tidy |
143.239.68.7 (talk) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
==See also== |
==See also== |
||
* [[List of towns in the Republic of Ireland]] |
* [[List of towns in the Republic of Ireland]] |
||
Goleen's daecent boi'. Gattin up the park in the summers or smokin on down the pier like. |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
Revision as of 15:54, 1 September 2008
Goleen (An Góilín in Irish) is a small rural village in County Cork on the south-western tip of Ireland. Farming and construction work are the main occupations of the local people. Many are involved with some aspect of the tourist business, looking after some of the many holiday homes which surround the village. The village has four pubs, four shops, a petrol station and a fast-food restaurant. Goleen is located towards the south-western end of the Mizen Peninsula, in West Cork. The land surrounding the village is of poor quality for farming, being hilly and rocky with limited soil cover. The village has a large Roman Catholic chapel; there is a smaller Church of Ireland church situated just outside the village but this has now been deconsecrated and is the site for a sail-maker.
Mizen Head, at the southern tip of the Mizen peninsula, about five miles from the village, is often claimed to be the most southerly point on the island of Ireland, but is in fact the country's most southwesterly point. The distinction of being Ireland's most southerly point belongs to nearby Brow Head, from where Guglielmo Marconi experimented with transatlantic radio signals at the beginning of the 20th century.
See also
Goleen's daecent boi'. Gattin up the park in the summers or smokin on down the pier like.
External links
- Cork Ancestors Website, [1]