Cobh Heritage Centre

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Cobh Heritage Centre
Ionad Oidhreachta an Chóibh
Cobh Heritage Centre.png
Heritage centre, An Cobh - geograph.org.uk - 249726.jpg
interior
Ireland adm location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Location within Ireland
Established1993 [1]
Location Cobh, County Cork, Ireland
Coordinates 51°50′56″N8°17′58″W / 51.8488°N 8.299367°W / 51.8488; -8.299367
Type Heritage centre, railway museum
Public transit access Cobh railway station
Website cobhheritage.com

The Cobh Heritage Centre is a museum located in Cobh, County Cork, Ireland. It is attached to Cobh railway station. [2]

The "Queenstown Experience", located at the centre, has mostly permanent exhibitions of Irish history. [3] The centre has held exhibits on life in Ireland through the 18th and 19th centuries, mass emigration, the Great Famine, Cork Harbour's defences, [4] on penal transportation to Australia, and on the sinking of the RMS Lusitania. [5] It also has displays on the history of the RMS Titanic, whose last port of call was at Cobh (then Queenstown). The centre also hosts temporary exhibitions and, for example, hosted exhibits on John Philip Holland (loaned from the County Louth Museum) in 2000. [6]

The centre is a tourist destination, including with visitors from cruise ships, which often dock in Cobh. [7] [8] The centre has two onsite gift shops and a café. [9]

The building was damaged on 5 May 1995, when a train arriving at Cobh failed to stop, and crashed through the wall. [10]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cobh railway station</span> Train station in Ireland

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The Cork and Youghal Railway (C&YR) was a company that built and operated a short 27 miles (43 km) railway built in the early 1860s in Ireland linking Cork with Youghal, a small resort with harbour at the mouth of the Munster Blackwater. There was an additional 6-mile (9.7 km) branch to Cobh (Queenstown), a deepwater port in Cork Harbour associated with transatlantic liners. The railway was forced into administration within a few short years due to the bankruptcy of major shareholder David Leopold Lewis and was taken over by the much larger Great Southern and Western Railway (GS&WR). The branch to Cobh became the main line and by the late 1980s was the only part of the previously extensive rail network around Cork City to remain operational apart from the main line to Dublin. 2009 saw the Midleton branch re-open to Cork while the remainder of the route is being converted to a greenway in the 2020s.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arch Building, Cobh</span> Municipal building in Cobh, County Cork, Ireland

The Arch Building, previously known as Cobh Town Hall and before that as Queenstown Town Hall, is a municipal building in Casement Square, Cobh, County Cork, Ireland. The building currently accommodates a public library and a tourist information centre. It is included in Cork County Council's Record of Protected Structures.

References

  1. Birnbaum, Alexandra M. (1 January 1993). Birnbaum's Ireland, 1994. HarperPerennial. ISBN   9780062781307 via Google Books.
  2. Monogan, David (24 March 2013). "From Coffin Ships To Triumph Abroad, Museums Tell Of Ireland's Haunting Diaspora". Forbes . Retrieved 2 December 2015.
  3. "Cobh Heritage Centre". discoveringcork.ie. 20 January 2015. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  4. "Cobh centre millionth visit". irishexaminer.com. Irish Examiner. 20 February 2004. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  5. "Lusitania Exhibition". cobhheritage.com. Cobh Heritage Centre. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  6. "Archives - 2000 The Holland Anniversary Year". mariner.ie. National Maritime Museum Of Ireland. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  7. "€15m berth will be Cobh's quay to success". Irish Examiner. 17 August 2016.
  8. "Cobh named one of Western Europe's top cruise destinations". Independent News & Media. 15 September 2016.
  9. "Cobh Heritage Centre – AVEA". avea.ie. Retrieved 3 October 2018.
  10. "RTÉ Archives - Train Crash at Cobh Heritage Centre 1995". rte.ie. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
Cobh Heritage Centre, reconstruction of the interior of an old ship Cobh Heritage Centre inside a ship.JPG
Cobh Heritage Centre, reconstruction of the interior of an old ship