37-840: N69 may refer to: Roads [ edit ] N69 road (Ireland) A50 motorway (Netherlands) Negros Occidental Eco-Tourism Highway , in the Philippines Nebraska Highway 69 , in the United States Other uses [ edit ] N69 (Long Island bus) Escadrille N.69 , a unit of the French Air Force Gunbarlang language Northrop N-69 Snark , an American cruise missile Stormville Airport , in Dutchess County, New York, United States Yangman language [REDACTED] Topics referred to by
74-560: A cow was being brought to market, two calves would be sent also, to balance it on the other side. The calves would then be returned, one on either side of the rail. In 2003, a 1000 m long replica of the original monorailway was opened. Listowel was the site of a noted mutiny which occurred during the Irish War of Independence . On 17 June 1920, members of the Royal Irish Constabulary at Listowel police station refused to obey
111-526: A one way traffic system through the town. After Listowel, the N69 terminates at Ballingown when Tralee bypass was opened in 2013. Prior to 2013, it used to go through Tralee. This Irish road or road transport-related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Listowel Listowel ( / ˈ l ɪ s t oʊ l / LISS -tohl ; Irish : Lios Tuathail , meaning 'Tuathal's ringfort ', pronounced [l̠ʲɪsˠ ˈt̪ˠuəhəlʲ] )
148-1582: A series of literary awards. The total prize fund of €35,000 includes the Kerry Group Novel of the Year and The Pigott Poetry Prize. Participants have included: Nobel Laureate and Booker Prize-winner J. M. Coetzee , Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney , Booker Prize winners Kazuo Ishiguro , John Banville , James Kelman and Anne Enright , Poets Laureate Ted Hughes , Carol Ann Duffy , and Andrew Motion , playwrights Tom Murphy , Brian Friel , Roddy Doyle , Frank McGuinness and Hugh Leonard , poets Michael Hartnett , Leland Bardwell , John Montague , Yevgeny Yevtushenko , Nuala Ní Dhomhnaill , Roger McGough , Rita Ann Higgins and Kate Cruise O'Brien , and other novelists and writers including Blake Morrison , Chris Whyte , Lionel Shriver , Colm Tóibín , Jennifer Johnston , John McGahern , Joseph O'Neill , Sebastian Barry , Joseph O'Connor , Hugo Hamilton , Edna O'Brien , Douglas Kennedy , Patrick McGrath , William Trevor , Colum McCann , Gerard Donovan , Frank McCourt , Irvine Welsh , Robyn Rowland , Andrew Lindsay , Michael Cunningham , Jane Urquhart , Anatoly Kudryavitsky , Cees Nooteboom , Michael Dibdin , Abdel Bari Atwan , Clive James , Melvyn Bragg , Alain De Botton , Lloyd Jones , Robert Fisk , Jung Chang , Terry Jones , Gabriel Byrne , and Graham Norton . John B. Keane of Listowel wrote: Beautiful Listowel, serenaded night and day by
185-516: Is a heritage market town in County Kerry , Ireland. It is on the River Feale , 28 km (17 mi) from the county town, Tralee . The town of Listowel had a population of 4,794 according to the 2022 census , the third largest in the county. Listowel is also the name of a townland within the town and an encompassing civil parish . Described by the organisers of Listowel's writers festival as
222-679: Is a leader in global food ingredients and flavours markets, and a leading branded consumer foods processing and marketing organisation in some EU markets. Headquartered in Tralee, the Group employs approximately 290 people at its manufacturing plant in Listowel. Listowel is serviced by many primary, post-primary and post-leaving certificate education facilities. Children between five and twelve are facilitated by Presentation Primary School for girls, Scoil Realta na Maidne, for boys, and Gaelscoil Lios Tuathail, which
259-513: Is a mixed school. The town has two Catholic secondary schools, Presentation Secondary School , Listowel and St. Michael's College . The town is also served by Listowel Community College, a mixed post-primary and post-leaving certificate school and Coláiste na Ríochta, a mixed post-primary school. The town hosts Learning Initiative of North Kerry. The origin of Listowel races can be traced back to an annual gathering at Ballyeigh, Ballybunion, about nine miles from Listowel. This event, which dates to
296-513: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages N69 road (Ireland) The N69 road is a national secondary road in Ireland . It runs from Limerick to Tralee and passes through Mungret , Clarina , Kildimo , Askeaton (bypassed), Foynes , Loghill , Glin , Tarbert , and Listowel . The N22 /N69 Tralee Bypass opened on 16 August 2013. Four kilometres of dual carriageway were added to
333-505: Is now a national monument , and was subject to restoration by the Office of Public Works (OPW) from 2005. OPW tour guides are now based at the castle during the summer tourist season giving free tours of the castle. Another smaller castle at Ballinruddery, Listowel, was built in the post-1600 period by the then Knight of Kerry. Listowel played a role in Irish railway history as it was the site of
370-547: Is within walking distance of the town centre. Founded in 1970, Listowel is home to Ireland's oldest literary festival. North Kerry is the birthplace of many of Ireland's most prominent writers, including John B Keane, Bryan Mac Mahon, Brendan Kennelly, Seamus Wilmot, Gabriel Fitzmaurice, George Fitzmaurice , Maurice Walsh and Robert Leslie Boland. The Writers' Week Festival was established to celebrate those writers and to provide an opportunity for other Irish writers to develop their talents and meet new audiences. The concept of
407-633: The Desmond campaign , Listowel Castle was built in the 15th century and was the last fortress of the Geraldines to be subdued. It fell after 28 days siege to Sir Charles Wilmot on 5 November 1600, who had the castle's garrison executed in the following days. The castle became the property of the Hare family, the holders of the title of Earl of Listowel , after reverting away from the Fitzmaurices, Knights of Kerry . It
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#1732856049390444-521: The Listowel mutiny . The title of Earl of Listowel is associated with the Hare family. The current incumbent Lord Listowel is Francis Michael Hare , one of the 92 hereditary peers elected to the British House of Lords . Holders of the title have included William Hare, 5th Earl of Listowel , who was a Labour politician and served as the last Secretary of State for India and Burma . Another member of
481-566: The Plea Roll where its name took the form of Lystothyl. By 1320 the town is referred to in ecclesiastical tax records, mis-written as Lismokill. In subsequent documents the name of the town is written variously as: Lissmoli, Listuoli, Lystuanyl, Lestovell, Lestowell, Lishtoghill, Listwohill and Listowhil. In the Annals of the Four Masters , in an entry dated 1582, the town first appears as Lios Tuathail,
518-504: The barony of Clanmaurice to the south. Surrounding villages include Asdee , Ballybunion , Ballyduff , Ballylongford , Causeway , Duagh , Lisselton , Lixnaw , Moyvane , Finuge and Tarbert . In July 2000, Listowel was officially designated as one of Ireland's 26 "Heritage Towns" – in part because of modern environmental and renewal works, but also because of its architectural heritage and "historic importance". Listowel's history dates back to at least 1303 when it first appears in
555-509: The "Literary Capital of Ireland", a number of internationally known playwrights and authors have lived there, including Bryan MacMahon and John B. Keane . Listowel is on the N69 Limerick – Foynes – Tralee road . Bus Éireann provides daily services to Tralee, Cork , and Limerick. The nearest railway station is Tralee. Listowel used to have its own railway station on a broad gauge line between Tralee and Limerick city; however, this
592-539: The Irish language. The club has a tradition of GAA involvement and achievement since June 1885 when Listowel GAA (The Feale Amateurs) was established as a GAA branch. In 1956 Emmets GAA Club was formed and in the following year the senior, intermediate and minor North Kerry League titles were won. In 1979, the Listowel Emmets GAA pitch next to St. Michaels College was closed for redevelopment; it re-opened again in 1981, and
629-601: The Listowel LEA, three representing the Fine Gael party, two representing Sinn Féin , one representing Fianna Fáil and one independent councillor. Under the Local Government Reform Act 2014 , as well as being members of Kerry County Council, the six Listowel LEA councillors are also members of Listowel Municipal District Council. As a division of a local authority, a Municipal District can exercise certain powers of
666-562: The Literary Workshop was first introduced at Writers' Week in 1971 by Bryan MacMahon. At the event, writers share their skills in poetry, fiction, theatre, and screen – with workshops in song writing, comic writing and storytelling also subsequently added. Writers' Week also provides a programme of literary events including lectures, readings, workshops, book launches, seminars, theatre, literary and historical tours, art exhibitions, music and dance. Competitions are also held, together with
703-578: The N69, the first such section to be included in this route. The N69 now terminates at the Ballingowan Roundabout on the N22 /N69 Tralee Bypass. The N69 start at Limerick on the N18 west Limerick bypass which was opened in 2010. It pass though the villages of Mungret , Clarina , Ferrybridge and Kildimo . This section of N69 is the busiest with average traffic volumes of 8,000 daily. It passed Askeaton , which
740-512: The commanding officer's orders that they be relocated to police outposts outside of the town. The Black and Tans had occupied the town barracks, forcing the redeployment, something which was both dangerous and hopeless in the face of huge local hostility to the men in question. Police commissioner Colonel Smythe wished that the RIC constables would operate with the army in countering the IRA's fight for freedom in
777-485: The county was chosen as a pilot area for a bovine disease eradication scheme. Allied to this, milk production was further depressed due to wet summer weather in 1979 and in 1980, which meant that Kerry lost almost 20% of its milk supply. This was significant in that it happened at a time when the co-op was in the course of completing a €18 million capital expenditure programme at the NKMP plant in Listowel. Kerry Group today
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#1732856049390814-569: The currently accepted spelling of the Irish Gaelic form of the town's name. Thomas Dineley wrote the English form of the name as 'Listoel' in 1681. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century there were two versions of the name in use, Listowel and Listowell. From the late 19th Century onwards the current spelling of Listowel was generally adopted. Since the foundation of the Irish State in 1922,
851-479: The early nineteenth century, consisted of a variety of games, horse-racing and a pre-arranged faction fight which concluded the event. Due to disturbances surrounding these fights, the meeting at Ballyeigh was suspended and racing transferred to Listowel, where the first meeting took place in 1858. The racecourse is located beside the River Feale, and two of the three entrances to the course are accessed by bridge across
888-717: The family was the Conservative politician John Hare, 1st Viscount Blakenham. He was the third son of the fourth Earl. In the 1970s, many small dairies in Ireland started to merge so as to be able to compete with the larger milk companies within the European Economic Community (which Ireland joined in 1973). Dairies in County Kerry followed suit and Kerry Co-operative Creameries Ltd (Kerry Co-op) began trading in January 1974. In
925-460: The four-arch bridge traversing the River Feale at the entrance to the town. Dating from 1829, according to local tradition this bridge (referred to locally as the "Big Bridge") replaced a smaller wooden structure, which had been destroyed in floods. Local plasterer and builder Pat McAuliffe (1846–1921) used stucco or external plaster to decorate the façades of townhouses and shops in the town and surrounding area. A native of Listowel, McAuliffe created
962-560: 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. The Listowel food Fair has been running annually since 1995. The festival promotes local artisan food products, and attracts celebrity chefs, nutritionists and artisan food entrepreneurs. At Irish local government level ,
999-553: The local authority. At national level, Listowel is part of the five seat of the Kerry Dáil constituency , which returns five TDs to Dáil Éireann . For European Parliament elections, Listowel is located in the Ireland South constituency , which elects five of Ireland's fourteen MEPs . Listowel Emmets is a Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA) club which supports the traditional Irish sport of Gaelic football,plus music, dance and
1036-465: The more rural areas. He suggested while negotiating with the constables that they would be given the power to shoot any suspect on sight. Led by Constable Jeremiah Mee , they refused, both from a point of personal safety and possibly also from a sense of sympathy with their country men struggling against the British forces. The officers were discharged after the mutiny. The episode has come down to be known as
1073-467: The period from 1974 to 1979, Kerry expanded its milk business in a similar fashion to other dairy co-ops. Its milk supply increased from 67 million gallons in 1974 to 87 million gallons in 1978. The new co-op acquired the independent Killarney, Limerick, Mariewasere and Ballinahina Dairies (Cork) which later became part of Kerry's Dawn Dairies structure with the addition of Galway and Moate Dairies. However, in 1979 everything changed for Kerry Co-op when
1110-470: The river. The racecourse is called "the island" by the locals due to this fact. Traditionally it was a meeting where farmers came to spend/gamble the money they made from the harvest but it has since grown into something larger and more wideranging. The Listowel track consists of a 1-mile, 2 furlong mile oval left-handed track with National Hunt fences and hurdles. The hurdle course is adjustable after each day's racing to give new ground. Listowel's racecourse
1147-448: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=N69&oldid=1115317101 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
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1184-507: The town of Listowel is located in the Municipal District of Listowel, which is named after the town. This is one of the six municipal districts in County Kerry , each of which also acts as a local electoral area (LEA) for the purpose of returning members to the local authority. The Listowel LEA currently elects six of the 33 members of Kerry County Council . In the 2019 Kerry County Council election , six councillors were elected from
1221-526: The town's name has been referred to as Listowel in statute law, for example in the Statutory Instrument under the Local Government Reform Act 2014 , when the Municipal District of Listowel was established as one of the six municipal districts in County Kerry. The town developed around a fortress of the Fitzmaurice family, Listowel Castle , and its square. The last bastion against Queen Elizabeth I in
1258-451: The world's first monorail operation. The Listowel and Ballybunion Railway was built to the Lartigue system, with a double-engined steam locomotive straddling an elevated rail. It officially opened on 29 February 1888, with public services beginning on 5 March 1888. It connected the town with Ballybunion . Coaches, with a compartment on either side of the rail, had to be kept balanced. If
1295-405: Was bypassed since 1990 with 5km of good standard road. After passing though port town of Foynes , it also pass though villages of Loghill and Glin before crossing into County Kerry . In Tarbert it has a junction for N67 before left for Listowel . Some sections of road between Listowel and Tarbert have hidden dip and have few sharp bends. The N69 pass busy market town of Listowel which has
1332-459: Was closed to passengers in 1963, to freight in 1978, and finally abandoned and lifted in 1988. The station building has been preserved as a private residence. Listowel is located at the head of the North Kerry limestone plain. Positioned in the very heart of North Kerry, on the River Feale, its hinterland is an area of mainly dairy agricultural use. The barony of Iraghticonnor is to the north, with
1369-664: Was renamed in honour of Frank J Sheehy who was appointed as chairman to the County Board in 1953. Listowel Celtic is the local soccer club, playing in the Premier A division of the Kerry District League . Listowel also has clubs involved in tennis, athletics, rugby, basketball, badminton and cricket. Listowel also hosts a 24hr running race; the Listowel Endurance Festival. Listowel's architectural features include
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