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The Town of Killarney
The town of Killarney - one of Ireland's best known
tourist destinations - lies adjacent to the boundary of the National
Park on its north-eastern edge. Its name comes from "Chill
Airne", meaning "church of the sloe", the original
site of which is thought to be the location of the present day St.
Mary's Church of Ireland.
The spectacular scenery of the area, particularly
the lakes has been
the basis of a tourism industry that has been operating in Killarney
for at least 200 years, although it was the visit of Queen Victoria
to the area in 1861 that saw the start of the large-scale tourism
that we know today.
The town represents an early example of town planning,
as the Earls of Kenmare (the then major local landowners) took a
keen interest in the development of the town. Thomas Browne, the
4th Viscount Kenmare is generally credited with the development
and extension of the original core area of the town in the mid eighteenth
century, and many early visitors commented on the improvements (such
as wide, paved and regular streets) made at Lord Kenmare's expense.
The most impressive building in the town
is the Cathedral, which was designed by Pugin and finally completed
in the 1920's after some eighty years of construction work.
The town itself is quite small, although the thriving
tourism industry means that the population of the town swells considerably
during the summer months. The total annual number of visitors to
Killarney reaches well over one million, and it is estimated that
up to three quarters of these will spend at least some of their
stay within the National Park.
Despite this, the National Park succeeds in retaining
its 'naturalness', due in part to careful management, and it is
still very easy for the visitor to get away from the crowds if he/she
so desires.
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Killarney National Park
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