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

Listowel’s fine young men named

Names as supplied by Aidan OMurchú

Front row 

Oliver Doyle, ?, Ned Lyons, John Burke, Mark Walsh, ?, Christy Walsh, Tommy Moore, Padraig Walsh, ?, Aidan Murphy, Ned Moriarty, Eamonn Hartnett, John Beechinor, Stephen Coffey.

Middle row

Neville, ?, Keating, Maurice Chute, Colm Keane, Paudie Carey, Michael Hannon, Paddy Horgan, Pat O Donoghue, Tom O Connell, John Sweeney, Gerry Kiernan, Gerry Murphy, PJ Browne, Tom Connor,

Back row

O’Reilly, Pat Stack, Eamonn O Carroll, Maurice Carroll, Kevin Woulfe, Raymond O Mahoney, ?, Nelius Scannell, McElligot, Tadhg Moriarty, Barry, Reidy, Pat Duggan, Dan Doyle, ?

Without being 100% sure, I think that 6 from photo are deceased.

Not bad. I see a few names there who might be able to name the rest.

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Some premises then and now

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One thing I love about Listowel people is their enormous pride in their own. Anyone with a Listowel connection who does well is a source of great pride. That is why when I heard that a Redemptorist priest who was born in Listowel is coordinating the relief effort is his part of the Phillipines, I had to share the news with you.  His name is Fr. Aidan MacMahon and he has served in the Phillipines mission for 35 years. He is a long time gone but he is still one of us and we’re proud.

Listowel, a staunch GAA town is proud of Jonathan Sexton and Tadhg Kennelly who have found success in different codes. So I was thrilled to hear that Bernard Brogan is coming to town on Friday next to switch on the Christmas lights. Bernard, with a very strong Listowel connection, is a huge star of Dublin GAA. It will be great to welcome him home to his mother’s hometown. I hope that a huge crowd turn out in The Square on Friday November 22 2013.  There will be mulled wine and hot chocolate to warm us.

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A Christmas image from last year to get you in the mood

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Newtownsandes Creamery Social 2013 from Jer.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4TnwMwLVqJU&feature=youtu.be

Odds ans ends for Friday

Killarney’s Jessie Buckley is to share a stage with Jude Law in a West End production of ‘Henry V’. Read all about how she feels;

How Jessie Buckley went from Kerry to the West End 

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This is a photo of a young John Lennon with his mother, Julia.

It seems he wasn’t exactly a model pupil.

“A pair of detention sheets which reveal the schoolboy misdemeanours of a 15-year-old John Lennon are to go on sale, revealing his “extremely cheeky” side.

The documents uncover his antics at Quarry Bank High School for Boys in Liverpool where he was renowned as a ”class clown”.

Reasons for punishment given by his teachers include ”sabotage”, ”fighting in class”, ”nuisance”, ”shoving” and ”just no interest whatsoever”.

On two occasions the Beatle even managed to receive three detentions in one day.

The sheets cover the periods when he was in Class 3B between May 19 and June 23 1955, and in Class 4C from November 25 1955 to February 13, 1956. His surname is written by a teacher on the top left corner of each page.”     (Mark Little on Twitter)


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Donal óg Cusack’s Picture of Liam Walsh’s hurley making workshop




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Who would be a jockey?



“Thankfully both Voloniste and Ciaran Fennessy were ok after their spill at Kinsale PTP today. See action in gallery on www.healyracing.ie — “



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Time to get out the diary and fill in a few dates not to be missed


November 15 Buddy Holly night in John B’s

November 19-24 Big Maggie in St. John’s 

November 21-24 Listowel Food Fair

November 24 launch of North Kerry Line in The Lartigue Museum

November 17 at 9.30 on TG4 Tar Abhaile


More about these last 2 in due course.


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Yeats’ passport










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Not long now!





Sunset in Bromore, 60’s Listowel boys and New Orleans Irish in 1800’s

Boat in the Shannon Estuary, photographed from Bromore Cliffs by Mike Flahive in November 2013.

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Another one from Dan Doyle




Dan is third from left at the back.

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St. Michaels’ extension under construction…not sure of the year.

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Back to Listowel. Ontario. It would appear that we were twinned with that town and a delegation came to Listowel, Co. Kerry in 1967.  They dressed in traditional costumes as they were celebrating their town’s  centenary. There are photos in the Kennelly Archive. Tom Fitzgerald found them here

http://www.kennellyarchive.com/id/QVS007/

Anyone among you readers remember the event? The late John B. Keane and Michael Kennelly are recognisable in the photos.

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Then and Now

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Norwich council taking delivery of its first computer!!!!!

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This next story comes from a great website; Irish Central.

Mary
Helen Lagasse is an award winning author based in New Orleans.
She is currently researching her latest book on the Irish who died while
building the New Basin Canal. By the time the canal opened in 1838, 8,000 Irish laborers
had succumbed to cholera and yellow fever. She is appealing for anyone with
information about their ancestors who may have been involved in the
construction to get in touch with her. She can be reached at  mhl5sol@cox.net.   

In 1832,
in the Second Municipality, sometimes called the American Sector, an area
upriver from Canal St., the arduous task of digging the New Orleans Navigation Canal, later known as
the New Basin Canal, began.

“Paddies”
slipped into the swamp to dig with pick and shovel the mosquito-infested ditch
that would be the new 60-ft. wide 6.07 mile long shipping canal. There was no
dynamite, nothing but wheel-barrows with which they’d haul the sludge out of
the ditch on inclined planks. And there was no way for them to drain the
relentless seepage but with pumps invented by Archimedes in 287 B.C.

The
builders of the city’s New Basin Canal expressed a preference for Irish over
slave labor for the reason that a dead Irishman could be replaced in minutes at
no cost, while a dead slave resulted in the loss of more than one thousand
dollars.

Laboring
in hip-deep water, the Irish immigrant diggers, who had little resistance to
yellow fever, malaria, and cholera, died in inestimable numbers. Six years
after construction began, when the canal opened for traffic in 1838, hundreds
if not thousands of Irish laborers would never see their homes again. It was
the worst single disaster to befall the Irish in their 
entire history in New
Orleans.

                                               

This is
the preface and focal point of my work-in-progress, working title “Bridget
Fury,” a novel based on the building of New Basin Canal and of the tragic
consequences for the Irish immigrant laborers, many of who died from disease and
exhaustion and were buried in shallow graves alongside the fetid ditches.

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Listowel Ontario and the Listowel,Kerry connection



Maeve Moloney pointed me in the direction of Wikipaedia for this;

Settler John Binning arrived in 1857 and was the first to create a permanent residence in the area. The community was originally named Mapleton, but the name was changed when a post office was established. The new name was chosen by a government official and refers to Listowel, Ireland. The majority of early settlers were of Protestant Irish origin (Ulster Scots Planters, or English Planters). Incorporated in 1867 as a village and in 1875 as a town, Listowel is now part of the town of North Perth.[2]

Listowel has a large Irish festival, called Paddyfest, which is held over the two weeks surrounding St. Patrick’s Day. The festival was first started in 1977 from an idea put forth by Dave Murtha to honour the large numbers of persons of Irish ancestry present in the Listowel area and is largely maintained by the Kinsmen and Kinette clubs of Listowel.

The official spokesperson for Paddyfest is chosen yearly in the Paddyfest Ambassador Competition. Contestants must perform a speech, impromptu question and interview with the judges and receive the overall highest score to be awarded this position. A separate award of Talent is given out to the contestant with the highest score in the talent competition. Runner-up and Congeniality are also awards which are available. Although the Paddyfest Ambassador Competition changed its name and official status from being Miss Paddyfest when first created, a male has yet to win the title.

(Now wouldn’t it be interesting to find out who that Listowel man was.)

1966 Listowel schoolboys, Duagh Sports Complex and Irish soldiers who fell in WW1 and WW2 remembered

This is another great photo from Dan Doyle’s album. Scoil Realt na Maidine 1966.

Would it be The Country team from the town league?

Dan is second from left at the back.

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Then and Now

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This little corner of the world is getting a facelift these days.

Flavins is nearly done and The Harp and Lion repainting job has just started.

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Remember these?

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They’re making progress building their sports complex in Duagh.

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This is the old girls Primary school being demolished. Denis Carroll took the photo.

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Denis Carroll took this  photo in Listowel on Armistice Day. 

NKRO in conjunction with Listowel Military Festival would like to make contact with people whose relatives died in either of the two world wars, with a view to collecting their stories, photographing their memorabilia and commemorating them.

http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Veterans-Day-Lest-we-forget–The-Irish-who-died-in-World-War-One-133702923.html?utm_campaign=opt-tweets&utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social_flow

Above is a link to an Irish Central article on the Irish who gave their lives to redress injustice in the world. The fallen young men included my late husband’s uncle.

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Battlefield at The Somme

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http://mykerryancestors.com/kerrys-world-war-1-dead/

Above is a link to Kay Caball’s post about Kerry casualties in WW1

Something old; something new….. and some Listowel schoolboys from 1966

This is Fumbling Buffoonery with Billy and John Keane in The Square for Writers’ Week…..2005, I think.

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Another blast from the past

A group of Transition Year girls in Pres. Listowel providing the music for a Seachtain na Gaeilge Ceilí.

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I took these 2 photos at either end of Charles Street in 2005. I took the 2 below in much the same locations in November 2013.

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In response to my request for a photo of the 1966 6th class, an email came winging its way from Dan Doyle, formerly of Tanavalla and now living on the other side of the world in Sydney, Australia. Dan had the photo and he has shared it with us.

Dan is at the back, second from right.  I’m hoping that someone will name the boys for us. Wouldn’t it be interesting to know where are they now?

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Philomena; The Movie

Definitely the best film of the year, I predict a slew of Oscars for this one.

 I went to see Philomena in Kieran Gleeson’s Classic Cinema in Listowel in the company of friends, all of us who grew up in the Ireland of the fifties and sixties. We all knew of girls like Philomena.

Philomena is based on the true story of Philomena Lee of Newcastlewest, a lovely woman who carried her grief and longing for 50 years.

“It is the story of a wronged woman’s exceptional capacity for forgiveness and how her compassion humbles a man of apparently greater intellectual capability. This is a story of the enduring nature of the human spirit.”

The reviewer I quote above put it very well. I recommend it to everyone.

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Maeve Moloney from the US sent me these photos to share with you all.

This is what Maeve wrote;

“These pictures depict my uncle, Paddy Murphy, who died at his home at Bedford Cross in Listowel this past Monday, November 4th, 2013. Uncle Paddy was 97 years old. He was the youngest brother of my Mam, Mary Murphy. There were nine children in their family. Only my Mam and Uncle Paddy were able to live their entire lives in Listowel. Only the youngest of the nine, Esther Lynch, the widow of Dennis Lynch (also of Bedford Cross) is surviving. She lives in London but visits Listowel frequently. The top picture shows, from left to right, Paddy’s daughter, Margaret, Maeve Moloney, Paddy, and Maeve’s sister, Maureen. The bottom picture shows Paddy at home. 

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