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: Brehon Laws Page 1 of 2

Departures in early 2025

Birds at a feeder in Kanturk

Go nÉirí an Bóthar Leat

Farewell to a smiling face and a marvellous business in Listowel town Square. Brendan Mahony will be missed.

The shadows were lengthening over Brendan Mahony’s shop when I called last week. Brendan is not being forced to shut shop by falling trade or any other economic circumstances. His business is booming and he is still doing what he enjoys. He is a people person and he loves the interaction with his customers. But 31 years is a long time in one job. Brendan is ready for a new challenge while he is still young. Life for a sole trader can be very tough.

Brendan Mahony Butchers will close in The Square on Saturday, January 25th 2025. it will mark the end of an era which began at No. 2 The Square in 1993. Time now for Brendan to have a holiday before starting in his new role.

Bridget O’Connor in the shop on Friday January 17 2025

Time now for taking a break, having a holiday and maybe even attending a few hurling matches.

Another very successful Listowel business is celebrating its 25h anniversary this month. Finesse Bridal Wear is a lovely business run by two lovely sisters. Liz and Mags offer a caring and professional service to brides. They know their business thoroughly, they work very hard and their care and attention to their brides is legendary.

The two ladies are a huge asset to the town, giving much back in the way of fundraising and Tidy Towning. Long may they continue.

Death of a Chief

This was the scene in Listowel Town Square on Jan 1 2025 as the funeral of former Fire Chief, Antony McAuliffe, made its way from St. Mary’s.

Antony was one of the first people I got to know in Listowel. He and his late brother, Ray, built our house. When they opened a hardware shop at the end of our road, I was a frequent visitor. Antony was invariably kind and patient.

His cortege was accompanied by his colleagues in the fire service and friends from his days with Listowel Drama Group.

Many people also rmembered Antony from his evenings as a volunteer Bingo caller.

The funeral procession passing through the Small Square where so often Antony led his men in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

May he rest in peace.

A Brehon Law explained

The Brehons were Ireland’s early lawmakers. I came upon a little book of some of their laws and I have been sharing them here. I have been surprised at how interested people are in their now quaint laws.

Many of the Brehon laws involve the husbandry of animals and many of the punishments involve the forfeit of some valuable livestock.

I shared this law concerning trespass by farmyard fowl. I confessed that I had never heard of a withe.

Then I received the following from Thomas Buckley;

Apparently it’s not such an obscure word after all. These withes were used in the making of St. Brigid’s crosses.

Every day is a learning day. Thank you, Thomas.

A Fact

When the Races relocated to Listowel in 1858, there was no bridge to the course from the town side. A temporary bridge seved to access the course in 1911.

<<<<<<<<<

Snowy Kanturk; January 2025

Photo; Blue Tit by Chris Grayson

Roof Collapse

One of the most disastrous impacts that the snowfall had on life in Kerry was the collapse of the roof of the Tralee Sports Complex. Thankfully it happened at nighttime and there was no loss of life of injury to anyone. The Complex is a very very busy place and many many North Kerry clubs and groups depend on it.

A Poem for Parents

Kanturk looked Beautiful in the Snow

Photos by Adrian Angelina on Facebook

Growing up in Listowel in the 1960s and 1970s

Concluding part of Carmel Hanrahan’s reminiscences…

The Races – a week off school, what bliss.  Returning from Summer holidays a week early seemed a small price to pay.  We went to The Market where the amusements were. It was never going to the amusements but going to “The Market”.  We saved whatever money we got through the year –my savings were in a Band-Aid Tin – white with a picture of a plaster on it.  I remember once having a Ten Shilling note in it which seemed like a fortune.  I’m wondering if it was possibly the year I made my First Communion. On our way from Cahirdown to town there was a small shop quite close to the boys’ National School – I can’t remember the name of the owner, where we regularly bought Slab Toffee – Cleeve’s – and which you would then break on the edge of the path.  Speaking around the lump of toffee was a skill in its own right. She also sold sweets in paper cones.

Burning question here!! Does anyone, apart from me that is, remember Penny Cakes? –.  My sister also remembers them so I know I haven’t imagined them.  The closest I can come to describing them is that they were like a rusk and I adored them I think there was also a variation with fruit. You could buy them out of big boxes which were placed just inside the door of Miss Molyneaux’s shop, (pronounced Munnix), across the street from Michael and Delia Kearney.  Biscuits in large tins with glass panel on top sold loosely resided just at the door.  Nobody I’ve ever spoken to from anywhere else knows what I’m speaking about when I mention them.  Tile loaves are another mystery to people – I learned that in Dublin they are called Turn-overs but will always be a Tile loaf to me.  Lynch’s bakery used to sell them and I would pick my way through one on the way home from the Square.  I often thought I should have bought two, one to hand over at home and the other for me.  My greatest regret about Listowel is that Lawlor’s Cake Shop closed.  Oh, my goodness, what cakes, never since matched or beaten.  The coffee cake in particular – there’s a surprise!

The Convent Primary school was where the girls all started off.  Some boys attended until senior infants when they then transferred to the Boy’s National School where Brian McMahon was Principal.  We learned to knit and sew in Primary School and the highlight of the whole enterprise was the visit of the Sewing Inspector.  There were two maybe three weeks with minimal schoolwork done as we were preparing for “The Visit”, getting our various projects completed.  Playing in the Schoolyard seemed to have a Seasonality to it.  There was a time for chasing games, then Hopscotch and Piggy (??) were de rigueur, Skipping and then Conkers.  Our Skipping Ropes generally came from Carrolls in the Square – a length of rope with a knot tied at either end.

Then came Secondary School when we strolled from one building to another without another thought.  How lucky we were – none of today’s angst trying to ensure a place and wondering if you qualify for the school of choice.  Everyone transitioned together with a few exceptions, and some new classmates joined us.  We had some interesting teachers in Secondary.  Tony Behan who was our history teacher and approached the curriculum in his own inimitable way, and who gave us the time and space to think things out for ourselves and draw our own conclusions.  But the best by far was Sr Carmelita who lived on a reputation for being very fierce and indeed, she presented as such.  However, once you engaged with her and got into conversation, she turned out to be an incredibly inspiring person.  Indeed, I met her a few times in Cork when she was visiting and went to tea with her in the Imperial Hotel where we continued our long and rambling conversations.  It is she I must thank for my love of English and language in general.

There were some Characters in Listowel as we grew up.  One of these being Babe Jo Wilmot.  What a larger-than-life personality.  She always struck me as being a very warm person, and had I been old enough at the time, I suspect she would have been great fun to socialise with.  We, of course, had the aforementioned Bryan McMahon whom I occasionally engaged in conversation with on my walk home from school and John B Keane.  John B used to walk up our road many evenings setting a ferocious pace with one of his sons struggling to keep up.  Billy told me recently that he was the walking companion in question.  Dr McGuire also walked up Cahirdown for his constitutional.  Many a fright he got when “Mac” (the Weimaraner) came bounding down the road to land with his front paws on my shoulders.  He hadn’t realised that Mac and I were ice-cream sharing partners on the occasions when Mike (his son) brought him to hang out.  What a handsome dog.

So, with my rosy glasses removed I am still firmly of the belief we were blessed to grow up in Listowel.  When I’m there now I can see so many changes to the place and yet, there is an underlying familiarity.  When I think of Listowel my immediate image is of standing on the river bank looking at the bridge.  I’m not sure why the bridge made such an impression but there you are.

A Few Food Related Brehon Laws

Couldn’t find any meaning for withe on the internet but looking at the illustration, it looks like a spancel.

A Fact

Bloomsbury, the publishers offered £2000 in advance for the first Harry Potter book, The Philosopher’s Stone

<<<<<

Autumn in Kanturk and Listowel

Lower Church Street

Lost Souls

I found this sad poem on the internet

LOST SOULS

Sitting alone at the bar in Kilburn

Mid afternoon on a mid Summers day

Wearing a suit stained with blood, sweat and booze

Drinking the last of this months rent 

He took the boat in 57

Leaving behind Mayo

Full of hope and fear

An address in his pocket

For a ganger and a start 

Money for a week to tide him over

Sunday best on his back 

New shoes squeezing his feet 

No Irish need apply

Lodgings hard found

Working every hour god sent

Paid in the crown at the weekend

Missing home, laughs to hide the pain

Another from the top shelf 

Saving for the summer holiday

Putting a little by 

Back home for a week to the old sod

Buying pints for the lads

Bragging about the wages

Gold chains around the neck

Bought from a suitcase

When did you get home?

When are you going back?

Back to back breaking in blighty

Years passing on

Body getting tired

Drink taking hold 

No money for the holidays

Or the funerals at home 

Nights in the doss house

Sleeping on the rope

Days on the streets 

Dreams of a long gone family

Passing away in the cold

(C) Kevin McManus

This sculpture, The Crying Stone by Colm Brennan

A Few More Hospice Morning Photos

Tidy Town Work

The Tidy Town organisation is about so much more than litter picking and tidying up. The replacement of these important tourist information signs is just one of their many unsung contributions to making Listowel the lovely place it is to live in, to work in or to visit.

Book Promoting in Kanturk

Kanturk looked very autumnal on my recent visit.

Noreen O’Sullivan has a keen interest in local history.

I met Alison Murphy in Presents of Mind. My book is now available in this lovely gift shop on O’Brien Street.

Eilish O’Connor in the beautiful welcoming Olde Worlde Alley Bar bought 3 books to give to family at Christmas.

A Fact

After its catastrophic collision with the iceberg it was a full 2 hours and 40 minutes before The Titanic sank.

<<<<<<<

People, Old Laws, a Loss and a Design Classic

Photo: Chris Grayson in Killarney

More Brehon Laws

I remember my mother spancelling a young cow who was not used to being milked and might kick out.

A yoke was a piece of wood tied under an animal’s head so that if he tried to walk too quickly, the yoke would hit him and deter him from straying.

A Sad Parting

BEN.

By Mattie Lennon

We’re left with only memories,

At those we now must clutch 

 Your picture on the kitchen wall

 It is our only crutch.

That image is consoling

And helps to ease the gloom

As your eyes, like Mona Lisa’s 

Just trace me round the room.

From scraping plates to closing doors

To going to bed at night,

All have a Ben-connection;

Each smell and sound and sight.

Your meat and nuts  disposed of

(To the Blue-bin went your bed.)

I didn’t want any witnesses

When tears flowed in the shed.

We got you thirteen years ago,

You were only four months old.

The last one of your litter,

The others all were sold.

We brought you home immediately

‘Twas a lovely Summer day. 

Both had our eccentricities 

So we bonded straight away.

We strolled and shared our traits for years 

(A half a score plus three.)

Strangers always hailed you first 

And then they’d talk to me.

I now walk out without you,

Your spirit’s there but , then

The dreadful thing I  have to say.

When  people ask., “Where’s Ben.”

To you kind and loved and loving dog

The illness came to stay.

Then needles, scans and Xrays

Were the order of the day.

Some medicines you wouldn’t take

And your pain I couldn’t see.

I forced tablets down and hurt you

Now that thought is hurting me.`

When all that could be done was done,

The end came mighty fast.

Decision made. The plunger pushed.

Relief from pain at last.

We didn’t use that terrible word,

The one that rhymes with “Dread.”

I asked the Vet a question

As our son then kissed your head

Mattie Lennon

Moments of Reflection

Thank you, Fred Ward for these photographic memories

Bobby reading

Me signing

Friends who came to support me

more cousins

The Biro….a Classic of Design and Usefulness

John Anthony Hegarty shared the following with us

A Fact

The world’s first car dealership opened in London in 1897.

<<<<<<

Kanturk Grotto

In Listowel Pitch and Putt Course

Kanturk always looks well. It has a very hard working Tidy Town Group, a Men’s Shed and a very involved local community.

The grotto at Greenane is always beautifully maintained.

A Few More from My Brehon Law Book

“The laws were a civil rather than a criminal code, concerned with the payment of compensation for harm done and the regulation of property, inheritance and contracts; the concept of state-administered punishment for crime was foreign to Ireland’s early jurists. They show Ireland in the early medieval period to have been a hierarchical society, taking great care to define social status, and the rights and duties that went with it, according to property, and the relationships between lords and their clients and serfs.” Wikipedia

Some People at the Hospice Coffee Morning

Things Fall Apart !

St. Patrick’s Hall’s New Sign

This is how it used to look with the old white sign

This is how St. Patrick’s Hall looks today with its glamorous new gold sign.

I spotted Martin Chute erecting this one. He did a beautiful job, as usual.

A Fact

Even though the first newspaper crossword appeared in a US newspaper in 1913, it took until November 2 1924 before a crossword was published in an English paper, The Sunday Express.

<<<<<<<

Page 1 of 2

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén