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: Craftshop na Mear Page 4 of 10

Twin Tubs, Crafts and 1960s Charles Street


Ita Hannon’s Béal


Another great photograph from Béal’s own photographer, Ita Hannon.

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Do you Remember This?




For those of you too young to remember this machine, it is a twin tub washing machine and it was the state of the art in laundry machinery in the 1970s and 80s.

The machine was top loaded. In our house it was stored in a room we called the back kitchen but nowadays is glorified with the title, Utility Room. It had to be hefted out to the kitchen on wash day…always a Monday. Then a hose was run from the tap to the wash tub and it was filled with water. We only had cold water on tap so a kettle of water, boiled on the range, was added to speed up the heating process. The lid was put on and the water heated. As soon as the water was hot enough, (this could be tested with your elbow!!!!) the clothes and the washing powder were added. The machine then “washed’ away like billyo, i.e. swirled the laundry hither and tither for what seemed like ages. Then the water had to be drained off. This was another labour intensive job. The machine had to be hefted to the back door, a hose attached and the dirty water drained off. Then the machine had to be filled again and the clothes rinsed of the dirty water. Then that water had to be drained off.

Now comes part 2. Before the twin tub we had a washing machine with a mangle. Do you remember the mangle? This vicious implement stood on top of the washtub and you had to spear a piece of washed clothing from the boiling hot water and push it into the mangle, which was two rollers with no room whatsoever between them. You turned a handle and the rollers turned, mangling the clothes and squeezing the water out of them. 

The twin tub was a huge advance, for the second tub replaced the mangle. It was, in fact, a spin dryer. Nowadays we are only used to the gentle tumble dryer. A spin dryer was a horse of a totally different color. It extracted the water from the clothes by spinning the bejasus out of them. They usually ended up inextricably entwined in each other and clung to the sides of the “dryer”. This was after the machine had done a performance to beat Daniel O’Donnell on Strictly around the kitchen floor.

You are now beginning to realize why it was called washday. By the time the clothes were on the line the day was gone and you were too exhausted to do anything else.

Happy Days?

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A Few More Lovely Gift Ideas from Craftshop na Méar

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Upper William Street, Listowel in October 2015




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Outside No. 60 Charles St. circa 1960




Photo: Noreen Carroll on Facebook

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Upcoming



Old prams, Crafts and children in Ballybunion

Stephen’s Green, Dublin 1967


(photo: Rare Irish Stuff)

Doesn’t this lovely photo take you back. These old prams were great vehicles. Kate Middleton saw the value of them when she perambulated Charlotte in one.

I doubt the Princess of Wales appreciated the full merits of one of these to the mothers of yesteryear. As well as being well sprung and providing a comfy ride for baby, you could buy a tray to go underneath and you could bring home a week’s shopping from a stroll around the town. Another accessory was a little wooden seat that you could perch on top and facing you. This could accommodate a toddler who had grown tired of toddling.

I well remember uses for this kind of pram when the family and cousins had outgrown it. The wheels could be removed to make a great boxcar.

We all have seen pictures of vendors in Moore Street and The Coal Quay transporting their wares to their stalls piled high in one of these prams. Up to recently I used to meet a lovely lady in the charity shops in Tralee coming with an empty pram and leaving with it full of her purchases.


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In Craftshop na Méar

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Halloween in Kerry 2015


All of my grandchildren came to Kerry for their school break and we had a ball. North Kerry is a super place when the sun shines. There is lots to do and I challenge anyone to find a better place to entertain children.


 The tide was very far out when we visited the beach.

Footprints in the sand… the beach was almost empty.

Roisín was literally and metaphorically in a world of her own.


Lots of seaweed, happy children and the shadow of a camera man.

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The Savage loves his Native Shore



There is something about the town where you grew up that pulls at the heartstrings long after you have left it. I am reminded of this often in the emails I get from blog followers, particularly from people who have no family left here. There are still ties that bind.

I was reminded recently by Marie Neligan Shaw of this poem by Longfellow …..

“Strange to me now are the
forms I meet


When I visit the dear old
town;


But the native air is
pure and sweet,


And the trees that
o’ershadow each well-known street,


As they balance up and
down


Are singing the beautiful
song,


Are sighing and
whispering still:


”A boy’s will is
the wind’s will,


And the thoughts of youth
are long, long thoughts.”

Even when the faces on the street are no longer familiar, there is something about the places that still sings to a deeper self  “and the thoughts of youth are long long thoughts.” 

Listowel has lost too many of its familiar faces from its streets in 2015. We miss them all.

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Tullamore School 1910




They appear to be all boys. I’m presuming that the girls had a photo taken as well. Below is the same school in 1973.

The photos were sent to me by John A Hegarty. They are from Ballydonoghue Magazine…a great resource for emigrant and native alike.

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Rattoo by Aidan Harrington

Halloween, Clounmacon bard, and Craftshop na Méar

Showing them how it’s done


Listowel Tidy Towns welomed Clonakilty Tidy Towns last week. They were in town to admire the work of the 2015 winners. Any rivalry between Ireland’s Tidy Towns is of a very gentle kind. Everyone shares the aim of making all of Ireland’s towns places of beauty for citizens and visitors alike.

The local committee were only delighted to display Listowel in all its glory to their Cork guests.

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Halloween






It’s pumpkin time again.

The folks at Xistance Youth Café are getting in the mood.



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Famed in Song and Story


Clounmacon is a place that has produced bards and writers in numbers out of all proportion to its size. Because of this, poems in praise of this small place abound in local lore. One of these is the one below by the late Jerry Histon

( Thanks to Noreen O’Connell)

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Craftshop na Méar



With Christmas just around the corner , it’s time to turn our thoughts to present buying. Why don’t we adopt the late Mary John B.s motto; “Support your local town or soon you’ll have no town to support.”

What better place to start your search for that unusual present than Crfatshop na Méar on Church Street where new products are arriving all the time. Below is a sample of some of the goods available there.

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Flanagan’s in Church Street is in Halloween colors all year round.

Crafters, Some Pres. Old Girls and grandchildren in Christmas shop

Photo; Timothy John MacSweeney

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New Busker in Town



This man on the corner of Market St. is a new addition to our streets.

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Talented ladies


These three ladies sell their crafts in Craftshop na Méar, Listowel.  I met Maureen Connolly, Eileen Fitzgerald and Eileen O’Sullivan in the shop on Saturday.


These two above photos are the front and back of the bag that Eileen is in the process of making. Wow!

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Some Pres. Old Girls



5th and 6th Years 1953

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A Little Corner of our Lovely Town



Between the Ball Alley and The Millennium Arch is a lovely little park with flower beds and picnic tables.




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Loving the Christmas Shop



My beloved girls were in town for a short break and they loved Listowel Garden Centre’s Christmas display.

I bring everyone who visits me to the shop. For me it has become an essential visitor attraction.

More Horse fair photos, Craftshop na Méar and Listowel Military Tattoo

Here are some sellers and buyers at the fair on Thursday July 2 2015

In this following sequence of pictures a young boy gets a leg up on to a horse and rides off bareback.

Some people seemed very relaxed and were enjoying their day at the fair.

People were fascinated by these pigs.

These ladies gathered to take a look.

Within sight of the superloo, plenty of poo on the street.

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A Trip to Craftshop na Méar



Here is a taste of crafts available in Craftshop na Méar, Listowel these days


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Why is there a Military Tattoo in Listowel?


This often asked question was well answered on Facebook by the people who organize the tattoo.

“Here is a very short and small snippet of why we do it:

2 of the 3 most famous fighter pilots in the RAF during WWII were Irish!
The 2 famous airborne divisions of the US Army during WWII, the 82nd Airborne and the 101st Airborne were commanded by 2 first generation Irish Americans!
The fighting Irish US army division of WWI were led ‘over the top’ by a Ballyduff man!
The founder of the Argentinian Navy was an Irish man!
The inventor of the submarine was an Irish man
And the most highly decorated US Army helicopter pilot of the Vietnam war was a Tralee man!
That’s only the tip of the iceberg- reason enough???”



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A Visit to  Friend



Yesterday I visited Fr. Pat Moore in his new temporary home, Mount Desert.

I took a big risk and smuggled in a Kerry flag behind enemy lines. Fr. Pat’s friend, Fr. Jim Kennelly took a bigger risk by posing with it before returning to his parish, Boherbue in Co. Cork.




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