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: October 2013 Page 3 of 5

Football Supporters, Ballybunion and Maeve Moloney of Listowel and South Carolina

Ballybunion Sea Angling took this extraordinary photo of the sky over Ballybunion on Tuesday morning last, Oct 15 2013.

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John Stack took this and lots of photos of the Tommy Madden Tournament and they are all available  from 

http://northkerryfootball.com

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Ballybunion in the 1950s complete with changing huts. Does anyone remember them there on the shoreline? I certainly don’t.



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This fossil found in Ballybunion is 300 million years old. Ballybunion Sea Angling posted this photo of it on his Facebook page.



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Maeve Moloney contacted me from South Carolina. She hails from Skehenerin. Maeve remembers Listowel with fondness and she has sent me some photos and a brief biography to let people know how she has fared since she left Listowel.

“I am the daughter of Mary Murphy and Jimmy (The Chum) Moloney.
My father was the dental technician for the Enrights when the father and then
his son had a dental practice in the Square for many years. There were six of
us children, all of whom had to emigrate to the U.S.A. Best known in Listowel
is my younger brother Tim (Teddy) who played with the Bunny Dalton Showband
before coming to America where he has been very successful with his own band
and his ownership of The Dublin Pub on Long Island. He visits Listowel
frequently. Among his very good friends in Listowel is Danny Hannon, the
bookseller. I and my husband, Robert, a now-retired U.S. Government lawyer,
have lived over the years in New York City, Washington D.C., Phoenix, Arizona,
and now we live in retirement in Columbia, South Carolina, where one of our
sons, Paul, also a lawyer, lives with his wife and two children. We have one
other child, Robert — yet another lawyer — who currently resides in Kansas
and has one son, Seamus. I’ve had a few careers myself. I was an interior
designer in Washington for many years and then, until a few years ago, ran an
Irish import business, mainly online. We were last in Listowel about 7 years
ago and are planning a trip with the whole family, including the three
grandchildren, for a year or two from now.”


Captions to the photos are clockwise beginning with the upper left.      

1)Maeve footing the turf, 1960;

2)William St., Ash Wednesday, 1984;

3)Taking It Easy, Standing on a Corner in Winslow, Arizona,
1996;

 4)Advertising on a Saguaro cactus outside my home in Arizona, 1997.







1)Ballybunion, 2007;

2)Washington DC, family picture, 1987;

3)James Joyce & Maeve, O’Connell St., 2007;

4)My Dad & his friend, The Pecker Dunne, 1980s.  



3:

1)Maeve at the Castle, 1960;

2)With US Congressman Joe Wilson on Maeve’s left, St. Patrick’s
Day Parade, Columbia, South Carolina, 2013;

3) At the newly dedicated Irish Memorial Park, Charleston, South
Carolina, in memory of 17th, 18th, & 19th Century Irish settlers in South
Carolina, note the raised granite map of Ireland, 2013;

 4) In my azalea garden
with my Yorkshire terrier, Maeveen, named after me.

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Ballybunion Sea Angling posted this lovely photo from late evening in October 2013 in Ballybunion.

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Next week I’ll tell you all about my experience of The parish mission.

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 Meanwhile over on  The Listowel Thread someone is trying to organise  a group to play board games in The Listowel Arms on  Wednesday evenings.

No 24 The Square and an extraordinary lady

The following photographs were sent to me by Eitan Elazar and they are from the family album of descendants of Dr. Michael O’Connor of no. 24 The Square, Listowel

Dr. Michael O’Connor and his wife in the garden of No. 24 in 1950

Mrs. O’Connor at her front door

Mrs. O’Connor at home in No. 24 The Square, Listowel

Dr. Michael O’Connor

In the garden at No 24 The Square.

The house with the family Morris Minor in front.

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From my friend and collaborator, Vincent Carmody I got this message on the history of the house itself;

“You might let the readers know that Gerard Lynch was the owner of the Castle House after the O’Connors.  The Lynch family then build a house at the rear. Danny Hannon also was given use of the stables and for many years they housed early productions of the infant Lartigue Theatre.  For some time the Lynches had part of the house rented to the V.E.C who used some of the rooms as classrooms due to lack of space at the old Technical school in lower Church Street and prior to the building of the present Community College. After the VEC relocated, the house was turned into a flat complex. These apartments would have been first homes for a good number of Listowel couples in the days before rent subsidies.

The house itself was built by Richard Fitzgerald in the early 1800’s. It passed from him through his widow, Elizabeth Agnes FitzGerald (nee Fitzmaurice) to her nephew Dr Ulysses Fitzmaurice in 1855. The Attorney, Francis Creagh, father of Bertha Beatty, became owner after the Fitzmaurices.  

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John Stack’s picture of the victorious Listowel Emmets youngsters.

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Forur Genealogy posted this lovely picture of Liza Mulvihill of Glin. This lady was featured in the last edition of Turtle Bunbury’s Vanishing Ireland.

I knew Liza many years ago when she used to cycle to Listowel to collect for the National MS Society. Liza had a lovely niece who had MS. Liza looked after  Mary Anne with the very best of care. Anxious to do something to help find a cure for this awful disease that was devastating her family, she joined the MS Society and became its local liaison person. When the flag day came round, Liza would cycle from her home in Ballyguiltenane  to Listowel with her collecting tin and flags. In the 1970s these”flags” were little paper rectangles which one attached with a straight pin. She usually took up her position in The Square, collected all day, only stopping for lunch and then cycled back home to count the money and send it back to Dublin with the collecting tin.

The MS Society now is a professional organisation with professional staff as well as volunteers on the ground. Back in the early seventies it was run from Dublin on a totally voluntary basis by a group of ladies bountiful. I don’t think they ever realised the sacrifice and hardship heroes like Liza endured in order to fill the coffers and fund vital research which has yet to produce the cure we all hoped was around the corner back then.

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This following story comes from Donegal this week. Has the country gone stone mad? I ask.

DONEGAL
BOY (10) GETS €5,000 FOR CUT KNEE

October 15, 2013

A
TEN-year-old boy has been awarded more than €5,000 in court today – for cutting
his knee.

The
settlement relates to an incident at Ostan Gweedore Hotel three years ago.

Barrister
Patricia McLaughlin told Donegal Circuit Civil Court, sitting in Letterkenny
today, that the child had arrived at the hotel on July 12, 2009 with his mother
and sister.

Whilst
the child’s mother was locking the car, her son fell on grass in the grounds of
the hotel and cut his knee.

Judge
Petria McDonnell was told that the hotel management were not told of the
incident at the time.

“The
first they knew of it was a letter which arrived a year later,” said Ms
McLaughlin.

The
hotel, she said, was not accepting liability but was prepared to settle the
claim.

It was
still not clear, said the barrister, how the cut came about but the boy had to
receive eight stitches for a wound to his knee.

“There
are no long term effects and the boy in fact wears the scar as a badge of
honour I’m told,” said Ms McLaughlin.

She
said the hotel had made a low all-in offer to the boy which totalled €6,000 to
cover costs and the injury and the boy would receive €5,059.90 as part of the
settlement.

Gleasure descendants and Dr. Michael O’Connor of 24 The Square

Listowel had some welcome visitors during the past week. Ben and Kathleen Naylor were on a trip to North Kerry to visit locations associated with Ben’s Gleasure ancestors. If you have forgotten about The Gleasure letters, here is the link.

http://gleasureharberletters.blogspot.ie

Ben’s ancestor is Frank to whom all the letters were written. Unfortunately we have none of Frank’s replies but the one sided correspondence we do have is a wonderful first person account of one family’s life in Listowel in the first half of the 20th century.

Ben consults the letters to clarify a point
Vincent Carmody points out the Gleasure names to Ben and Kathleen.
Vincent took the couple on a tour of the town pointing out places of interest.
Ben and Kathleen pose at the door of the pub which once belonged to Ben’s great great grandfather
Jacinta, Susan and Tom Quilter pose with the Naylors outside their veterinary shop, a premises once owned by the Gleasure family.

Vincent explains why this corner of town was known locally as The Custom Gap.

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If you are following my tales of the Gleasure family and descendants, you will remember a reference in a previous post to one of May Gleasure’s letters in which she referred to her father’s illness and how his life was saved by the intervention of one Dr. Michael O’Connor. The good doctor was George Gleasure’s neighbour in The Square. He lived in the house now occupied by The Seanchaí.

Dr. Michael O’Connor R.I.P.

After I had posted this story I was contacted by  Geraldine O’Sullivan who is a granddaughter of Dr. O’Connor. She sent me his obituary from the Kerryman and the above photo. The newspaper cutting was very blurry so I contacted Michael Lynch the archivist in the County library and he sent me a slightly better scan but of the whole page of the newspaper from August 25 1951.

Then the story took another twist when Eitan Elazar, another grandchild of Dr. O’Connor sent me a typed up version of the obituary and a copy of the mortuary card.

There has
passed to his eternal reward one of North Kerry’s most gentle and unassuming
sons in the person of Dr. Michael O’Connor who was M.O.H. for Listowel and
district for the past thirty-five years. He was born at Derrindaffe, Duagh and
educated at St. Michael’s College Listowel, and at the National University,
Dublin, where he took his M.D. degree in 1906. It was in that year he started
his professional career in Listowel and from then on he had the interests of
that town very closely at heart. Right through his entire life he had the
greatest consideration for the poor and needy to whom he gave of his best
without thought of gratitude or money. Apart from his medical life, he took a
leading part in the affairs of the town and was foremost in anything that
furthered the interest of Listowel. In 1918, a special branch of the Town
Tenants’ League was formed to take over portion of Lord Listowel’s estate by
negotiation for the benefit of the landless poor of the town. These negotiations
failed and with the approval of town and country, the lands known as the Lawn
and the Major’s Field were forcibly entered and ploughed up. This action led to
the arrest of Dr. O’Connor  and the members of the special committee, who
were charged and sentenced to a term of imprisonment in Cork Co. Jail. Later,
Lord Listowel decided to give the land to the people and Dr. O’Connor and
another townsman were appointed trustees. Thus by his action, plots of land
were secured for cultivation by the people and particularly the poor. He was
founder member of Sinn Fein in North Kerry and devoted much of his professional
time organizing the I.R.A and there was not a town or village in North Kerry
but had its Sinn Fein Club, due to his untiring efforts and hard work. The
first Dáil Éireann Loan was organized by him in North Kerry. As a counterblast
to the Belfast Pogrom in 1920, he took a leading part in the Belfast Boycott
and had it so perfected that not a pennyworth of Belfast or English goods
entered Listowel. Naturally, all these incidents marked him as a man to reckon
with, so the British Government decided to make its move. On the Monday
following “Bloody Sunday” in Dublin the doctor and six of his
associates were arrested and taken to Listowel Jail, later being transferred to
Kilworth Camp, Cork Co. Jail and eventually Ballykinlar, Co. Down, where they
remained until the General Amnesty in December, 1921. During his internment
(which incidentally lasted thirteen months) his residence was taken over by the
British military and his wife and young family were forced to seek shelter
among friends. After the “split” he became pro-Treaty, but still his
sacrifices for the country were not over. Coming from Tralee one evening he was
forcibly removed from his car and compelled to walk across the mountains to
Castleisland spending one night in the open country , by the side of a fence,
and was later held prisoner for several days. In later years he took little
active part in politics. With his death the nation has lost a noble son and the
poor a kind friend. May the sod rest lightly on him who spent his life doing
good to others and may God, the giver of life, have mercy on his soul.

Eitan remembers visiting Listowel and staying at number 24

“Our memories of Listowel were from many holidays spent down at the house at 24 the Square.

Vivid memories were of the market days in the square waking up to the mooing of cows, the hee haws of donkeys and the bleating of sheep.

many many outings to Ballybunion during the summer. visits to Roberts the sweet shop at the corner of the Square 

and freshly baked apple tarts from Lynch’s bakery across the square and playing in the grounds of the Castle.

Michael O’Connor jr was a very good artist who was particularly interested in Celtic manuscripts. I include one of his works, 

the breast plate of St Patrick. “

Isn’t that magnificent?

Eitan sent me some more family photographs which I will post tomorrow.

Words and Music and Saturday at Listowel Races 2013

 The entertainment at Listowel Writers’ Week Words and Music event on Saturday evening,

 October 12 2013 was second to none.

Kathy Nugent, accompanied on the piano by Colm O’Brien, had the audience in the palm of her hand with well known Doris Day, Sinatra and Tony Bennett numbers. Kathy has a powerful voice and a really winning stage presence.

Claire Keane gave us a lovely rendition of John B.’s Sweet Listowel.

Gabriel Fitzmaurice’s theme was family as he read some warm sonnets to his granddaughter, his late father and his wife. Admiration, awe and love shone through in every line.

Veronica, Bernie, Margaret and Norella, all from the Writers’ Week committee were working hard on the night.

This local group of multi talented young musicians wowed us all with their versatility and musicianship.

Mary Kenny was one of the star turns. She spoke about The Femme Fatale, Terry Keane and then in Part 2 she gave us a little insight into her own unconventional upbringing.

Cyril Kelly is one of a group of Listowel people exiled in Dublin. Like all of this group, he retains a huge affection for his native town and mines these happy memories of growing up in this special place in much of his writing. He read  a poem he wrote for Miriam Kiely, celebrating happy days as teenagers in Listowel. He also took up the theme of family with a revealing insight into his first venture into fatherhood in the days before epidurals, when pain relief had not advanced much further than mopping his wife’s brow with a flannel!

Owen MacMahon is an expert on his father’s work. He gave us a unique insight into Bryan MacMahon, short story writer. As always, his talk was laced with amusing local anecdotes, self deprecating humour and erudite classical and Irish references. He even ended with a song beloved of all past pupils of The Master, Kerry Candle Light.

A happy Seán Lyons, chairman, Listowel Writers’ Week signed off on a very successful evening.

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On the Saturday of The Harvest Meeting of Listowel Races 2013 I went to The Island en famille. I am a very proud mother and grandmother so people have been wondering where those Saturday photos went. Well, here they are…

Bobby Cogan met up with his friend, Fergus O’Connor who was at The Races with his dad.

 The boys studied form in the parade ring before committing their (or my) money.

€2 each way on Number 4.

Listowel Tidy Towns were holding an upcycling competition.

 Some people seemed a bit unsure of what constitutes upcycling.

There was a bit of early canvassing going on.

This lad was doing a good job of cleaning the ring.

Carine met a work colleague and family.

Clíona met her friend Gillian.

Madeleine and Margaret looked every stylish even though they told me that they were more dressed up the day before since it was Ladies’ Day.

Clíona and Seán picked a few winners.

Edel, Frances and Liam were winners in the upcycling competition.

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John Kelliher took this great picture of rutting stags in The National Park, Killarney

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Jer.’s video clip from the community procession at Listowel Parish Mission 2013

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UO3vP5gyvfY&feature=youtu.be

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(Pic: Goracing)

A tug o war was one of the many fun events which took place at Limerick racecourse yesterday. All funds raised on the day will go to help injured jockies, Johnjo Bright and JP MacNamara

Generation emigration and the last of my Ladies’Day photos

The Skype call and Facetime have replaced the “letter from America”

Sunday Night is Skype Night

Above is a link to a great article by Collette Browne in The Irish Independent of Sept 30 2013. I will reproduce here the first few paragraphs. The whole article is well worth reading, whichever side of this scenario you identify with,

30 SEPTEMBER 2013

Like tens of thousands of households,
Sunday night in my parents’ house is Skype
night – when they chat to my brother and his family, who are living in the
United States.

Having married, had a daughter and
recently obtaining US citizenship since he moved, it is unlikely my brother
will ever return to live in Ireland. His life now is elsewhere.

For my parents, this means that they have
to watch their only grandchild grow up via a computer screen, missing important
milestones in her life.

Communication tools like Skype
have doubtlessly made it easier for severed families to keep in touch but they
cannot recreate a hug, let you carry a child to bed or facilitate a family
having a meal together.

Despite the ache caused by physical
absence, for many emigrants, like my brother, the experience of living abroad,
where they enjoy better job prospects and a higher quality of life, has largely
been a positive one…..

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Lots of premises getting a facelift these days

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More from Ladies’ Day 2013

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Words and Music

Saturday October 12 was a great night in The Listowel Arms where local and national talent entertained an appreciative audience.

Billy Keane told his anecdotes and read his poem. Mickey MacConnell brought the house down with two of his many lovely ballads. If Aldi and Lidl had any sense of humour they would be beating a track to his door and using his great song in their advertising

The Ballad of Lidl and Aldi

David Browne gave an inimitable rendition of Carthalawn’s songs form John B.’s Sive.

Denis Hobson is an excellent interpreter of John B.s characters. On Saturday night he was The Chastitute. He was ably supported by members of The Abbefeale Drama  Group.

(a few more photos tomorrow)

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John Stack’s pic of G.A.A. action from the weekend

Moyvane v. Clounmacon

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