pre-trip report Kilmainham Gaol tickets
#1
Original Poster

Joined: Feb 2009
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pre-trip report Kilmainham Gaol tickets
Visiting Kilmainham Gaol was a priority for us as history addicts. I was glad I visited the website and learned that tickets for any given day go on sale3 at midnight Dublin time 28 days in advance. Being clever, I did the math and figured out that that was 7 pm EST in the States. I did a few trial runs and was glad I did - tickets seem to sell out almost immediately. So on Tuesday the 7th I had the site open with my finger hovering over the refresh button for the buy tickets now page. I clicked at 7pm exactly and I kid you not, half the tickets were already gone. Luckily I snagged two for the day we wanted (May 6th), only 45 minutes later than the hoped for time.
so if you wish to visit the gaol, plan your ticket purchase ahead of time.
so if you wish to visit the gaol, plan your ticket purchase ahead of time.
#2

Joined: Oct 2008
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This is quite valuable information to others, Laura. Good job!
I also would like to suggest to others to brush up on the fight for Irish independence before you go. While the key year of interest on the Kilmainham tour will be 1916 and The Easter Rising, please do a quick internet look-up of the story of Robert Emmet, largely responsible for 1803 rising. Emmet's story was the "banked furnace" the would later flame for short blaze nearly a century later in 1916 and then finally fuel Irish Independence by 1921.
For an entertaining fictionalized version of the history, read Morgan Llywelyn's "1916", and then follow those up with "1921"*.
If you really get into it, read a biography of Michael Collins. I have a lot of others I could suggest, but just doing the above will make everything you experience in the jail more profound.
I also would like to suggest to others to brush up on the fight for Irish independence before you go. While the key year of interest on the Kilmainham tour will be 1916 and The Easter Rising, please do a quick internet look-up of the story of Robert Emmet, largely responsible for 1803 rising. Emmet's story was the "banked furnace" the would later flame for short blaze nearly a century later in 1916 and then finally fuel Irish Independence by 1921.
For an entertaining fictionalized version of the history, read Morgan Llywelyn's "1916", and then follow those up with "1921"*.
If you really get into it, read a biography of Michael Collins. I have a lot of others I could suggest, but just doing the above will make everything you experience in the jail more profound.
#4


Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 6,196
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Success!!! I was able to purchase our tickets for the Kilmainham Gaol tour for May 9. But it was a stressful process. I logged on to the site a few minutes before 7. Exactly at 7PM I clicked on refresh and like Laura said, half the tickets were already sold. I selected the time I want and the number of tickets; however, when I clicked on Book Now, I got a message that said "unable to communicate with the site". UGH! I had to try numerous, numerous times before I was allowed on to the page where I enter my name, contact info, and payment info. I assume this is because the site was extremely busy, and I had to just keep on clicking until I was allowed in. So, now I have our tickets, and I am very excited.
To anyone who wants to purchase Kilmainham Gaol tickets, log on to the site a few minutes early, refresh exactly at 7PM, and then keep on trying to get in if you aren't successful the first time. You have to be fast!
To anyone who wants to purchase Kilmainham Gaol tickets, log on to the site a few minutes early, refresh exactly at 7PM, and then keep on trying to get in if you aren't successful the first time. You have to be fast!
#7


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#8

Joined: Jan 2011
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Visiting Kilmainham Gaol was a priority for us as history addicts. I was glad I visited the website and learned that tickets for any given day go on sale3 at midnight Dublin time 28 days in advance. Being clever, I did the math and figured out that that was 7 pm EST in the States. I did a few trial runs and was glad I did - tickets seem to sell out almost immediately. So on Tuesday the 7th I had the site open with my finger hovering over the refresh button for the buy tickets now page. I clicked at 7pm exactly and I kid you not, half the tickets were already gone. Luckily I snagged two for the day we wanted (May 6th), only 45 minutes later than the hoped for time.
so if you wish to visit the gaol, plan your ticket purchase ahead of time.
so if you wish to visit the gaol, plan your ticket purchase ahead of time.
Happy Travels!
#9

Joined: Oct 2008
Posts: 2,882
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Pre-Reading
Laura, you did darn well with "Trinity". It's held up surprisingly well.
Pushing away from the Easter Rising events, I love Fintan O'Toole's "We Don't Know Ourselves".
I can't recall if you and Karen (for now on referred to as Fodor's Sisters United) are doing Northern Ireland. I have a ton of fiction I continue to read there.
Pushing away from the Easter Rising events, I love Fintan O'Toole's "We Don't Know Ourselves".
I can't recall if you and Karen (for now on referred to as Fodor's Sisters United) are doing Northern Ireland. I have a ton of fiction I continue to read there.
#10
Original Poster

Joined: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,274
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Laura, you did darn well with "Trinity". It's held up surprisingly well.
Pushing away from the Easter Rising events, I love Fintan O'Toole's "We Don't Know Ourselves".
I can't recall if you and Karen (for now on referred to as Fodor's Sisters United) are doing Northern Ireland. I have a ton of fiction I continue to read there.
Pushing away from the Easter Rising events, I love Fintan O'Toole's "We Don't Know Ourselves".
I can't recall if you and Karen (for now on referred to as Fodor's Sisters United) are doing Northern Ireland. I have a ton of fiction I continue to read there.
and thanks for the reading recommendations - I am about to put holds on them at the library.
We aren't making it to Northern Ireland - I think Karen might be....




