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: basketball

KAHS in Listowel

New Kingdom Bar, Upper Church Street. Photo taken on May 17 2022. Equal billing given to Liverpool and Kerry, different codes evoking loyalty from Kingdom customers.

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Society of St.Vincent de Paul

As I arrived in the shop last week, some of the lovely ladies who volunteer here were receiving a visit from their regional manager.

She must have been mightily impressed by this shop which is always beautifully laid out, well stocked and with the loveliest of shop assistants.

I made a bad job of photographing the window which was all dressed for Sustainability Week

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Basketball Memories from Pres Yearbook 2003

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Kerry Archeological and Historical Society in Listowel

Members of KAHS on the steps of Listowel Castle

Vincent Carmody, pictured here with Simone Langemann and Jimmy Deenihan was in action again introducing us to the wealth of writing talent on the streets of Listowel.

Jimmy Deenihan, chair of the society, gave some of the history of Listowel castle.

Kay Caball told us about the origins of Listowel Town Square and the the grand family that was the Kerry Fitzmaurice until their downfall.

She promises to tell it all again on the Friday morning walk during Writers’ Week.

Date for the diary…June 3 2022, meet at The Listowel Arms at 10.00 a.m. Even if you hate walking you’ll manage this one as it will have more talking and singing than walking.

We finished our day in Listowel with a trip to the Lartigue Museum and Jimmy told us a bit of the history of the train.

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Some Handsome local Shops

Listowel people take a great pride in their streetscape. I am fascinated by the attention paid to the facade of the whole building not just the shop front.

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Basketballers Named, the Ball Alley and a love poem

Listowel Town Square

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Ball Alley Art Gallery

The St. John’s and Listowel Tidy Towns Art project is finished. It’s really really good so if you are in town do drop in.

The walls are now adorned with picture bubbles depicting Irish culture with an emphasis on Listowel.

I was delighted to see that the alley was still serving its original purpose with a young man practicing badminton.

Junior Griffin’s poem remembers the ball alley as it was in its heyday.

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With a Little Help from my friends

Denis Carroll named most of them and I got a little help to jog his memory on only 2.

Back; Gerard Tarrant, Yvonne Croghan, Kay OShaughnessey, Martina Fealy, Katie O Sullivan, Miriam Beasley, Karen Carmody, Denis Carroll.

Front: Jacinta Hartnett, Beatrice Kelly, Marie Carmody and Deirdre Diggins

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Daddy’s Girl

I’m unashamedly awarding myself the award for most heart melting moment captured on camera.

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Back to Nearly Normal

Cork Opera House for my first trip back to the theatre, 60% capacity, face masks and covid certs.

The play was a classic and performed with all the respect that such a classic deserves.

Alex Murphy in the role of Gar Private stole the show. You may know him from his role in Young Offenders

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Ballybunion, Pres. Basketball and 1970 Fleadh Committee

Illumination by Michael O’Connor

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From an Old Pres. Album

I can see a few faces I definitely know. Please help me to name them all.

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Poem from a Local Poet

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Concluding the Bryan MacMahon article from Shannonside Annual 1956

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Fleadh Cheoil Committee 1970

Betty Stack has given us all the names for this old photo. Thank you, Betty.

Front Row: Mairead Walsh, Eamon Hartnett, Jackie Walsh, Michael Dowling, Geraldine Hartnett, Joan Curtin, Maria O’Gorman
Middle Row:
Pat McAuliffe, Michael Stack, T. Dillon, Maureen Nolan, Betty Stack, Patricia Cronin, Helen Leahy, Peggy Gleeson, Patsy Kennedy, Jack Molyneaux, Christy Stack
Back Row: Ben Landy, PJ Kirby, ? , Mossie Molyneaux, Timmy Brosnan, Sean Broderick, Ian Nugent, Paul Nolan, Vincent O’Sullivan, Joe Gleeson, Peter O’Sullivan

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Gleeson’s now Jumbo’s, Garden of Europe, Fitzmaurice ancestors and The Harp and Lion

Property House, Grand Parade, Cork

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Jumbo’s Then and Now



Eddie Gleeson and Edward Gleeson at the door of Gleeson’s, now Jumbo’s

photo: Eileen Sheridan


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Garden of Europe in August 2019

View from the entrance

 New flower border

 Schiller

 Montbretia

Roses

Guide to the Garden by Amy Sheehy

 Geotagging

 Holocaust Memorial

John B. Keane

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Old and New




The newly restored and painted stucco looks a bit different to the old one.


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In Search of Fitzmaurice Ancestors

Carol Burns wrote to us following her visit to Kerry;

We visited the Fitzmaurice castle in August. 

There were 10 of us from the United States. 

My husband’s grandmother was Johanna Fitzmaurice. 

This is some of what we know about the family. 

The name begins with Walter who was a Norman 

and royal officer for William the Conqueror who invaded

England in 1066.  They were invaders of Ireland in 1169. 

Johanna’s parents were Michael Fitzmaurice, born in 1834 in Ardagh and died in Renfrew, Canada in 1910.  Her mother was Johanna Culhane, born in 1836 an died in 1920.

Johanna’s grandparents were John Fitzmaurice born in 1807 in Ardagh  and died in Renfrew, Canada.  Her grandmother was Johanna Holly born in 1797 in Ireland and died in Renfrew, Canada. 

Our Fitzmaurice ancestors lived in Rylane, Duagh.

Members of the Fitzmaurice family were blacksmiths and moved 

to Renfrew, Canada in around 1860. 

A few of the Fitzmaurice ancestors attended St. Brigid’s church 

in Duagh, County Kerry. 

Is there more information about members of this Fitzmaurice ancestors?

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Were you a Basketballer?


A Pres. Listowel winning basketball team. I need help with names and dates.

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My Last Guided Walk of 2019




Only four lovely English visitors for my walk on August 31 2019. Small but mighty as they were interested and engaged and we had a lovely stroll around town. I think they will return home to install some jostle stones at the entrance to their London home.


Bodhráns, Basketball and Irish Dancing



They’re Still Rutting in Killarney



Photo: Jim MacSweeney



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A Different Killarney Crane ?






Chris Grayson who took the photograph identified this bird as  a heron, but we all know Killarney is famous for cranes. I consulted  Charlie Nolan, our local expert on bird life in general but particularly birds who live near rivers. He tells me that there are no cranes in Ireland. That settles that. It’s a heron.

Charlie Nolan told me two facts, one about cranes and one about herons.

Apparently when we had cranes in Ireland, we ate them for dinner.

The heron lays four eggs. The first fellow to hatch is the strongest and he picks off his brothers and sisters, turfing them out of the nest until he has it to himself. A classic case of survival of the fittest.

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Sonny Canavan ; Bodhrán maker



( Story and Photos from Facebook)

Listowel on Facebook posted this photo of Sonny Canavan and his niece Margaret. It prompted the man below, Gerard Leahy, to share a memory.

I have a Canavan bodhran, it is the Stradivarius of bodhrans.

I was getting home from the movies at the Astor one night to 23 Market St when I was about 17 years old. It was raining, Sonny was hanging out under the veranda of our shop, the pubs had just closed. He saw me and said, ” Sonny Leahy, can you give me a ride home”. My first thought was that he called me Sonny and I thought was what an honor to be called Sonny by the legendary Sonny Canavan.
I drove him home and we talked about bodhrans. He told me he had 4 or 5 up on the kitchen and I could have my pick for 5 pounds ( he told me he was getting 15 from the yanks! ).
I remember him reaching up to the gutter to pull down the keys and he walked into his kitchen with little kid goats running around the place.
I treasure this bodhran that he made and the stick that my old friend Tom Enright ( working at Sean Tacks ) made for me. Absolute treasures.

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A Trip Down Memory Lane for Some Former Basketballers


Photo  and caption from Denis Carroll on Facebook

National League team, “Team Atlantic” sponsored by Frank Quilter. The year was 1995. We had a home fixture and if we won that we won the league that year and WE DID! We had the Tanaisté & Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dick Spring present as a guest. Great memories, we had some craic!

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Funeral Cortege moves up Church Street October 21 2016






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The Origins of Irish Step Dancing


information from Jimmy Hickey,  the Last of the Great North
Kerry Master Dancers

Dance Dying

By John Fitzgerald

For Jimmy Hickey

Who will take me from the
floor

and float me into air?

Who will make those soft
black shoes

When you’re no longer there?

For I have had a master

Since first he came to town.

I put him on a new stage

He left behind the clown.

Tipping toes and tapping
heels

He danced me down through
time

Hornpipes and reels from far
off fields

And jigs all truly mine.

From the actor to the master

The great house to the class

No one to dance my dances

When you have danced your
last.

This poem was written by one
talented Listowel man for another. John
Fitzgerald recognizes that we might be seeing the end of traditional dance in
North Kerry.

Modern Irish dancing in the
Riverdance mode or the bouncing wigs, heavy make up and glued on socks variety is the successor
to the old form of Irish dancing. It is part of an evolutionary process that
began in pre Christian times.

I will give you now a short
history of North Kerry dancing as told by Jimmy Hickey, one of it’s most
articulate exponents. Jimmy told this story to Fr. Pat Moore in a Radio Kerry programme produced by Mike Joe
Thornton in 2004. Jimmy gave me a recording of the programme.

It seems that Irish dancing
was brought to these parts by a circus man called Tom Moore. He taught the
steps and the technique to Ned Batt Walsh who taught Jerry Molyneaux who in
turn taught Liam Dineen and Liam Dineen taught Jimmy Hickey. Jimmy has found no
one who will stick with him for long enough to learn all the complicated steps.
He has had some great dancers over the years but they all give up and go on to
other things.

Dancing as a form of
entertainment is as old as time. The Druids danced around the May bush. Dancing
at the bonfire was a kind of fertility ritual. The young couple danced over the
flames. Fire has traditionally symbolized life.

The influence of the Spanish
Armada which was wrecked off the west coast can also be seen. The battering
element of Irish jigs and hornpipes is very like the battering and heel
drumming of the flamenco.

In the days of the big house,
dancing was a very important accomplishment for a young lady or gentleman.
Parties for the gentry took the form of shooting by day and dancing by night.
These balls were where matches were made. The best and most elegant dancers
stood out. They caught the eye of the prospective marriage partner or his
mamma.

“ A good dancer never went
home alone.”

The quadrilles and cotillions
were the forerunners of our polkas today.

In the 19th
century in pre Famine Ireland there were
three types of dancing master.

The top of the tree were the
dancing masters who lived at The Big House and taught the young ladies and gentlemen
to dance. These men claimed to be trained in France. They wore silk stockings and
top coats. They dined at the table of their masters and were treated almost
like one of the family.

The next tier of dancing
master taught classes to ordinary people. These took the cotillion and
quadrille of the Big House and customized them for ordinary folk.

The third type of dance
teacher was the village hop merchant. He was a jig actor who taught basic steps
to people and who organized cross roads dances.

Another influence on Irish
dancing was the American factor.The Irish who emigrated to build railways in
North and South Carolina often settled there and they bought their Irish dancing and music with them. This evolved
into Blue Grass and Barn Dancing. Turkey in the Straw is actually a reel.

The jig is a truly Irish
dance, the reel is Scottish and the hornpipe English. Figure dances are usually
reels.

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Brosna church….a postscript








Castleisland Christmas Charity Weekend



December 3rd to 5th 2016



Castleisland Parish will hold a Special Appeal on behalf of Brosna

Parish on the 3rd/4th December.  It will be an invitation to support

our neighbours who have a substantial parish debt arising out of the

works done on the Parish Church some time ago. There will be an

envelope collection that weekend and a special concert featuring Liam

Lawton in Castleisland Parish Church on Monday 5th December 2016.



We hope to set up a committee to help organise the weekend. If you

would like to help please ring the parish office on 066 7141241

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Brendan Kennelly Honoured at the Abbey Theatre, Sunday October 23 2016




Noel O’Grady organised the tribute and Éamon ÓMurchú shared the photo.

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