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: Carmel Hanrahan Page 1 of 3

Athea Mural Relocation

Market Street on Saturday, February 1 2025

From the Archives

Every now and again Jer Kennelly delves into the nespaper archives and finds something with a Listowel connection. Sometimes the story ends there and sometimes the story (remember John J. Foley and Thade Kelly’s Hin?) takes on a life of its own.

Here is such a cutting from 1895 for you.

San Francisco Call, Volume 77, Number 133, 22 April 1895

PARISH PRIESTS NAMED

Father Kirby Assumes Charge of the New St. Agnes Church.

SUPERIOR OF THE PAULISTS. Father Wyman Appointed to Succeed Father Brady of St. Mary’s. Rev. Father Kirby has been appointed pastor of
the new parish of St. Agnes by the Most Rev. Archbishop Riordan, and
Rev. Father Wyman has been named superior of the Paulist community at
old St. Mary’s Church on California street to succeed the late Father
Brady. Father Kirby preached his first sermon at St. Agnes Church,
which is a neat little edifice on Masonic street, near Page, at the
high mass yesterday morning. The church was built as an outside
mission to the Sacred Heart parish, and was under the jurisdiction of
Rev. Father Flood. Father Kirby is a young man of zeal and talent. He
was born at Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland, on April 16, 1860. His
early education was gained at Mount Melleray and at All Hallows. Later
he attended the seminary of St. Sulpice in Paris. On the 17th of
March, 1883, he was ordained by Bishop Higgins of Kerry, Ireland. He
“came to San Francisco in the spring of 1883. His first appointment
was as chaplain of St. Mary’s College, from where he was transferred
to Father King’s church in Oakland. Later he served two years as
assistant to Father Serda at Temescal. On September 2, 1885, he was
appointed as assistant at the cathedral, where he has since resided.
Of his family a brother is a priest, Rev. Thomas Kirby, at Mission
Dolores, and two Sisters are members of the Presentation Order, Sister
Augustine in Berkeley, and Sister de Sales in the Powell-street
convent, this city. Father Wyman has long been a Paulist missionary
and is well known throughout the United States. He prefers missionary
work to the cares and responsibility of a pariah and looks forward to
the appointment of a permanent superior to succeed him that he may go
into the country and preach. “We have received requests for
missionaries from different parishes all over the coast,” he said
yesterday, “and we are anxious to comply. Missionary work is the
object of the order, and for myself I much prefer that field. If we
had the priests we could send them north to Washington and south to
Arizona. Besides, California and Nevada must be looked after.” The
work of remodelling old St. Mary’s Church will begin this week. The
interior is to be handsomely painted and frescoed, and the idea of the
Paulists is to make the historic tabernacle one of the most beautiful
in the city.

An Interesting old Post Box

in West London

Another Photo from Carmel Hanrahan

Left to right: Tom and Eileen O’Halloran, John and Breda Hanrahan and Joe Mc Namara & Betty. 

I took this picture late last year.

This is just a small section of the artwork but it gives you an idea of the complex detail of flora and fauna, legend and history woven into this masterpiece.

The mural was given a temporary home on a long wall until the nearby premises was sold. This has now happened and the new owners have plans for the space so the masterpiece so dear to everyone in Athea must be relocated.

Athea Tidy Town Group undertook the task of dismantling it and minding it.

Here are some of the pictures they shared on Facebook.

A Fact

In Germany about 2000 schools were closed between 1989 and 2009 because of the fall in the numbers of children in the population.

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Two Stories revisited

McKenna’s corner, Februry 1 2025

Jimmy MacElligott

To recap for people coming new to this, Jimmy McElligott was a WW2 pilot and a native of Bridge Road, Listowel. Jimmy was a star of the Rockwell rowing team and Munster rugby. Jimmy’s plane was brought down at Dunkirk. Jimmy was not among the survivors. He was 24.

Thomas Buckley has found online the location of Jimmy’s grave in a war cemetery near Paris.

Carmel’s Photos

Carmel has remembered a few more names.

I want to say the match was in Brosna but I could be pulling that out of the air. 

Isabel Carmody, unknown boy, Kerry McAuliffe, Tommy Moore, ??, Carmel Hanrahan, Monica (or perhaps Martina) Barrett, Geraldine Browne, Maura ??, ??, Kathleen Kennelly, ?? man standing at back, Caroline Barrett, Niamh Long, ?? at back, Denise Mulvihill, ?? at back, Matty Donohue, Front: ??, Kerry’s friend from boarding school and Norma Doyle

Dermot Mahoney remembers that Kerry’s friend was Audrey Hanley.

A Sobering Thought

I shared this before but it’s worth revisiting. I found it on the internet when looking for something else.

Doing Anything on Saturday ?

A Fact

In 1968 Dr. Christian Bernard performed the second ever heart transplant on Philip Blaiberg.

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A school Tour and a Birthday

St. Brigid window in St. John’s church, Ballybunion

St. Brigid of Kildare

St. Brigid mural on a wall in Kildare town

According to tradition Saint Brigid was born in Faughart, Co Louth, where there is a shrine and a holy well dedicated to her. The Saint found a convent in Kildare in 470 that has now grown into a cathedral city. There are the remains of a small oratory known as Saint Brigid’s fire temple, where a small eternal flame was kept alight for centuries in remembrance of her. She is one of Ireland’s patron Saints and known as Mother of the Gael. She is said to be buried along with St Colm Cille and St Patrick in Downpatrick. Throughout Ireland there are many wells dedicated to St Brigid. 

Growing up in 1970’s Listowel

More memories and photographs from Carmel Hanrahan…

Do you remember the Lartigue Little Theatre?  No stage and the seats were on a steep incline.  I visited the Writers’ Museum on a recent visit and was surprised to find that nobody seemed to know about it.  That is, until a lady of my own vintage came in and remembered it.  Where I now live, they have a Theatre which is of a similar design.  Mind you, the cast don’t come out with tea and biscuits for the audience at interval time as they once did in the Lartigue.

We had a Youth Club which was held on Friday night.  I think the venue was the Sluagh Hall.  Every now and then we had a disco there and that was a highlight.  Dominic Scanlon usually provided the music being DJ (there’s a term no longer used) as he was probably one of the few of us with a comprehensive record collection.  I seem to remember there were parents on duty at these to chaperone us.  A bit like the “Ballroom of Romance” if you remember that film.  Seamus G, I know you’ll read this, I don’t remember you in connection with the Youth Club. We must have split into different groupings by then.  

December 28th was the date set in stone for the Student’s Dance/Ball.  Held in the Listowel Arms Hotel and the only proper dance for years.  My sister dressed quite formally for the first one she attended but I think it rapidly became more casual after that.  I certainly don’t remember dressing up a lot for it.  Later, we occasionally went by bus to Glin on Saturday Nights for a showband-type dance that was held there.  My memory is of an over-crowded, sweaty, marquee with little or no facilities.  But, I imagine we wouldn’t have complained too much at the time.   Who organised those buses I wonder?  Of course, there was also the Central in Ballybunion where we went for discos in the late 1970’s.  Possibly only during the summer months.  That was also the venue for our Leaving Cert Results night out.  What a motley crew we were.  

School tour, to Killarney (Lady’s View).  Left to right: Bottom Row; Catherine Lynch, Christina Caffrey, Catherine Sullivan, Violet Nolan and Linda McKenna.   Top row; Dana Mulvihill, Carmel Hanrahan, Sr. Edmund, Jacqueline Quill, Sr. Therese, and Denise Mulvihill

One of myself and dad sometime in the early 1980’s.  The dog arrived very shortly after I left.  I was so upset as a child when we lost “Sooty” our dog that dad swore there would never be a dog in the house again while I was there.

A Special Birthday

Four of my six grandchildren have birthdays in January. so last Sunday we had a combined celebration for them.

Sean and Killian, no longer boyeens, now grown men, are nineteen.

Aisling turned 18. Róisín is 16.

Róisín and one of her friends from the yard.

When Aisling was born her uncle Bobby and Aunt Carine lived in France. Every baby in France has a comforter which they call a doudou so they sent one to Aisling. It became her favourite toy. It was carried everywhere, on trips to Kerry and Dublin and on holidays abroad. It filled the role of a faithful friend and confidante over the years. But at 18 it is now the worst for wear.

Carine decided to buy a new one for Aisling’s 18th birthday. But this particular squirrel is a discontinued line, replaced years ago by the more popular teddies and rabbits. There was none to be got anywhere.

Not to be defeated, Carine put out a call on a website that sells old and discontinued items and there she found a second hand but little used one.

When Aisling opened her birthday present on Sunday she was overcome with emotion. It was like meeting a long lost child. It reminded her of how handsome and cuddly Doudou looked all those years ago.

Here are the two boys, Doudous mark 1 and 2, memory banks to treasure for ever.

Best birthday present ever!

A Fact

Popeye appeared as a comic strip for the first time in 1929.

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St. Brigid

Chris Grayson’s great hare photo

St. Brigid of Ireland

St. Brigid window in St. John’s church, Tralee

In preparation for her feast day, you may like to make a St. Brigid’s cross

Here are some simple instructions I found on the internet so you can make your own cross.

If you fail to make your own they are selling them in aid of Ard Chúram in Thyme Out Café.

Listowel in 1970s

as remembered by Carmel Hanrahan

…You could even bring something home from the clothes shops on “appro” (approval).  Can you imagine it happening now?!  McKenna’s had a great system for payment that I never saw anywhere else.  Though I believe Cleary’s in Dublin had a similar system.  The bill and your money were placed into metal containers which then went whizzing across the shop on wires to an office – which looked like a pulpit – and your change and receipt were returned the same way.  They also had a builder’s yard in one of the back ways – around where Mr. Price is now.  Back ways, now there’s a thing…  I don’t think I’ve ever been in another town where the back ways were such a significant size.  Almost like hidden pathways to everywhere.  We used them for our walk to school, though we weren’t supposed to.  Probably because they weren’t as developed as they now are and were merely back entrances for the town’s businesses and houses with very little foot traffic.  There was the Bacon Stores on Church Street, owned by Toddy O’Connor where ham and bacon hung from the ceiling and there were barrels of salted meat.  He also sold eggs and butter.  The butter was cut from a very large block and he used butter pats to shape it.  He also had trays of drisheen on the counter along with trays of crubeens.

The Harrington’s lived at the Garda Station, Geraldine was in our class at school but, as is the way, they moved to another location.  The Lenehan’s lived at the Railway Station.  Joseph and Therese, and were there other siblings?  I met Joseph in Heuston Station once when I was returning for my father’s funeral.  Trains obviously in his blood. 

(to be continued)

Carmel sent this photo of a group of supporters at a Listowel Celtic match. She says

Here’s an interesting one.  We went to support Listowel Celtic football team – the photo is from 1977.  I’m not going to try to name people.  I see a few who are immediately recognisable including my lifelong friend, Kerry McAuliffe and Tommy Moore standing next to her.  Niamh Long is there and so Is Isabel Carmody.

Can you name a few more? Maybe Listowel Celtic have a team photo from that day.

I Never Knew This!

William Street Children

Photo and caption from John Keane on Facebook

A Fact

The Pilgrim’s Progress by John Bunyan was written in 1673 and has never been out of print. Bunyan wrote the story while he was in prison for preaching without a licence.

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Down Memory Lane

Mural in the grounds of St. John’s church Tralee

Remember This?

This busmen’s hut used to be in the middle of Patrick Street

Down Memory Lane with Carmel

The next instalment of Carmel Hanrahan’s reminiscences and photos…

The 1970’s seemed to bring a number of returning American families.  Mary Scanlon and her many brothers moved in further up Cahirdown and was “double first cousins” with a family on Church Street.  I had never heard of that before.  The Reagans moved in across the road in one of the new estates and there was a returning family which ran one of the bars on Market Street.

We had a few people join us in Secondary School from England too.  One was a girl called Mary Salmon and another was a Brigette (I think that’s how she spelled it)??  I want to say she came from London but could be wrong.  She was a breath of fresh air for us, telling amusing stories about school in England, teaching us to do the Charleston and in third or fifth year wanting to sing “Hey Big Spender” for the Christmas Concert.  We all thought this was a brilliant choice but Sr. Eithne had apoplexy and when she calmed down had a fit.  Needless to say, the show went ahead but without that particular song.  I think she might have closed the school down in preference to allowing that performance.  

The 1970’s brought with them a modernisation of many facets of life.  Listowel had a lot of wonderful shops which are now lost to memory.  The Fancy Warehouse where we bought all our knitting and haberdashery (what a lovely word) supplies. Carroll’s Drapery Store on William Street, with its magnificent wooden floor, counter with brass ruler attached, glass display cases and those wonderful fabrics. I can still bring to mind the magical atmosphere of Micheál Flavin’s book shop, I could have spent hours in there.  I still have the dictionary I chose in there in third class – because I liked the word etymological on the cover. We got our school supplies there “on account” as was done in most shops.  We also got Bunty and Tammy comics/magazines there.  Do you remember the Christmas Annual of the various comics?  Seamus next door used to get a copy of the Beano.  I think he lost out there, as, while we read the Beano too, I don’t think Bunty held much interest for him.

(More tomorrow)

Left to Right: Helena Doyle, Marie Keane, Marie Dowling (Kneeling) and Káitlín O’Connor

Left to Right: Catherine Lynch, Isabel Carmody and Catherine Corridan in the Primary playground

Left to Right: Eileen Keane, Katsi Kenelly, Marie Keane and Denise Mulvihill

Expand your Vocabulary

I was surprised to see that I know a few of these.

A Fact

Up untikl 1959 it was illegal in Britain not to celebrate Bonfire Night.

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