Welcome to Listowel




 

 

 

 


Attractions:

 

Childers Park


  • Better known locally as "The Cow's Lawn" this fine municipal park is used by the local Tennis Club, Pitch and Putt Club, Rugby, Cricket and Football clubs. Serious athletes as well as others use the paths through this 30 acre park to train, jog or just stroll. Visitors and locals play indoor soccer, badminton or basketball in the Community Centre, which also has a well equipped health and leisure centre.



    Kerry Literary and Cultural Centre: The Seanchaí – Kerry Literary & Cultural Centre is a visitor attraction in the Heritage Town of Listowel which presents the works of the great Kerry writers in a unique audio-visual experience. Located in a 19th century Georgian residence in Listowel’s magnificent Square, the Centre features five of the County Kerry’s most esteemed writers – John B. Keane, Bryan McMahon, George Fitzmaurice, Brendan Kennelly and Maurice Walsh. The writings of these national and internationally renowned literary figures are filled with an abundance of rich characters, humour, romance and tragedy drawn from the towns and villages of North Kerry. The words of the writers will make you laugh and cry, but above all you will come away from your visit to Seanchaí with a sense of the people and places that shaped Kerry’s literary genius.
    A Guide to the Centre is available in 6 languages – English, French, German, Spanish, Italia & Japanese, and guided tours are available for group bookings.


    The Seanchaí


    Seanchaí pronounced “shan-a-key” comes from the Irish language and means ‘Storyteller’. “Storytelling is the oldest form of entertainment. In ancient Ireland the ‘Seanchaí’ was held in such high regard, he sat at the table with the King himself.” So said Eamon Kelly, Ireland’s most famous ‘Seanchaí’ of the long tradition of storytelling.
    St. John’s Art and Heritage Centre:  Listowel host a number of music performances annually, from traditional to classical. Theatre, Music, Dance & Visual Arts, featuring the best of local, nation and international product in Theatre, Music, Dance & Exhibitions. Annually St John's hosts approximately 160 Arts events comprising of 80 theatre presentations, 60 music/dance events and 20 exhibitions. Youth Performance workshops in Drama, Music, Contemporary Dance and traditional Arts cater for approximately 150 Primary and Post Primary students weekly during the school year. A drama summer school runs in July and August.

    Listowel Castle:

    This 12th century castle is now attached to the Kerry Literary and Cultural Centre. It was built as a fortress by the Anglo Norman Earls of Kerry. It ceased to be a significant defence in 1559. All that remains of this national monument is the fine facade which has been painstakingly restored in recent years and is floodlit at night. The Kerry Literary and Cultural Centre, located next door to the castle, opened to visitors in Summer 2000. It features exhibits dedicated to the work of local writers.

    The Garden of Europe:

    The garden is laid out in 12 divisions representing the countries that formed the European Union in 1992. The garden has two focal points. At the top of the garden there is a splendid bust (almost twice the life size) of the poet Schiller who was the author of "Ode to Joy" which is the unofficial anthem of the European Union. At the lower end of the garden there is a monument to the memory of those who died in the Holocaust and to all victims of injustice and oppression .

    The Lartigue Monorailway:

    The Listowel Ballybunion Railway opened on 1st March 1888; it ran the ten miles between the two towns and was remarkable because it was the first monorailway in the world. After much work and fundraising by the committee, work started on the building of the new Lartigue on the site on John B Keane Road in November 2000. The construction work was carried out by an excellent team of FAS employees under the direction of members of the restoration committee and the train went in to operation in June 2003. The railway has about 1000 metres of monorail track, three switches, two turntables and three platforms representing Listowel, Lisselton and Ballybunion.

     

    ListowelIreland’s Literary Capital

    Nestled in the northern half of the County of Kerry, along the beautiful coastal N69 route, known the world over for lush green countryside and peaceful meandering rivers, is located the lively market town of Listowel, situated on the banks of the River Feale. Described as the Literary capital of Ireland, Listowel, and indeed North Kerry has produced an abundance of world famous writers, giving it a uniqueness not to be found in any other part of Ireland. This is reflected in the writings of the late Dr. John B. Keane, one of it’s most famous sons :

    Beautiful Listowel, serenaded night and day by the gentle waters of the River Feale.
    Listowel where it is easier to write than not to write,
    Where first love never dies, and the tall streets hide the loveliness,
    the heartbreak and the moods, great and small,
    of all the gentle souls of a great and good community.
    Sweet, incomparable hometown that shaped and made me.

    Sandwiched between the bustling city of Limerick and the world renowned tourist haven of Killarney, one could be forgiven for dismissing Listowel as another one of the seemingly endless rural towns in Ireland catering more for the strong local farming community, than to the visitor. Home to Kerry Group, one of the worlds largest food producing companies, Listowel is indeed a traditional agricultural centre, however, in recent years the town has recognised the need to look beyond this traditional industry, and develop its strong cultural identity for the economic benefit of the town. Central to this has been the development of a number of major tourist attractions in the town including the Seanchaí – Kerry Literary & Cultural Centre & the Lartigue Monorailway, and the designation of Listowel as a Heritage Town in 2000, one of only 26 Heritage Towns in Ireland.

    Listowel is acclaimed nationally and internationally as a place of literary excellence. Its writers, poets and playwrights have captured the essence of rural Ireland – to make us laugh or weep, or simply wonder. To honour this great literary talent, The Seanchaí Centre opened in 2001 and encompasses an audio-visual interpretative museum on the great North Kerry writers including John B. Keane, Bryan MacMahon, Brendan Kennelly, Maurice Walsh & George Fitzmaurice. Located in a magnificently restored 19th century Georgian residence in Listowel’s Town Square, Seanchaí is a museum of words & spirit where the imaginative worlds of the great Kerry writers are evoked.

    The Seanchaí Room entices the visitor to sit and listen to the history of storytelling in Ireland and how it was the precursor to the written word. This is exemplified in Ireland’s most famous storyteller, Eamon Kelly, himself a Kerryman. ‘Storytelling’, he claims, ‘is the oldest form of entertainment. It was practised before the written word. The stories were handed down from generation to generation, and in ancient Ireland the seanchai was held in such high esteem that he sat at the same table as the king.’

    Take a journey with the Kerry writers through historical and scenic North Kerry in a stunning audio-visual presentation in the Landscapes Room. Learn about the places, people, traditions and customs that influenced the writers in their works – from the harshness of the Atlantic waves crashing against Ballybunion’s rugged cliffs to the magnificent spectacle of the Wren Boys as they perform through the streets of Listowel.

    Travelling through the Centre pause and read from the many writers of Kerry; from the experiences of the Great Blasket Islanders - Peig Sayers, Thomas O’Criomhthain and Muiris O’Suilleabhain - to the humorous verse of Robert Leslie Boland.

    When a Listowel man takes a drink from any tap in this lovely town
    ‘Tis not only water thats going down, but the purified secrets of the dead
    Flowing into his belly and through his head
    No town here or in any land will do this for your body and mind
    Inspiration flows through the graveyard sod
    Turn a tap in Listowel, out flows God!
    Brendan Kennelly


  • Listowel’s unique railway, the Lartigue Monorailway will open to the public in May 2003. Approved on the 16th April, 1886, under the Listowel and Ballybunion Railway Act, the Lartigue Monorailway was reputed to be the only one of its type in the world and was characterised by an engine and carriages which ran along a single rail which stood approximately 3 feet off the ground and ran through the centre of the train. Designed by French engineer Charles Lartigue, the idea of a monorail was conceived by him after viewing camels carrying goods across the Sahara Dessert.

    The Lartigue Monorailway was the first stage of travel for many of North Kerry’s emigrants. The railway was disbanded in 1924 as the damage caused to it during the War of Independence was irreparable, and the company became bankrupt and went into liquidation.

    A reconstructed passenger model of the Lartigue Monorail will run along a 1 km track in Listowel at the site of the old Great Southern Railway. Visitors will get the chance to go back in time and experience this unique mode of transport, not to be witnessed anywhere else in the world.

    A Lartigue Story

    To catch the Lartigue between Listowel & Ballybunion, one did not have to go to the nearest station as the train would stop anywhere on request. About two miles from Listowel the line passed close to a thatched cottage from which the lady of the house – Mamie – often took the train to town. One day when the train was passing the house Mamie was outside tackling her little donkey to his cart. The driver of the LARTIGUE – Jackie Riedy haled her : “Aren’t you coming with us today Mamie”? to which she replied : “Yerra no Jackie, I’m in a bit of a hurry today”!

    This does not necessarily mean that the donkey would travel faster than the train but probably to the fact that when her business in Listowel was completed that she would have to wait for the next train to Ballybunion.

    Listowel has a long history dating back to 1303 where it first appears in the Plea Roll. Fortress to the Fitzmaurice family the town developed around Listowel Castle, and its magnificent Square is one of its many distinguishing features.

    As you walk around the Square you will see a number of buildings of historical and architectural significance. Listowel Castle dating back to the 15th century, was built as a fortress by the Anglo Norman Earls of Kerry. It ceased to be a significant defence in 1559. All that remains of this national monument is a fine twin tower façade. Dúchas, The Heritage Service are currently undertaking conservation work on the Castle which will make it accessible to the public.

    St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church, built in 1829, is situated in the corner of the Square, and renovation work over the years included the addition of the spire and porch in 1865 and the side aisles in 1910. According to local folklore, Lord Listowel prevailed upon the clergy to ring the Angelus bell at 7.00 p.m. so that he could get an extra hours work from his men.

    A distinctive feature of the streets of Listowel is the colour and variety of its shop front designs. Most notable are The Maid of Erin in The Square, The Harp & Lion and The Emporium in Church Street. These unique items of plasterwork are the work of local craftsman Pat McAuliffe (1846-1921). The Maid of Erin depicts a Romantic image of Mother Ireland surrounded by a harp, a wolfhound and other symbols of Eire.

    There are two walking trails around the town. The Riverside Path (4 km) takes you along the River Feale and traverses many distinctive features of the town including Listowel Bridge, the Dandy Lodge, Childers Town Park and The Garden of Europe.

    Winner of the 2000 Tidy Towns National Landscapes Award, the Garden of Europe is a place of beauty and peace where one may relax amid representative shrubbery from any European countries. It also contains a public monument to the memory of the millions who died in the Holocaust.

    The Old Railway Trail (11 km) commences at the old railway station, on the Ballybunion road, and takes the walker into the countryside through wild bogland where turf cutting takes place.

  • This graveyard, whose name literally means "little white churchyard", lies about a quarter of a mile outside Listowel on the road to Ballybunion. This is our local reminder of the terrible years of 1845-'47 when famine ravaged the countryside and many thousands of the bodies of starved and diseased Irishmen were buried in mass graves, without benefit of shroud or coffin.

  • Interesting Links:

    www.listowel.ie

    North Kerry

    Fáilte Ireland

    Writers Week

    Listowel Races

    Seanchai Center

    Heritage Ireland

    Travel Ireland

     

     

     

     

     

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