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Tralee



 
 
Tralee is the county town of County Kerry
County Kerry

County Kerry is a southwestern county in Republic of Ireland. Informally referred to as The Kingdom, it forms part of the provinces of Ireland of Munster....
, in the southwest corner of Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Ireland is an Island country in north-western Europe. The modern Sovereignty state occupies about five-sixths of the island of Ireland, which was partitioned by the British on 3 May 1921....
. The name Tralee comes from the Irish 'Trá Lí', or 'Trá Laoi', which means 'strand of the Lee' (river), although some believe it comes from the Irish 'Trá Liath' meaning 'grey strand'. The town is situated on the northern side of the neck of the Dingle Peninsula
Dingle Peninsula

The Dingle Peninsula is located in County Kerry and is the most westerly point of Ireland....
. Tralee is the largest town in Kerry. The town's population including suburbs was 22,744 in the 2006 census.
ated at the confluence of some small rivers and adjacent to marshy ground at the head of Tralee Bay
Tralee Bay

Tralee Bay is located in on the west coast of County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It is situated between Kerry Head on the north side and the Maharees on the west and extends eastwards as far as the bridge at Blennerville....
, Tralee is located at the base of a very ancient roadway that heads south over the Slieve Mish Mountains
Slieve Mish Mountains

The Slieve Mish Mountains are a mountain range found in County Kerry in the Republic of Ireland. Overlooking Tralee Bay on the northern side and Dingle Bay on the south, they extend for approximately 19 km from east to west....
.






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Tralee is the county town of County Kerry
County Kerry

County Kerry is a southwestern county in Republic of Ireland. Informally referred to as The Kingdom, it forms part of the provinces of Ireland of Munster....
, in the southwest corner of Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Ireland is an Island country in north-western Europe. The modern Sovereignty state occupies about five-sixths of the island of Ireland, which was partitioned by the British on 3 May 1921....
. The name Tralee comes from the Irish 'Trá Lí', or 'Trá Laoi', which means 'strand of the Lee' (river), although some believe it comes from the Irish 'Trá Liath' meaning 'grey strand'. The town is situated on the northern side of the neck of the Dingle Peninsula
Dingle Peninsula

The Dingle Peninsula is located in County Kerry and is the most westerly point of Ireland....
. Tralee is the largest town in Kerry. The town's population including suburbs was 22,744 in the 2006 census.

History

Croppy Boy
Tralee Courthouse
Ashe Memorial Hall
Situated at the confluence of some small rivers and adjacent to marshy ground at the head of Tralee Bay
Tralee Bay

Tralee Bay is located in on the west coast of County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It is situated between Kerry Head on the north side and the Maharees on the west and extends eastwards as far as the bridge at Blennerville....
, Tralee is located at the base of a very ancient roadway that heads south over the Slieve Mish Mountains
Slieve Mish Mountains

The Slieve Mish Mountains are a mountain range found in County Kerry in the Republic of Ireland. Overlooking Tralee Bay on the northern side and Dingle Bay on the south, they extend for approximately 19 km from east to west....
. On this old track is located a large boulder sometimes called Scotia's Grave
Scotia's Grave

Scotia's Grave or Scota's grave is a large natural boulder located just south of Tralee in County Kerry beside the Finglas rivulet. It marks what is reputed to be the grave of a daughter of an Egyptian Pharaoh known as Scota....
, reputedly the burial place of an Egyptian Pharaoh's daughter. The Norman town was founded in the 13th century by Anglo-Normans and was a stronghold of the Earls of Desmond
Earl of Desmond

The title of Earl of Desmond has been held historically by lords in Ireland, first as a title outside of the peerage system and later as part of the Peerage of Ireland....
. A medieval castle and Dominican order
Dominican Order

The Order of Preachers , after the 15th century more commonly known as the Dominican Order or Dominicans, is a Roman Catholic religious order founded by Saint Dominic in the early 13th century in France....
 Friary were located in the town. The mediaeval town was burnt in 1580 in retribution for the Desmond Rebellions
Desmond Rebellions

The Desmond Rebellions occurred in between 1569-1573 and 1579-1583 in Munster in southern Ireland.. They were rebellions of the Earl of Desmond dynasty—the Fitzgerald family or Geraldines and their allies against the efforts of the Elizabethan Era English government to extend their control over the province of Munster....
 against Elizabeth I
Elizabeth I of England

Elizabeth I was List of English monarchs and Queen of Ireland from 17 November 1558 until her death. Sometimes called The Virgin Queen, Gloriana, or Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth was the fifth and last monarch of the House of Tudor....
. Tralee was granted to Edward Denny by Elizabeth I in 1587 and recognised by royal charter
Royal Charter

A royal charter is a charter granted by a Monarch to create institutions or other forms of incorporated bodies . In the United Kingdom legal tradition a royal charter is in the form of letters patent....
 in 1613.

Sir Edward Denny, 4th Baronet
Sir Edward Denny, 4th Baronet

Sir Edward Denny, Bart.His family motto "Act Mea Messis Erit" ? "in age my harvest shall be".Born 2 October 1796, he was the eldest son of the 3rd Baronet of Tralee Castle, Co....
 was a notable landlord in his day: especially during the time of the Great Famine when instead of increasing his rents as so many landlords did at that time he maintained rents to suit his tenants. He was a notable Plymouth Brother
Plymouth Brethren

The Plymouth Brethren is a conservative, Evangelicalism Christian restorationist New religious movement, whose history can be traced to Dublin, Ireland, in the late 1820s....
.

A monument commemorating the 1798 rebellion
Irish Rebellion of 1798

The Irish Rebellion of 1798 , or 1798 rebellion as it is known locally, was an uprising in 1798, lasting several months, against United Kingdom and its subject Kingdom of Ireland....
 – a statue of a Pikeman by Albert Power – stands in Denny Street.

The modern layout of Tralee was created in the 19th century. Denny Street, a wide Georgian
Georgian architecture

Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking world to the set of architectural styles current between 1720 and 1840. It is eponymous for the first four Monarchy of the United Kingdom of the House of Hanover—George I of Great Britain, George II of Great Britain, George III of the United Kingdom, and George IV of the...
 street was completed in 1826 on the site of the old castle.

Tralee courthouse was designed by Sir Richard Morrison and built in 1835. It has a monument of two cannons commemorating those Kerrymen who died in the Crimean War
Crimean War

The Crimean War, also known in Russia as the Oriental War was fought between the Russian Empire on one side and an alliance of France, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Kingdom of Sardinia, and the Ottoman Empire on the other....
 (1854–56) and the Indian Rebellion
Indian Rebellion of 1857

The Indian Rebellion of 1857 began as a mutiny of sepoys of British Honourable East India Company's army on 10 May 1857, in the town of Meerut, and soon erupted into other mutinies and civilian rebellions largely in the Upper Gangetic Plains moist deciduous forests and central India, with the major hostilities confined to present-day Uttar Pr...
 (1857).

The Ashe Memorial Hall sits at one end of Denny Street, dedicated to the memory of Thomas Ashe
Thomas Ashe

Thomas Patrick Ashe born in Lispole, County Kerry, Ireland, a teacher, was a member of the Gaelic League, the Irish Republican Brotherhood and a founding member of the Irish Volunteers....
 - an Irish Volunteers
Irish Volunteers

The Irish Volunteers was a military organisation established in 1913 by Irish nationalism. Its declared primary aim was "to secure and maintain the rights and liberties common to the whole people of Ireland", in other words, the safeguarding of Irish Home Rule Bill....
 officer in the Easter Rising
Easter Rising

The Easter Rising was a rebellion staged in Ireland during Easter Week, 1916. The Rising was an attempt by militant Irish republicanism to win independence from United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland....
 of 1916. The building is built of local sandstone and houses the Kerry County Museum
Kerry County Museum

Kerry County Museum is a museum located in Tralee, County Kerry in Ireland. The museum is based in the Ashe Memorial Hall in the centre of Tralee....
 and a reconstruction of early Tralee.

The Dominican church of the Holy Cross was designed by the English Gothic Revival architect Augustus Pugin in the 19th century

Tralee saw much violence during the Irish War of Independence
Irish War of Independence

The Irish War of Independence from January 1919 to July 1921 was a guerrilla warfare mounted against the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in Ireland by the Irish Republican Army ....
 and Irish Civil War
Irish Civil War

The Irish Civil War was a conflict that accompanied the establishment of the Irish Free State as an entity independence from the United Kingdom within the British Empire....
 in 1919–1923. In November 1920, the Black and Tans
Black and Tans

The term Black and Tans refers to the Royal Irish Constabulary Reserve Force , which was one of two paramilitary forces employed by the Royal Irish Constabulary from 1920 to 1921, to suppress revolution in Ireland....
 besieged Tralee in revenge for the IRA abduction and killing of two Royal Irish Constabulary
Royal Irish Constabulary

The armed Royal Irish Constabulary was Ireland's major police force for most of the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries. A separate civic police force, the unarmed Dublin Metropolitan Police controlled the capital....
 (RIC) men. The Tans closed all the businesses in the town and did not let any food in for a week. In addition they burned several houses and all businesses connected with Irish Republican Army
Irish Republican Army

The Irish Republican Army was an Irish republican revolutionary military organisation descended from the Irish Volunteers, established 25 November 1913 and who in April 1916 staged the Easter Rising....
 (IRA) activists. In the course of the week, they shot dead three local people. The incident caused major international outcry when reported by the press, who wrote that near famine conditions were prevailing in Tralee by the end of the week.

In August 1922, during the Irish Civil War, Irish Free State
Irish Free State

The Irish Free State was the state established as a Dominion on 6 December 1922 under the Anglo-Irish Treaty, signed by the British government and Irish representatives exactly twelve months beforehand....
 troops landed at nearby Fenit
Fenit

Fenit is a small village in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland, located on north side of Tralee Bay about 10km west of Tralee, just south of the Shannon Estuary....
 and then took Tralee from its Anti-Treaty garrison. Nine pro-Treaty and three anti-Treaty soldiers were killed in fighting in the town before the anti-Treaty forces withdrew. However the republicans continued a guerrilla campaign in the surrounding area. In March 1923 an infamous atrocity was carried out by Free State troops near Tralee when nine anti-treaty IRA prisoners were taken from the prison in Tralee and blown up with a land mine at nearby Ballyseedy
Ballyseedy

Ballyseedy, is a townland in county Kerry, in south west Ireland.It was the scene of an atrocity in the Irish Civil War, where eight anti-Treaty IRA prisoners were killed by their National Army captors....
.

Tourism

Tralee is a major tourism destination and has seen some €55 million of tourism investment over the past several years. The town has developed a range of quality all weather visitor attractions. Tralee is also famous for the Rose of Tralee
The Rose of Tralee

The Rose of Tralee festival is an international competition which is celebrated among Irish communities all over the world. The festival takes its inspiration from a nineteenth century Ireland ballad of the same name about a woman called Mary, who because of her beauty was called 'The Rose of Tralee'....
 International Festival which is held annually in August.

Places of interest

  • Kerry County Museum
    Kerry County Museum

    Kerry County Museum is a museum located in Tralee, County Kerry in Ireland. The museum is based in the Ashe Memorial Hall in the centre of Tralee....
     – incorporating the theme park 'Kerry: The Kingdom' and an exhibit which depicts life in medieval Geraldine Tralee.
  • Siamsa Tíre – Ireland's National Folk Theatre, offering traditional music and plays in Irish
    Irish language

    Irish , also known as Irish Gaelic, is a Goidelic languages of the Indo-European language family, originating in Ireland and historically spoken by the Irish people....
    .
  • Blennerville Windmill
    Blennerville Windmill

    Blennerville Windmill is a tower mill in Blennerville, County Kerry. It was built by Sir Rowland Blennerhassett in 1800 but by 1846 had fallen into ruins....
     located about 2 km outside the town, Ireland's largest functioning windmill.
  • Tralee Aquadome – A large indoor water leisure facility with a mini-golf course, located near Fels point, just off the Dan Spring road, at the Western exit from the town. The Slieve Mish Mountains range acts as a pretty backdrop to the site.
  • Tralee-Dingle Railway
    Tralee and Dingle Light Railway

    The Tralee and Dingle Light Railway and Tramway was a 51 km , 914 mm gauge narrow gauge railway running between Tralee and Dingle, with a 10 km branch from Castlegregory Junction to Castlegregory, in County Kerry on the west coast of Ireland....
     – Departures also take place from the Aquadome site for trips on the restored part of the old Tralee to Dingle Railway. Local enthusiasts have brought back an original Hunslet
    Hunslet Engine Company

    The Hunslet Engine Company is a United Kingdom locomotive-building company founded in 1864 at Jack Lane, Hunslet, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England by John Towlerton Leather, a civil engineering contractor, who appointed James Campbell as his Works Manager....
     steam engine from the USA to relive the days when the Tralee to Dingle line carried goods and passengers along the famous narrow-gauge picturesque route before it was finally closed in 1953. Visitors can take a short train ride in carriages imported from Spain pulled by the puffing Hunslet a few kilometres out to the Tralee Bay village of Blennerville. Here the restored Blennerville Windmill and Museum house a fascinating look into Tralee's historical past as a gateway to the new world in the 19th century. Nearby the Windmill stands the yard where the Jeanie Johnston
    Jeanie Johnston

    The Jeanie Johnston is a replica of a three mast barque that was originally built in Quebec, Canada in 1847 by the Scotland-born shipbuilder John Munn ....
     wooden sailing ship replica was completed in 2002. The new Jeanie Johnston ship is now based in Dublin city docklands.


Archaeological sites

  • Casement's Fort – an ancient Ring Fort where Roger Casement
    Roger Casement

    Roger David Casement , , was an Ireland patriot, poet, revolutionary and Irish nationalism. He was a United Kingdom consul by profession famous for his reports and activities against human rights abuses in the Congo Free State and Peru, but better known for his dealings with Germany before Ireland's Easter Rising in 1916....
     was hiding when arrested.
  • Sheela na Gig
    Sheela Na Gig

    Sheela na Gigs are figurative carvings of naked women displaying an exaggerated vulva. They are found on churches, castles and other buildings, particularly in Ireland and Great Britain, sometimes together with male figures....
     – now located in the Christian Round Tower at Rattoo, a few km north of Tralee.
  • Monument to Saint Brendan
    Brendan

    Saint Brendan of Clonfert or Br?anainn of Clonfert called "the Navigator", "the Voyager", or "the Bold" is one of the early Celtic Christianity saints whose legends reflect their history....
     the Navigator at Fenit – with reproductions of ancient Irish structures
  • Cathair Cun Rí – Iron Age Fort overlooking Tralee Bay
    Tralee Bay

    Tralee Bay is located in on the west coast of County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It is situated between Kerry Head on the north side and the Maharees on the west and extends eastwards as far as the bridge at Blennerville....


In addition to the above, a very considerable number of archaeological sites around Tralee and throughout the County of Kerry, especially ring-forts, are listed for preservation in the new Draft Kerry County Development Plan 2009–15.

Transport


Roads

Tralee is served by National Primary and Secondary roads as well as local routes.

National primary routes:
  • N21 east/north-east to Limerick
    Limerick

    Limerick is the third largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the county seat of County Limerick in the province of Munster, in the midwest of Republic of Ireland....
    , connecting to N22 south-east to Killarney
    Killarney

    Killarney is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland. The town is located north of the MacGillicuddy Reeks, on the northeastern shore of the Lakes of Killarney which are part of Killarney National Park....
    , Cork
    Cork (city)

    Cork is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the Ireland third most populous city after Dublin and Belfast. It is the principal city and administrative centre of County Cork and the largest city in the Provinces of Ireland of Munster....
    .


National secondary routes:
  • N69
    N69 road (Ireland)

    The N69 road is a national secondary road in Republic of Ireland. It runs from Limerick to Tralee and passes though Mungret, Clarina, County Limerick, Kildimo, Askeaton , Foynes, Tarbert, County Kerry and Listowel....
     to Listowel
    Listowel

    Listowel is a market town in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland, and is situated on the River Feale, 28 kilometre from the county town, Tralee....
    , Foynes
    Foynes

    Foynes is a small town and major port in County Limerick in the midwest of Ireland, located at the edge of hilly land on the southern bank of the Shannon Estuary....
     and Limerick
    Limerick

    Limerick is the third largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the county seat of County Limerick in the province of Munster, in the midwest of Republic of Ireland....
  • N70
    N70 road (Ireland)

    The N70 road is a national secondary road in Republic of Ireland. It comprises most of the Ring of Kerry....
     to Killorglin
    Killorglin

    Killorglin is a town on the Ring of Kerry, in County Kerry, Ireland. It is located on the river Laune, which boasts a Sport rowing club and a new boathouse....
    , Ring of Kerry
    Ring of Kerry

    The Ring of Kerry is a tourist trail in County Kerry, south-western Ireland. The route covers the 170 kilometre circular road , starting from Killarney, heading around the Iveragh Peninsula and passing through Kenmare, Sneem, Waterville, County Kerry , Cahersiveen and Killorglin....
     on Iveragh Peninsula
    Iveragh Peninsula

    The Iveragh Peninsula is located in County Kerry in Republic of Ireland. It is the largest peninsula in southwestern Ireland. A mountain range, the Macgillycuddy's Reeks, lies in the centre of the peninsula....
    , Kenmare
    Kenmare

    Kenmare is a small town in the south of County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. The Irish name for the town 'An Neid?n' translates into English as 'The Little Nest'....
  • N86
    N86 road (Ireland)

    The N86 road is a national secondary road in Republic of Ireland. It runs from Tralee to Dingle and passes though Annascaul and Lispole en route....
     to Daingean Uí Chúis
    Dingle

    Dingle is a town in County Kerry in Republic of Ireland on the Atlantic Ocean coast some west-south-west of Tralee and west-north-west of Killarney....
     (Dingle)


Regional roads:
  • R556 (north) to Ballybunion
    Ballybunion

    Ballybunion is a coastal village in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland, 15 km from the town of Listowel. There are castle ruins near the town, although all that remains is a single wall, and two golf courses in the area including the famous Ballybunion Golf Club, a top class Links course founded in 1893 and host course to the Murphys Irish...


Rail

There is a train service to Killarney
Killarney

Killarney is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland. The town is located north of the MacGillicuddy Reeks, on the northeastern shore of the Lakes of Killarney which are part of Killarney National Park....
, Cork
Cork (city)

Cork is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the Ireland third most populous city after Dublin and Belfast. It is the principal city and administrative centre of County Cork and the largest city in the Provinces of Ireland of Munster....
 and Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
 operated by the national railway operator Iarnród Éireann
Iarnród Éireann

Iarnr?d ?ireann is the national railway system operator of Republic of Ireland. Established on 2 February 1987, it is a subsidiary of C?ras Iompair ?ireann ....
. Tralee railway station
Tralee railway station

Tralee railway station serves the town of Tralee in County Kerry.The station, originally named Tralee South, was opened on 18 July 1859. It was given the name Casement on 10 April 1966 in commemoration of Roger Casement, one of the executed leaders of the Easter Rising....
, originally named Tralee South, was opened on 18 July 1859.

Bus

A dedicated bus terminal was built in 2007. Tralee bus station is a regional hub for Bus Éireann
Bus Éireann

Bus ?ireann provides bus services in Ireland with the exception of those operated entirely within the Dublin Region, which are provided by Dublin Bus....
 who provide bus connections to Dublin
Dublin

Dublin is both the largest city and capital of Republic of Ireland. It is located near the midpoint of Ireland's east coast, at the mouth of the River Liffey and at the centre of the Dublin Region....
, Limerick
Limerick

Limerick is the third largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the county seat of County Limerick in the province of Munster, in the midwest of Republic of Ireland....
, Galway
Galway

Galway is the fourth largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the only city in the province of Connacht in Republic of Ireland. The city is located on the west coast of Ireland....
, Cork
Cork (city)

Cork is the second largest city in the Republic of Ireland and the Ireland third most populous city after Dublin and Belfast. It is the principal city and administrative centre of County Cork and the largest city in the Provinces of Ireland of Munster....
, Killarney
Killarney

Killarney is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland. The town is located north of the MacGillicuddy Reeks, on the northeastern shore of the Lakes of Killarney which are part of Killarney National Park....
 and to Dingle
Dingle

Dingle is a town in County Kerry in Republic of Ireland on the Atlantic Ocean coast some west-south-west of Tralee and west-north-west of Killarney....
.

Air

Kerry Airport
Kerry Airport

Kerry Airport , or Aerphort Chiarra? in Irish language, often called Farranfore Airport, is an airport in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland....
 located in Farranfore
Farranfore

Farranfore is a village in County Kerry, Ireland. It lies on the N22 road Roads in Ireland approximately midway between Tralee and Killarney and on the rail transport in Ireland connecting those two towns....
 between Tralee and Killarney
Killarney

Killarney is a town in County Kerry, southwestern Republic of Ireland. The town is located north of the MacGillicuddy Reeks, on the northeastern shore of the Lakes of Killarney which are part of Killarney National Park....
 provides air services to Dublin, London Luton, London Stansted, Manchester and Frankfurt Hahn.

Sea

The local port for Tralee is Fenit
Fenit

Fenit is a small village in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland, located on north side of Tralee Bay about 10km west of Tralee, just south of the Shannon Estuary....
, about 10 km west of the town on the north side of the estuary. Catering for ships of up to 17,000 tonnes, the port is a picturesque mixed-use harbour with fishing boats and a thriving marina (136 berths).

Local media

Newspapers and magazines:
  • Kerry's Eye
    Kerry's Eye

    Kerry's Eye is a weekly local newspaper in County Kerry . It is published every Thursday. It was founded in 1974 by Padraig and Joan Kennelly and has a circulation of over 25,000....
  • The Kerryman
  • The Kingdom
  • Tralee Times


Local radio:
  • Radio Kerry
    Radio Kerry

    Radio Kerry is a full service, licensed radio station that operates from the franchise area of County Kerry in Southwest Republic of Ireland.Radio Kerry was established in 1989 and began broadcasting on July 14 1990....


Sport

  • Na Gaeil GAA club is based in the Oakpark area of Tralee.
  • John Mitchels GAA
    Gaelic Athletic Association

    The Gaelic Athletic Association is an amateur Irish and international cultural and sporting organisation mainly focused on promoting Gaelic games: the traditional Ireland sports of hurling, camogie, Gaelic football, Gaelic handball and rounders....
     club is based in the Boherbee area of Tralee.
  • Kerins O'Rahilly's
    Kerins O'Rahilly's

    Kerins O'Rahilly's are a Gaelic Athletic Association club from Tralee County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. They are based in the Strand Road area of the town....
     GAA club are based in the Strand Road area of the town.
  • Tralee Mitchels
    Tralee Mitchels

    Tralee Mitchels were a Gaelic Athletic Association club in Tralee, County Kerry, Republic of Ireland before the formation of the three Tralee clubs namely John Mitchels GAA Club, Austin Stacks and Kerins O'Rahilly's....
     is a former GAA club.
  • Austin Stacks
    Austin Stacks

    Austin Stacks is a hurling and Gaelic football club based in Tralee in County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It has more All-Ireland Senior Football Championship medals and GAA All-Stars than any other Gaelic Athletic Association club in Ireland....
     GAA club is based at the top of the rock and is famous for players like Mikey Sheehy
    Mikey Sheehy

    Mikey Sheehy is an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship winning Gaelic footballer from County Kerry in Ireland.Born in Tralee, Mikey Sheehy played for the Kerry GAA in the late 1970s and 1980s and was considered to be an extraordinary athlete, who could have played a variety of sports with success....
    , Ger Power
    Ger Power

    Ger Power is a former Republic of Ireland sportsperson who played Gaelic football with Austin Stacks and Kerry GAA in the 1970s and 1980s....
     and Kieran Donaghy
    Kieran Donaghy

    Kieran Donaghy is an Irish Gaelic footballer for Kerry GAA. He plays his club football for Austin Stacks in Tralee. He has also played basketball for Abrakebabra Tigers....
    .
  • Tralee Harriers Athletics Club
Tralee has also formed its very own American Football
American football

American football, known in the United States and Canada simply as football, is a competitive team sport known for mixing strategy with physical play....
 club called the Tralee Titans. They are the first team in Kerry to play this sport and will participate in the Irish American Football League
Irish American Football League

The Irish American Football League is a fully-kitted American football Sports league in Ireland. Founded in 1984, it consists of 9 teams, with 2 having joined the league in 2007....
.

There is also a strong basketball tradition in the Tralee area with Tralee Tigers being the most well known although St. Brendan's have a bigger youth selection. Tigers play in the National League and Cup while St. Brendan's play in league 1. In soccer there are St Brendan's Park, Kingdom Boys, Tralee Celtic and Tralee Dynamos.

Education

In common with all parts of Ireland, most schools at all levels in Tralee are managed and owned by the churches. Tralee Educate Together School is secular, and is neither owned nor managed by any church. At secondary level most schools are explicitly Roman Catholic in ethos, except Gaelcholáiste Chiarraí.

Primary:
  • Tralee Educate Together, Killeen
  • CBS (Scoil na mBráithre), Clounalour
  • St Mary's, Moyderwell
  • Presentation, Castle Street
  • St John's, Ashe Street
  • St John's, Balloonagh
  • Holy Family, Balloonagh
  • Gaelscoil Mhic Easmainn, Rath Ronain
  • St Ita’s and St Joseph’s, Balloonagh (Special Needs)


Secondary:
  • St Mary's CBS (The Green)
    St Mary's CBS (The Green)

    St Mary's CBS is a Congregation of Christian Brothers secondary school in Tralee, County Kerry, Republic of Ireland.The school has around 750 students on roll....
  • Tralee Community College, Clash
  • Mercy Secondary School, Mounthawk
    Mercy Secondary School, Mounthawk

    Background Mercy Secondary School, Mounthawk, is the largest school in Kerry and one of the largest secondary schools in Ireland. It is a Catholic school and has approximately 1,300 pupils and 105 teachers ....
  • Gaelcholáiste Chiarraí, Tobar Mhaigh Dor
  • Presentation Secondary School, Castle Street
  • Brookfield College, Oak Park


Third Level:
  • Institute of Technology, Tralee
    Institute of Technology, Tralee

    Institute of Technology, Tralee is a third-level educational institution located in Tralee, County Kerry, Ireland. It was established in 1977 as the Regional Technical College, Tralee....


Hospitals

  • Kerry General Hospital
  • The Bon Secours Hospital


People

Famous Tralee people include:
  • Brendan
    Brendan

    Saint Brendan of Clonfert or Br?anainn of Clonfert called "the Navigator", "the Voyager", or "the Bold" is one of the early Celtic Christianity saints whose legends reflect their history....
    , monastic saint and navigator
  • Joe Barrett
    Joe Barrett

    Joe Barrett was a Gaelic footballer from County Kerry in Ireland in the 1920s.Barrett won six All-Ireland Senior Football Championship medals with Kerry in 1924, 1926 and the 4-in-row teams of 1929 to 1932, when he was also captain....
    , footballer
  • Daniel Bohane
    Daniel Bohane

    Daniel Bohane is an Irish Gaelic footballer. He plays with the Austin Stacks club of Tralee and is a member of the Kerry GAA county squad. He is a versatile player who can provide cover a a number of positions....
    , footballer
  • Leonard Boyle
    Leonard Boyle

    Father Leonard Eugene Boyle was an Irish and Canada scholar in medieval studies and palaeography and was the first Irish people and North American Prefect of the Vatican Library in Rome from 1984 to 1997....
    , priest and scholar
  • Kieran Donaghy
    Kieran Donaghy

    Kieran Donaghy is an Irish Gaelic footballer for Kerry GAA. He plays his club football for Austin Stacks in Tralee. He has also played basketball for Abrakebabra Tigers....
    , footballer
  • Robert D. FitzGerald
    Robert D. Fitzgerald

    Robert David FitzGerald was an Irish people-Australian surveying, Ornithology, botanist and poet. His father, also Robert David FitzGerald, was a banker, and his mother was Mary Ann, n?e Bell....
    , surveyor, botanist
  • Rea Garvey, singer of Reamonn
    Reamonn

    Reamonn is a Germany rock music and Pop music band that is well known all over Europe. They recorded six albums....
  • Maurice Gerard Moynihan
    Maurice Gerard Moynihan

    Maurice Gerard Moynihan was a senior Irish civil servant, co-drafter of the 1937 Constitution of Ireland, Secretary of the Government of the Irish Free State in 1937, Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland in 1960, and Knight Commander of the Papal Order of St....
    , Secretary of the Free State Government, Governor of Central Bank
  • Joe Keohane
    Joe Keohane (footballer)

    Joe Keohane was an award-winning Gaelic footballer from County Kerry.Born in Kerry, he played for the Kerry GAA and club football for John Mitchells....
    , footballer
  • Sean O'Callaghan
    Sean O'Callaghan

    Sean O'Callaghan is a former member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army who became an informer for the Garda S?och?na and who was later debriefed by the United Kingdom MI5 in the Netherlands....
    , IRA member
  • Christie Hennessy
    Christie Hennessy

    Christie Hennessy was an Ireland folk music singer-songwriter....
    , singer/songwriter
  • Denis O'Donnell
    Denis O'Donnell

    Denis O'Donnell was a well-known entrepreneur in County Kerry, Ireland, in the early 1900s....
    , businessman
  • Patrick Denis O'Donnell
    Patrick Denis O'Donnell

    Patrick Denis O'Donnell, , was an Irish Military history, writer, former United Nations peace-keeper, and retired Commandant of the Irish Defence Forces....
    , military/historian (and known locally as Paddy, or P.D.)
  • Dan O'Keeffe, footballer
  • Ger Power
    Ger Power

    Ger Power is a former Republic of Ireland sportsperson who played Gaelic football with Austin Stacks and Kerry GAA in the 1970s and 1980s....
    , footballer
  • Declan Quill
    Declan Quill

    Declan Quill is an Irish Gaelic football who played with the Kerry GAA and continues to play with the Kerins O'Rahilly's club team in Tralee. A double All-Ireland Senior Football Championship winner, Quill is noted as a talented, skillful and prolific forward....
    , footballer
  • Micheál Quirke
    Micheál Quirke

    Miche?l Quirke is an Irish Gaelic footballer. Quirke plays with the Kerins O'Rahilly's club team and the Kerry GAA....
    , footballer
  • John O'Keeffe
    John O'Keeffe (footballer)

    John O'Keeffe played Gaelic football for the Kerry GAA in the 1970s and 1980s, which won the exceptional four-in-a-row between 1978 and 1981.O'Keeffe won a large number of All-Ireland Senior Football Championship medals....
    , footballer
  • Boyle Roche
    Boyle Roche

    Sir Boyle Roche, 1st Baronet, Member of Parliament was a member of the Irish House of Commons. He is better remembered for the language of his speeches than his politics—they were riddled with mixed metaphors , malapropisms and other unfortunate turns of phrase ....
    , politician
  • Dan Spring
    Dan Spring

    Dan Spring was an Ireland politician who represented the constituency of Kerry North in the D?il, from 1943 to 1981. He was a member of the Labour Party and was the father of Dick Spring, who led the Labour Party from 1982 to 1997....
    , politician, footballer and rugby player
  • Dick Spring
    Dick Spring

    Richard "Dick" Spring , is a businessman and former senior Ireland politician. He was first elected as a Labour Party Teachta D?la in 1981 and retained his seat until 2002....
    , politician, footballer and rugby player
  • Austin Stack
    Austin Stack

    Austin Stack was an Ireland revolutionary.Austin Stack was born in Ballymullen, Tralee, County Kerry. He was educated at the Congregation of Christian Brothers School in Tralee....
    , revolutionary and footballer
  • Mikey Sheehy
    Mikey Sheehy

    Mikey Sheehy is an All-Ireland Senior Football Championship winning Gaelic footballer from County Kerry in Ireland.Born in Tralee, Mikey Sheehy played for the Kerry GAA in the late 1970s and 1980s and was considered to be an extraordinary athlete, who could have played a variety of sports with success....
    , footballer
  • Tommy Walsh
    Tommy Walsh (Kerry footballer)

    Tommy Walsh is an Irish Gaelic footballer with the Kerins O'Rahilly's club team and Kerry GAA senior and U21 teams. He is the son of former Kerry player Se?n Walsh ....
    , footballer
  • Gareth Mannix
    Gareth Mannix

    A native of County Kerry, Producer/Engineer Gareth Mannix has a considerable list of credits to his name. He has worked on platinum albums by Jerry Fish and the Mudbug Club, Damien Dempsey, Jack L and Juliet Turner....
    , Sound Engineer/Producer


Politics

  • Tralee has a town council
    Town council

    A town council is a democratically elected form of government for small municipality or civil parishes. A council may serve as both the representative and executive branch....
     with twelve members.


Sister Cities

  • Tralee is twinned with Compton, California
    Compton, California

    Compton is a city in southern Los Angeles County, California, California, United States, south-southeast of downtown Los Angeles, California. The city was incorporated in 1888....
    .


See also

  • List of abbeys and priories in Ireland (County Kerry)
    List of abbeys and priories in the Republic of Ireland

    Abbeys and priories in Ireland lists abbeys, priory, friary or other monastic religious houses in Republic of Ireland. This article does not include foundations in Northern Ireland, which are covered in List of abbeys and priories in Northern Ireland....
  • List of towns and villages in Ireland
  • Market Houses in Ireland
    Market Houses in the Republic of Ireland

    Market Houses are a notable feature of many Irish towns with varying styles of architecture, size and ornamentation making for a most interesting feature of the streetscape....
  • Tralee Bay
    Tralee Bay

    Tralee Bay is located in on the west coast of County Kerry, Republic of Ireland. It is situated between Kerry Head on the north side and the Maharees on the west and extends eastwards as far as the bridge at Blennerville....


External links



Maps