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Dundalk
 

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Although DUNDALK has a reputation as a tough border town, home to uncompromising Republicanism, it still has enough interest to justify a visit. Starting life in legendary prehistory as a fort guarding a gap in the mountains to the north ( DA?n Dealga, the "Fortress of Dealga"), it became in turn a Celtic, Norse, Anglo-Norman, Jacobean and finally Williamite stronghold. This hard tradition seems still to hang over the town, and it never seems a place where you - or for that matter the locals - can feel fully at ease (having said that, the town has some excellent pubs ).

As far as sights go, the outstanding one is the nineteenth-century Neoclassical courthouse , whose open Doric portico leads in to an airy, classically proportioned interior. In the plaza outside, the Guardian Angel or motherland statue is unequivocally dedicated to "the martyrs in the cause of liberty who fought and died in the struggle against English Tyranny and foreign rule in Ireland" - a far cry from the monument of gratitude in Ardee. St Patrick's Cathedral in Francis Street is also worth a look while you're here: its cornucopia of embellished towers, turrets and crenellated walls is a reasonably successful imitation of King's College Chapel, Cambridge. Inside are some rich mosaics using gold pieces in abundance to depict biblical stories.

Louth County Museum (Tues-Sat 10.30am-5.30pm, Sun 2-6 pm; A?2/a?¬2.54), in a warehouse on Jocelyn Street (beside the tourist office), uses a variety of artefacts and documents to tell the stories of local industries, from coopering to cigarettes. The museum is an uneasy mix of high-tech display and poorly labelled exhibits, but there is a wealth of material here. During the 1960s, Henkel bomber cockpits were sent over to Dundalk to be made into bubble cars - you'll find a 1966 model on the first-floor landing. The top two floors have recently been set aside to house a new exhibition that focuses on the area's rich Stone Age history.

Should you wish to see, a well-designed and well-maintained Irish Modernist building, head for the 1970 Carrolls tobacco factory , designed by Scott Tallon Walker. A mile south of Dundalk on the Dublin road (N1), it is fronted by a striking sculpture by Gerda Froemmel reflected in an artificial lake, and contains an impressive collection of modern Irish art .


Other useful information for tourists (each section contains more specific sub-sections):




Ireland,
Dundalk