Kylatlea, Mullinahone, E41 RY17

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Kylatlea, Mullinahone, E41 RY17 M802 No.3925 Kylatlea, Mullinahone, E41 RY17 • 4/5 Bedrooms • 2/3 Reception Rooms • 4 Bathrooms • PVC Windows • Oil Central Heating Guide Price €245,000 44 Gladstone Street Clonmel County Tipperary Tel: 052 6121 622 | Fax: 052 6122 601 | Email: [email protected] https://www.pfq.ie/ PSRA Lic No: 001721 Kylatlea, Mullinahone, E41 RY17 An excellent detached dormer residence on a generous site in a good rural location providing convenient access to Clonmel and Kilkenny. The bungalow residence accommodates and entrance hall, sitting room, dining room, kitchen/breakfast room, utility, integrated garage and bedroom/study at ground floor with 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms at first floor. The grounds comprise of lawns and driveway and are ideal for a growing family. Situated with excellent mountain views, the property has PVC windows and oil central heating. This is a great opportunity to purchase a well built, sizable, rural residence. Entrance hall 16'4" (4.98m) x 12'4" (3.76m) Tiles floor, staircase to overhead. Sitting Room 14'4" (4.37m) x 16'6" (5.03m) With bay window, laminate floor, open fire with cast iron and timber surround. Dining Room 13'10" (4.22m) x 17'0" (5.18m) Laminate floor, coving centre rose, double doors to Kitchen/diner. Kitchen/breakfast room 22'5" (6.83m) x 12'9" (3.89m) Tiled floor, fitted units at eye and floor level, integrated electric oven and dishwasher, gas hob and extractor, breakfast counter, solid fuel stove with brick surround, sliding door to rear. Utility 7'9" (2.36m) x 8'7" (2.62m) Laminate floor, work top, plumbed for washing machine and dryer. Shower Room 7'9" (2.36m) x 3'1" (0.94m) wc, whb, shower, tiled floor, part tiled walls. Garage 18'3" (5.56m) x 12'0" (3.66m) Roller door and pedestrian access Study/Bedroom 5 14'3" (4.34m) x 13'5" (4.09m) Laminate floor. Bedroom 1 14'0" (4.27m) x 13'5" (4.09m) Laminate floor. Dressing area 4'0" (1.22m) x 7'7" (2.31m) Laminate floor and a hanging area. En-suite 7'1" (2.16m) x 11'6" (3.51m) wc, whb, electric shower, fully tiles floor to ceiling. Bedroom 2 14'1" (4.29m) x 11'9" (3.58m) Laminate floor. Storage area 4'0" (1.22m) x 5'10" (1.78m) En-suite 7'1" (2.16m) x 5'10" (1.78m) wc, whb, shower, tiled floor and part tiled walls. Main Bathroom 7'10" (2.39m) x 7'9" (2.36m) Large shower, wc, jacuzzi bath, fully tiled floor to ceiling. Bedroom 3 8'10" (2.69m) x 12'9" (3.89m) Laminate floor. Bedroom 4 14'4" (4.37m) x 14'3" (4.34m) Laminate floor, plumbed for en-suite (not completed - 5ft x 6ft 6") 44 Gladstone Street Clonmel County Tipperary Tel: 052 6121 622 | Fax: 052 6122 601 | Email: [email protected] https://www.pfq.ie/ PSRA Lic No: 001721 .
Recommended publications
  • Béal an Átha Review
    Web Senior Hurling Draws Roinn II On Monday the 3rd of February Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Group 4 the draws took place for the County Senior Hurling Championship & County Kilruane JK Ballin- A Mac Portroe Senior Hurling Challenge Cup Round 1. Brackens garry Donaghs The Draw for the North SHC also K’avilla / C.J, took place since the last edition of the review & Holycross Cappa- B D’skeigh Kickhams / B’cahill white Ballina will face Silvermines in the opening Round. Kickhams M’ahone This is a game between the 2012 & 2013 County Intermediate champions. Lorrha / B’lahan / Thurles C Ballina Ballina are in Roinn II of the County Senior Dorrha Dualla Sarsfields Hurling Championship & have been drawn in group Cashel 3 with Borrisokane, Mullinahone & Ballingarry. The Carrick Borris- D King Moneygall Davins okane winners of this group will go into the Preliminary Cormacs Quarter Finals (last 16) of the County Championship, while the bottom team in the group County Senior Hurling Challenge Cup will face a relegation play-off. Round 1 Ballina have been drawn at home in the Toomevara V Borrisokane; Ballingarry V Kilruane County Senior Hurling Challenge Cup (County MacDonaghs; Carrick Davins V Carrick Swans; JK League) against Cashel King Cormacs. This is due to Brackens V Thurles Sarsfields; Moycarkey-Borris V take place on the weekend of March 1st/2nd. Éire Óg Anacarty/Donohill; Burgess V Nenagh Éire The full draw for the County SHC is listed Óg; Clonoulty/Rossmore V Upperchurch/Drombane; below and in all groups it’s Holycross/Ballycahill V Knockavilla/Donaskeigh Round 1: A V B; C V D Round 2: B V C; D V A; Round Kickhams; Silvermines V Loughmore/Castleiney; 3: C V A; B V D Drom/Inch V Templederry Kenyons; Moneygall V Killenaule; Boherlahan/Dualla V Kildangan; Portroe County Senior Hurling Championship Draw V Roscrea; C.J.
    [Show full text]
  • The Wages Book of a Fethard Farmer, 1880-1905
    TIPPERARY HISTORICAL JOURNAL 1994 © County Tipperary Historical Society www.tipperarylibraries.ie/ths [email protected] ISSN 0791-0655 The Wages Book of a Fethard Farmer, 1880-1905 By Cormac 6 Grada This note is based on the wages book of a prominent farmer from the Fethard area, Michael O'Donnell. The wages book, which is in very good condition, contains over 200 pages measuring approximately 13 inches by 6 inches. It is currently in the possession of Michael O'Donnell's grandson, Brian O'Donnell of Garrinch, Fethard.' The book covers a 20-year period between the early 1880s and the early 1990s. All the entries seem to have been made in Michael O'Donnell's own hand. Michael O'Donnell was born in 1851. The eldest of a family of seven, he seems to have acquired the farm at Bannixtown on his marriage; his wife was Maria Josephine, daughter of John Shea of Bannixtown. O'Donnell's father lived on in nearby Kilsheelan until 1895 and his mother until 1902. Michael O'Donnell himself survived to a ripe old age, dying aged 82 years in January 1933. Some years before his death he moved home from Bannixtown to Byrne's Kiln. He handed the farm and house at Bannixtown over to his youngest son Bryan. Bannixtown is situated on good land about four miles east of the town of Fethard, facing south towards Slievenamon. The wages book gives several hints of Michael's prosperity. On a fly-leaf it reports that in 1894 he insured his life for £500, and his houses etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Moycarkey Old Graveyard Headstone Inscriptions
    Moycarkey Old Graveyard Headstone Inscriptions Three Monuments inside the Catholic church. 1 Beneath lie the remains / Of / Revd. John Burke /(native of Borris) / He was born 1809 Ordained priest 1839 / Appointed P P Moycarkey & Borris 1853 /Died 2nd August 1891 /R.I.P. / Erected by the people of Moycarkey. Stonecutter P.J. O'Neill & Co. Gr. Brunswick St, Dublin. 2 Beneath are deposited / The remains of the / Rev Patrick O'Grady /Of Graigue Moycarkey / Died on the English mission / At London /On the 17th of Jan 1887 / Aged 26 years / Erected by his loving father. Stonecutter. Bracken Templemore 3 Beneath / Are deposited the remains of /The Rev Robert Grace P.P. of /Moycarkey and Borris / Who departed this life the 2nd / Of Octr. 1852 / Aged 60 years /Requiescat in pace / Erected by Revd. Richd. Rafter. Stonecutter. J. Farrell Glasnevin. 1 Headstones on Catholic church grounds. 1 Erected by / William Max Esq / Of Maxfort / In memory of / His dearly beloved wife / Margaret / Who died 2nd Novr 1865 / Most excellent in every relation of life / A most devoted wife / And sterling friend / Also the above named / William Max Esq /Died 1st Feby 1867 aged 72 years / Deeply regretted by / A large circle of friends / R.I.P. 2 Very Rev Richard Ryan / Parish Priest / of / Moycarkey, Littleton and Two-Mile-Borris / 1986-2002 / Died 10th January 2002 / Also served God and God’s people / In / Raheny, Doon, Ballylanders / Thurles and Mullinahone / Requiescat in pace. 3 In memory of / Very Rev. Daniel M. Ryan / Born Ayle, Cappawhite November 26th 1915 / Ordained priest Maynooth June 22 1941 / Professor St Patricks College Carlow 1942 – 1947 / Professor St Patricks College Thurles 1947 – 1972 / Parish priest Moycarkey Borris 1972 – 1986 / Associate pastor Lisvernane December 1986 / Died feast of St Bridget February 1st 1987 / A Mhuire na nGael gui orainn.
    [Show full text]
  • Book Reviews
    TIPPERARY HISTORICAL JOURNAL 1994 © County Tipperary Historical Society www.tipperarylibraries.ie/ths [email protected] ISSN 0791-0655 Book Reviews Land, Politics and Society in Eighteenth-Century Tipperary. By Thomas P. Power. (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1993).376 pp. IRf44. The traditional and still widespread view of the eighteenth century, from a Roman Catholic perspective, is one of persecution and suppression. With the increased assertiveness of the catholic nation after 1829, it became useful to emphasise the darkness of the eighteenth century and by contrast to highlight the distance an increasingly triumphant nationalism had come since those dark days. This view of the eighteenth century was in large measure created and propagated by concentrating on the savage letter of penal legislation, and not on the altogether more casual and at times haphazard spirit in which that legislation was enforced. This point of view can be seen in the work of such an important Tipperary historian as Canon William P. Burke. The book under review by the Waterford-born Thomas Power, and based on his 1987 Trinity College Ph.D. thesis, challenges popular assumptions about the eighteenth century, and for exposing one Irish county to academic scrutiny anyone interested in Ireland's past has reason to be grateful to him. It is a comment on the underdeveloped state of local or regional history in Ireland that it is still found necessary to justify such a study, even though the time is long past when comfortable national generalisations on certain topics adequately illuminate the past. By taking this county as his area for study, Dr Power has not only opened out a hitherto murky period but has also cast a new light on the better known nineteenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Co Tipperary Burial Ground Caretakers
    BURIAL GROUND CARETAKER ADDRESS1 Address2 Address3 PHONE NO Aglish Elizabeth Raleigh Aglish Roscrea Co. Tipperary 067 21227 Aglish Thomas Breen Graigueahesia Urlingford Co. Tipperary 056‐8834346 062‐75525 087‐ Annacarthy Pat English Rossacrowe Annacarthy Co. Tipperary 6402221 Annameadle Thomas O'Rourke Annameadle Toomevara Nenagh 067‐26122 Ardcroney‐New Paddy Horrigan Crowle Cloughjordan 087‐ 6744676 Ardcroney‐Old Paddy Horrigan Crowle Cloughjordan Nenagh 087‐6744676 Ardfinnan Alfie & Anne Browne The Boreen Ardfinnan Clonmel 052‐7466487 062‐72456 087‐ Athassel Thomas Boles 6 Ard Mhuire Golden Co. Tipperary 2923148 Ballinacourty Jerome O' Brien 2 Annville Close Lisvernane Co. Tipperary 087‐3511177 Ballinahinch Thomas McLoughlin Grawn Ballinahinch 061‐379186 Ballinaraha James Geoghegan Ballinaraha Kilsheelan Clonmel 087‐6812191 Ballingarry Old Michael Perdue Old Church Road Ballingarry Co. Tipperary 089‐4751863 Ballybacon Alfie & Anne Browne The Boreen Ardfinnan Clonmel 052‐7466487 Ballinree Pat Haverty Lissanisky Toomevara Nenagh 086‐ 3462058 Ballinure Johanna Hayde Creamery Road Ballinure Thurles 052‐9156143 062‐71019 087‐ Ballintemple Kieran Slattery Deerpark Dundrum Co. Tipperary 7934071 Ballycahill Patrick Cullagh Garrynamona Ballycahill Thurles 0504‐21679 Ballyclerihan Old & 052‐6127754 083‐ New Michael Looby Kilmore Clonmel Co. Tipperary 4269800 Ballygibbon Ann Keogh Ballygibbon Nenagh 087 6658602 Ballymackey Pat Haverty Lissanisky Toomevara Nenagh 086‐ 3462058 Ballymoreen No Caretaker 0761 06 5000 Barnane Vacant at present 0761 06
    [Show full text]
  • Information Guide to Services for Older People in County Tipperary
    Information Guide to Services for Older People in County Tipperary NOTES ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ Notes ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________________________________
    [Show full text]
  • The Growth and Development of Sport in Co. Tipperary, 1840 to 1880, Was Promoted and Supported by the Landed Elite and Military Officer Classes
    THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF SPORT IN CO. TIPPERARY, 1840 – 1880 PATRICK BRACKEN B.A., M.Sc. Econ. THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF PH.D. THE INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR SPORTS HISTORY AND CULTURE AND THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORICAL AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES DE MONTFORT UNIVERSITY LEICESTER SUPERVISORS OF RESEARCH: FIRST SUPERVISOR: PROFESSOR TONY COLLINS SECOND SUPERVISOR: PROFESSOR MIKE CRONIN NOVEMBER 2014 Table of Contents List of figures ii List of tables iv Abbreviations v Acknowledgments vi Abstract vii Introduction 1 Chapter 1. Sport and the Military 31 Chapter 2. Country House Sport 64 Chapter 3. The Hunt Community 117 Chapter 4. The Turf : Horse Racing Development and Commercialisation 163 Chapter 5. The Advent of Organised Athletics and Rowing 216 Chapter 6. Ball Games 258 Chapter 7. Conclusion 302 Bibliography 313 i List of Figures Figure 1: Location of Co. Tipperary 10 Figure 2: Starvation deaths in Ireland, 1845-1851 11 Figure 3: Distribution of army barracks in Ireland, 1837 13 Figure 4: Country houses in Co. Tipperary with a minimum valuation of £10, c.1850 66 Figure 5: Dwelling houses of the dispersed rural population valued at under £1, c.1850 66 Figure 6: Archery clubs in Co. Tipperary, 1858-1868 83 Figure 7: Archery meeting at Marlfield House, date unknown 86 Figure 8: Map of Lough Derg, 1842 106 Figure 9: Location of Belle Isle on the shores of Lough Derg, 1842 107 Figure 10: Watercolour of The Fairy on Lough Derg, 1871 109 Figure 11: Distribution of the main hunt packs in Co. Tipperary, 1840-1880 121 Figure 12: Number of hunt meets in Co.
    [Show full text]
  • St Mary's Parish Newslink
    St Mary’s Parish Newslink 29th April 2018 Fifth Sunday of Easter Year B Parish Website: www.stmarysparishclonmel.ie Webcam: cs.tv.live.clonmel Parish Radio Link: 106.5 F.M Church Services Receiving Communion—Darren M. Henson, STL Mass Times: Sundays: As a small faith-sharing group reflected on Sunday Vigil (Sat) 6:15 pm. liturgy, a question arose. How could they enrich re- 10:30 am. 12:00 noon ceiving the Eucharist? Sometimes Holy Communion is Holy Days: moving or comforting. Other times it seems ordinary. When Holy day falls on Mon - Fri While the Eucharist is the source and summit of the Vigil 6:15 pm, Christian life, even the most faithful Catholics experi- 7:45am, 10:00 am and 7pm ence periods when Communion does little to rouse (When Holy day falls on Saturday, Vigil the soul. Getting more out of Communion entails Mass at 6.15pm on Friday) inner spiritual work and engaging the Catholic imagi- 10:00 am, 12noon and 6.15pm nation. The document Happy Are Those Who Are Called to Weekdays: His Supper, prepared by the USCCB in November Mon—Fri 7.45am and 10am 2006, concerns reception of Holy Communion. The Bank Holidays 10am. Saturdays: 10am & 6.15pm Vigil document stresses a double Eucharistic unity: communion with the Risen Christ and with all believers. At Mass, we join our lives to Christ and participate in his Parish Team saving sacrifice. As we receive his body and blood, we encounter the very presence Fr. Billy Meehan: Tel 6122954. of the Risen One.
    [Show full text]
  • August 2021 WELCOME to the TIPPERARY CHILDREN & YOUNG PEOPLE’S SERVICES COMMITTEE PARENTING SUPPORT CALENDAR, JULY – AUGUST 2021
    Parenting Supports in Co. Tipperary: July - August 2021 WELCOME TO THE TIPPERARY CHILDREN & YOUNG PEOPLE’S SERVICES COMMITTEE PARENTING SUPPORT CALENDAR, JULY – AUGUST 2021. THE INFORMATION BELOW IS ORGANIZED UNDER 4 SECTIONS, AS FOLLOWS: Parenting Group Programmes Parenting Supports Parent, Baby & Toddler Groups On-line Resources Please note that services will need to continue to comply with Covid-19 protocols during this period. Any move to face-to-face contact will need to be confirmed through direct contact with the services. Parenting (Group) Programmes Area Details of programme Date of Venue Target Group Contact Commencement Details Duration Northern TLC Kidz Programme To start in Venue in North Children aged Margaret Carroll Blake, section of Groupwork programme for children September/October 2021 Tipperary, to be between 5 -16 years Barnardos Thurles Co. Tipperary and mothers, meeting in separate decided. and their mothers Tel. (0504) 20018 groups, who have experienced from the North of the E-mail: Domestic Violence. county. [email protected] Open for referrals now Northern Strengthening Families Programme: Teenagers, aged 12 – Áine O’Brien, section of Group programme: - To start on 17th Templemore 16 years with parent Community Substance Misuse Co. Tipperary September 2021 or responsible adult, Team - It aims to give parents and their Transport will be residing in Northern children the opportunity to learn provided if new, healthy communication skills - 14 weekly sessions in part of the county. Tel. (061) 318904 needed that create positive relationships the evening 086- 414 1890 within families. These new skills Open to teenagers E-mail: [email protected] also assist and reduce the risk of - 3 hours per session either with or without young people getting involved in Substance Misuse adverse behaviours.
    [Show full text]
  • Roinn Cosanta. Bureau of Military History, 1913-21
    ROINN COSANTA. BUREAU OF MILITARY HISTORY, 1913-21. STATEMENT BY WITNESS. DOCUMENT NO. W.S. 1,380 Witness Patrick Ryan, Kerry Street, Fethard, Co. Tipperary. Identity. 'B' Captain Company 1st Battalion, 3rd Tipperary Brigade, 1917-1921. Subject. Fethard Company Irish Volunteers, Co. Tipperary, 1917-1921. Conditions, if any, Stipulated by Witness. Nil S.2718 File No. FormB.S.M.2 STATEMENT BY PATRICK RYAN, Kerry St.. Fethard, Co. Tipperary, Captain 'B' Company, 1st Battn., 3rd Tipperary Brigade. On a night in the early summer of 1917 I attended a meeting which was held in a place called Downey's Barn at Clamps Castle, Fethard. This meeting was called for the purpose of organising an Irish Volunteer company in Fethard and district, and, if I mistake not, the late Paddy Hogan of Cashel, afterwards Commandant of the 2nd Battalion, Was one of those principally concerned In arranging the meeting. He was certainly present that night and was, as far as I can now remember, the principal speaker. The meeting itself was a small one, as for obvious reasons only a selected number of men were invited to attend. I should say, however, that there were about twenty men present, all of whom agreed to become members of the Volunteer organisation In the election of officers which followed I was elected as Captain of the company, James Keating of Brookhill was elected 1st Lieutenant, James Tierney of Fethard was elected Company Adjutant and Tommy Lee of Fethard was elected Quartermaster. Company There was no activity of note at that time. After the company was formed weekly parades were held, generally at Downey's Barn, and training in foot drill was engaged in.
    [Show full text]
  • Irish Historic Towns Atlas (IHTA), No. 13, Fethard Author
    Digital content from: Irish Historic Towns Atlas (IHTA), no. 13, Fethard Author: Tadhg O’Keeffe Editors: Anngret Simms, H.B. Clarke, Raymond Gillespie Consultant editor: J.H. Andrews Cartographic editor: Sarah Gearty Editorial assistant: Angela Murphy Printed and published in 2003 by the Royal Irish Academy, 19 Dawson Street, Dublin 2 Maps prepared in association with the Ordnance Survey Ireland and the Ordnance Survey of Northern Ireland The contents of this digital edition of Irish Historic Towns Atlas no. 13, Fethard, is registered under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 International License. Referencing the digital edition Please ensure that you acknowledge this resource, crediting this pdf following this example: Topographical information. In Tadhg O’Keeffe, Irish Historic Towns Atlas, no. 13, Fethard. Royal Irish Academy, Dublin, 2003 (www.ihta.ie, accessed 14 April 2016), text, pp 1–12. Acknowledgements (digital edition) Digitisation: Eneclann Ltd Digital editor: Anne Rosenbusch Original copyright: Royal Irish Academy Irish Historic Towns Atlas Digital Working Group: Sarah Gearty, Keith Lilley, Jennifer Moore, Rachel Murphy, Paul Walsh, Jacinta Prunty Digital Repository of Ireland: Rebecca Grant Royal Irish Academy IT Department: Wayne Aherne, Derek Cosgrave For further information, please visit www.ihta.ie FETHARD The small market town of Fethard in Tipperary is located 12 km north of of the thirteenth century. Relatively large even by the standard of urban Clonmel and 36 km south-west of Kilkenny. It nestles at the edge of the low- parish churches at the time in Ireland, this church was laid out with lying catchment area of the River Suir, its historic core sited on an eminence proportions of 2:1, the width of the nave being twice the width of the within a loop of one of that river's small tributaries, the Clashawley.
    [Show full text]
  • The List of Church of Ireland Parish Registers
    THE LIST of CHURCH OF IRELAND PARISH REGISTERS A Colour-coded Resource Accounting For What Survives; Where It Is; & With Additional Information of Copies, Transcripts and Online Indexes SEPTEMBER 2021 The List of Parish Registers The List of Church of Ireland Parish Registers was originally compiled in-house for the Public Record Office of Ireland (PROI), now the National Archives of Ireland (NAI), by Miss Margaret Griffith (1911-2001) Deputy Keeper of the PROI during the 1950s. Griffith’s original list (which was titled the Table of Parochial Records and Copies) was based on inventories returned by the parochial officers about the year 1875/6, and thereafter corrected in the light of subsequent events - most particularly the tragic destruction of the PROI in 1922 when over 500 collections were destroyed. A table showing the position before 1922 had been published in July 1891 as an appendix to the 23rd Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records Office of Ireland. In the light of the 1922 fire, the list changed dramatically – the large numbers of collections underlined indicated that they had been destroyed by fire in 1922. The List has been updated regularly since 1984, when PROI agreed that the RCB Library should be the place of deposit for Church of Ireland registers. Under the tenure of Dr Raymond Refaussé, the Church’s first professional archivist, the work of gathering in registers and other local records from local custody was carried out in earnest and today the RCB Library’s parish collections number 1,114. The Library is also responsible for the care of registers that remain in local custody, although until they are transferred it is difficult to ascertain exactly what dates are covered.
    [Show full text]