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

Tag: A Minute of Your Time Page 2 of 5

Flavins Closing, Christmas in Athea and Listowel and A Minute of Your Time

Last Christmas 




In January 2020 a chapter will close in the proud literary history of Ireland’s literary capital, Listowel. Flavin’s of Church Street is closing.


D.J. Flavin of 30 Church Street is a shop and a family woven into the fabric of Listowel for generations.


I will miss Joan and Tony and their lovely shop when this  little bit of local colour and individuality has gone  from our town.


Thanks for the memories.


Joan serving, Christine, one of her regulars on December 18 2019

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They’ve Planted a Hedge




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Christmas in Listowel


Here are a few images of home for the diaspora.


My friend Rosie painted the lovely scenes on the shop windows here at  Spar on Bridge Road.

Lynch’s Coffee Shop in Main Street always has some of the loveliest window displays.


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Christmas in Athea


(From Athea and District Newsletter)

That Time of Year

By Domhnall de Barra

Coming up to Christmas, my mind always wanders back to days of yore when the world was indeed a different place. There are huge changes since those days, most of them for the better, but there are also some good things that have been lost along the way. The biggest difference between the middle of the last century and today  is how more well off we are now. Today, thank God, there is little or no poverty in our area. Back then it was an entirely different story. The years after the 2nd world war were lean ones indeed with no employment and a real scarcity of money. Families were usually big; 9 or 10 children being the norm but some were much bigger. Small farms were dotted around the parish, most of them with 10 or 12 cows to milk, and they barely survived. The farm was handed on to the oldest son so all the other siblings had to find work. The only employment available was to work for bigger farmers, most of whom lived on the good lands down the County Limerick, or working for shopkeepers and publicans in the village or nearby towns.

There was only so much of this to go around so, as soon as they were old enough, the boys and girls from Athea emigrated to England or America to find a better life for themselves. There was many a tear shed at the railway station in Abbeyfeale or Ardagh as young people, who had never seen the outside world, embarked on the long trip to some foreign city, not knowing what they were facing. There was hardly a house in the parish that was not affected by this mass exodus of our finest young people. It was however the saving of this country because those who found work with McAlpine, Murphy, and the likes sent home a few pounds every so often to help the family left behind. The postman was a welcome visitor bearing the letter with the English or American stamp. People would also send home parcels, especially coming up to Christmas. You didn’t have much, growing up in that era. You had two sets of clothes, one for weekdays and one for Sunday, well, when I say Sunday I suppose I really mean for going to Mass because as soon as you got home the clothes were taken off in case they got dirty!.  The ordinary clothes were often hand-me-downs from older brothers and sisters and might have been repaired and altered many times. The mothers, in those days, were deft with sewing, darning and mending. When a shirt collar got frayed it would be “turned” and it looked like a new garment. The socks were made of thick wool and worn all the week. Naturally they got damp in the wellingtons, our main type of footwear, so we hung them over the fire at night . In the morning they would be stiff as pokers and we often had to beat them off the floor or a nearby chair to make them pliable enough to put on. There was no such thing as an underpants in those times or indeed belts for the trousers. A pair of braces did the trick and kept the trousers from falling down. That is why the parcel from abroad was so welcome. The new clothes they contained  transported us into a different world and we felt like kings in our modern outfits.

The food was also simple but wholesome. Bacon and cabbage or turnips was the norm at dinner but sometimes we would make do with a couple of fried eggs and mashed potatoes or “pandy” as we used to call it. The eggs were from our own hens and had a taste you will not find today. Sausages were a rare treat and of course we looked forward to a bit of pork steak and puddings when a neighbour killed a pig.

Education was basic national school level, except for the few who could afford the fees for secondary school so, all too soon, childhood was over and the next group took to the emigration trail. There was great excitement at this time of the year because most of those who emigrated, especially to England, came home for Christmas. Their arrival at the station was eagerly awaited on the last few days before the festive season and we were in awe of their demeanour as they stepped down from the train dressed in the most modern of clothes with their hair in the latest fashion. There was much rejoicing and a nearby hostelry was visited where the porter flowed freely as those who came home were very generous to those who had stayed behind and had no disposable income. It was now time for a change of diet because nothing was too good for the visitors and we gorged ourselves on fresh meat from the butchers and “town bread”.

Midnight Mass was a special occasion with the church full of people all wishing each other a happy Christmas. The crib was a great attraction for the children who  looked in awe at the baby Jesus in the manger. There was a solemnity about it and a sense of celebration at the same time. The Christmas dinner was a real feast with a goose or a turkey  filling the middle of the table surrounded by spuds, Brussels sprouts and other vegetables. Jelly and custard followed and it was like manna from heaven!  I don’t think many of today’s youngsters will be as excited as we were or cherish every moment in the company of family members who would soon take the lonesome trip back across the seas.  Even though, today, we have more than enough I would give anything to go back to that  time when I was a boy and experience the magic once more.


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A Poem from Noel Roche of Chicago and Listowel


In Loving Memory of my sister, “ Jack’

I wonder if you’re up there

Irish dancing on a cloud.

I know that when you sing

You’re surrounded by a crowd.

Mam and Dad and Dick and Jim,

And all who passed are there.

I wonder what God’s thinking

Every time he hears you swear.

I know in my heart

There is one thing you will do.

I know you’ll ask Elvis

To sing The Wonder of You.

I know there’s angels laughing,

They all think you’re great.

Heaven has not been the same

Since you walked through the gate.

You left behind a lot of stuff

Clothes, jewellery and rings.

Your daughter got the promise

That you’re the wind beneath her wings.

I know your friends are sad

I know they’re feeling blue.

But I also know they’re grateful

That they had a friend like you.

Your brothers and your sisters

Are going day by day

And trying to accept the fact

That you have gone away.

Your nephews and your nieces

Every single one,

Are struggling with the fact

That their favourite Aunty’s gone.

I’m here in Chicago

Many miles away.

I’ve got a hole in my heart

That will not go away.

I’m trying to get over this

And make a brand new start

I know that I am not alonw

You are always in my heart.

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A Heartfelt Thank You




I am truly grateful to everyone who has supported me by buying my book. This publication was a leap of faith for me. It was very different from my previous book which sold well to people who love Listowel.

With A Minute of Your Time I was much more exposed. I let down the crutch of our beautiful town and the huge volume of affection that people feel for it. I had to trust that people would buy me, my musings and my photographs. I am humbled and uplifted by the response.

Thank you from the bottom of my heart to everyone who bought the book, to people who sent me lovely cards and letters, to people who stopped me in the street to tell me how much they love the book, particularly to the man who quoted, “Your attitude, not your aptitude will determine your attitude. Page 77.” Classy, you made my day.”

The book is available in local bookshops. I’m hoping that people home for Christmas will pick it up while they’re in town. If you got a book token for Christmas, maybe you’d think of your hard working blogger…..

Mike the Pies, Old Drama Group photos and a daft Christmas story from the Dúchas collection

St.Mary’s at Night, Christmas 2019

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A Kerry Christmas Childhood

Garry MacMahon

Now I cannot help remembering the happy days gone by,

As Christmastime approaches and the festive season’s nigh.

I wallow in nostalgia when I think of long ago,

And the tide that waits for no man as the years they ebb and flow.

We townies scoured the countryside for holly berries red,

And stripped from tombs green ivy in the graveyard of the dead,

To decorate each picture frame a hanging on the wall,

And fill the house with greenery and brighten winter’s pall,

Putting up the decorations was for us a pleasant chore,

And the crib down from the attic took centre stage once more.

From the box atop the dresser the figures were retrieved,

To be placed upon a bed of straw that blessed Christmas Eve,

For the candles, red crepe paper, round the jamjars filled with sand,

To be placed in every window and provide a light so grand,

To guide the Holy Family who had no room at the inn,

And provide for them a beacon of the fáilte mór within.

The candles were ignited upon the stroke of seven,

The youngest got the privilege to light our way to Heaven,

And the rosary was said as we all got on our knees,

Remembering those who’d gone before and the foreign missionaries.

Ah, we’d all be scrubbed like new pins in the bath before the fire

And, dressed in our pajamas of tall tales we’d never tire,

Of Cuchlainn, Ferdia, The Fianna, Red Branch Knights,

Banshees and Jack o Lanterns, Sam Magee and Northern Lights

And we’d sing the songs of Ireland, of Knockanure and Black and Tans,

And the boys of Barr na Sráide who hunted for the wran.

Mama and Dad they warned us as they gave each good night kiss,

If we didn’t go to sleep at once then Santa we would miss,

And the magic Christmas morning so beloved of girls and boys,

When we woke to find our dreams fulfilled and all our asked for toys,

But Mam was up before us the turkey to prepare,

To peel the spuds and boil the ham to provide the festive fare.

She’d accept with pride the compliments from my father and the rest.

“Of all the birds I’ve cooked,” she’s say, “ I think that this year’s was the best.”

The trifle and plum pudding, oh, the memories never fade

And then we’d wash the whole lot down with Nash’s lemonade.

St. Stephen’s Day brought wrenboys with their loud knock on the door,

To bodhrán beat abd music sweet they danced around the floor’

We, terror stricken children, fled in fear before the batch,

And we screamed at our pursuers as they rattled at the latch.

Like a bicycle whose brakes have failed goes headlong down the hill

Too fast the years have disappeared. Come back they never will.

Our clan is scattered round the world. From home we had to part.

Still we treasure precious memories forever in our heart.

So God be with our parents dear. We remember them with pride,

And the golden days of childhood and the happy Christmastide.

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Mike the Pies in December 2019



I love the new look.

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Old Listowel Drama Group photos

Below is a great collection of old Drama Group photos that Maeve Moloney has sent us. We have no details of names or even the name of the play/plays or the year they were taken. We need your help.

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A Dúchas Christmas Memory



Garret Stack went to confession Christmas Eve and he was to go to communion Christmas morning and the clock stopped during the night and he got up and went away thinking it was very late and when he was near Newtown he met a priest and he knew him and that priest was dead and he came down the road and went into Mc. Cabe’s and it was only one o’clock and he stayed there until morning.

Written by Con Shine, Kilbaha, told by his father John Shine.

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A Minute of Your Time



 My photograph shows Diana having a quick look At A Minute of Your Time in O’Mahoney’s Tralee. This is the latest outlet to sell it.

It’s sold out in The Friary Bookshop, Killarney but it’s available nearby in The Dungeon. Eagers and O’Connors also have copies.

It’s proving popular as a Christmas present, suitable for young and old.

 Thank you to everyone who has supported me in this new venture.



Knocknagoshel Church, Book Launches and A Trip Home

Sitting on the fence


A blurry Kanturk robin taken through a window

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Dates for the Diary


It’s that time of year when concerts, plays, craft fairs and book launches are happening thick and fast. Here are a few upcoming events.

The craft Fair is on December 1

Sun 1st

KERRY HOSPICE FOUNDATION – LIGHT TO REMEMBER MEMORIAL TREE CEREMONY

Remember someone special this Christmas by purchasing a ribbon to tie on the special Remember Memorial Tree outside St John’s Theatre & Arts Centre.  Remembrance Tree Ribbons and Cards are available in the Theatre in addition to many shops around Listowel. The Ceremony will take place at 5pm.  All are welcome.


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Knocknagoshel Church

There are some lovely stained glass windows in this beautiful church. Some churches have veery richly coloured windows, which in themselves are lovely but can serve to darken the interior. This church has a happy mix of coloured and clear glass so the church is cool and bright. Here are some of the lovely windows.

The church has many generous benefactors who are commemorated in the windows and in plaques on the walls.

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The Kanturk Launch of A Minute of Your Time

This is my sister-in-law, Breeda’s, kitchen in the afternoon of the Kanturk launch.  I joined the testers who are out of this shot. A big thank you to my Kanturk family who pulled out all the stops to make this night such a success.

Cora and Aisling helped their dad to sell the books in the Edel Quinn Hall. Róisín took the photos.

My cousin, Eugene Brosnan returned to his Kanturk roots to provide the musical entertainment. He was a big hit with the audience.

One of the great parts of the night was meeting up with old friends, most of whom told me that I have grown into my mother.

My nephew, William, introduced me with such a glowing speech I hardly recognised myself.

Tony and Joan pictured here with my brother are frequent visitors to Ballybunion. I hardly recognised them in their winter clothes and on home turf.


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Presents of Mind



Presents of Mind is just one of several Kanturk shops stocking A Minute of Your Time

Remembrance Day 2019, names of soldiers in Listowel 1922 and Katurk Memories

Turf lorry passes by St. Mary’s Listowel on Sunday November 10 2019.

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People I met in The Square on Sunday




Three lovely ladies, Ingrid O’Connor and her daughters were in The Square after 11.30 mass.

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Remembrance Sunday 2019

The men and woman who organised the remembrance ceremony.

Jim Halpin who has done most to remember the fallen soldiers from North Kerry.

Taking the salute

Raising the tricolour


For me the two most spine chilling moments of the remembrance are firstly the reading out of the names of the fallen. These are local names familiar to us all, ancestors of local people who made the greatest sacrifice. The second moving moment is when that bugler plays the last post, bidding farewell to those who served.

 
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Listowel Army personnel from The Military Archives Census 1922

Listowel (Kerry)

Patrick

Daly

19

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Dirran

19

Listowel (Kerry)

Timothy

Enright

18

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Flaherty

28

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Fahy

25

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Finn

25

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Flaherty

20

Listowel (Kerry)

William

Flahive

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Stephen

Gurtrie

19

Listowel (Kerry)

Maurice

Granville

52

Listowel (Kerry)

Stephen

Gaughan

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Ned

Hanafin

19

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Hanafin

21

Listowel (Kerry)

Dan

Hunt

30

Listowel (Kerry)

Jeremiah

Hunt

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Martin

Hayes

26

Listowel (Kerry)

Con

Hickey

20

Listowel (Kerry)

Joe

Hynes

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Martin

Hynes

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Martin

Howe

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Hayes

19

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Haugh

20

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Hanrahan

23

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Horan

18

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Bartley

Hernon

30

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Peter

Kenrick

21

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Jas

Kenny

19

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Kelly

22

6

Listowel (Kerry)

Timothy

Kelly

21

6

Listowel (Kerry)

John

King

21

6

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Murphy

32

8

Listowel (Kerry)

John J

McGarry

19

8

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Moriarty

20

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Murphy

19

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Murphy

19

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Francis

Moore

20

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Pat

Morrissey

23

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Naughton

19

8

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

O’Grady

25

8

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Halloran

23

8

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Sullivan

19

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Daniel

Shanahan

22

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Thos

Stack

22

10

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Walsh

21

10

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Walsh

21

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Coleman

Walsh

24

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Christy

Whelan

19

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Ward

20

10

Listowel (Kerry)

James

McMahon

23

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Dominic

Flaherty

24

10

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Sullivan

26

12

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Hickey

18

12

Listowel (Kerry)

Joseph

Grady

18

12

Listowel (Kerry)

William

Archer

18

14

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Ayers

24

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Denis

Bentley

20

14

Listowel (Kerry)

James

Blake

18

14

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Brady

22

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Bolton

21

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Edmond

Burns

21

14

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Curly

20

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Collins

26

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Cashel

35

14

Listowel (Kerry)

Thos

Connelly

21

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Austin

Cullinan

22

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Joseph

Condon

19

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Dan

Corry

33

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Curran

20

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Cantillon

26

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Collins

22

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Curran

20

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Timothy

Donovan

22

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Daly

50

16

Listowel (Kerry)

Austin

Kelly

22

18

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Kennedy

21

18

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Lennane

20

18

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Lynch

30

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Mat

Lynch

20

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Lawrence

Larkin

24

18

Listowel (Kerry)

James

Lynch

21

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Joe

Lafferty

20

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Dan

Lynch

22

18

Listowel (Kerry)

Tom

Lynch

21

18

Listowel (Kerry)

George

Mahony

18

20

Listowel (Kerry)

Eugene

McNamara

23

20

Listowel (Kerry)

John

McNamara

19

20

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Moroney

22

20

Listowel (Kerry)

McPhilbin

20

Listowel (Kerry)

William

McNamara

29

20

Listowel (Kerry)

Frank

Mangan

21

20

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Moore

60

20

Listowel (Kerry)

Thomas

Moore

28

20

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

McGrath

26

20

Listowel (Kerry)

John

O’Grady

23

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Sullivan

18

22

Listowel (Kerry)

James

Pope

18

22

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Perkins

20

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

Purse

17

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Joseph

Pendergast

23

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Quirke

18

22

Listowel (Kerry)

John

Ryan

28

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Frank

Roche

22

22

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

Ryan

18

22

Listowel (Kerry)

T P

Shea

23

24

Listowel (Kerry)

John

O’Connor

32

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Roger

O’Connor

22

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Denis

Sullivan

19

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Michael

O’Connor

18

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Patk

O’Grady

22

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Dan

O’Brien

22

24

Listowel (Kerry)

Brian

O’Grady

26

24

Listowel (Kerry)

John

O’Connell

26

24

Listowel (Kerry)

John

O’Keeffe

21

24

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Kanturk, My Home Town




We, Kanturk natives, are lucky to have a Facebook page dedicated to Kanturk Memories where people share photos and memories.

The above treasure is of a carnival in 1941. Goggin’s was one of the local mineral water companies.

I’m taking a trip down that Memory Lane tomorrow evening, November 15 2019 for my Ahern family are organising a Kanturk launch of A minute of Your Time in the Edel Quinn Hall at 7.30. I’m looking forward to meeting up with old friends and cousins. My cousin, Eugene Brosnan is going to play the music and my super caterer, sister in law is looking after the nibbles.. If you are in the area, drop in. It should be a good one.

Remembrance Sunday, Garda Recruitment in 1923 and Celebrating A minute of Your Time

 Remembrance



Listowel Town Square, November 10 2019


Armistice Day, Remembrance Day, November 11 is a day to celebrate peace but to also remember the horrors of the two world wars that changed our world beyond recognition.

This poem by a little known Scottish poet captures the ‘shell shock” and post traumatic stress of survivors.

When you see millions of the mouthless dead

Across your dreams in pale battalions go,

Say not soft things as other men have said,

That you’ll remember. For you need not so.

Give them not praise. For, deaf, how should they know

It is not curses heaped on each gashed head?

Nor tears. Their blind eyes see not your tears flow.

Nor honour. It is easy to be dead.

Say only this, ‘They are dead.’ Then add thereto,

‘Yet many a better one has died before.’

Then, scanning all the o’ercrowded mass, should you

Perceive one face that you loved heretofore,

It is a spook. None wears the face you knew.

Great death has made all his for evermore.

Charles Hamilton Sorley


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Freestate Police Recruits

This advert which I posted a while ago aroused great interest.

Vincent Carmody had this to say on the matter;

Mary,

I was interested in the advert for the new police force. At one time I made a lot of esquires when I  was researching details of an uncle of mine, Patrick Walsh of Pollough, who joined the new force in 1924. 

When plans for the new force were been drawn up,  Michael Collins was very anxious to have a crossover of serving R.I.C. officers and constables join the new Irish Police force. This was,  of course, to avail and use their expertise. However there was a lot of bitterness and resentment among many of the men who had been active in the I.R.A. and who would still have regarded these ex- R.I.C. men  as the enemy. This movement would have spawned the Kildare Mutiny, 

From figures that I have since gleaned from that wonderful historian, ex Chief Super. Donal O’ Sullivan,  between 150 and 200 from the R.I.C. would have signed up initially, with many of these resigning through intimidation, of the total number who joined, 60 men stayed in the Garda Force until their proper retirement age.

Back to my uncle Patrick, I checked with Garda Archives  and found that he had served in the old I.R.A. and then joined the pro Treaty side during the Civil War. He joined the Guards on the 28/8/1924 and his first posting was to a town in Co. Cork on 8/1/1925. He remained there until he resigned on the 5/9/1928. The official reason was that he was intending to emigrate to America.

However like all family history, I found that there were stories behind the story. Patrick would have been the eldest son of the Walsh family and as Irish tradition goes, he would, if he had wanted, been likely to inherit the Walsh family farm, My grandmother Mary Walsh, however, had a wish that her eldest son to go for the priesthood as soon as he had completed his time at St. Michael’s. After his leaving certificate, and deciding against the priesthood, he joined the local I.R.A. along with his cousin and friend Con Brosnan and many others from the Clounmacon and Moyvane areas. Following the Treaty, he, again like Con, joined the new Free State Army as a private. Following the Civil War and reluctant to return to farming he joined the Gardai. 

According to Con Brosnan, who once told me, Patrick was an above avarage footballer and when based in Cork, he played with distinction with the Cork Junior team beaten by a point in Killarney by Clare in the Munster Junior Final of 1925. Football was to figure again in the story of his early retirement from the force, whereas the official line was that he resigned voluntary as he had intended to travel to America, I have found out the he, along with the rest of his team-mates from the club which he was playing for, had won a divisional championship and were celebrating in a number of local pubs on the Sunday night of the final. In those days, Sunday drinking was taboo, so people found on, if caught, would be taken to court and fined. In Patrick and his teammates case they were caught in two different pubs by the Sargent of the Gardai, who was on duty that night. Whatever about the general public, it would have been regarded as a major scandal for a serving Guard to be found drinking outside regular hours. So, in order to avoid an inquiry, my uncle took the easiest way out and made a clean break, voluntary retiring, saying he wished to go to America. Instead of which, he went to Australia, where he lived until his death in the late 1960’s.

In John Bs, ‘Self Portrait’, he describes how, when in England, he and his friend, Murphy,  saw joining the British Navy, would have been an ideal way of seeing the world, having filled up the entry forms and listed themselves as been Irishmen, the petty officer having read the forms, duly told them that they were British as were their parents. Unwilling to give way in terms of nationality, John B and Denis Murphy retreated, with John B later recalling in his book, ” The Royal Navy suffered a terrible defeat on that day, even if it doesn’t know about it. It lost a probable Drake and a possible Nelson. 

In that sense and in the same vein  I wonder, did the Gardai lose a possible future  Commissioner when Pat  Walsh resigned in 1928 !!!!

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And Nicholas had another insight into the eligibility or otherwise of some candidates;

Hi, Mary,

Most interesting advert for An Garda Síochána from Eoin Ó Dubhthaigh, Commissioner.  Might I point out that, as Gaeilge, it specifies that anyone who had NOT worked for Ireland’s cause in the battle against England would NOT be accepted- hence many applicants sought and received ‘nominations’ from ex-IRA members of standing to show that they had been active in the fight. We must assume that these were true. But if they were handled the same as pensions for some such warriors, then….. Nicholas.

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A Book That Changed my Life

A Minute of Your Time has brought a shower of blessings into my life.

I’ve received umpteen personal messages, handwritten messages, emails, an apple tart and buns, cups of coffee and more. I feel truly valued. Thank you everyone.

 I am now well known to the postal services. These letters reached me but I would advise if you are ordering a book for me to post, its best to send me an email first and I’ll send you my land address.

The biggest surprise has to be this unexpected endorsement from Michael O’Regan in his Call from the Dáilon Kerry Today on Radio Kerry on Friday.

When your friend is a silversmith and you have this box delivered to you……

 Eileen Moylan of Claddagh Design made me this beautiful solid silver bookmark. My cup runneth over….

As well as all the celebrating and self absorption I have been signing my book for local shops and next Friday I will be having a Cork launch in Kanturk in the Edel Quinn Hall at 7.30. I’m looking forward to taking my book back to my roots.

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