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

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Ballylongford Tree, Ballydonoghue Parish Magazine 2019, The Wren and More Mike’s Murals in Tralee

Ballylongford Christmas Tree 2019

 Photo: Ballylongford Snaps.

The lighting up of their Christmas tree is a big occasion in Bally. They had a lovely evening for it on Saturday last.

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Ballydonoghue Parish Magazine

This gorgeous photos from Hegarty’s shop is the cover image for this year’s eagerly awaited journal.

Some of the capacity crowd in Tomáisín’s for the launch

Prizes were awarded for creative writing and photography. John McGrath won the poetry prize.

The committe couldn’t wait to get a look .


Marion Walsh of the Dublin Kerry Association did the honours as official launcher of the yearbook.

I took these photos from Ballydonoghue Parish Magazine’s Facebook page. There are lots more there too.

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A Video Gem

This lovely old video dates from 1963 and it features a young Bryan MacMahon giving an interview to TG4 about the origins of “The Wran” at a Wrenboy Festival in Newcastlewest in 1963

Bryan MacMahon on the Wren tradition and the bodhrán



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His Best Yet?

The very talented Mike O’Donnell continues to intrigue Tralee people with his murals. I took the photos from Mike’s own Twitter feed.

Because it’s Kerry, there has to be a football tribute. What better subject that that Kerry legend, Mikey Sheehy.

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Christmas is a Time to Remember

Ribbons are on sale in St. John’s and many local shops.

Church St, Piseógs, Ballylongford school and Listowel Tennis and Listowel Men’s Shed

Main Street. Listowel in January 2019

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No Listowel Connection



I saw this on a Photos of Dublin site. It reminded me of something out of The Keystone Cops .

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Then and Now

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If you believe this, you’ll believe anything


From Dúchas, the folklore collection

One night as a nurse was returning to Newtown after attending to a patient in Knockanure she was passing a fort when a man came out of it and asked her to come in to see his wife who was sick. She went in, and there were other people who used to dip their fingers in a pot of stuff which looked like soup in the corner and rub it to their eyes. When the nurse was leaving the house she did the same. A few days after that the nurse went to the fair and she met the man again. She shook hands with him. The people at the fair could not see him at all and they were surprised at what the nurse was doing The man told her to close her left eye and to see if she could see him. She said she could not. He then told her to close her right eye and to see if she could see him. She said she could. He struck her left eye with a stick which he had in his hand and she was blind in that eye ever after.

Collector- John Culhane
Informant- Dan Cunningham, Age 76 Address Newtownsandes, Co. Kerry.


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Ballylongford School



Photo shared by Liam O’Hainnín on Facebook

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Listowel Juvenile Tennis 1980s




Photo: Danny Gordon

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Listowel Men’s Shed



What is a Men’s Shed?


A Men’s Shed is a dedicated, friendly and welcoming meeting place where men come together and undertake a variety of mutually agreed activities.

Men’s Sheds are open to all men regardless of age, background or ability. It is a place where you can share your skills and knowledge with others, learn new skills and develop your old skills.

New members are always welcome and can be assured that there is something of interest for everyone as the men have ownership of their Shed and projects and decide their own program of events. Good health is based on many factors including feeling good about yourself, being productive and valuable to your community, connecting to friends and maintaining an active body and an active mind. Becoming a member of a Men’s Shed provides a safe and busy environment where you can find many of these things. Also, importantly, there’s no pressure. Men can just come and have a chat and a cuppa if that’s all they’re looking for.



Some of the Listowel men taking a break

Listowel Men’s Shed meets on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 11.00 in 56 Feale Drive. New members are welcome.

Photo and information from Listowel Men’s Shed Facebook page

Below are some of the plasterwork projects they completed recently and you can acquire one for a reasonable donation which will go towards purchasing materials for their workshops.

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Shop Closure




Price Savers on William Street is closing down.

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Bill O’Flaherty




I posted this lovely old photograph yesterday and it struck a chord with local historian, Martin Moore.

Here is what he wrote;

Mary,

Further to email from John Buckley of Roscrea, and
Tanavalla, Bill Flaherty served as a weight master
in the market.

Before that he served as a policeman in the RIC.

His wife was Dwyer and her brother was a most prominent
policeman in New Zealand. In fact, the Dwyers had at
least 4 generations of policemen, including Michael
of Moneygall, mentioned by John.

Thanks John for sharing this.


Newmarket, WW1 Stories, Field Names and Christmas in Listowel

Olive Stack’s Christmas tribute to her hometown


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Tree in Listowel Town Square in November 2018

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Pals Brigades

This is one of the recruiting posters from World War 1.  This and other similar posters played on man’s desire to be one of the gang. This policy of putting men from the same area together worked in that it cemented friendships between men who shared common memories and loyalties. It also formed a bond born out of shared experiences in the battlefield.

At his excellent lecture on Kerry and the Great War in Kerry Writers’ Museum on Sunday November 11 2018 Tom Dillon told us several stories of men risking life and limb to save a friend from home.

Denis Baily of Tralee won the Military Cross for bravery. At the Battle of the Somme in 1916, he went out, under fire, to rescue a fellow Tralee soldier, Patrick Collingwood.

Paddy Kennelly from Ballybunion lay dying on the battlefield in Messines in 1917.  The soldiers were under orders not to stop to help the wounded or they would be shot. Mickeen Cullens, a neighbour of Kennelly’s recognised him, defied orders and hoisted the wounded soldier up on his shoulders and brought him to safety. Both men survived the war and remained friends back home.

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Newmarket Co. Cork

Just outside Newmarket, Co. Cork there is a lovely place called The Island Wood. Raymond O’Sullivan took this photo there.

Here is what he wrote on his Facebook page to accompany the photo;

Strabo, the Greek geographer, philosopher and historian who lived around the time of Christ, believed that in Ireland the limits of the habitable earth should be fixed. He described the natives as wholly savage and leading a wretched existence because of the cold. Other Classical writers also describe it as a cold and miserable place and go even further to to accuse us of cannibalism, endocannibalism (the ritual eating of relatives), incest and all forms of fornication. Opinions reflecting Classical prejudices to anyone living outside their narrow sphere, no doubt. It is clear that none of them ever set foot on our green and misty isle and definitely never stood on the bank of the Poll Fada on a sunny mid- November morning

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Shannon Mouth (Dúchas Collection)



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Field Names


Our ancestors had a name for every field. Maybe families still retain these names. Do farmers invent names for fields anymore?

Here is a contribution from a child in Ballylongford to the folklore commission and now preserved in the Dúchas Collection.

There are many names given to the different fields in our farm, such as, the “Well’s Field,” so called because there was a blessed well there one time. This well moved from where it was first, owing to a woman who washed clothes in it one time.

The Three Cornered Field, so called because there are three corners in it.

The Pound Meadow, this gets its name from cattle who were being pounded in it at night, long ago.

The New Field, is so called because it was a garden before, and now, cattle are being pounded there.

The Parkeen, this gets its name because it is a small field.

Griffin’s Field, this gets it name from a family of Griffins who once lived there. This family left the place and it is now owned by my father.

The Fort Field, is so called because there was a fort there at one time. The ring of the fort is all that now remains to be seen, as the trees were cut down long ago.

The Long Field is so called because it is the longest field in our farm.

The Gate Field, this field is so called because there is a gate going in to it from the public road.

The Hill Field, is so called because it is a very hilly field.

These were told to me by my father who lives in the townland of Ahanagran about two miles from Ballylongford.

Collector Teresa Holly- Informant Patrick Holly, Relation parent, Age 60 Address- Aghanagran Middle, Co. Kerry, Location- Aghanagran Upper.

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Christmas in Listowel


This year once more the local traders have a Christmas website up and running. It’s worth while checking back every so often to see what’s happening and what’s on offer.

Christmas in Listowel


This is the Christmas supplement that came last week with Kerry’s Eye. The eagle eyed will spot yours truly in the picture on the cover.

Listowel Children in the 1960s, A Holy Well and Armistice Day Centenary Commemorations in Listowel






The River Feale behind the Listowel Arms; Photo: Charlie Nolan

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Old Pals

“Fond memory brings the light of other days around me.”

Bernard O’Connell who lived in Upper William Street Listowel and now lives in Canada posted to Facebook this picture of his childhood friends.

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A Holy Well



From the schools folklore collection at Dúchas


Tarbert School collection. Nora Scanlon, Dooncaha.

Our Holy Wells

There is a well in Tarmons known as St. Senan’s. It is in the corner of Buckley’s field in Ballintubber.

This well is not deep and a stream flows out of it. Always in the month of May people pay rounds at this well on every Saturday of the month.

This is how people pay rounds. People pick up seven pebbles out of the stream and then kneel down at the well and start reciting the Rosary. Then they start at the right hand side of the well and walk slowly all round reciting a decade of the Rosary while going round. At the end of each decade they throw one pebble away. Then when the seventh round is paid they kneel down and finish the Rosary. Then they take three drinks out of the well and wash their faces at the stream. Then they usually tie a piece of cloth on an overhanging bush. It is said that according as the cloth wears away the disease wears off the patient.

It is called St. Senan’s well because it was St. Senan who blessed its waters. From the well you can see the ruins of seven churches and round tower in Scattery built by St. Senan.

There are no fish in the well and the water is not used for household purposes. Once a woman went to fill her kettle at the well. She forgot to bring a vessel with which to fill her kettle. She left her kettle at the well and went back for a saucepan. When she returned the well had disappeared and the bush with it. It went from the top of the hill to the side where it is now.

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A Thought


As Asphalt and concrete

 Replace bushes and trees,

As highways and buildings 

Replace marshes and woods

What will replace the song of the birds?

Tony Chen

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Only in Ireland


Photo; Random Cork Stuff

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People at the Armistice Day Centenary Commemoration in Listowel




On a cold showery Sunday a good crowd turned up to commemorate the men who endured appalling hardship in the most awful of wars. Cold and rain were nothing compared to weeks spent in wet trenches with rats for company.

Carmel Gornall was there with her brother and two sisters in law.

Carmel’s sisters in law had grandfathers who served in The Great war.

Great to see Jim Halpin brave the cold to be part of it. Jim has done more than most in North Kerry to make sure that the names of the brave men who fought will be remembered.




Local history lovers and retired military men turned out in numbers to remember.

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One to Watch

 Bánú nó Slánú:  Thursday TG4  9.30p.m.

This documentary looks at the small town way of life that is dying a death in Ireland, as illustrated by a visit to once thriving towns in Kerry and Leitrim. Ballylongford in north Kerry has seen its mill, creamery and many businesses close over the last 30 years. In 2017, no new children started in the national school for the first time in living memory and its post office is now under threat.  One of the last small farmers in the village, Donal O’Connor, who’s in his 70s, sums things up: “I’m the last of the family. There are no small farmers anymore.”  Kiltyclogher in north Leitrim made the headlines when it launched a media campaign to attract people to move to the village. Six  families made the move, helping to save the local school  – but one year on, how does the future look? Did the newcomers stay? And have they done enough?

(Photo and text from Irish Times TV Guide)

Ballylongford, Killarney and Helios’ Visit and Flora Sandes

Autumn in the Cows’ Lawn

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Beautiful Bally


Ballylongford is a historic and romantic rural village in North Kerry. Helen Lane is a kind of one woman marketeer for the place. Here are some of her beautiful atmospheric photos. She posts photos  regularly on Facebook at Ballylongford Snaps.

The Battery at Carrig Island

 Carrigafoyle Castle

 Kennelly’s

Lislaughtin Abbey and graveyard

Lislaughtin

Saleen Pier

St. Michael’s church

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A Visit from the French branch of the Family



My two lovely boyeens are all grown up now but they still came to their old nana for a few days during mid term break.





We went to Killarney.



The new visitor experience at Killarney house has games, and lots of other activities that make learning fun. I couldn’t recommend it highly enough.

When their parents came to spend the weekend they brought Helios.

Helios very kindly posed with a few local landmarks for me.

The river walk proved a bit of a challenge but with lots of coaxing we got him under the bridge. I don’t think he’ll do it again though.







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Could she have a Kerry Connection?

As the Armistice centenary is commemorated worldwide this weekend, we remember Flora Sandes, the only British woman – with a strong Irish connection too – to officially serve in an allied army during the first World War.

Born in Yorkshire to a Dublin-born reverend and a Cork Huguenot, Sandes’ middle-class childhood did not foretell of the life of adventure that awaited her. She did later recall that, as a child, she would “pray every night that I might wake up in the morning and find myself a boy”.

She was active in St John’s Ambulance in York, so when war was declared, she immediately joined Mabel Grouitch’s nursing unit. The journey to Serbia via Greece was difficult, with the volunteers arriving in Salonika aboard a cattle ship in the middle of a violent thunderstorm.

Seeing the hardship caused by a lack of medical supplies in Serbia, Sandes briefly returned to England to fundraise, collecting over £2,000 in just three weeks. During the return journey, transporting 120 tons of medical supplies, she met American nurse, Emily Simmonds. They worked together in Valjevo during a severe typhus epidemic – the mortality rate was 70 per cent – and were both later awarded with the Order of St Sava.

You can read the full article here;

Irish Times

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Kerry and the Great War



Local historian, Tom Dillon, will give a lecture on Kerry during The Great War at The Seanchaí on Sunday next, November 11 2018 at 7.30

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