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  2. New eagle camera installed at St. John's - AOL

    www.aol.com/eagle-camera-installed-st-johns...

    Dec. 8—St. John's Lutheran Community on Friday announced the addition of an eagle camera for its widely followed eagle's nest at its Fountain Lake campus. The organization installed a live ...

  3. Wallace sisters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_sisters

    Nora Wallace (1893– 17 September 1970) and Sheila Wallace (1887 – 14 April 1944) were business women who owned a newsagents on Brunswick Street, now known as St Augustine Street in Cork, who were also Intelligence officers for the IRA during the Irish War of Independence and used their premises as a meeting place and brigade headquarters.

  4. St Colman's Cathedral, Cobh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Colman's_Cathedral,_Cobh

    Built on Cathedral Place, it overlooks Cork harbour from a prominent position, and is dedicated to Colmán of Cloyne, patron saint of the Diocese of Cloyne. It serves as the cathedral church of the diocese. Construction began in 1868 and was not completed until over half a century later due to increases in costs and revisions of the original plans.

  5. Washington Street, Cork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Street,_Cork

    Cork Courthouse, St Augustine's Catholic Church, pubs, restaurants Washington Street ( Irish : Sráid Washington ) [ 2 ] is a street in central Cork city , Ireland. Built in 1824, [ 3 ] it runs from the old medieval town centre onto the site of the western marshes, and today links the Western Road and Lancaster Quay with the Grand Parade .

  6. John's Lane Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John's_Lane_Church

    The church is named after St. Augustine and St. John the Baptist, but is popularly known as John's Lane Church, from its location at the corner of John's Lane. [6] The church steeple is the highest steeple in the city, [7] standing at over 200 feet (61.0 m). It was originally not designed to hold bells, but a spiral staircase was added later to ...

  7. Red Abbey, Cork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Abbey,_Cork

    The Red Abbey in Cork, Ireland was a 14th-century Augustinian abbey which took its name from the reddish sandstone used in construction. Today all that remains of the structure is the central bell tower of the abbey church, which is one of the last remaining visible structures dating to the medieval walled town of Cork.

  8. Cathedral of St Mary and St Anne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathedral_of_St_Mary_and...

    Saint Mary's and St Anne's Cathedral is both the seat of the Bishop of Cork and Ross, and the parish church for the Cathedral parish which includes the areas of Blarney Street, Shandon and Blackpool. Baptismal records date back to 1731. [3] The parish boundary had also included the areas of Blackpool and Clogheen/Kerry Pike until 1981.

  9. Church of St Mary and St John - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_St_Mary_and_St_John

    The Church of St Mary and St John is the older of two Roman Catholic churches in the town of Ballincollig, County Cork, Ireland. The church was built in the 1860s, funded by donations from the local people of the time, and officially opened on 28 October 1866.