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: Clounmacon

Bryan MacMahon’s Clounmacon memories and KnitWits

+

R.I.P. Garda Adrian Donohoe killed in the line of duty. Unspeakable tragedy: the loss of a lovely young man while guarding Credit Union workers.

Sadly he joins The Garda Roll of Honour

<<<<<

Looks like victory in The Australian Open meant a lot to Victoria Azarenka.

<<<<<<

KnitWits News



Our first consignment of caps is on its way to the U.S. to

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Kozy-Kaps-4-Kids/132602910091359

for distribution to children undergoing chemotherapy.

Visit our KnitWits page to see our knitters at work

https://www.facebook.com/pages/KnitWits/134286519974162

<<<<<<

This lovely tribute to Clounmacon was written by the late Bryan MacMahon for inclusion in the journal published to celebrate the opening of Clounmacon’s new football field.

The Clounmacon of my Mind by Bryan McMahon

I have nothing but the loveliest and liveliest memories of Clounmacon as a community, a fact significantly underlined by the opening of a new Gaelic pitch today.

As a matter of fact, Clounmacon School was the first school I ever attended. I was no more that three years of age when I first entered its classrooms. My mother, God rest her, who had been teaching in Lancashire for almost ten years returned home to marry and take up an appointment as an assistant teacher in Clounmacon-then the only outlying school in Listowel parish.

The school was a new one and spic and span in every particular. The paint on the partitions was bright and shining and the atmosphere was excellent. Even as a child could appreciate that.In the winter of 1912 (that’s how far back my first contact with Clounmacon goes and I have verified the date in an old family diary), a small pony, a trap and harness was bought for my mother. Off she went up Dromin Hill, the pony trotting, the brass glittering and the little silver bells on the harness gaily ringing.I was in the vehicle. I was dressed in a dark blue velvet suit with a lace collar as befitted the son of a schoolmistress!

After we passed Charlie Nolan’s of the Pound-that’s the name of the house opposite the gate of the Sportsfield-and waved to Paddy Evans at the fountain and to Kiely’s just beyond it-I spied something that attracted my full attention. It was a tall woman with a galvanised bucket of water balanced on her head. With a slight inclination of her face she saluted me with dignity.

Our next stop was at the closed railway gates where the thunder of the passage of a passenger train made the pony restive. After a greeting from Hannie Jones (mother of all the O’Connell’s) and a chat with the neighbours, we faced the hill. A stop was made at O’Sulllivan’s to see if berries were appearing on the tall holly tree beside a house. Then there was a word to Old Jack Leahy, a mine of folklore, who witnessed the last duel fought in Listowel square and who, I believe, worked as a clerk in Michael Davitt’s office in Dublin, and a God speed from Margaret O’Riordan (Conway to you) we were now passing Raymond’s. There was a beautiful little well just across the low demesne wall where on our journey home the housekeeper would have a bucket of apples for us.

On the crest of the hill and in a little distance from the road was Kennelly’s. Later I entered the kitchen to find an elderly pair conversing in fluent Irish as capably as one would find in Ballyferriter today.  With Jer, a brother in Bedford, this family comprised the last natural Gaelic speaking family in North Kerry.On the brow of the hill there was a pause to chat with several neighbours. Here it was at a later date that our pride came to grief as I shall explain presently.

Downhill then the pony trotted merrily to reveal houses in Knockane and Clounmacon I came to know as well as my own. After a chat with Son O’Donnell we came to a halt at Murphy’s. There we were royally received, the pony untackled and left there until the afternoon.

“Across the Fields to school” is a fitting title for what I recall as a first impression of the school area. I realise later that girls and boys were making their way cross-country to the school from the Mail Road area. Sometimes they had to walk along the tops of the fences as the dykes, as we call them, were flooded.

The schoolmaster greets me- a fine old timer called Thade O’Flaherty. There are assistant teachers also: memory betrays me at this point as I am not sure whether the assistants were Tom O’Connell, Michael Griffin or Patrick O’ Farrell. But all of those were there in the early days of Clounmacon School.

As I enter the building, and my mother’s hand leaves mine. I am engulfed by the senior girls. They crush me to their bosoms and admire my velvet suit, my lace collar and my little Duke shoes with the buckles. It was my first major encounter with the opposite sex. I wasn’t aware of the full ramifications of their embraces but, young as I was, I knew that something pleasurable was going on. They even fought one another for possession of me. Later, when the cookery classes were over, they bribed me with tarts and queen cakes.

Given into the custody of one of the older boys who was seated beside me, I too demanded a pen and a sheet of paper. I then peeped over his shoulder and cogged from him- this though I had never been taught to write. The teacher was amused when he took up my handiwork. What I had done was to cog faithfully the name and address of the senior boy beside whom I was seated.

Lunchtime came and again the senior boys took charge of me in the playground. The school master stayed inside in the school with the door locked while he ate his luncheon. When he emerged he wiped his face with his handkerchief and seemed in good humour. A trio of my custodians, the bigger lads, hustled me into the open door and right into the empty classroom. One of them knelt on the floor and putting his nose to a tiny pool of dark liquid on the boards looked up and said “Tis porter all right lads”.

Some time later, on spying a similar pool of spilled liquid on the kitchen floor in my own home. I knelt and sniffed it deeply then looked up and said  ‘Tis porter all right mother”. When I was cross examined on this antic the whole story came out. “ Well, could you beat the Cloubmacon lads?” was my mother’s comment of the affair.

What else do I recall? The girls gathering ceannabhán or bog cotton to stuff pillows, also collecting wild flowers to win a competition in the old Gymnasium Hall at the North Kerry Show in Listowel. I recall too many of the girls coming to my house to seek advice from my mother before they set out for the United States of America.

But most of all I recall the pony under our trap who, taking fright on the crest of Dromin Hill, drove one of the wheels onto the fence and capsized the vechicle. I was dragged out bespattered with mud and blood. My velvet suit was in tatters, I recall being comforted in a neighbours house (Shanahans?) and later sitting shivering with shock in front of Murphy’s big fire where a cup of tea steadied my shaken nerves and the fire dried my sodden clothes

These memories of a school and a gracious community are renewed and reinforced by the opening of a new Gaelic football ground today where thrilling contests will adorn the Ireland of the future.

Above all, my memories focus on a very lovely community, which although the school as a school is gone, the building lives on in sterling service to the people. This pitch and the splendid players Clounmacon of the future will produce, as it has done in the past, will also forge a fine link in the chain of tradition.

<<<<<<

+

R.I.P.

DEATH has occurred of Joseph Vincent Buckley age 72, of Massapequa Park, NY and Main Street Moyvane, on January 21st  2013, father of Kelly O’Boyle (Carl), Michael, Sean and Ryan. Also survived by his brother  Fr. Michael and sister Marie.  Joe was a restaurant owner on Long Island for the past 40 years of The Jolly Tinker (Rockville Centre); Katie Daly’s (Massapequa) and Molly Malone’s (Bay Shore).  Mass for Joe on Friday 25th 2013 at St. Rose of Lima  Church, Massapequa, NY. Interment to follow at Grace Cemetery Massapequa. Joe Buckley was son of Michael Buckley and Nora Shine both of Moyvane Parish, he was predeceased by his parents and siblings, Liam who died in 2009, Fr Denis, Con, John, Donie, Paddy, Ned and Kit.

<<<<<<

This atmospheric photo was taken in Serre in 1917, during WW1. It shows troops of The Manchester Brigade heading out to dig trenches.

>>>>>

Our Special Olympics winter games team head off to South Korea. Hope they have a ball!

<<<<<

Au Revoir

Billy Keane’s article in Saturday’s Irish Independent about his godson, Jonathan Sexton’s move to Racing Metro is here.

http://www.independent.ie/sport/rugby/jonny-will-miss-home-cooking-but-hes-earned-french-gravy-3367386.html

A lovely read!

>>>>

Another  Irish short film has won an award at The Sundance Festival

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A8C3RESgnxE&feature=player_embedded

The Summit tells the story of Ger McDonnell

On August 2008, twenty-four climbers from several international expeditions converged on High Camp of K2, the last stop before the summit of the most dangerous mountain on earth. Forty-eight hours later, eleven had been killed or had vanished, making it the worst K2 climbing disaster in history.

At the heart of The Summit lies a mystery about one extraordinary man, Ger McDonnell. By all accounts, he was faced with a heart-breaking dilemma– at the very limit of his mortal resources, he encountered a disastrous scene and a moral dilemma: three climbers tangled up in ropes and running out of time. In the death zone, above 8,000 metres, the body is literally dying with each passing second. Morality is skewed 180 degrees from the rest of life. When a climber falls or wanders off the trail, the unwritten code of the mountain is to leave them for dead. Had Ger 

McDonnell stuck to the climbers’ code, he might still be alive. 

>>>>>

Shoes in Auschwitz

Yesterday was Holocaust Memorial Day. 

Every single one of these shoes belonged to someone like you or me.

<<<

Some great photographs here of the storm in Ballybunion yesterday. It’s dangerous out there!

https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.552091844815602.131275.100000443754376&type=1 

More of John B’s Cloumacon memories a love story and some Listowel kids 1987

John B. Keane remembers Clounmacon (continued)

If Meen is the lowest part of Clounmacon then Dromin is the highest. For most of his life my father ascended and descended this formidable height as he walked to and from school. There was a time when he was driven by Mrs. Griffin in her famous Baby Ford. She hailed from Dingle and was a first cousin to the patriot Thomas Ashe. Dan Daly, the other teacher, hailed from Dunquin, west of Dingle and spoke the most beautiful Irish. Michael Keane, later principal of Listowel Boys’ School, also taught in Clounmacon in my father’s time for a while. Michael Foley and Bernie Long were the last principals to teach there. Mrs. Griffin was a doughty woman. Short in patience perhaps, but magnanimous of heart, she nearly always drove at the wrong side of the road. In those days it didn’t matter since there was no other motor car regularly transversing the Listowel to Clounmacon road.

We always knew at home when there would be a station in Clounmacon. My father would arrive late in the evening, maith go leor, reciting poetry and singing songs.

If I was asked to furnish one distinguishing trait in the Clounmacon people as a whole I would plump for generosity. Always during Listowel Race Week the younger members of the Keane household would accidentally contrive to meet up with Clounmacon men who had remained on in town after the races. We always scored. They used let us mind their cattle too, even when they didn’t need minding, during the great fair when Church Street, from Cotters’s corner to Ballygoloughue Cross, would be chock-o-block with cattle. Black pollies, Shorthorns and Whiteheads were the bovine fashions of the time with the odd Dexter and Kerry too.

An abiding memory of Clounmacon spirit and heart their great win over Tarbert in the North Kerry football final of  1954, beautifully captured in verse by the inimitable Dan Keane. I also remember when Clounmacon didn’t have a team of their own. Thady Scanlon and myself were selected at midfield for Listowel in a North Kerry quarter-final against Ballyduff, a powerful force in those days. The man that was marking Thady stood at six feet whereas Thady hadn’t a great deal with five. Thady annihilated him with sheer courage although we only managed to draw. What Thady lacked in height he more than made up in spirit. He was a wise man who said “it’s not the size of the dog in the fight but the size of the fight in the dog”. This applies especially to Clounmacon and the fighting spirit of its footballers.

Let me conclude by saying how thankful I am to the editors for inviting me to contribute to this most praiseworthy venture and let me assure them that it is indeed, a labour of love.

(This article was published in Scéal Cluain Mheacain, a publication brought out to celebrate the opening of Clounmacon Sportsfield in 1992.)


<<<<<

This photo was taken in Bray in the 1980s

>>>>>>

A Love story to lift even the hardest heart

Inaugural Love

When President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice President Richard Nixon were inaugurated in 1957, photographers captured an image of them on the Inaugural Parade viewing stand with the President’s grandchildren, Anne and David Eisenhower, and the VP’s daughters, Julie and Tricia Nixon.

David Eisenhower and Julie Nixon Eisenhower are now married, and in the most recent book that they co-authored, they recall that the event may have been the start of their lifelong romance. 

David Eisenhower writes in “Going Home to Glory” that in one version of “the resulting photograph, I am staring intently at Julie and she is looking at me.”

-from the Eisenhower Library

<<<<<<<


Remember this photo from the 1940s sheet found by Maurice MacMahon?









This is an extract from the email Martin Stack wrote me about it


“Last week was my first time to go on and have a look at your blog that I have heard so much about. I think it was a case of Murphy’s Law as you put out a question as to who was the man standing at the door of McKennas. In fact that man was my uncle John Stack, (form Cahirdown) he would have been in his 20’s at that time and worked for a number of years there before moving to Tralee for a short time (working in Latchfords) before finally moving to Limerick (working for Boyd’s) getting married to Ita who is still alive and well, they have two boys Ger and Billy. John died about 12 years ago.”

Martin’s father, Tom Stack, is still alive and well and living in William St. He was thrilled to see the photograph of his late brother and Dick Kiely whom he also knew very well.

<<<<<<

A group of children in Cherrytree Drive in 1987.  Seems like yesterday!

Gerard Nugent, Kieran Croghan, Michael Nugent, Gavin Buckley, Miriam Croghan, Bobby Cogan, Ciara O’Regan holding her sister, Mairead, Mary Salmon, Denise Clifford, Anne Cogan behind Clíona, Charlene Clifford behind Laura Nugent, Sarah (friend of Mary Salmon) and…..

John B.’s Clounmacon and town criers

In 1992 to celebrate the opening of the sports field, the people of Clounmacon brought out a journal called Scéal Cluain Mheacáin. One of the local people they asked to contribute an article was John B. Keane.

This is what he wrote


Meen Bog, the summer of nineteen forty two. As we endeavoured to foot the huge black sods which had been consigned to the deep adjacent cutaway we were asked a million times by other turf footers, “Do those who spread the sods ever think of those who will have to foot them?”

Let those who cut it foot it, we thought, as we vainly tried to erect stoolins with sods which just wouldn’t stand up, which slipped from the hands, which broke in two as we dragged them from one morass to another, sods which seemed to have been specially designed to frustrate the mightiest efforts of amateur stoolin-makers like myself.

Later on in life at St.Michael’s I heard a terrified scholar once describe the College President, Fr. David O ‘Connor, as follows: “He’s coming”, said he, “with a face on him as black as the seventh sod”. I knew what he meant. There was nothing in the whole wide world as black as the seventh sod in the vast bogland of Meen. Even coal was not as black because the blackness of coal is relieved by its glint. Not so the seventh sods of those daunting turfbanks.

Meanwhile, in North Africa, the Germans were mounting their fiercest offensive in a campaign they were destined to lose. Montgomery was appointed Commander of the eight army in Egypt. The battle of Stalingrad was about to commence as was the battle of El Alamein and, in Meen Bog, Anthony Doyle, Tom Halpin and myself fought our own battle with the most inconsiderate chunks ever to leave the shining helve of a slean. Now and again we would look at each other in despair as we contemplated the countless sods stretched out before us.

“Time to eat”, said Tom Halpin, “there goes the bell”,

“What bell?” , we asked.

“Oh” , said Tom, “that’s the twelve o’clock Angelus bell of the church in Listowel. You can hear it no bother of a fine day”.

Anthony Doyle and myself strained out ears and directed them towards the town, three miles away. We had no trouble convincing ourselves that faint peals were issuing from the belfry of St. Mary’s. A fire of cadhrawns was already alight in the lee of a turfbank. The water was in the kettle and in jig time it came to the boil. There were sandwiches go leor and there was milk, tea, sugar and cups in the canvas bag my mother had stocked up earlier that morning. “Buns!”, the exclamation came from Tom Halpin. Sure enough, there were currant buns in a brown paper bag. As in the way with all gorsoons we did the unprecedented thing and ate the buns first. We then tackled the sandwiches, saving a few for the four o’ clock tay- although this, more often than not, took place at two.

After the meal we decided to have a session of sporting activities. We began with the hundred yards which Anthony Doyle won hands down. Then came a middle distance race which was won by Tom Halpin. Then came the long jump and hop step and what have you. An observer was later heard to remark that if we worked half as hard as we played we’d have the footing finished in a half day.Reluctantly we returned to it. The hours dragged by and every so often we would straighten ourselves to take the kinks out of our backs. The four ‘clock tay came and went and the sun began to sink in the west. At least it seemed to us that it was sinking.

“There goes the bell” said Tom Halpin. We strained our ears a second time and there it was, ever so faintly discernible in the distance. There is no sound like the sound of the Angelus bell in the evening, especially if the evening in question is free of wind and rain. We stood motionless and made the sign of the cross before reciting the Angelus. This was said with a piety and reverence that would put a reverend mother to shame. At the conclusion we blessed ourselves again and surveyed our handiwork. We had not fared too badly although it must be said that no records were broken and unless fine weather was maintained the Keanes would have very wet turf for the winter.

We bade farewell to the boglands and took the narrow road which would bring us to Clounmacon School where my late father reigned for so long, thirty one years if memory served me correctly.

The school was closed for the summer holidays. No sooner had we set ourselves on the Listowel road than we beheld a most uncommon sight. It was nothing less than a postman and he mounted on a bicycle with a bag slung across his back. I think it was the late Mick Enright but what would a postman be doing out so late and Christmas nowhere near. Tentatively we asked him if he had the right time. Mick alighted from his bike, thrust his fingers into the top pocket of his uniform and with drew a substantial timepiece.

“The time”, he said “is quarter past two”.

“Are you certain?”, we asked disbelievingly.

“See for yourselves”, he said and extended the watch for all to see. Dolefolly we returned to the bog. Before we left some three hours later the greater part of the turf was standing. There was no more mention of bells.

( to be continued tomorrow)

>>>>>>

Since I started writing this blog, many interesting people have written to me, none more so than my latest correspondent. His name is David Mitchell and he is the last British town crier. He rings his bell and he cries in the city of Chester. He wrote to me because he is researching a book on bellmen in The British Isles.  He had read my earlier post on town criers. I sent him to Vincent Carmody who has loads of stories about Listowel’s bellmen.

According to Brendan MacWilliams it was part of the bellman’s job to give notice of impending bad weather.

“At a meeting of  Dublin City Council in 1577, it was decreed, “that Mr. Mayor and his Brethren shall devise and appoint whereby a bell shall be tolled in time of great tempest and storms so that every well-disposed citizen may be remembered to pray for his neighbors who may be in danger upon the seas; and that Mr. Mayor and his aldermen shall decide what allowance or reward shall be given to him that shall take pain in the knolling of the said bell.”

Barnaby Rathe got the job and kept it for over 30 years. His post also made him “master of the beggars” and as such he was required to “rid the city of vagabonds”.

<<<<<<<

 drainage job in the Boys School is still in progress. The yard is all dug up but the front of the school seems to be finished.

>>>>>

This stylish lady is Mairead Sharry O’Connor. She is the most creative and inventive person I have ever met. This coat started life as a blanket. Mairead customized it with red carpet yarn and tweed hearts that she hand stitched herself. She also made her hat.

<<<

Have you seen the Nike ad. ?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NCDYjHtEcU&feature=youtu.be

<<<<

On January 22 1972 Ned Broy passed away. He was agent for Michael Collins and afterwards Commissioner of the Garda Síochána. You can read more about him if you follow the below link.

http://www.garda.ie/Documents/User/Colonel%20Eamon%20Broy’s%20Role%20in%20Irish%20Espionage.pdf

>>>>>.

Clounmacon in 1954

A blast from the past for you this fine morning.

This is another photo from Jer Kennelly’s collection.  The only caption is Clounmacon 1954. Who are all of these fine young men, and what did they win?

I trust that some of my readers will help identify them.

I’ll leave you with this thought for the day that’s in it.

 Just for today I will not worry

Just for today I will not anger

Today I will do my work honestly

Today I will give thanks for my many blessings

Today I will be kind to all living things

Not a religious tract, these are the 5 principles of Reiki.

Page 3 of 3

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén