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: Con Houlihan Page 2 of 3

Way of Life, FCA, Con Houlihan remembered






Ballybunion in “ould God’s time”.













One for the diary!



From May 9th to 12th come join us for the Way of Life Gathering in Ballybunion, Co Kerry, a seaside town famous for its champagne air, it’s daunting cliffs, it’s golf-links and it’s unique sense of fun.

This Gathering aims to capture the essence of the Way of Life in Kerry from it’s friendly people with their strong sense of community, their love of literature, music, dance and having the craic, to a culture of top quality locally produced food.

Together with the people of Ballybunion and the surrounding towns we are organizing a series of events including Trad sessions, Ceili Dancing , Storytelling, a special Farmers Market featuring local food producers, a visit to the neighbouring Farmers Market in the town of Listowel, a Symposium on Irish Food hosted by a celebrity chef, cookery demonstrations of traditional Irish recipes and a tour of the Ring of Kerry.

In addition to the events being arranged, Ballybunion also offers a wide range of activities including: Golf, Surfing, Hiking, Swimming, Horse-riding & Beauty treatments.

There are people attending from Paris, Barcelona, Prague, London, Frankfurt, as well as from all over Ireland.

Wherever you are, come and join us for what will be a great few days in the beautiful town of Ballybunion, Co Kerry!



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FCA

F-Company, Listowel FCA  at camp at base of Carrauntwohill 1987 .

James Kenny sent us this. I don’t think he is in it but does anyone know the names of the lads who are?

Kay Caball recognised her uncle, Michael O’Connor in my last  FCA photograph.

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The first Con Houlihan Summer Conference will take place in his native Castle Island on Saturday May 4th.
Tourism, hotel hospitality, the Gathering, changes in rural life, the economy, the social and economic programme of the Government, and the arts as an instrument of social inclusion are all topics that will be addressed at the conference.
The life and times of Con Houlihan will be presented in a humorous way by his friend and writer Billy Keane.
The conference will be held in conjunction with the Castleisland town festival and Carnival which will run from May 2nd to 6th. 2013.

Click here http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/hed-keep-you-talking-till-dawn-29104214.html


to read Billy’s lovely tribute to Con in the Independent.



 <<<<<



I challenge you to see this through to the end without shedding a tear.




http://hurryupharry.org/2013/02/27/sportsmanship/

>>>>>

That was then, this is now

2009

 2010

2013

Serendipity, Mike O’Donnell and Con Houlihan

Serendipity means a “happy accident” or “pleasant surprise”; specifically, the accident of finding something good or useful while not specifically searching for it. The word has been voted one of the ten English words hardest to translate in June 2004 by a British translation company. However, due to its sociological use, the word has been exported into many other languages.


Last week, I had one of these serendipitous moments that have become one of the great joys of my life since I took to writing this blog.

Mike O’Donnell, the artist who painted the portrait of the great Con Houlihan, which was unveiled on Culture Night in Castle Island library, emailed me with a photograph of the portrait and a copy of the poem Theo Dorgan wrote for the occasion.

THE VOICE

I heard a voice in the wind down off the mountain,a voice in the ash holding out its last dry leaves,and in the silence after the gates had closedin Croke Park, in Lansdowne Road, a familiar voicewhispering softly, clear and distinct, followingby my side as I walked through the city of Dublin.I walked south and I walked north,I walked east and I walked westand the voice was still with me, clear and distinct.By the Nuns’ Pool, as the sun was going down,and in Kilbannivane as the moon was risingover the yew trees in their mysterious darknessthe voice was beside me, soft and clear and distinct.I did not need to ask who stood beside me,time cannot hope to silence our quiet hero.

………….

Any words of mine would now be so inadequate.


>>>>>>>>



The artist, Mike O’Donnell is a Kerryman, currently in exile in Dublin. He is the grandson of Garda John O’Donnell. 

John was stationed in Kanturk at the time of his death.

Michael Lynch furnished me with scans of The Kerryman and The Irish Press from July 1940. These papers carried the story of the tragic drowning  of the young garda.

Garda John O’Donnell who was in his early thirties, was on holiday in Ballybunion with his wife and three young children. On the evening of July 20 1940 he was swimming near Castle Point when a freak wave swept him and other swimmers on to the rocks. John drowned while attempting to rescue two local girls, Vera and Patricia O’Carroll. The girls were eventually rescued by others who were present.

Listowel’s Dr. Joseph McGuire was the coroner who presided over the inquest which was held on the following day. The jury commended Mr. Jack McGuire, then a medical student, for his bravery in taking out a life buoy into rough seas in an attempt to  save John O’Donnell who was being dragged out to sea by the strong current.

In the aftermath of the tragedy, letters were published in The Kerryman calling for life guards on Ballybunion beach and the presence of a rescue boat and a competent crew to man it.

Garda O’Donnell was remembered in Kanturk, where he had been living for six years, as a quiet, unobtrusive, helpful brave man. 

He was posthumously decorated by the state for his bravery. 

This courageous man was the grandfather of the very talented portrait artist, Mike O’Donnell. Mike is justifiably very proud of him.

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Make a note in your diary

The new RTE programme; The Gathering; Homeward Bound starts on RTE 1 tomorrow night and runs for 6 weeks. October 23 is Listowel’s night.

 It will be available to a global audience on the RTE player

http://www.rte.ie/ten/2012/0925/gatheringhomewardbound.html

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Tadhg Kennelly danced a jig on the desk in the TV Studio to celebrate Sydney Swans winning the 2012 championship

Con Houlihan,turf cutting and Bord na Mona

One of the pleasing things that happened after the great Con Houlihan died was that many journalists were moved to pen excellent essays mourning his passing.  One of these was a front page paen in The Sunday World by Roy Curtis. I’m going to indulge myself here and quote it in full.

‘He was a humble intellectual, an emperor of the written word who never ceased being a man of the people’

PASSION: Con was a man of big appetites PASSION: Con was a man of big appetites

HE WAS a wordsmith, a gentle and wise colossus, a son of the soil, a great hook-nosed and dishevelled Kerry sage, the most brilliant eyewitness to life’s ebb and flow.

He was a poet, a drinker, a lover of sport, people, nature, art, travel, bars and life. He was an artist who sketched the most vivid, moving portraits: His imagination was his brush, the 26 letters of the alphabet his paint, the newspaper his canvas. He leaves behind sufficient masterpieces to fill every nook and cranny of the Louvre.

He was an insomniac, a man with too much yearning to trouble himself with sleep, an individual whose curious mind could not be sated by the 24 hours in a day. He was shy, his shovel-sized paw covering his mouth as he decanted great nuggets of wisdom in that musical, lilting, difficult-to-decipher Kerry cadence.

He was a humble intellectual, a diffident genius, an emperor of the written word who never ceased being a man of the people. He was a man who made unlikely connections: Among them brandy and milk, his medicine of choice as he wandered on his own daily Homeric odyssey.

He was a daily communicant at pubs that hung like a necklace around the Liffey: Mulligan’s, Cassidy’s, The Palace Bar,Tommy Wright’s, The Regal Inn…

He flicked in his writings from sport to nature, from the claustrophobic chaos of an All-Ireland final’s closing moments to the tranquil idyll of swans residing on the Grand Canal by his beloved Portobello, with effortless grace. He was a font of knowledge and learning; an oasis of insight, sincerity and intelligence in a world increasingly parched of perception, understanding and decency.

He was a perfectionist, a slave to proper grammar, a man who viewed a misplaced comma or semi-colon as an act of vandalism against the English language. He was the back page of the Evening Press, a storyteller whose tales from faraway lands and dispatches from locations exotic and humdrum were at once lessons in geography and history, in sport and in life, in the character of man.

COLOSSUS: Houlihan

COLOSSUS: Houlihan

He was Ireland’s Charles Dickens. He was the behemoth of Burgh Quay and later, the seanachaí of the Sunday World.

He was a bare-footed rugby player, a wild-haired soul unconcerned with sartorial norms, a giant who would adorn his enormous frame with a bedraggled collection of wine jumpers, half-closed anoraks, ill-fitting trousers and unlikely black trainers. He had the look of a man who lived his life in a wind-tunnel.

He was a humungous whale who didn’t have it in him to harm plankton; he was political and passionate; he peered beneath the surface – deeper than almost anybody alive – to where the good in a man resided. He lived on a diet of black pudding, spuds and common sense. He was a teacher.His writings on the Dublin/Kerry rivalry of the 1970s should be on the Leaving Cert English course.

He was for many years my hero and for many more after that my friend. Con Houlihan’s passing leaves a crater in the earth, a great hunger in the lives of those of us who fed for decades at the trough of his erudition.

He was the man who stole my 21st birthday. On the eve of that October day in 1989, he had advised me he would be buying me drink the next day. At nine in the morning! By three o’clock the next afternoon I was asleep, fully-clothed on the sofa of my parents’ house.

There was no talk of recommended units of alcohol in those innocent days, but, had there been, I would probably have consumed my quota until my 30th birthday. I keeled over; Con, his lips barely wet, went on to Inchicore for another few pre-match pints before taking his familiar spot by the Camac river to watch Saint Pats. Later that night he would script another word-perfect portrayal of the

day.

If my father almost disowned me that afternoon, he positively swooned when, on RTE radio, Con praised my writing. Dad kept the recording for the remainder of his life. Because what Con Houlihan said mattered. He was trusted and loved. He was timeless: had he been of concrete and mortar, he would have been a listed building; something precious,that would stand forever, untouched, protected.

His appetites were voracious: For knowledge, for sport, for drink, for life. Though he had been unwell for some time, we thought him indestructible as he sailed towards his 10th decade.

But yesterday, finally, he left us. What remains is imperishable: a legacy of writing that demands – whatever the literary snobs say – inclusion alongside Joyce or Yeats, Casey or Kavanagh. To have read him was an education, to have known him a privilege, to have

drank with him was a liver-thumping thrill.

Our sympathies to Harriet, a lady of infinite patience and kindness. All that is left is to raise a cognac glass filled with brandy and milk to the supreme wordsmith, the sovereign of storytellers, the greatest of Kerry and Irishmen.

Roy Curtis

>>>>>>>


The great Con Houlihan was laid to rest in his beloved Castle Island on Friday. One of the “gifts” that was brought to the altar to represent him was a sod of turf. Con loved the bogs of his native county and spent many happy hours working at the turf. He also worked for Bord na Mona for a year or two.

…….

Todd Andrews was one of the first to realize the value of Ireland’s peat bogs. The Turf Development Board was set up in 1933 and in 1946 Bord na Mona came into being. People associate Bord na Mona with the blanket bogs of the midlands but for many years BNM ran a turf cutting operation in Lyreacrompane.

The kind of bog with which we are familiar in this part of the county is a cutaway bog. People owned these bogs and others bought turbary rights from them. The sods of turf were cut vertically with a sleán and were laid on the bank to dry. The sods were turned regularly until they were dry and then they were piled into little stooks and eventually brought home and made into a rick or stored in a turf shed to dry further.

This method of harvesting turf is hugely labour intensive. It is still practiced by many private individuals in North Kerry. Turf is still the preferred fuel for heating in many local households.

It was not long before BNM brought in machinery to do the cutting or milling of the peat. Milling cuts the peat from the top of the bog.

This man is bringing home his turf on an ass with two creels or panniers tied across his back. The donkey was a very suitable beast for bog work since he was relatively light and could be brought into even the most soggy bog.

In the 1950s your turf was brought home to you in a lorry.

This man, an employee of BNM is loading sods of turf into a collector. The man had to keep ahead of the machine and had to keep bending and throwing in a back breaking routine.

This photograph is from Lyreacrompane where women were employed to feed the collector. The machine was known as “The Iron Ganger” as it dictated the pace of the work.

Tracks were laid across the bog and the turf loaded into wagons which were pulled by the engine to the centre for loading on to trucks.

During the war there was no coal imported and loads of turf were brought to the Phoenix Park to provide fuel for the city of Dublin. We must remember that the trains ran on steam as well.

All of these photos and many more are here

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bord-na-Móna-Heartland/180733458639655

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The Races are coming

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Military History

http://www.bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1580.pdf

This testimony is the statement of a Dr. Enright who attend to Con Dee after he was shot and wounded at Gortagleanna

Con Houlihan, a Listowel connection

Last week I wrote about Con Houlihan, the art critic. Today I’ll address Con Houlihan, the book reviewer.

According to his obituary in Saturday’s Irish Times, Con”s first article in a national paper was a review of Solzhenitsyn’s novel, The First Circle.

” When the review appeared, I couldn’t have been more excited if I had won The Nobel Prize or been voted captain of Castle Island RFC.” he wrote later.

As a journalist, Con was a bit of a Jack of all Trades and he did the occasional review. His classical studies and his wide ranging general knowledge made him the ideal man to assess a play or a book.

One book that he enjoyed reviewing was our own Vincent Carmody’s North Kerry Camera.

Here is what he wrote in The Evening Press on Saturday December 8 1990:

“The fair town of Listowel has produced yet another book. The
perpetrator is a young man called Vincent Carmody – and the new arrival is
christened “North Kerry Camera”.

   It is a loving
chronicle of Listowel and its outback between 1860 and 1960. Over the last 20 years or so we have become
more and more aware of our heritage. The reason is clear, our country in those
two decades has been changing at a mighty rate of knots. Our awareness of this
change has led to us appreciating more keenly the value of our heritage.

  Vincent Carmody has
done the state some service; his book – both in pictures and in words – is an
invaluable contribution to history. The picture on the front cover will be
familiar to many. It shows two beshawled women riding high ona donkey-and-cart
as they pass Galvin’s pub, otherwise The Central Hotel. The words are contributed by John B. Keane,
Brian Kennelly, Eamon Keane, Bryan MacMahon, John O’Flaherty, Fr Kieran O’Shea,
Ned O’Sullivan, John Molyneaux and Sean McCarthy. Eamon Keane and Sean McCarthy
are no longer with us; I was privileged to have enjoyed their friendship.

  I love especially
the photograph of The Square on a fair day. I know that Square very well
indeed; I bought and sold Bonhams there in my wild youth. The fairs are now
almost a thing of the past – and I am not being sentimental in regretting their
passing. I am not indulging in a pun when I say that, unlike the marts, they
gave the small man a fair chance.

  Of course sport is
not neglected; it plays a huge part in the culture of Kerry. There is a grand
picture of Tommy Stack being almost mobbed as he came back after winning a
historic Grand National on Red Rum in 1977. Tommy is my neighbor on the other
side of the great moorland. – I shed a few tears in Aintree on that famous day.

  All on one page
there are pictures of four north Kerry immortals – Con Brosnan, Denis Moran,
Tim Kennelly and Jimmy Deenihan. Denis Moran is not really a son of north
Kerry, except by residence. His dear departed father was a native of
Cahirciveen; his mother, my sweet departed friend, was a daughter of
Castelisland.

  Jerry Kiernan, that
deer in human form, figures too; we see him winning a marathon somewhere in
America, 2.12.48. We see Willie Sexton with oval ball in hands making a break
in the light-blue of Garryowen. And we
see my old friend Pat Mulcare, the great golfer, swinging a wood on some
unspecified course.

  Humour puts up its
crazy ead, especially in a piece by Fr. Kieran O’Shea. He tells the story of a
certain Mr. Doodle who stood for a Dail election a way back in innocent years.
By now you will have guessed that Doodle was not his registered name, but who
cared?

  Like all
politicians he excuded promises; they included a factory for shaving
gooseberries in the town of Listowel. He also promised to give leprechauns the
right to vote. Now, two generations later they still lack the franchise. He
also threatened to plough The Rocks of Bawn. You will be saddened to hear that
he didn’t make it to Leinster House.

  Vincent Carmody’s
splendid book is published in a limited edition and as far as I know is not on
general sale. “

………..

Unfortunately Vincent’s book is long since unavailable to purchase but rumour has it that another and even better one is on the way.

<<<<<<

The year is 1979 and this is the cast of Presentation Secondary school’s musical.  Jer. Kennelly found the photo  but we have no names. No doubt it’s stirring a few memories so maybe someone will remind us of the musical and maybe someone will even have kept a programme with the names.

>>>>>>.

This picture from the national archives was taken in Dublin in 1960. Notice the cyclist, the nun and the window cleaner, familiar sights on the capital’s streets back then.

<<<<<<

Old Ways

Harvesting silage; 1995

>>>>

Well done all AND Cian O’Connor of course.

Football crazy

Euros 2012 fever is beginning to abate and those of us with only a glancing interest in soccer can reclaim the telly.

I thought that it would be timely to put up a little post about soccer.

Firstly I am going to share with you a piece by my favorite sports writer, Con Houlihan, which he wrote about someone who had as much natural talent as any footballer ever but unfortunately, mishandled his talents and became more famous for his antics off the pitch than on it. I speak of course of George Best.

Folk memory has forgotten that, towards the end of his career, George had a brief unhappy sojourn on “the banks of my own lovely Lee”.

“George Best, like Brendan Behan, came from a family whose
closeness made the arrows of exile all the sharper.

Brendan Behan was the kind of child on whom grannies and
aunts and assorted auld wans dote – so  seemingly was George Best.

Such indulgence makes for a pleasant childhood — but when
eventually you sail out into the open sea, you may find the going a bit rough.

 ….

I have a particular little cause for being ill disposed
towards George Best.

It concerns a Christmas week some years ago when I was
spending a well earned holiday in the bosom of my family.  (The well earned etc part  is what low-grade correspondents in the
Kerryman say about some dosser home for a few weeks from England.  ) 

There I was on Saturday night, 28 December 1975, eating a
little piece of Christmas pie and drinking a mug of lemonade, when word arrived
over  the electronic wire ordering me to
be in Cork on the morrow.

The reason for this dramatic message was the rumoured
appearance of wee Georgie in the colours of Cork Celtic in a League of Ireland
game.

At that stage of wee Georgie’s career everything was
rumour.  But I  turned up — so rather amazingly did he.

And so did the greatest gaggle of small  boys and indeed small girls seen at large
since the Pied  Piper of Hamlin turned
debt collector.  The winding little lane
that leads down from the city to Flower Lodge was almost bursting its banks..

 I find it hard to
forgive George Best for his display that day.

Lo and behold — George was back for the next match (against
Shelbourne at Harold’s Cross).  A big
crowd came to that game too — and went away less than gruntled.

George appeared one more time for Celtic — and people
stayed away just because his name was on the team sheet.

An old truth had been illustrated — you don’t pay twice to
see the same fat man in the circus sideshow.



>>>>



Now I’ve rifled through Listowel Celtic’s website to bring you these old photos of soccer closer to home

The early days: a 1960 Celtic team:

back row(l
to r) – Noel Downey, Jack Carmody, John Croghan, Mike Brennan,

          
Joe Guerin, David Shaughnessy, Michael McEvoy

front
row
(
l to r )- Michael Sugrue, John Leahy, Owen Beechinor, Jerry Griffin 





1970’s


Back Row..Jackie Carmody, Pa Kennedy, Daithi Carroll, Toddy Scanlon, Leo Allman, Tony
Carey, Henry Molyneaux, Jack Kelly, John Bunyan, Denis Bunyan.

Front Row..Mike Casey, Paddy Lynch, Paddy Hannon, David Fitzmaurice, Declan Sheehy,
Gerard Tarrant.

1980s

Back Row…Tony Carey, Gerdie Collins, Mike Canavan, Nix Riordan, Liam Canty, Dobs
O’Brien, David Mulvihill, John Chute, Sean Carey, Pat Carmody,Tom Walsh.

Front Row…Declan
Leahy, Mickey Kelliher, Maurice Hannon, Gerard Tarrant, Fergus Houlihan,
Tommy Sweeney, Declan Sheehy, Jimmy Dore, Alan Grimes, Colin Grimes.

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