This blog is a personal take on Listowel, Co. Kerry. I am writing for anyone anywhere with a Listowel connection but especially for sons and daughters of Listowel who find themselves far from home. Contact me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

Month: June 2012 Page 3 of 5

Games and Bloomsday

It has been a sad week in Listowel. The town came to a halt on Wednesday as a riderless horse clip clopped its way to the cemetery. The whole town turned out to mourn the tragic loss of John Lynch. Listowel people observed the old tradition of shops and businesses closing their doors while the cortege passed. The massive turnout for the wake and funeral reflected the esteem in which the Lynch family is held in Listowel.

+May he rest in peace+

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Now to the sports page

We may have lost the match but we won the singing. Our Euros 2012 jaunt is over, but we leave Gdansk with heads held high. Who knows what might happen against Italy?

 Incidentally, Gdansk, formerly Danzig, is a city with an Irish connection. Read about Seán Lester here

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seán_Lester

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Take a look at these 50 greatest moments in Olympic history.

http://www.mirror.co.uk/sport/other-sports/50-days-to-go-to-london-2012-866271

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Not exactly the Olympics but close by Irish standards.

Tailtean Games, Croke Park 1924

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Ed. O’Connor, prompted by my amazing basketball fact of the other day, sends us this little titbit about the game.

 The game was invented by James Naismith in Springfield, Massachusetts only about 8 miles or so from my hometown of Holyoke, MA….some may know and others may wish to know that Holyoke is the birthplace of Volleyball( inventor William D. Morgan, 1895) and also home to one of the largest St. Patrick’s Day parades in the US, especially when you consider its population relative to the other major cities which have parades .

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Ad. from Limerick 1960

Tweeted by Limerick1912; ” Halpin’s Tea was founded in 1886, but closed down in February 1984 due to “the continued effects of the recession & increased competition”.”

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Tomorrow is Bloomsday

BLOOMSDAY 2012

The History & Tradition of Bloomsday

Bloomsday celebrates the day on which the action of James Joyce’s novel Ulysses takes place, 16th June 1904, the day on which we believe Joyce first went out with his future wife Nora Barnacie. The day is named after Leopaold Bloom, the central character in Ulysses.

One of the earliest Bloomsday celebrations was a Ulysses lunch, organised by Sylvia Beach, the publisher of Ulysses and her partner Adrienne Monnier in France in June 1929. The first Bloomsday celebrated in Ireland was in 1954.

Today Bloomsday is celebrated by Joyceans across the globe with readings, performances, re-enactments and a host of other events. In Dublin, enthusiasts dress in Edwardian costume and gather during the day at many of the location where episodes of Ulysses took place (Martello Tower at Sandycove, Davy Byrne’s pub and 7 Eccles Street).

The James Joyce centre hosts Bloomsday breakfasts and other events in the run up to June 16th as well as on the day.

Bloomsday 2012

The copyright for Joyce’s work expired at the end of 2011 so the celebration of Bloomsday 2012 will be very special indeed. Tight control of Ulysses has been kept during the copyright period so fans are determined to celebrate this freedom with special public performances. To date the only place where public readings of Ulysses were allowed was on Bloomsday in the James Joyce Centre in North Great George’s Street,

Plans are already in place for Bloomsday 2012 to re-enact parts of Bloom’s journey with spontaneous performances of his work across the city. These Bloomsday 2012 performances will feature on Twitter and Facebook encouraging the public to join in to make Bloomsday 2012 one of the best ever.

Gleasures of Listowel and Massachusetts

This premises, The Americano Pub in The Square was once owned by a Gleasure family.

A few days ago I got an email from a descendant of this family. This is what Ben Naylor says:

I am from Washington, DC but have Listowel roots.  My great-great grandfather (George Gleasure) came over to Canada from Ireland in the late 1800’s, crossed the border into the US and resided in Natick, Massachusetts for a decade before returning with his children to Ireland, making residence in Listowel from about 1898-1923 (his death).  The Gleasures ran a liquor store/pub in The Square.  My great-grandfather, his son (Frank Gleasure) wanted to come back to America and left the family in 1901 to come back to Massachusetts. 


Ben has inherited hundreds of letters sent from the Gleasures in Listowel to Frank.  Ben is putting them all online here

http://gleasureharberletters.blogspot.ie/

The letters are not great works of literature but are of enormous value historically, as his relatives at home tell Frank all the little newses of the town. Frank was very generous to his family, regularly sending newspapers, postcards, photographs and presents and their gratitude is a salient feature running through all the correspondence.

One of the family was a keen photographer and Ben has inherited the photographs as well. He promises to send us some old pictures of The Square and the family pub when he gets back to New York next week.

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This is Listowel Convent Primary School as it used to look. School photos were often taken in front of “the statue’.

Here is one such photo. I have no idea of a date or a name.

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Listowel Town development plan to 2015 is available here:

http://www.listowel.ie/Volume%201.pdf

Obituary etc.

So sad! The very hard working John Lynch, who died tragically last weekend, will be laid to rest today. The sympathy and support of the town is with his bereft family who must pick up the pieces and face a future without him. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a anam.

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This is Stirling McLeod and family from Canada. Jer. Kennelly photographed them in Listowel on the day of Listowel Community College’s fundraising.

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A group of Listowel boy scouts on one of their many adventures.

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Two posters

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Ever “The Yank”& Church St.

I took the following from the Irish Central website. It is written by a man called Brendan Charles. While his roots are not in Kerry, his words will find a resonance with many of my readers.

“Woodlawn Heights, located approximately 10 miles from New York City, serves as the perfect locale. It caters to two distinct groups: Bronx residents and Irish immigrants. After my parents emigrated from Ireland, they raised four children in the area, which afforded me an opportunity to study both cultures.

Now, as a young man, I often contemplate my identity.

New York is my home. I find solace in its distinctive surroundings – the towering skyscrapers, the congested streets, and the collective cacophony of brakes, horns, and sirens. I attended high school on the Upper East Side. I worked for two summers at Sutton Place. I indulge in freshly-baked bagels, dirty-water hot dogs, and late-night halal food. I walk fast, I speak Spanish, and I know the best pizza on First Avenue.

(Upon request, I can also deliver a much-ballyhooed account of the New York Yankees all-time greats: Berra, DiMaggio, Gehrig, Jeter, Mantle, Mattingly, and Ruth.)

My ancestry is distinctly Irish, however. My father and my mother emigrated from Counties Leitrim and Kilkenny. They arranged yearly visits to Ireland, in an effort to immerse their children in the culture. There, I lived alongside my extended family and experienced the country’s food, music, and sport.

I always remember the breakfast that awaited my arrival from Shannon Airport — sausages, rashers, black pudding, white pudding, fried tomatoes and brown bread. My grandmother watched from across the table as I consumed each meal.

In the weeks to follow, my cousins and I played hurling in the pitch opposite my aunt’s house. We trekked through fields and purchased sweets at the nearby shops. I learned how to milk a cow at my uncle’s farm, and the sudden numbness that arrives after touching nettle leaves.

In a different part of the country, my grandfather warbled jovial tunes while he sat in his armchair and watched the news. He held out his hand to catch mine, shaking it in rhythm. When my grandmother called us in for dinner, we walked into the kitchen and sat at the table. She had prepared several pans of boxty (a regional potato pancake).

As a young man, I currently know the names of all 32 counties, the four provinces, the trademark sound of Joe Dolan, the foremost events in Irish history, the quickest route from Galway to Dublin, the times to recite the Angelus prayer, the silence of the countryside, the liveliness of the cities, the complexities of a James Joyce novel, the differences between Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael and Sinn Féin, the rainy weather, the generosity of the Irish people, and the easiest way to spot an Irishman at the beach – tall socks, white shirt and loads of sunscreen.

Yet, despite my breadth of knowledge and experience, my extended family still refer to me as a “yank,” and perhaps deservedly so.

I am neither American nor Irish. And though I sustain a connection with each culture, I am – at any given moment – prone to experience sudden disconnects from both.

The identity of Woodlawn Heights suffers invariably from the very dichotomy that defines mine. As such, it serves as the perfect locale; especially for me, and at least for now.

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Church St. back in the days when traffic travelled two ways, goods were delivered by dray horses and there was only the odd car to be seen. The Square end of the street was known as Leahy’s Corner.

This is that corner a few years ago.

And this is Leahy’s corner today

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Only in Kerry! A tractor makes its way up William Street on a sunny afternoon in June 2012.

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This is a very thought provoking article from The Irish Times Generation Emigration section in Saturday’s paper.

http://www.irishtimes.com/blogs/generationemigration/2012/06/09/what-lies-ahead-for-us-is-uncertain/

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Random Tuesday fact: It was a full 21 years after the game of basketball was invented before someone thought of cutting a hole in the bottom of the net. Up to then, someone had to climb up and poke the ball out after a score.


Corpus Christi and Euro 2012

Yesterday we had our Corpus Christi procession.

People made a huge effort and the town looked its best. Here are some of the window displays:

There was a big crowd processing.

Sr. Consolata played and the choir sang.

A very successful day. Well done all!

This is a very good video from Jer. Kennelly. He has half the town in it.

http://youtu.be/RSZbiky4_Qs

Here is my video of the final hymn:

http://youtu.be/SR7ntHh4gtA

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Commiserations lads!

The country is gone football crazy. Half the young folk have gone to Poland to swell the green army and the other half are blowing paddyzalas in pubs up and down the country. They have a big screen in The Square in Tralee and in Ballincollig they have this in Mary O’s pub.

Meanwhile, Spain is getting away with a bailout with no strings attached. Why do I get the feeling Europe might be laughing at us?

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If you haven’t yet seen the Thai children singing The Rocky Road to Poland, they are here,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwSL-IUym08&feature=youtu.be

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You gotta have a laugh. This from Broadsheet.ie will give a giggle to poor exhausted Leaving Cert. Maths students. 

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