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: Dick Carmody

Mario Goetze, God’s Acre, Turf cutting and a trip down Memory Lane

We knew him when he was only a lad.

This is a photo of Shane Murray(Ireland) and Mario Goetze(Germany) taken in Listowel in 2008.

This is the same Mario now aged 20 in his Borussia Dortmund colours. He is in the news because he practically single handedly beat the great Real Madrid on Weds. last.



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Last Wednesday night in St. John’s we were treated to a rare glimpse into Listowel in times past, as seen through the lenses of John Lynch and Jack McKenna.

John McKenna played some apt tunes on the the piano as we watched footage never before seen in a public setting in Listowel.

Jack McKenna has been recording life in his native town since the 1940s. He recorded the FCA in the Square as they drilled in preparation for invasion in the 1940s. He recorded Seamus Wilmot’s funeral, Dick Pierse’s wonder horse, the Feale under ice and a frosty Sunday morning in the Square in the 1950s. 

These are just some of the gems we watched on Weds. night.

The feeling was one of attending an old black and white silent movie, but one set in a familiar location. It was a privilege to watch these old movies in the company of the film makers.

I took a few photos of attendees on the night

Claire and Bernie Carmody

Liz and Marie McAulliffe

Jim Sheahan and John Lynch
Sue and Jack McKenna with Sue Taylor
Veronica Corridan and friend

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Dick Carmody took a great interest in the posts about An Teampall Bán. He shares this poem with us which he wrote earlier this year . The poem is about God’s Acre, a burial ground of unmarked graves in Ballybeggan, Tralee. This graveyard dates back to The Famine and times of other tragic sufferings.

God’s
Acre

God’s
Acre bids me enter through the well trodden stile of crafted limestone

Man’s
handiwork separating the living from the dead, the busy from the rested

Therein
repose the remains of the unmentioned, unlisted and oft forgotten

In
distant times of want, denial and inhumanity they came here for final rest

Alone
they sometimes sought it out, cold refuge against an even colder neglect

Last
faltering steps taken to meet their Maker in the soft embrace of Mother Earth

Or in
make-shift carts a final journey shared from workhouse or roadside refuge

Drawn
over limestone paths by souls rehearsing their own inevitable last journey.

In
our own time of plenty and opportunity we still seek out this relic from the
past

Stepping
inside from a world speeding by, we each find our own personal recess

Arriving
to repose the burdens of our living with the memories of those deceased

The
Stations, the Grotto, the Altar and the Cross all give us comfort on our way

Departing
we are relieved, comforted and renewed by this sanctuary to our dead

God
surely chose his Acre wisely, its great value not being of our choice
or making.

Dick
Carmody                                    January,
2013

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Lovely photo of men cutting turf on a raised bank, one sleánsman and one catcher  carrying on an age old tradition.

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I took this photo a few years ago at the unveiling of the John B. sculpture in the Garden of Europe. Billy Keane is surrounded by a bevy of local beauties.

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This was the only photo I could find on the internet of Miriam O’Callaghan accepting the inaurgual Mary Cummins award for outstanding achievement by an Irish woman working in the media. It was presented at the First Women in the Media event held in Ballybunion last weekend. The event was a great success by all accounts.

The Bog2Beach challenge was a great success as well. If I come across any photos in my research or if someone would like to send me some of photos of either event I’d love to share them.

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Yesterday I went to Kerry Parents and Friends Garden Fete. Here is alittle video I made and I’ll post some photos during the week.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UFLWmhd5kBY&feature=youtu.be

Valentine’s Day, Lupercalia and the horse

St. Valentine’s Day and Lupercalia

It is well known that if a wolf’s howl is heard near populated areas, a storm is on the way. I learned this from Brendan McWilliams. Apparently the wolf can predict the weather and will seek shelter in a barn or a shed when he senses the impending storm.

What is less well known is that it is thanks to the wolf that we celebrate Valentine’s Day.

According to legend, Romulus and Remus, founders of the city of Rome were suckled by a she wolf in a cave that came to be called the Lupercal. The Romans in due course held a festival of fertility in mid February each year, participants gathered near the Lupercal and the rituals were called Lupercalia.

With the advent of Christianity, Lupercalian celebrations tamed down a lot and became associated with the feast of St. Valentine on February 14. By medieval times the festival had taken on a gentler, more romantic theme. Nowadays it seems to me that it’s just another excuse to sell overpriced cards, roses and chocolates.

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More from 1988

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This picture is of a  Tralee scene

The caption on this one is Kerry Creamery

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Horses’ tales  

(extract from Dick Carmody’s In the Shadow of the School)

Breaking in and the
training of farm horses required an experienced and skilful horseman. As with
many tasks relating to farming, there was always one or more recognised experts
locally who would take spirited and untrained animals through all the stages of
roping, harnessing and carting to becoming a sober manageable and contented
animal that could be entrusted to any member of the family. There were
exceptions, whose reputations would soon become known throughout the locality
and might not be so easily disposed of at the next horse fair.

For horse breeding purposes, most farmerss depended on the
services of a visiting stallion to place their breeding mares in foal. This arrangement took place on
fair days in Sheehan’s yard at the top of William Street in Listowel. Though
well educated in farm animal husbandry from a very young age, for this
particular event we were kept a safe distance. The expected arrival of a young
foal in about 11 months was now eagerly awaited.

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Are ye right chief with Ruby Walsh winning for Willie Mullins at Thurles yesterday.

Winter in Listowel and a few old photos

The Small Square is looking bare and wintry these days. Roll on Christmas and the extra street  lights we are promised for this year.

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Yesterday’s hunt/mudbath in Ballyduff

Bernard O’Connell (Upper William St. and Canada) sent us this photo

Front row (L-R) Patrick J McElligott, Denis Quille, James Sugrue, Brian O’Grady

Middle Row Martin Quille, Christopher Broder, Con Brosnan, Timothy O’Sullivan

Back Row Daniel O’Grady, Miss Mary Aherne, Sean Coughlan

Bernard writes;

Denis Quille 2nd left in the front row was married to my Gran Aunt Julia O’Connell she was a sister of my Granfather Jack my Dad’s father, he was a Tailor at 31 Upper William St, my home where I grew up.”

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They don’t make ’em like they used to….

Design classic! Did you have one of these? They never wore out or broke and could be passed from one child to the next.

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Last week one of the old stock of North Kerry passed away. 

Jeremiah Behan R.I.P. of Lisselton was one of nature’s gentleman.

When I came to town first and was raising a young family, I used to own a chest freezer and I used to buy the meat to fill it in Behan’s of Lisselton. The twice yearly trip to Behan’s was never a chore. There was always a cup of tea and a chat in the friendly cheerful atmosphere of a family shop. Jeremiah will be missed by his family and his many friends.

Ar dheis láimh Dé go raibh a anam uasal dílís.

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Two photos from The Kerryman archives

Coursing in Listowel in 1982

Dan Kiely on the platform after mass in Listowel in 1982

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An idea for local people on your Christmas list

IN THE SHADOW OF
THE SCHOOL
 memories of growing up in rural North Kerry in
the 1950’s by Dick Carmody will be launched on Friday, 30th Nov. at 8.00pm inClounmacon
Community Centre. Book proceeds go to support the work of Kerry Emigrant Support.

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This news is from Radio Kerry:

A decision on whether to give the go ahead to a primary care centre in Listowel has been deferred. An Bord Pleanala was due to make a decision on November 20th, however the decision has now been put back to January 24th. The proposed two-storey facility on Convent Road, Listowel is to comprise a regional primary care centre, a GPs care centre, a medical suite, as well as 50 car parking spaces. Listowel Town Council granted planning permission, however that was appealed to An Bord Pleanala, who will now make a decision on January 24th.

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