross traditional farms, an authentic outdoor
interpretation of rural life in Kerry in the 1930’s and
1940’s.
- Ross Castle
Ross Castle is a 15th century towerhouse and is a typical
example of the stronghold of an Irish chieftain in the Middle
Ages.
- Skellig Michael
This island is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the monastery
dating to the 6th or 7th century is the world’s finest example
of an early Christian monastic settlement. Apart from being a
sacred site, the island is also home to breeding colonies of sea-birds,
and during the breeding season a spectacular site to watch them,
especially the comical puffins.
- Staigue Fort
Staigue Fort is one of the largest and finest ring forts
in Ireland. The walls are up to 5.5 metres high and 4 metres thick
and it is thought that it was built in the first century B.C.
- The Old Barracks
The Old Barracks Heritage Centre exhibition is situated
in a former Royal Irish Constabulary Barracks overlooking the
river and Cahersiveen Marina. The exhibition features items of
local history, archaeology, flora and fauna.
- The Skellig Experience
This heritage centre tells the amazing story of the
Skellig rocks.
- Valentia Island
One of the largest islands off the South West coast
of Kerry, it is joined to the mainland by bridge via the Portmagee
Channel. Just one of the many interesting sites on the island
are Tetra pod footprints. These magnificent imprints of history
are thought to date from Devonian times between some 350 to 370
million years ago.
- Wynn’s Folly
a castellated mansion built by Lord Wynn in 1867. The
folly is the only building remaining as the Castle were burned
to the ground in 1921 and never rebuilt.
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