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

Category: Ballybunion Page 7 of 23

A Clock, a Ghost, a Concert, a Novelist and a Few Artefacts

On Church Street Listowel in April 2023

<<<<<<<<<

Another Listowel Artist

This unusual piece is in St. Patrick’s Hall. It is the work of Micheál Kelliher.

<<<<<<<<<<

Coming to Listowel Writers Week 2023

This is Elaine Feeney whose latest novel, How to be Build a Boat, is reviewed in all of last weekend’s newspapers.

I haven’t read it yet but it sounds like a fairly light summer read so I’m in.

I have only recently read Emilie Pine’s Ruth and Pen. I loved Eleanor Oliphant too. If you are familiar with these, you will know that the protagonists are neurodiverse people. Sounds like Feeney’s hero is too.

<<<<<<<<

In a Listowel Pub Window

I snapped these old artefacts as I passed Tankers recently.

My mother had a sewing machine just like this. Back then sewing machines were either hand operated or treadle. The treadle ones were brilliant as they left both hands free to manoeuvre the material that was being sewn.

This old wireless was once a luxurious item.

This item is a bit before my time. I think it is an early hot water jar used to warm the bed. I could be wrong in that though.

<<<<<<<<<<<

A Different Kind of Concert

<<<<<<<<<

Crowley’s Fest

Here is Raymond O’Sullivan’s introduction to Bealtaine and Crowley’s Fest:

Bealtaine approaches and we move into the light half of the year. Our Celtic ancestors originally divided the year in two, the dark half, and the new year, beginning at Samhain, and the light half at Bealtaine. Similarly, their days began in the darkness, at sunset. An ‘airy’ time of year when the ‘little people’ are moving house, from their winter to their summer lodgings, and also the time when music lovers move to the sunny south west for the annual Crowley’s Fest in Kenmare.

The Cíarraí Theas crowd certainly know how to pick an appropriate and auspicious time and place to throw a party. On Sunday evening, to the sound of music, we’ll SPRING into SUMMER as the golden sun sets in Inbhear Scéine. The exact time and place where, according to mythology, Parthalán led one of the first groups of pioneers to settle in Ireland.

🎼Samhradh buí ó luí na gréine,

Thugamar féin an samhradh linn.”

I may have strayed a little off the purpose of this post, but here it is, the list of the events for the weekend:-

<<<<<<<<<<

A Ghost Story from Ballybunion

A story recorded by Sheila Sheahan as told by her mother aged 52 in 1937 or 38. The story is preserved in the Schools’ Folklore Collection in the National Archives

About thirty years ago on Christmas night a man in Beale had to leave his own house and he had to take his candle in his hand to a neighbour’s house, because he was hunted by ghosts who asked him to leave as there was to be a fight that night between the Wrens and the Shines who lived in the neighbourhood some year before.

As he and his sister were leaving, a man whom they knew to be dead of years offered to lead them and when they went out in the yard, he had to divide the crowd to allow them pass. The day before the place was covered with magpies and he did not know what was to happen. 


The morning after this he was going fishing. The moon had risen. When he got up, he thought it was day. He went to the boathouse and waited under his canoe until it was bright. As he was about to lie under the canoe, the man who told him to leave his house the night before came to the canoe and peeped in. He told him that if they went fishing that morning, someone would be drowned.

When it was bright he and four other men went fishing. They were not far out when a great storm came and overturned the boat and two men were drowned.

<<<<<<<<<

A Fact

The term Honeymoon comes from the Babylonians. They declared mead, which is a honey flavoured wine, as the official wedding drink. The bride’s parents were required to keep the groom supplied with mead for a month after the wedding….the honeymoon period.

<<<<<<<<

A Big Birthday

Lower Courthouse Road in April 2023

<<<<<<<<<

Pitch and Putt

My 2 eldest grandchildren are all grown up now. Visits to pet farms and fairy trails don’t cut it anymore. They have found a new passion, Pitch and Putt. They played the Listowel course three times on their recent visit and pronounced it an excellent course.

<<<<<<<<

A Poem by Listowel’s John McAuliffe

<<<<<<<<<<

An Emigrant Remembers

John Leahy wrote to us again. His Listowel Connection, I’ll remind you, is with the Leahy’s of Leahy’s Corner Shop. John’s father was Sean Patrick Leahy. His grandather was Jack Leahy.

John is a poet and publishes his poems on The Kemptown Verses website

Here is his recent email;

Dear Mary

Thank you so much for including my poem and picture in your beautiful 
magazine.
I was so proud. I seldom write love poems, but that one was specifically 
for Carina and means a lot.
This has really brought out deep emotions and memories for me.
On a trip home when I was about 13 or 14 my cousins took me to a 
restaurant in the Square;
one of them nudged me and said with great satisfaction “look on the next 
table, that’s John B. Keane”
Some days later one of his sons came to Tralee with us to see a band.

It was my late farther who got me into writing because of his great love 
of literature.
He passed away in 2005 at the age of 93, I really wish he could have 
seen your magazine.
Mum came from Donegal in a small holding near Killybegs. Her maiden name 
was Callaghan.
I lost her in 1993.

Kind Regards
John

<<<<<<<<<

Listowel Writers’ Week 2023

If you are in town on Saturday June 3 2023, why not come and join me and my band of able assistants on our morning walk. We’ll have songs and stories and not much walking.

There’s a Writers’ Week Parkrun at 9.30 for the more energetic.

Charlie Nolan’s video of the walk in 2018 is here;

Saturday Walk 2018

<<<<<<<<

I was at a Birthday Party on Saturday

Mary Boyer is 85.

Mary with her two sons in Namir’s in Ballybunion on Saturday April 22 2023. Mary was joined by family, friends and neighbours to celebrate the milestone birthday.

Mary with Mairead Sharry

Mary with Patricia Borley

With Maria Leahy

With Ruth OQuigley

These are just some of the friends Mary has made as she engaged in her many activities. If ever there was a poster girl for lifelong learning it’s Mary Boyer. Mary’s skills include, knitting, crochet, macramé, flower arranging, cooking, jewellery making and creative writing. A little bird told me she is learning the keyboard.

Mary with her old friend, Namir Karim, who opened his doors on Saturday especially to host Mary’s party.

Mary has that enviable ability to make friends and to keep them for life. We’ll be back for the 90th and for many more le Cúnamh Dé.

<<<<<<<<

A Fact

The first ever safety feature for a car was invented in 1908 by John O’Leary.

What was it?

He patented a large net like a giant shrimp net to be attached to the front bumper to scoop pedestrians out of harm’s way before they could be run over.

<<<<<<<<

Teachers

April 2023

<<<<<<<<<

April Horsefair 2023

<<<<<<<<<<

My Brave (aka Foolhardy) Easter Visitor

Cora felt that a trip to Ballybunion would be wasted without a bit of a dip. Her mother assures me she was well away from those dangerous looking waves. The camera foreshortened the distance.

<<<<<<<

Listowel’s Presentation Sisters

Once upon a time the sisters used to be buried in a cemetery in the convent grounds. A nun’s funeral was a solemn ritual, full of ceremony and singing, her sisters chants accompanying their departed loved one into eternity. Now the local convent building and grounds, including the graveyard, is no longer sacred ground and the remains of the sisters are now interred in St. Michael’s Cemetery.

Many of the names on these simple stones are names of great women I knew as friends and work colleagues. They sacrificed much and their legacy will benefit Listowel and beyond for years to come.

<<<<<<<<<<

Retirement marked with a Tony O’Callaghan plaque

When Jim Cogan retired from St. Michael’s he was presented with a beautiful piece of Tony O’Callaghan’s artwork adorned with symbols of family, Jim’s work life and his interests. It is a treasure.

In the photograph with Jim are Bill Walshe and Fr. Seamus Linnane on behalf of the Board of Management and John Mulvihill, principal, St. Michael’s.

<<<<<<<<<

Beautiful Signwriting

<<<<<<<<

A Fact

Both Shakespeare and Cervantes died on the same day, April 23 1616

<<<<<<<<

Listowel Police Mutiny in 1920

Photo; Éamon ÓMurchú in Malahide

<<<<<<<<<<

Family Time

One of my Ballincollig grandchildren attends Gaelscoil Uí Riordáin.

I attend their show last week. It was hard to believe that they were just primary school fifth and sixth class pupils. They were superb.

There is my little Cora giving it socks as an exotic dancer.

<<<<<<<<<

Tony O’Callaghan and the Listowel Police Mutiny

This is the Tony O’Callaghan plaque on display in Listowel Garda Barracks. It is a record of the names of the mutineers.

“On June 19th 1920, fourteen rank and file members of the Royal Irish Constabulary in Listowel defied the order of their superior officers and refused to hand over the control of the barracks to the British Military, and to adopt a shoot to kill policy against the local community. This incident – forever more known as the Listowel Police Mutiny – was a seminal event in the Irish War of Independence.” Kerry Writers Museum.

<<<<<<<<<<

Then and Now

<<<<<<<<

A Ballybunion Sunday

Essential training and practice for this vital service takes place on Sunday mornings in Ballybunion. My daughter-in-law took the photos.

<<<<<<<<<<<

A Fact

A jiffy is an actual unit of time. It’s 1/100 of a second.

<<<<<<<<<

Big Days in Town

St. Mary’s Listowel on March 24 2023, Confirmation Day

<<<<<<<<

Vehicles in St. Patrick’s Day Parade 2023

Vintage vehicles are a part of St. Patrick’s Day tradition in Listowel.

<<<<<<<

Tony O’Callaghan, Artist in Copper

Tony O’Callaghan of Listowel had presentation pieces commissioned for many prestigious people.

David O’Sullivan found these newspaper accounts of President ODalaigh’s visit to North Kerry. He was presented with a Tony O’Callaghan copper plaque by Listowel Town Council.

Some other examples of O’Callaghan’s work, treasured by their Listowel owners;

<<<<<<<<<<<

Daffodil Day 2023

Some of the collectors who were out and about on March 24 2023.

<<<<<<<<<<<

Coming Up soon

in no particular order….

<<<<<<<<<

Page 7 of 23

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén