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: Halloween

November, Halloween, Sonny Bill and random acts of kindness

All Souls

November was traditionally the time when we remembered our loved ones who have gone before us. The early days of November were spent visiting graveyards and churches and gaining indulgences to free our departed loved ones from Purgatory.

Somewhere along the years of my lifetime, November morphed into a highlight of this great Ameerican festive season I have seen called HalloThanksXmas.  Instead of the church yard we visit pubs and hostelries and we dress up as ghouls and goblins and our children are persuaded that it is appropriate to go out in the neighborhood begging for sweets.

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Halloween 


I celebrated Halloween in Cork with my family so I’m depending on Facebook for images of October 31 2015 in Listowel.


Changes was a ghoulish spooky place to be.

 They had a bonfire on the beach in Ballybunion.

Listowel Folk Group were haunting John B.’s

My boys in Listowel Garden Centre Halloween shop

(photo credits; Changes, Ballybunion Prints, Jim Quinlan and me)

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Halloween in Cork


My little Trick or Treaters

In Cork the highlight of the festival is the Dragon of Shandon Parade. This is the work of Cork Community Arts and this year for the first time the parade came down from Shandon and onto the North Main Street area. I was there and here are a  few photos of the marvellous floats and paraders.



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Sonny Bill ……..the Listowel connection



( photo; Getty Images on Facebook)

When all the tries and all the penalties and even all the refereeing errors are forgotten, this image of Rugby World Cup 2015 will live on. It embodies all that is best in sport. It is a celebration of the sportsman’s appreciation of the fan.

If you are reading this from under your stone or way into the future you may not know what I am talking about. This is the moment when the great New Zealand player, Sonny Bill Williams gifted the World Cup medal he had only received minutes before to an overenthusiastic fan. In his post match euphoria the boy had raced past the security man to congratulate his hero. The security man had a bit of rugby training himself and he tackled the young fan to the ground. Sonny Bill picked him up, dusted him off and posed with him for the photographers. Then, in a spontaneous gesture, he took the medal from around his neck and gave it to the stupefied young fan.

Take a look at the video, Alma Rugby.  Watch to the end and you will see just how much this gesture meant to this young fan.

Now I promised a Listowel connection.  Well, it is actually very tenuous as  connections sometimes are.

Remember this lad at the RDS? He too is called Sonny Bill.

And yes, he is named after the great Sonny Bill Williams.

 His owners as well as being horse mad are also rugby mad.

 2015 was a good year for Sonny Bills.

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It’s the Little Things……the kindness of strangers



On Sunday I was at mass in The Church of St. Mary and St. John in Ballincollig. As I waited for mass to begin I was sitting in my pew minding my own business and reading the parish newsletter. They are losing their curate, Fr. Dave O’Connell to Barryroe and in his place they are getting Fr. Cian O’Sullivan. As I was perusing this and other Ballincollig snippets, I feel a tap on my shoulder. It is the man in the seat behind. He is offering me his glasses wipe. He has cleaned his own glasses with it and he feels it is a shame to throw it away after only cleaning one pair of specs.

Thanks to him I was seeing everything extra clearly for the rest of Sunday. Thank you, stranger.




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.

Halloween and Christmas

It was once my pleasure to teach some girls who had recently come with their families from Poland to live in Listowel. They told me that they do not celebrate Halloween in Poland. It is the Feast of All Souls for them and on this national holiday everyone tries to make their way back to visit their family graves. Roads are often jammed with families traveling from the cities to visit country churchyards.

 We used to be like that in Ireland once but now it’s all witches, pumpkins, sweets and the annual begging that we borrowed from American traditions, called Trick or Treat. Below are a few details from Listowel Halloween window displays.

If you are looking for someplace to take the children at Halloween I’d recommend The Kerry County Museum in Tralee. It’s open from 9.30 to 5.00 and has some spooky Halloween goings on.

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Listowel Garden Centre is looking fabulous for Christmas 2013. It is a Winter Wonderland and every one involved in setting up the displays is to be applauded.

On Saturday, when we visited, Pamela and Katelyn were face painting. They were very busy and doing a smashing job.

Watching fish is so relaxing!

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In Carlow in 1934 petrol cost 6d.

Halloween, Bog bodies and the Dandy Lodge

Halloween

Our Celtic ancestors called this feast Samhain. It was a time of transition from light to darkness. They believed that the boundaries between the living world and the world of the dead were very thin at this time. They believed that the spirits of the troubled dead sometimes returned  to avenge old wrongs or to settle a score.

 In Christian times we subsumed some of these old beliefs and this time of year became a time of remembrance for our dead loved ones and a time of prayer  and respect for the departed.

These grisly pictures are suited to the day that’s in it.

 Bogs are great places for preserving bodies.

On Saturday, 26th April 1952, peat cutters from Grauballe,
Denmark came across a well preserved body. He was called Grauballe Man
after the location he was found in. He was estimated to have died between A.D.
210 and 410. This is his exceptionally well preserved hand. He was so well
preserved that the body was first studied in the police laboratory at Aarhus,
as they assumed that the man had died in the recent past. His body now resides
in the Museum of Prehistory at Aarhus, where he lies in exactly the posture in
which he was found in the peat bog.

This is a photo of Borre Fen man as he was found, with the
halter around his neck. He was found at Borre Fen, Denmark in 1946. The dead
Iron Age man was exceptionally well preserved. He had been brought to the bog
naked except for the rope around his neck. He had a reddish stubble on his face
which showed that he had not shaved on his last day alive. Two more bog bodies
were found in this area in 1947 and 1948.

Probably the most famous bog body is this fellow below; the Tollund Man.

More on him here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tollund_Man

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Calling all Mulvihills

Did you know that you have your very own newsletter?

 I did not know this piece of information until Jer emailed me a copy.  It looks to me like it is a print publication but you can also have it sent to you by email. It does not appear to be available on line.

This is the voice of your clan chief

Our e-mailing list now stands at 652 individuals. Most of
these folks receive
The Mulvihill Voice newsletter on a
quarterly basis. In addition, we snail-mail a number of
copies to folks who prefer that format. I think that it is
reasonable to believe that, with sharing of the newsletter,
we are reaching the majority of Mulvihill families,
particularly in the U.S.

The Clan‟s private website currently hosts 260 members. It
provides a repository for pictures, stories, and files of
general interest. The site also contains a popular blog that
allows members to interact and share. It‟s fascinating to see
all those old pictures, and read those stories that are so
much a part of our heritage. Over a dozen folks have now
contributed their complete family trees to the site, which
becomes a resource for others looking to explore their own
ancestry. I would encourage anyone who has not yet done
so, to contact me with your e-mail address so that I can
send you an invitation to join. It‟s free!

Not everything is free, however. Last year we initiated a
Contributions program to cover continuing Clan expenses,
and it was pretty well received (considering the state of the
economy). As you can see from the „Thermometer‟on page
2, we are over halfway to our goal. Our most grateful
THANKS! to those folks who have responded most
generously. Besides offsetting general Clan expenses,
including the newsletter, we hope to reach a point where we
can endow some specific projects to explore and preserve
exceptional Clan sites or records, particularly in Ireland.
Please contact our Treasurer if you would like to make a
contribution. Every little bit counts! “



For those of you interested in receiving the Mulvihill Voice here are the contact details

 The Mulvihill Voice

Box 2772

Sag Harbor, NY 11963 USA 



mulvihillvoice@hotmail.com


Please send your contact info to:
Thomas C. Mulvihill, Membership
8821 Misty Creek Drive
Sarasota, Florida 34141
mm2000@comcast.net
941-929-9093 

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It is mid term break and I am on Nana duties. For the next few days I have scheduled some posts “I made earlier”.

Kay Caball who grew up within a stone’s throw of The Cows’ Lawn has written its history and she has very kindly shared her work with us. I will start serializing the account tomorrow but first a few photos from Childer’s Park, aka The Cows’ Lawn as it looks today.

Sign at the entrance

This is a very old gate now going nowhere. This type of gate did not close with a latch, nor could it be locked with a key. It was ingeniously designed to allow humans easy access but to keep animals out. I searched on the internet and, while I found lots of examples of this type of gate from all over the world, I could not find a name for it.

This was reconstructed from the stones taken from an old house on Bridge Road, allegedly the oldest house in Listowel. I could find no one to tell me when it first came to be called The Dandy Lodge.  I suspect it may have been in fairly recent times.

Today it is located facing the entrance to the park, hiding the rather unsightly Pitch and Putt clubhouse

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I went to the bank on Friday and there it was, gone! At least, Bank of Ireland, Listowel as I knew it was gone and in its place the beginnings of a DIY bank. YUCK! Gone is the personal touch and in its place machines.  Progress?

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John Summers writes from Sydney apropos Fr. Sneider, the world’s oldest full time teacher;

“So lovely to see the tribute to Fr Schneider in Listowel Connection. He is truly one of those men of real gentle Christian wisdom and a model for we lesser mortals who try to teach those pupils the Good Lord has placed before us in our classrooms.

I had the privilege very early in my career of working at Alos here in Sydney ( remember we Aussies have to shorten everything St Joseph’s College becomes Joeys, St Ignatius becomes Iggies and so on) I the 1980s and Fr Schneider was then a bit of a legend.

Isn’t good to come across a good news story about so many priests, sisters and brothers who tried their best, were good and kind people to their students and who left an impact on their communities. May be the terrible darkness of abuse in the churches may allow the light of good people like Fr Schneider glow even brighter like a candle in a darkened room.”

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