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Bricks and stones

MALCOLM ROGERS looks at what’s on offer besides pubs, clubs and views in Ireland during 2008 in the way of museums, standing stones, exhibits and country houses.

Observe the Observatory

Take a trip to Valentia Observatory, which despite its name is not on the island but in Cahirciveen. The historic weather station measures earth tremors, ozone levels and magnetic fluctuations. Another part of the Observatory monitors climate change by logging the date when buds, leaves and flowers appear.

Meteorological observation has had a long history in Ireland — our early monks were among the first record keepers in the world — and this station is part of that tradition. It boasted the first trans-Atlantic telegraph cable, Marconi’s wireless station and some of the first weather balloons. You can still see the latter being released.

The Observatory is not open all week, so phone ahead.

Tel: 00 353 66 9476353.

Pulling a stroke

Strokestown Park House and Garden in Co. Roscommon has now been restored to its full 18th century splendour, with some fine paintings, curios and antiques. Originally a Jacobean mansion, of particular interest are some original documents and images from the Great Famine. To the west are several small loughs and to the south rise the heights of Slieve Bawn from which you can get terrific views of the winding Shannon away to the east.


Irish Linen Centre, Lisburn, Co. Antrim

It’s astonishing to think that Belfast and its environs were once home to the world’s greatest manufacturers of rope, steel, ships — and of course linen. Almost all gone now but at the Irish Linen Centre you can at least still see linen being made. The museum contains some machines which have a Heath Robinson type beauty themselves, as well as audio visuals which evoke a not-quite-so beautiful era: The Victorian times of child labour and hard graft in the linen mills. Open Monday-Saturday, 9.30am-5pm. Tel 028 9266 3377.


Glengowla Silver Lead Mines, Galway

Ireland’s only mine with shafts and tunnels open to the public. Glengowla heritage and visitor centre is located just two miles from Oughterard on the Clifden road (N59). You can see the workings of this abandoned mine with an underground trip to view the large marble chamber and mineral studded caverns. Tel: 00 353 (0) 91 552360.


The Natural History Museum, Merrion Street, Dublin 2

The Natural History Museum is renowned as one of the last great Victorian cabinet museums, with exhibits packed onto every square inch of floor and wall space, and not a sign of

hi-tech multi-media interaction in sight. Here you will find the most complete museum experience possible, because in essence this is a time warp. No description could prepare you for the treasure house of zoological exhibits which awaits inside. All the familiar Irish animals are present and correct — the Irish hare, the red fox and

the Irish jay, along with rarities such as the pine marten and otter. Admission is free.

Telephone: 00 353 1 677 7444.

 

The Ulster Folk and Transport Museum, Cultra, Co. Down`

The Museum ranks among Ireland’s foremost visitor attractions, recapturing a disappearing way of life, preserving traditional skills and celebrating transport history.

The Folk Museum invites you to visit a typical Ulster town of the early 1900s and to stroll through yesteryear’s countryside with its farms, cottages, crops and livestock.

The Transport Museum presents Ireland’s most comprehensive transport collection and includes an award-winning Irish Railway Collection and road transport galleries and also Titanic and Flight Experience exhibitions.

Tel: 028 904 28428.

 

Waterford Treasure, Merchants Quay, Waterford

Housed in a converted warehouse known as The Granary, this amazing collection of artefacts reflects the fact that Waterford is Ireland’s oldest city.

The exhibits include the Catholic bishop’s cape in cloth-of-gold, royal charters and numerous archaeological samples from Waterford’s chequered history.

Tel: 00 353 51 304 5000.

 

The GAA Museum, Croke Park, Dublin

The museum is part of the hallowed Croke Park, a stadium which has the fourth largest capacity in Europe (85,000) after Barcleona’s Nou Camp, Real Madrid’s Bernabeu and the San Siro in Milan.

The importance of the GAA in the history of Ireland’s struggle for independence is highlighted in the audio-visual presentation National Awakening, which relates the events of last century’s first Bloody Sunday in 1920.

The museum also has a comprehensive range of exhibits related to the development of the Gaelic sports — hurling, football, camogie, handball and road bowling and a photo gallery depicting the great Gaelic names of the past.

Tel: 00 353 1 855 8176.

 

Casino Marino, Dublin 3

Designed for Lord Charlemont by Sir William Chambers, this neo-classical masterpiece in north Dublin is a beautifully designed house.

The ‘casino’ has nothing to do with gambling, by the way. It’s the Italian diminutive for ‘casa’ or house.

The renaissance splendour of the place still shines through. In fact it’s a pity that the chap it was built for, Lord C, never actually set foot in Ireland.

Tel: 00 353 1 8331618.

 

Church of St. Aengus, Burt, Co. Donegal

This masterpiece by the late Liam McCormick is the finest modern church in Ireland. Its circular stone-walled exterior was inspired by the pre-Christian Grianán Aileach nearby. Inside, a wonderful mixture of light and ornamentation above the altar gives a beautiful, serene atmosphere to the entire building.

 

Down on the farm

Céide Fields Visitor Centre is the most extensive Stone Age site in the world. Five miles west of Ballycastle, Co. Mayo, there are burial sites and field systems dating back 5,000 years.

Part of the bog has been cut away to reveal the collapsed stone walls of the ancient fields and there’s an interpretative centre where you can get an idea how our early ancestors lived.

Tel 00 353 (0) 96 43325.

 

Observation Tower, Smithfield Village, Dublin.

The glass pod atop the old Jameson distillery chimney has inevitably become known as ‘the flue with a view’.

Since Nelson departed his column somewhat suddenly in 1966, this vantage point has the best view in Dublin. From the top you can see as far north as Howth Head, and as far south as Killiney Beach.

Tel: 00 353 1 817 3820.

 

Waterfront Hall, Belfast

This sleek building on the banks of the Lagan, overlooking the Harland and Wolff shipyards where the Titanic was built, presents concerts, theatre — or just an exceptionally good cup of coffee. It’s reminiscent of some of the buildings making up the South Bank in London but with Belfast Lough added. Designed by Robinson MacIlwaine, this circular building is the match of anything in Europe.

 

Pay a flying visit

During the 1930s and early 1940s Foynes in Co. Limerick was the pivotal point for air traffic between North America and Europe, what is now called a hub airport.

But way back then flying was a more rigorous business than today, so it’s no wonder that Irish coffee was invented here — to fortify the doughty air travellers.

The Foynes Flying Boat Museum recalls this era with exhibits and illustrations, a 1940s style cinema and the original terminal building.

 

Hunt Museum The Hunt’s over

If you’re looking for a truly absorbing museum, pay a visit to the Hunt Museum, an internationally important collection of some 2,000 original works of art and antiquity, from Stone Age to the 20th century, including a bronze horse by Leonardo da Vinci, and paintings by Renoir, Picasso and Yeats. The museum also features an extraordinary medieval curio — a medal allegedly made out of one of the thirty pieces of silver given to Judas for betraying Jesus. And there it is, right in the middle of Limerick!

 

Westport House, Co. Mayo

Westport House should be visited not least because of its magnificent setting on the edge of Clew Bay. Thackeray described the scenery hereabouts as “the most beautiful in the world” and it would be hard to disagree with old Billy Makepeace. The mainland of Ireland suddenly stops here and the land appears to have shattered into thousands of tiny misty and mystical islands.

Westport is the largest and most important country house west of the Shannon and remains in the possession of the family that built it.

Since the late 18th century, visitors have marvelled at the building’s ‘up yours’ style of architecture.

It used to have a beautiful demesne but sadly, as is the way of these things in Ireland, this has been seriously mutilated by development in recent decades.

Newgrange Passage Tomb, Co. Meath

Brú na Bóinne is quite simply one of the finest structures in Europe and one of the oldest buildings in the world.

These passage tombs, approximately 5,000 years old, are probably the oldest man-made structures still surviving.

At the winter solstice, December 21, the main passage tomb is strikingly lit up for 17 minutes by the rising sun.

A visit to this place leaves you wondering about our ancient ancestors and their subtle aptitude for engineering, incorporating art, science and spirituality.

 

Creggandeveskey Court

A beautifully-situated court tomb in Co. Tyrone, quite difficult to reach by foot but worth every footstep of the way. Nearby is a well preserved Mass-stone from a much later period when Irish people were prevented by the penal code of openly practising their religion.

The Poulnabrone Portal dolmen in Co. Clare is what is known in archeological circles, indeed stone circles, as a single-chambered megalithic tomb.

These gaunt stone structures occur in many parts of Ireland but this one in its spectacular setting on the Burren makes it a Stonehenge, in southern England was built in approximately 1800 BC, more than 1,000 years after Newgrange had been built.

It’s exact purpose is unknown but there are persistent, although unfounded, theories that some of the rocks used in the construction originated in the area of Naas in Co. Kildare.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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