Tipperary Ireland

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Posts tagged river Suir

Town of Carrick-on-Suir

The name Carrick-on-Suir derives from Carraig na Siuire meaning the Rock of the Suir. This is a picturesque town situated on the river Suir. Carrick castle (Tudor Manor), the only one of its kind in Ireland is an Elizabethan fortified mansion. It was one of the prime seats of the Butlers, Earls and Dukes of Ormonde. Tudor Manor was said to have been constructed by Black Tom Butler the 10th Earl to receive Queen Elizabeth I, his cousin. But the Queen never did visit it. There is a bridge built with seven arches in the mid 15th C. The town, with a clock of 1784, once had a flourishing woolen industry and was also noted for brewing and distilling. Of the three Catholic churches in the town, St. Nicholas’ is a romanesque building, the Franciscan church (1822) is gothic and Carrickbeg church which was not completed incorporates features of a 1336 friary and has a doorway with carved heads.

Town of Templemore

This 70-acre town park (part of the former Carden demesne) are the remains of Templemore Abbey and Black Castle is situated on the plain beneath the Western slopes of the Devil’s Bit Mountain. There is a large lake and swimming pool in this park. The upper reaches of the River Suir near the town provides facility for brown trout fishing. The lake in the town park is a store of variety of fish like pike, roach, perch and tench. The North Tipperary Foxhounds are very common here. The once old British (later Irish) army barracks, now fully refurbished as a modern Garda training college is the place to train Ireland’s Gardai (police force).