Listowel Connection

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

Remembering my Sister

November Walk

 Mallow Camera Club;  Grade 1. Third Place. Ann O’ Mara.

<<<<<<<<<<


“The heart that has truly loved  never forgets”


This is the last photo of my only sister. She was Nora Christina Ahern, called Ina at home and Chrissy in school.

This photo was taken in Mallow Hospital. She had put on the jumper over her nightdress so she would look “dressed”.

She is not smiling because it is a passport photo. Indeed she has little reason to smile anyway because she is very ill.

It is  March 1964. She is 15 years old. A month later on April 10th she passed away. She never got to Lourdes so the passport was never needed after all.


In this photo, Ina is wearing a yellow jumper she knitted herself. Because she was 15 she was too old for the children’s ward so she was in a ward with all the old women. They were lovely to her and she became one of them. Their pursuits became her pursuits. She knit with their encouragement and she joined in the exchange of patterns. She read Ireland’s Own and discussed the latest adventures of Kitty the Hare. Best of all she prayed with them. Every evening the women of the ward took out their rosary beads and said the family rosary. Ina, who, before her illness, had been a bit of a tearaway, fell into line with her new friends. She took consolation and support from the communal prayers. She knew that many of the older ladies were praying for a peaceful death for themselves and for each other. They desperately wanted their youngest patient to get better.

I know now what I didn’t know then. Ina was never going to get better. She was in the departure lounge too.

I think of my sister often, especially at this time of her anniversary. She is part of everything I do. Today she is part of my blog.


Through the years;



Aged 4 and 5


Aged 13 and 14 on our Confirmation day


<<<<<<<<<


Another local phrase remembered


Mary, I like to phrase ‘out beside it.’  In South Meath, we say, ‘You’re out by the side of it’ when we point out to someone  that they are wrong or mistaken about something. One memorable instance of this was when a school-mate of mine, having had a few clips about the ear from the Master, retorted: ‘If you think you can ‘bate’ me like that, you are out by the side of it!’ Well, he would have been if it had happened these days… Nicholas L.



Cycling, Market Street and a New Book to Look Forward To

Helping Hand

 Mallow Camera Club;  Jim McSweeney

<<<<<<<

Market Street Listowel, March 2021


<<<<<<<


A  Book to look forward to


BOOK ANNOUNCEMENT – COMING SOON

Charlotte & Arthur by Pauline Clooney, October 2021

This work of historical fiction tells the story of Charlotte Brontë’s marriage to Irish curate Arthur Bell Nicholls. The book takes place in a last year of Charlotte’s life as the unlikely couple set off on their honeymoon to Ireland. Set against the backdrop of the recent famine, their tour exposes the contrasting lives of the poor and the privileged of Irish society.

Available to pre-order at merdogbooks.com/product/charlotte-arthur/

Spoiler alert: Charlotte and Arthur took in Listowel in their Irish honeymoon.

<<<<<<<<<<<


Official Opening at Presentation Secondary School



This photograph was taken at the official opening of the extension to the school.


Left to Right; Fr. O’Mahoney, Bishop Diarmuid OSuilleabháin, Jimmy Deenihan, ? maybe Minister for Education, Dick Spring, Sr. Sheila, Fr. Clifford and Sr. Eileen

<<<<<<<<<

Strange But True


Ireland’s rarest fish is the Goureen, or Killarney Shad. It is found in Lough Leanne, Killarney and nowhere else in the world.

Source; Foster’s Irish Oddities, Allen Foster


St. Mary’s in Green, Some Jokes and Some Listowel People Remembered

Heron

Mallow Camera Club;  Eamon O’ Donnell


<<<<<<<<<<


St. Mary’s Listowel goes Green



Our Church on St. Patrick’s Day 2021


<<<<<<<<<


Remembering the Old Stock


This photo brought back memories for Billy McSweeney. Billy wrote;


Hi Mary,

I remember Tasty Cotter well and I also remember the man in the photo 
looking back over his right shoulder as Gerald McElligott, the Listowel 
Arms Hotel owner.

I hope you washed all the green paint from St Patrick off! Our 
children’s joke was that you had to go to the Sluagh Hall the day before 
to get your behind painted green

Billy McSweeney


<<<<<<<<<


Some Funnies


Vincent Doyle sent us these to help us raise a smile in these unsmiling times.

 <<<<<<<<


Sweep Ticket from 1960



Photo from Glin Historical Society on Facebook

An Aga Cookbook, some Caring Cork Posters and an old Lartigue video

Boy with a Hen

Mallow Camera club,   John Hooton.

>>>>>>>> 

An Old Cookbook

Cookbooks lend a great insight into how we used to eat. I unearthed this old gem at the back of a cupboard. It used to belong to my beloved Aunty Eily. The cookbook came with her first electric cooker, which she cared for with such loving reverence that she still had it in working order until her death.

The heating controls on this cooker had three settings ; low, medium and high.

The date on the cook book is 1956.

Forcemeat is an old word for stuffing. I looked it up.

a gill is a quarter of a pint.

This recipe is an ancient one and famously in the 18th century began with the instruction, First, catch your hare.

(Another old cookery book, in giving directions for a particular kind of pudding, begins thus, Take your maid and send her for a peck of flour. )

<<<<<<<<

Some Cork Photos

<<<<<<<<


Lartigue 1920’s

Precious media sent to us by Danny McDonnell

Christmas cards and March Hares

Foxgloves at Slea Head 

Mallow Camera Club;  John Hooton.

<<<<<<<<<

The March Hare

Have you heard the expression, mad as a March hare? Of course the hares aren’t mad at all just a bit frisky this time of year.

For my last birthday I got a present of this lovely book.

It has a little bit about Nature for everyday of the year. Here’s what it says about the March hare.

<<<<<<<<

Shopping in a Pandemic

I have very few outings nowadays and when I do get out it’s only on essential business. Last week my outing was to the pharmacy for my medication. There I was, socially distanced, waiting to be served, when what did I spy but bargain basement Christmas cards. 

I am living proof that a bargain is something you don’t need at a price you can’t resist. 

Christmas cards in March! Only a dedicated bargain hunter, starved of all my usual charity shop fixes would fall for that one.

Problem now is, will I remember where I put them next Christmas?

<<<<<<<<<<


Getting Ready for Reopening

The newest barber’s shop on Church Street has their new sign up in time for reopening.

Page 201 of 676

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén