macraignil wrote: » The church at the end of Summer hill north (Trinity Presbyterian Church) has a small defect in the angle of the stone spire and the story I was told was that the stone mason who built it killed himself due to the embarrassment of making the mistake. The green area in the middle of the old part of UCC (The Quod) should never be crossed by a student as any one who does will never get their degree. One of the first torpedoes developed was first fired in Cork harbor. Just did some searching and this inventor may be the source of the story I heard. The round tower in Cloyne in east Cork will be some day be surrounded by the sea.
shtpEdthePlum wrote: » These are terrific lads keep em coming. The outside is a mile and the inside is a kilometer. Roughly. I walk it every day and can attest to this being just about right. Very imprecisely. Additionally the four-faced liar is a Norrie myth and the story of Cha and Miah is a Sorrie one.
Augeo wrote: » Outside is 1200/1300m.... 6 furlong... 3/4 of a mile..... Under 15 minute walk at normal pace.
macraignil wrote: » The church at the end of Summer hill north (Trinity Presbyterian Church) has a small defect in the angle of the stone spire and the story I was told was that the stone mason who built it killed himself due to the embarrassment of making the mistake. .
the beer revolu wrote: » I also can't help thinking that if you put a path wide enough around a puddle, the path could be a mile long. The claim was always that the circumference of the Lough was a mile, not some arbitrary path around it that includes footpaths along the road that have no doubt changed over the years.
the beer revolu wrote: » Yeah, that Turner's Cross church myth is just that. I thought it was the architect was supposed to have commuted suicide because no one liked the church? Anyway, doesn't take much digging to bust that one.
Itssoeasy wrote: » I mean it was an ambitious thing to build when it was built. It’s a very destructive looking church.
Yester wrote: » There's an active nuclear reactor in the Science Building in UCC. They can't go near it in case it blows up and kills us all.
saabsaab wrote: » 'Before becoming a hotel in 2008, the building were Maldron is housed today used to be the North Infirmary Hospital in 1720 and was later used to secretly treat the wounded soldiers from the war. Due to its history, the hotel is considered one of the most haunted places in Ireland. Guests have reported seeing the ghost of a woman who is believed to have died while giving birth back when the hotel was an infirmary, while broken mirrors and equipment have terrified guests and staff alike. Rumour has it that in between rooms 318 and 319 there is a closed off room, 325, which cannot be accessed on its own and is said to be a hive of paranormal activity.'
Itssoeasy wrote: » I mean it was an ambitious thing to build when it was built. It’s a very distinctive looking church.
Ludo wrote: » Dickens novel Great Expectations (hated it when had to read it for inter cert years ago) and character Miss Havisham was based on a stay at Havisham House in Rochestown...apparently.
the beer revolu wrote: » I know a bit about this but it's sketchy. I know for certain that he Dickens didn't stay in what was Haversham House Hotel (formerly Norwood Court Hotel) but the inspiration for Great Expectations allegedly came from a nearby house close to Norwood Court. I don't recall the name of the house but in the 70s it was a ruin and known locally as "the haunted house" (imaginative!). Houses built there in the 90s. Between Norwood Court and garryduff. I believe he stayed in a house in Douglas, perhaps on maryborough Hill.
Ludo wrote: » I have heard the house in question was in what is now Thornbury View (fits the description of the location you gave also). I have been it was where the large green area in the estate is now.
Itssoeasy wrote: » https://www.rte.ie/archives/collections/news/21249072-cork-north-infirmary-may-close/ The north infirmary was mentioned and this is a link to reports of its closure.