Search Results ... (662)
-
View of Bagenalstown Station
View of Bagenalstown Station
View of the station house and platform at Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station, Co. Carlow.
Image courtesy of Carlow County Library, 2005.
-
Plaque to William Dargan
Plaque to William Dargan
The plaque to William Dargan at Carlow Railway Station. This plaque commemorates the engineer and builder of Irish railways, William Dargan. It was erected by the Old Carlow Society, which is now the Carlow Historical and Archaeological Society.
Image courtesy of Carlow County Library, 2005.
-
Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station, 1901
Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station, 1901
Bagenalstown is Eliza's destination. She wants to get off here to visit her cousin Katie, who lives in there. Bagenalstown Station is not as big as Carlow Station.
Image courtesy of Carlow County Library, 2005.
-
John's Bridge
John's Bridge
John's Bridge, Kilkenny
Property of Dr. Brendan Grimes
-
Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station
Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station
View of the station house and platform at Bagenalstown (Muinebheag) Railway Station, County Carlow.
Image courtesy of Carlow County Library 2005.
-
Steam Train
Steam Train
Steam Train. Photo by Rex Murphy 1924.
Photo by Rex Murphy 1924, printed in The Railways of Ireland 1975.
-
Train at Carlow Railway Station
Train at Carlow Railway Station
Black and orange are the existing colours for Irish Rail. However, various shades of green are now used in the newly introduced rolling stock and on the Arrow Routes to Kildare.
© Carlow County Library.
-
Planes Refuelling at Shannon Airport, 1950s
Planes Refuelling at Shannon Airport, 1950s
The first commercial flights left Shannon in 1945. This photograph was taken in the 1950s.
Photograph by Bill Bluett.Courtesy Clare County Library
-
Working on the Sugar Beet Train
Working on the Sugar Beet Train
Irish men working on a sugar beet train.
By permission of Dungarvan Museum.
-
Lighthouse, Scattery Island
Lighthouse, Scattery Island
The present lighthouse on Scattery Island opened in 1872. It replaced a simple iron framework which held a light and was destroyed in a storm just six months after construction.