Beaufort, County Kerry
Beaufort 
    Lios an Phúca  | |
|---|---|
Village  | |
Beaufort Bridge  | |
| Coordinates: 52°04′08″N 09°38′20″W / 52.06889°N 9.63889°W | |
| Country | Ireland | 
| Province | Munster | 
| County | County Kerry | 
| Elevation | 34.155 m (112.056 ft) | 
| Population  (2016)  | 251 | 
Beaufort (Irish: Lios an Phúca) is a small village that lies on the banks of the River Laune in County Kerry, in the southwest of Ireland. It consists of a post office, three public houses, one supermarket, parish hall, guest houses and thirty private houses. As of the 2016 census, the population was 251. 9 km west of Killarney, Beaufort sits at the foot of Ireland's highest mountain Carrantuohill.
Edward Day, Archdeacon of Ardfert from 1782, lived here until his death in 1808. His estate later passed to his nephew, the Reverend John Robert Fitzgerald-Day, who lived at Beaufort from the 1840s to his death in 1881.
In 1910, Kalem Company, an American moving-picture company spent several weeks in the village shooting films. Among the company: the director Sidney Olcott, actress Gene Gauntier, Alice Hollister and actors Jack J. Clark, Robert Vignola, JP McGowan, the cinematographer George K. Hollister. The first film was The Lad from Old Ireland, the first American movie to be shot outside the U.S.. This was followed by Rory O'More, The Irish Honeymoon, The Colleen Bawn and Arrah-na-Pogue, which were adapted from Dion Boucicault's plays.
Olcott returned to Beaufort each summer until 1914. He rented the hotel owned by Patrick O'Sullivan who also owned a pub, which still exists today: The Beaufort Bar.