Roscrea

Roscrea (Irish Ros Cré, "Wood of Cré") is a town in County Tipperary in Ireland, with a population in 2016 of about 5500. It has a concentration of medieval buildings, notably the castle, and is also a good base for nearby sites across the county boundary in Offaly and Laois.

Get in
Expressway X12 runs every two hours from Dublin Airport and Busáras via Portlaoise, taking two hours to Roscrea, and continuing west to Nenagh and Limerick. A Local Link bus also plies the section between Roscrea and Nenagh.

Kavanagh's Bus 812 runs twice M-Sa between Roscrea, Templemore, Thurles and Urlingford.

A branch railway line connects Limerick, Nenagh and Roscrea to the main line at Ballybrophy (for trains between Dublin Heuston and Cork). There are two trains M-Sa and one on Sunday, and travel time from Dublin is 90 min. Roscrea is 500 m north of town centre: there are no facilities to collect online tickets here.

By car from Dublin follow N7 onto M7 (the first section to Naas has not yet been upgraded to motorway) then stay on M7 to N62 the Roscrea turnoff.

Get around
The town is easy enough to walk around. You need your own wheels for outlying accommodation and for sights in the nearby villages.

See

 * Black Mills nearby on Church St is a restored watermill, included in the castle admission. Within is the original 12th-century St Cronan's High Cross.
 * The Round Tower next to Black Mills was built around 1100. These distinctively Irish structures are believed to be bell towers for adjacent churches; they could serve as look-outs but were not primarily defensive. Roscrea's tower is only 20 m high: the top and conical cap were removed during 1798 "The Year of the French". Church Street nowadays cuts across the monastic site, and the Tesco just behind doesn't do much for the ambiance.
 * St Cronan's 12th-century Romanesque church survives only in the west gable on Church St, the rest was demolished in 1812 when the present Anglican church was built. There's also a replica of the High Cross, the original being within Black Mills. St Crónán of Roscrea was the 7th-century founder of the nearby abbey, where an 8th century monk called Dimma MacNathi produced a beautifully-illustrated copy of the Gospels. This Book of Dimma is nowadays part of the Book of Kells display in Trinity College Dublin. The present church is a product of the "First Fruits" initiative to build more Protestant churches in Ireland by the neat trick of taxing the Catholics. See County Tipperary for more on this story.
 * or Abbey was founded in the 15th century by Greyfriars (Franciscans). It was smashed at the Dissolution but the bell-tower remains, along with north and east walls.
 * Roman Catholic Church of St Cronan's is a block south of the Friary on Convent St. Building started in 1843 but the Famine delayed things. It was dedicated in 1855 after a successful fund-raising tour of the USA.
 * was the original site of St Crónán's monastery: living in a bog was great for solitude but was distinctly boggy, so they moved on to Roscrea. In 1750 Corville House was built here and was a family home to 1932; it then passed to the Sisters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, who ran a home for unmarried mothers and their babies until 1970. The babies were sent for adoption, mostly to the USA. Many mothers and babies lie in the graveyard known tweely as "The Angels Plot", which ducks the question of why so many died here. In 1971 the home became a school for children with special learning needs, still run by the Sisters.
 * is the remains of a 12th-century abbey, built on an island in Loch Cré (Monaincha means "bog island"). It's cited in 12th- and 13th-century texts as a place that no female can enter, even female birds or animals would instantly die. But the male inhabitants live forever, until they're so decrepid that they ask to be taken off in order to expire. The area has been drained for farmland and those mystic properties nowadays affect neither visitors to the church nor guests of the nearby spa.
 * is a village 14 km southwest of Roscrea, straddling the boundary with County Offaly. It was the ancestral home of Falmouth Kearney who emigrated to Ohio, and was maternal great-great-great grandfather of Barack Obama, 44th President of the USA. O'Bama, as he should surely be styled, visited in May 2011 and in Olie Hayes' pub the First Lady was taught how to pour a correct pint of Guinness. The brief spell of Obama tourism has been and gone — let's face it, he never opened a string of plush golf resorts like his successor — so the name mostly endures in the Obama Plaza service area, junction 23 of M7.
 * is a village 14 km southwest of Roscrea, straddling the boundary with County Offaly. It was the ancestral home of Falmouth Kearney who emigrated to Ohio, and was maternal great-great-great grandfather of Barack Obama, 44th President of the USA. O'Bama, as he should surely be styled, visited in May 2011 and in Olie Hayes' pub the First Lady was taught how to pour a correct pint of Guinness. The brief spell of Obama tourism has been and gone — let's face it, he never opened a string of plush golf resorts like his successor — so the name mostly endures in the Obama Plaza service area, junction 23 of M7.

Do

 * is a peak of 478 m (1570 ft) west of Templemore, and roughly equidistant from Roscrea, Thurles and Nenagh. It's usually climbed on its south side from the car park on R501. The legend goes that the devil took a bite out of it, broke his teeth, and spat out the lump which landed as the Rock of Cashel. The tower near the summit is a 19th-century folly. The large cross on the summit was erected in 1953-54.
 * (Sliabh Bladhma) form the boundary with County Laois, and Roscrea is a good base for hiking their southern parts.
 * is a peak of 478 m (1570 ft) west of Templemore, and roughly equidistant from Roscrea, Thurles and Nenagh. It's usually climbed on its south side from the car park on R501. The legend goes that the devil took a bite out of it, broke his teeth, and spat out the lump which landed as the Rock of Cashel. The tower near the summit is a 19th-century folly. The large cross on the summit was erected in 1953-54.
 * (Sliabh Bladhma) form the boundary with County Laois, and Roscrea is a good base for hiking their southern parts.

Buy

 * Aldi and Tesco are a block north of the centre.

Drink

 * Town centre pubs are Delahunty's, Brendan's, Lily O'Briens and Stand Bar. Biddy's is south near the Abbey.

Connect
As of June 2021, Roscrea has 4G from all Irish carriers, though the Vodafone signal is patchy outside town. 5G has not yet reached this area.

Go next

 * North to Birr, a Georgian small town with the remarkable "Leviathan" telescope.
 * South through the market town of Thurles to Cashel, with its medieval religious complex teetering on a crag.
 * West via Nenagh to the miniature Dublin of Limerick.