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

Ballybunion, Listowel Town Park, Postboxes and Cashen fishermen

Heron at Fota


photo; Chris Grayson







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More from St. John’s Ballybunion


Above are the priest’s tombs, below is the side entrance.

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Commemorative Garden coming along nicely

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Seeing Double in North Main Street, Cork

On a recent visit to Cork I was surprised to spot these two mailboxes side me side in North Main Street. There must have been huge volumes of mail in this part of town once upon a time.

The boxes are from different eras as you can see from the different designs.


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Cashen Fishermen in the 1980s


Photo and caption from Cashen Connections on Facebook

April 1958

(Lt) to (Rt) : Seamus Rourke, Jamsie (Mac) Mc Ellistrim, Willie Stack-Sullivan, Richie (Mouse) Diggin, Behind Richie: Willie Mc Carthy, Sean Rochford, Francie Diggin, Jackie Stack-Sullivan, John Neill, Johnny Healy, Mikey Reddon, Behind Mikey : John Carthy, Far background: John Patrick(John Taid ) Sullivan
All gone but not forgotten!

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Cycling News



Stage 2 of Rás Mumhan will start in Listowel on the Easter Weekend 2017

Stained Glass in Ballybunion and Progress at the Community Centre

WOW

Chris Grayson photographed this magnificent peacock in Fota Wildlife Park

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More photos of St. John’s Ballybunion

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Progress at the Community Centre



The blocks are flying up.



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The Square, Listowel February 2017


MBC is a new business at this premises



The Tidy Towns’ sculpture is a nice addition to this corner of town.

St. Johns, Ballybunion, parking in Spain and a walkway for Listowel fishermen

The Eye of the Tiger


Sumatran Tiger at Fota photographed by Chris Grayson

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Stained Glass Windows in Ballybunion



More photos from my visit to Ballybunion’s St. John’s Catholic Church


Stations of the Cross are traditional in style.

St. John Bosco and St. Jude



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Where he is Now ?



Do you remember this man holding the sign? It is our own Abraham Nur whom we all still miss from Scribes. Abraham now works in The Brehon in Killarney

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Balls in Estapona




Marie Moriarty is on her holidays in Estapona in Spain and there she saw this. Balls very similar to the controversial ones in Ballybunion lined the edge of the pavement to prevent vehicles parking.

 I wonder if anyone has tripped over them.

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News from Radio Kerry




photo; John Kelliher

Kerry County Council has received funding of €40,000 to develop the walkway under Island Bridge near the racecourse in Listowel.The funding was approved by Inland Fisheries Ireland in January. The spot is popular amongst anglers.

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Mea Culpa




False news, misinformation, alternative facts…I’m guilty as charged. Dr. Donal Daly informs me that I misidentified the above animal in Chris Grayson’s photograph. It is a Rhinoceros and not a hippo as I said. Thank you Donal.


St. John’s Ballybunion, beggars and daffodils in bud

Hippopotamus at Fota Wildlife Park


His name means water horse but he has little in common with the horses we know. A hippo is highly dangerous due to his aggressive and unpredictable nature. He can run at 19 miles an hour for short stretches. Chris  Grayson, who photographed him, can run much faster.

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St. John’s Ballybunion




St. John’s Church in Ballybunion is an absolutely beautiful edifice. The renovation work carried out on it in recent years has further enhanced it. I’d recommend a visit.

This magnificent window is behind the main altar.

Because, in response to Vatican 11 we got rid of so many statues from our churches, I find it strange when I visit churches like St. John’s and find so many still  in place.

I like statues because they take me back to my childhood when we had statues everywhere, in our homes, in schools and hospitals and in grottos on main roads and at holy wells. Statues were part of the landscape of my childhood.



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Beggars, the unemployed and refugees in 19th Century London

No Change There Then……….

It’s absolutely true that there is nothing new under the
sun. Read this account of the treatment of beggars in London in 1819 and see if
you don’t hear echoes of rhetoric we are hearing so often today.

The Sydney
Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser;       
Sat 29 May 1819

The charitable
Institution for the discouragement of mendicity, and the relief of poor
travellers, approaches very neatly in principle to one which has been eminently
successful at Bath, and which forms a branch of the Pierre Point-street
Institution in that city.

Every person
who has visited that town, where the number of beggars was once proverbial,
must be aware what a benefit has been conferred on the public by affording a
small but systematic relief to poor travellers.  It is computed that they have been assisted by
one fourth of the sum usually expended in street alms giving ; and it appears
altogether improbable that any ever visited Bath in quest of the small
allowance of a two-penny loaf and a pint of soup, which is all that is in
general bestowed. This could never induce

paupers to
deviate from their general route, much less to travel from a distance.

A full third of
the applicants at Bath have been discharged soldiers and sailors with their
families, returning home from Chatham, going to London for prize-money, or to
pass the Board at Greenwich, or to seek employment in sea-port towns. A full
sixth are discharged workmen, dismissed from parishes not their own, in
consequence of the desire felt by the parishioners to employ their own
increasing

stock of
paupers, in preference to giving them unearned subsistence. A full third of the
number may be referred to the class of workmen dismissed from decreasing
manufactories, dock-yards, and establishments which have ceased on the change
from war to peace; the rest are Irish labourers seeking employment, starving
negroes, who have wandered from different seaport towns, and perhaps a very few
regular mendicants, who may have deceived the vigilance of the attending
registrars.

But the
Institution has saved many donors from being deceived, and is in fact more advantageous
to the rich than even to the poor; while to the latter it affords relief in due
proportion to their immediate necessities, giving to all the benefit of a comfortable
meal, of advice, if necessary, and of that repose which the weary traveller can
best appreciate; and in some instances extending assistance a little farther,
though always within very narrow bounds.

* mendicity = begging

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Daffodils about to blossom




The Fair, the Tarbert Road and Value Centre

Tree in Winter: Listowel Town Park 2017





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Top of Bridge Road, Listowel



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The Fair

 Dick Carmody in his book  In the Shadow of the School remembered the fairs of his youth.

Another aspect of the Fair

Breaking  in and the training
of farm horses required an experienced and skilful horseman. As with many tasks
relating to farming, there was always one or more recognised experts locally
who would take spirited and untrained animals through all the stages of roping,
harnessing and carting to becoming a sober manageable and contented animal that
could be entrusted to any member of the family. There were exceptions, whose reputations
would soon become known throughout the locality and might not be so easily
disposed of at the next horse fair.

For horse breeding purposes, most
farmers depended on the services of a visiting stallion to place their breeding
mares in foal. This arrangement took place on fair days in Sheehan’s
yard at the top of William Street in Listowel. Though well educated in farm
animal husbandry from a very young age, for this particular event we were kept
a safe distance. The expected arrival of a young foal in about 11 months was
now eagerly awaited.

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On the Tarbert Road



This is a section of Tarbert Road outside Listowel. This busy junction leads to the An Post sorting office and Applegreen service station.

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Value Centre, Bridge Rd., Listowel


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