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: Garden of Europe Page 4 of 9

Garden of Europe, Festival of Kerry, Statues in St. Mary’s and more from the stars of Brendan of Ireland

It was Roses, Roses all the Way



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Festival of Kerry…A Thought

Source: A Year in Kerry by Patrick O’Sullivan

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Listowel Community Centre Looking Good

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Garden of Europe in August 2018


This seat is placed opposite The Tree of Hope

This is what you are reading if you are seated here.

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Moving Statues


St Theresa has been restored to a new position in St. Mary’s.

And St. Padre Pio has got company on his altar.

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More from Brendan of Ireland




The purpose of the series of books was to educate children about the cultural differences between people in different countries.

Brendan, as a typical Irish child, wears jumpers knitted by his aunt, short trousers held up with braces and Robin sandals.

He walks to school and he plays hurling, pitch and toss and card games. His life is an outdoor one of turf and water from the well, feeding hens and investigating birds’ nests.

Brendan fishes for tráthníns and he keeps them in jam jars and changes the water every day before he releases them back into the stream.

Brendan finds a bird’s nest and cannot resist taking a look at an egg.

Frank Greaney remembers this well near the family home. You had to bend down to draw the cool water. Here Brendan is carrying a bucket of water home for drinking and cooking.

In the story the house has no electricity or running water.

Here Grandpa Jack is telling Brendan a story by the fire. Most people remember Paud Carey as a quiet reserved man, with little to say for himself. People might have thought him aloof or shy but Frank, who knew him well, remembers an extraordinarily generous man who waited at the gate of the  Technical School to give Frank 2 shillings when 2 shillings was a fortune.

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Deer, Oh deer!




Christopher Grayson took this awesome shot in Killarney National Park.

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My Pick




This is Saoirse McGrath, the 2018 Meath Rose contestant.

Why is she special?

Because she bought 16 of her 25 day dresses from her local St. Vincent de Paul shop.

So if he Roses are down your way keep an eye on her style.

1939 paper, Garden of Europe signs and Some 1966 Roses

Doe a deer…. baby deer at Beauford photographed by Chris Grayson

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An Old One from Scoil Realta na Maidine



Scoil Realta na Maidine teachers photographed by John Hannon

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A Blast from the Past



Recently a friend bought an old house. When she started her refurb. she pulled up all the old carpets. In the days before underlay, people used to use newspaper to  cover the concrete to keep damp from rising up to ruin the floor covering. It is a sign of how good this insulation was that the first paper laid down was the Evening Press of 1939 and it was there in 2018 intact. She shared a few pieces of these newspapers  with us.

Seems like they were bombarded from morning ’til night by advertising even back then.

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Road Works are Gas




One day as I was passing the John B. Keane Rd. sign workmen were replacing it after laying their gas pipeline.

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Repainting the Signs



Faded signs are being repainted this summer.




The MacMahon tree is beside The Garden of Europe and provides bay leaves for the town.

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Roses in 1966


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On a bank Holiday break in Listowel



It was lovely to meet my former pupils, Brita Whelan and Darina Harman, their families and Jake.

Green Guide to Listowel 1965, Mosaics in The Garden of Europe and Bridge Road Then and Now

Listowel Town Square, July 2018

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More from The Green Guide



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Art Installations in The Garden of Europe

 Lovely pebble mosaics have appeared in The Garden recently. There is no artists credited with the pieces and there should be because they are beautiful.


Patrick Tarrant’s John B. Keane sculpture is looking lovely in Summer 2018.

The Holocaust Memorial is central to the Garden. Lest we forget….

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Sign Upgrading

This sign at the Millenium Arch was badly in need of a facelift.

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Bridge Road Then and Now




Photo by John Hannon



Photos by Listowel Connection

Convent street, Listowel Visual Arts Week 2018, Cruinniú na nÓg

Photographer’s Heaven, Cnoc an Óir

Photograph of Pixie O’Gorman by Mike Enright

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Lofty’s Corner


Once upon a time this was a great hang out as the students alighting from or waiting for school buses bought and consumed their supplies.

This is Horan’s. it used to be a private house and then a blind shop.

Convent Street Listowel

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Visual Arts Week 2018 Community Art in The Square

My friend, Junior Griffin, himself a handy artist, was taking a go at painting the collaborative work on the Saturday of Listowel Arts Week 2018.

The sun was shining and people who were passing by were invited to paint a little of a four part canvas soon to be assembled as an artwork.

The event was run as part of Cruinniú na nÓg so there were many youngsters only too willing to have a go.

Cruinniú na nÓg was happening in The Seanchaí and St. John’s.

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Evening in Ballybunion





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I’m Dogsitting




My house guest  this week is Molly. She is having a Kerry holiday. Yesterday I took her to a well known Listowel landmark and she was suitably impressed.

A Robin, Beef Tea by John B. Keane and Fr. Danny Long and Maisie McSweeney

Closeup of a Robin


Photo: Ita Hannon

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Garden of Europe Update



This corner of our lovely town is looking very bare these days.


signs of spring

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A Fruity Poem  by William Cole  (from For Laughing Out Loud)



I thought I’d win the spelling bee

And get right to the top.

But I started to spell “banana”,

And I didn’t know when to stop.

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Bridge Road


This is the old Neodata site. It looks like it is going to be a car park, for the foreseeable future anyway.





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Beef Tea  (concluded)


by John B. Keane


….There was another
man in the street at the time, a notorious rogue albeit a likeable enough
fellow. He was greatly addicted to all forms of intoxicating drink and as is
the case with such people he often found himself with an insatiable desire for
meat. He would insist, on his arrival home from the public house, that his wife
did not look at all well. As it happened, she was something of a hypochondriac
and liked to hear such things.

“I haven’t been
feeling well all day,” she would agree.

“What you need,”
he would say,” is a nice mug of beef tea. If you have a shilling or two handy
I’ll go down and knock up the butcher and get a pound of the finest round.”

All beef tea
consisted of, by the way, was the water in which the beef was boiled.  As soon as she started to partake of the beef
tea our friend would start to partake of the beef. It was a good ruse and it
kept both of them in good health for many a year.

Nowadays there is
no talk of beef tea and more’s the pity because I might not be here at all only
for it. There were occasions when it was supposed to have brought people back
from the very mouth of the grave. Under no circumstances was the fat of beef to
be used. A nice lean cut off the round was the very man for the job.

People may look
askance at it now but in my boyhood it was held in reserve to the very end much
like a crack battalion in time of battle. Then when all seemed lost the beef
tea like the battalion would be unleashed on the enemy, the battalion upon the
opposing army and the beef tea upon the harbingers of human extinction.

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Fr. Danny Long and Maisie McSweeney


Billy McSweeney writes;


Fr Danny Long was President of St. Michael’s College from Sept 1954. I
remember him fondly, not only because he was a relief to all the
students from his predecessor, but also because he had a sharp sense of
humour. His arrival at St. Mike’s on my first year definitely saved me
from an ‘uncomfortable’ 6 years.

In my memory we have a story of when Danny Long visited the Library and
asked my mother for ‘Dr Zhivago’ by Boris Pasternak. This was out new at
the time and was all the rage. There was a long queue of borrowers
waiting their turn to read it.

Danny was insistent that she put him at the head of the queue, which she
rejected and refused to do as it would be unfair! She told him so!

“You know that I could turn you into a goat!” says Danny. (To non-native
Listowel readers this was a well-known piseog of old!)

“BeGod Father, if you do I’ll puck you,” was the reply.

He had met his match!

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