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Stair na hÉireann | History of Ireland

Stair na hÉireann | History of Ireland

Irish History, Culture, Heritage, Language, Mythology

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Tag: Bridges or Ross

Bridges of Ross | Ross, Co Clare

05/11/2022.Reading time 1 minute.

The Bridges of Ross are located on the western side of Ross Bay near the village of Kilbaha and 8km from Carrigaholt in Co Clare. Originally there were three ‘bridges’ or sea stacks but only one remains today. Walk the couple of hundred meters from the car park to view the remaining sea stack as it cannot […]

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Bridges of Ross | Ross, Co Clare

05/11/2021.Reading time 1 minute.

The Bridges of Ross are located on the western side of Ross Bay near the village of Kilbaha and 8km from Carrigaholt in Co Clare. Originally there were three ‘bridges’ or sea stacks but only one remains today. Walk the couple of hundred meters from the car park to view the remaining sea stack as it cannot […]

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Stair na hÉireann/History of Ireland

Stair na hÉireann/History of Ireland

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#OTD in 1941 – Death of painter, Sir John Lavery, in Kilkenny. Best known for his portraits, Belfast-born Lavery attended the Haldane Academy in Glasgow, Scotland, in the 1870s and the Académie Julian in Paris in the early 1880s.
Fáilas
Ireland 1845-52 | The Mersey Ship - “We could be buried along with our people, in the old churchyard, with the green sod over us, instead of lying like rotten sheep thrown in a pit, and the minute the breath is out of our bodies, thrown into the sea to be eaten up by them horrid sharks.” Robert Whyte "I spent a considerable part of the day watching a shark that followed in our wake with great constancy... the mate said it was a certain forerunner of death." From The Truth Behind The Irish Famine, 100 images, 472 eye witness quotes: www.jerrymulvihill.com
Nollaig na mBan Shona Daoibh!
#OTD in 1986 – Death of singer, bassist, instrumentalist, and songwriter, Phil Lynott.
Ireland 1847 | Asenath Nicholson “I gave a little boy a biscuit, and a thousand times since have I wished that it had been thrown into the sea; it could not save him. He took it between his bony hands, clasped it tight, and half-bent as he was, lifted them up, looked with his glaring eyes upon me, and gave a laughing grin that was truly horrible. The curate turned aside, and beckoned me away. ‘Did you see that horrid attempt to laugh? I cannot stay longer, was my answer’.” Taken from The Truth Behind The Irish Famine, 100 images, 472 eye witness quotes. Signed copies at: www.jerrymulvihill.com

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Stair na hÉireann – History of Ireland

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