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: Fr. Pat Moore Page 6 of 9

Local faces at WiM 2016, Lectures and a Visit to Asdee and Finuge Freewheelers

Early morning in Ballybunion photographed by Mike Enright

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I met some local people at Women in Media


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Military Weekend Coming Up


There are some really interesting history lectures planned for this weekend :

Wednesday April 27 8.00p.m.

Ardfert Witnesses at the Trial of Roger Casement by Helen O’Carroll

Saturday April 30 at 7.30 

Irish Spitfire Legends by Paul Beaver

Sunday May 1st. at 7.00

The Architectural Design of the Early Spittfire by Diarmuid Walsh

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News from Downtown Asdee



With my friend, Helen Moylan I visited Fr. Pat last week. I found him in very good spirits and looking forward to witnessing the changing season in his beloved Asdee.

You can read his account of life in rural North Kerry among the bluebells and the wild garlic in his uplifting blog Between the Hills and the Sea

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Old Cork



Patrick J. O’Shea shared this old photograph of the No. 3 bus passing under Brian Boru Bridge in Cork

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Finuge Freewheelers had a fun run and John Kelliher took the photos





More photos HERE

Vehicles in the Parade on March 17 2016, Rattoo and a poem from Fr. Pat Moore

Chris Grayson of Glenbeigh  and Killorglin posts some really lovely photos on Facebook. This is one of them.

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Vehicles at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade

I was reminded that I forgot the old cars which were featured in the 2016 parade. Here they are;

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Rattoo Tower viewed through the abbey window


Photo; Bridget O’Connor

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Easter Monday




This poem was written by Fr. Pat Moore on Easter Monday, 2007.  In Fr. Pat’s own words, “I wrote it after a walk with my friend, Brendan Walsh on Carrig Island. I talked to Brendan last night and he remembers that day too, the tiredness we felt and the rediscovery of energy  after the walk. 

 Easter Monday

“We walked to the furthest point of Carrig Island.

Nearby is the first monastic site in North Kerry.

Across the Shannon Estuary the round tower and monastic sites of Scattery break the skyline.

A northwest wind chills the sunlight that is gaining confidence this April morning.

Feeling like the last two priests in Kerry, we are full of Holy Week tiredness, inwardly more ashes than fire, more sickness than healing.

In this place and at a different time Senan of Scattery crossed over to build a causeway, a task abandoned for want of blessing.

“We have only ourselves,” we said as we stood there.

In our inner emptiness is the birthing place for Easter hope.

That it may overtake us and bring us forward.” 

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Na Fuinneoga is Gaelaí

Listowel winners of the competition for the most Irish St. Patrick’s windows

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Movers and Shakers of  Media on our Doorstep




I took this photo of the prestigious panel of women who spoke at last year’s women in Media in Ballybunion.

The ladies are, Moya Doherty, Miriam O’Callaghan, Dearbhail MacDonald, Dee Forbes, and Katie Hannon.

Four of the five were well known to me from Irish TV. The one I didn’t know in April 2015 in Ballybunion turns out to be the biggest name of them all.

Dee Forbes , originally from Cork, was then head of Discovery Channel in Europe .

She is now Director General of RTE.

This year’s Women in Media Weekend takes place from April 15 to April 17 2016 and Joan O’Connor has another star studded line up ready for us.

Women in Media 2016

Risin Sun then and now, a favourite recipe and the premier of Sive in 1959



Beautiful Beale




Ita Hannon

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Your Help is Needed to Identify this old school, Teacher or Pupils




It’s somewhere in North Kerry but the sender of the photo has no further clue.

As they say on the TV programme, Crime Call, “The image is very clear. Someone must recognize someone…”



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The Success of Sive


Text and photos: Vincent Carmody



Vincent Carmody was at the premier of Sive in Walsh’s Ballroom and he wrote the following account of the night.

Premier of Sive.

I was there at the beginning.

John B. said, ‘All Souls Night’ was his introduction to three act plays. My introduction was Sive’s premier, at Walsh’s Ballroom, on Feb 2nd, 1959.

I remember it, as it was one, of only two times ( apart from attending Mass), that I ever went, to any social occasion with both my parents. The other was when we went to see the film, Oklahoma, at the Plaza. My sister, Maura was with us. She was entering the nuns shortly afterwards.

I had seen Walsh’s Hall, rising from a green field site, in the mid 1950’s, and the night of the premier, was my first glimpse of it internally, it appeared then to me, as the largest building, apart from our local Church, that I was ever in. 

The hall was jam-packed, many of those around, were familiar to my parents, so there was a continual buzz of conversation. Looking back, much of what went on, on the stage that night, went over my head, However, there are certain moments that I can vividly remember to this day, after a distance of 57 years.

The first was, the distinctive sound of a bodhran being beaten, first in the distant, then louder as it came nearer the Glavin’s house, then louder as the two tinker men came into the kitchen, Carthalawn singing and being told by Pats Bocock, ‘your best, your almighty best’

I remember, Mena Glavin’s taunting of her mother in law, Nanna Glavin, and I am sure that I felt pity for her. What I remember most of the acting, was the shouting outside the house, before Sive’s dead body was brought back from the bog, and then as she was brought into the kitchen and laid on the table top. 

Make believe became reality when the play finished, the lights were turned and the actors took several standing ovations.

All those on the stage that night were people that my family knew well, The Cahills, John and Siobhan (Carthalawn and Nanna Glavin), our mothers used attend Children Of Mary together, John Flaherty (Pats Bocock) as gentle a billiard player, as he was a gentleman, he was our tailor, Bill Kearney (Thomasheen Sean Rua, the Matchmaker) we knew him as Sgt. Kearney, he was officer in charge of the local F.C.A. headquarters, The Slua Hall. Nora Relihan (Mena Glavin) Nora was married to Mick Relihan, our neighbour. Brendan O Carroll, the play’s producer, my mother was a regular customer of his drapery shop, ( it was there I got my first pair of green and gold Kerry socks). Margaret Dillon (Sive). Her brother Tony and myself were for a while altar boys at the convent. John B, I did not know him then, at this time, he would have been known as The Joker’s ( Eamon Keane’s) younger brother. Kevin O Donavan (Mike Glavin), our friend and neighbour, he was our shoemaker. Brian Brennan (Liam Scuab), he was from out of town, he worked for the contractors that were building the new boys school at the time. Hiliary Neilson (Sean Dota) the Technical School’s metalwork teacher with the Swedish name, at the time, we only knew of him from lads attending the school. They used say,” you better keep on his right side or else he could hit you with anything”  Meeting him in later life, I found him a kindly man, his sole interest in teaching, the progress and well being of his pupils.

I have since seen the play over 10 times, however those first night memories are indelibly frozen in my mind.

The photograph and program, I framed, and gave to John B. on his 70th birthday in 1998. It remain’s in the bar.

The original photo of the opening night cast,

From left, Sean Cahill, John Flaherty, Bill Kearney, Nora Relihan, Brendan O Carroll, Margaret Dillon, John B Keane, Siobhan Cahill, Kevin O Donavan, Brian Brennan, Cecile Cotter ( assistant stage manager, a daughter of Tasty Cotter) Hiliary Neilson.



From Kay Caball’s scrapbook comes the early reaction from the critics






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A Pleasant Surprise



When I opened the Weekend Magazine in my Irish Independent a few Saturday’s ago I saw a familiar face. It was Patricia Murphy who I remembered from Pres. a few years ago. Patricia was part of a feature about people sharing their favourite recipe. 

I’ve included it here for you. I haven’t tried it yet so you might let me know if you do.

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Do you remember this?




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Then and Now


2007

2016



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Life in Downtown Asdee



Fr. Pat Moore continues his slow recovery. He is keeping us all posted on progress here

Between the Hills and the Sea

On Sunday he shared a memory of his good friend, Chrissie Nolan who passed away in December 2015

Fr. Moore’s photo of Chrissie Nolan taken at his deaconate ceremony in Rome in 1981

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Fealeside Frolics



All photos by John Kelliher



You have until Sunday night to catch this Widows’ Paradise It’s gas!

Brooklyn….the Listowel Connection, water from a pump and Shane Enright gets an All Star

Listowel Writers’ Week Brochure ….The Winning Cover Design

The brochure cover design for Listowel Writers’ Week 2016 programme was chosen by competition. The winning artist is Edain ODomhnaill from Clonakilty.

The design is a totally new departure from Writers’ Week’s previous covers, but, I’m sure you’ll agree its beautiful and very apt.

The cover design says to me that a book has endless possibilities. If you are a reader, it can lift you off the page high into the clouds and beyond.

If you are a writer, a book can also offer infinite possibilities. This is aptly illustrated this year in the case of Colm Tóibín’s Brooklyn.

Tóibín  is a great friend of Writers’ Week. He wrote Brooklyn. It is the story of a girl who emigrated from rural Ireland to the U.S in the nineteen fifties. It is the story of many such girls. We all know an Éilís. Éilís’s adventure is nothing out of the ordinary, involving seasickness, homesickness, a bossy landlady, Irish priest, night classes, dances etc., etc. It is this very ordinariness that gives Brooklyn it’s universal appeal.

Tóibín published his book to great acclaim and then the magic happened. One of the endless possibilities that blow characters and plot off the pages and into the stratosphere opened up. Brooklyn, the movie, came about. Saoirse Ronan was an inspired choice for the leading role and then another magical possibility came about….three Oscar nominations.

Edaín had none of this in mind when she entered the competition to design a cover for Writers ‘Week’s 2016 programme. But there is a magic that a painting shares with a book. Once it leaves the creator’s hands, it’s ours. We can all interpret it in our own way and take what we want from it.

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Back to the Washing Board




Nicky Leonard added this tuppence worth to the washing debate. A washboard was a wooden appliance with a ridged surface at one side. You stood it in the was tub and you rubbed the soaped clothes up and down the board to get the dirt out.

Nicky found the above washing board on the internet. It’s not your usual wooden one. It’s made completely of glass and was intended for washing lingerie only. The term midget refers to its mall size.

Nicky also sent us this photo of a woman at a pump filling a gallon of water. These gallons used to contain sweets in the days when sweets were sold individually or by weight. We used the empty sweet gallons for everything; tea in the meadow or bog, milk, water, collecting eggs or blackberries, bringing feed to hens etc, etc. I haven’t seen one in years.

We used to have a pump just like this one in a field we called the pump field. It was very handy for watering the cattle and I suspect that the big bath of water under this pump might be for just that purpose, a water trough for cattle.

Interestingly the top is off this pump as it usually was in ours as well for the pump had to be primed before it would give you any water. Priming was done by pouring water into the pump from the top.

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Tarbert All Star …with a Listowel Connection




Photo: John Kelliher

Marty Morrissey of Rte presented his All Star award to Shane Enright in The Swanky Bar, Tarbert last weekend. Shane’s mother, Stella is from Listowel.

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Savannah McCarthy, International Footballer




Savannah McCarthy formerly of Listowl Emmetts is traveling to California with the Irish Senior Ladies Soccer team



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Fr. Pat Moore




As he continues his recovery, Fr. Pat has found a new way to talk to his friends and followers. He has his own Website

Fr. Pat Moore – Between the Hills and The Sea

He finishes his first blogpost with these quotations;

“Sometimes the wrong train will take you to the right place ”

“We forget things if we have no one to tell them to ”

We are all looking forward to Fr. Pat’s telling us unforgettable things.

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Yesterday’s Indo

This is the Pat Healy photograph I mentioned yesterday.

Hollywood wedding, Closure of Mai Fitz’s and an Athea play in rehearsal

Kanturk Hillwalkers climbed Mangerton this week.

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Celebrity Wedding in Listowel




Photo: The Listowel Arms Hotel

Duagh film producer, Gerard Barrett wed Gráinne O’Sullivan of Listowel in St. Mary’s on January 3 2016.

Fr. Pat Moore gave a beautiful homily which Billy Keane shared with us all in his Irish Independent column

“None of us comes to a relationship with empty hands. We are all formed in homes, whether in Bedford or Carrueragh. We carry in the blood or in the mind the images of those who have loved us and whom we have loved. We carry damage, too, wherever we are wounded.

“These images we have carried for years, they are set in the mind, they are the lenses through which we view things. So often we can’t see through the net of these patterns. The magic of love is what Grainne and Ger have. It releases an energy.

“New thresholds have opened up. And the grace of new beginnings. Life quickens with new possibilities, fresh invitations, when a couple sense the complexity and delight of it all.”


Read on Here

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Another One Bites the Dust



After trading on William Street for the past six years, Mai Fitz’s closed its doors last weekend.  

Photo: John Kelliher

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Lartigue’s Ingenius design




Photos: Nicky Leonard

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Something to Look Forward To






“Rehearsals are progressing very well for Athea Drama Group’s upcoming production of ‘The Hen Night Epiphany’ which will be staged in late February. Directed by Oliver McGrath, this is a heart lifting tale that tells the story of five women who meet up for a night of fun and laughter that ultimately leaves their lives turned upside down. The cast features Annette O’Donnell, Angeline O’Donnell, Nora Hunt, Louise Ahern & Ria Browne.”         (source:Athea Limerick)

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Little Piece of Heaven




Photo:Ballylongford Snaps

The Battery, Carrig Island, Ballylongford, Co.Kerry

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Rallying the troops in 1901

TWO MOST QUEENLY ACTS   
West Coast
Times , Issue 11877, 17 April 1901, Page 4


According to Lord Roseberry, as
quoted by the Saturday Review,” two most queenly acts

 of  Queen Victoria’s life were her visit to
London in the dark days of Colenso and

Spion Kop when Ladysmith, Kimberley,
and Mafeking were all invested, and her visit to Ireland in the following
spring.

By coming suddenly to London during
that terrible winter

of 1889-1900, the aged Queen bade
the citizens of her capital be of good cheer, and reminded them that she had
lived through the Indian Mutiny.

According to newspaper accounts at the time  Nine miles of decorations have been erected between Kingstown and Phoenix Park in Dublin, and £10,000 spent in illuminations, in honour of the Queen’s visit. “

 “By crossing over to Ireland, in a state of health that was already infirm, she personally thanked the Irish for the bravery of their countrymen on the field of battle.”

The queen was, of course, Victoria, whose long reign has now been surpassed by the present queen, Elizabeth.

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