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: Jimmy Hickey Page 5 of 8

Cyril Kelly on Jimmy Hickey, Old Dance Poster and a Craft and food fair in the Listowel Arms

Shadows on The Feale 


(photo: Deirdre Lyons)

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An Childhood friend pays tribute to Jimmy Hickey


Jimmy Hickey and Cyril Kelly are friends from way back. they are still friends today. Cyril was prompted to write to me when he saw his old friend feature so deservedly in Listowel Connection. 

Cyril wrote;


“In your frequent perambulations around the town, if you come across the man with the twinkling eyes and twinkling feet, extend the good wishes of a former fellow cornerboy of yore. Many a time and oft in the Sunday mornings of the hungry fifties, we played handball against the gable end of what was then Kanes at the corner of Forge Lane (later  the ESB and later again other metamorphoses). Then, with endless time on our hands we loitered with content in the vicinity of that corner, commenting on the rivettingly  entertaining vista of The Bon-Tons, Quille’s, Birdy Browne bound for 10 o’clock, various officers of the Garda Siochána setting off on their leisurely beat or on their bikes, pedaling the countryside in search of a variety of obnoxious weeds, et cetera, et cetera. 


During those halcyon mornings, Jimmy with his restlessness and quick wit, was the best of company.”


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Violet Dalton shared this old Dance Poster on Facebook






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Listowel Food Fair in The Listowel Arms, Sunday November 13 2016

Here are some of the people I met.

Derval O’Rourke posed with the Walsh family at their John R.’s stall.

Maurice Hannon was having a chat with the winning  cheesemaker at his table.

I met this lovely young Duagh man at the Eabha Joans stand. He had on display a range of garnishes which they had made from locally sourced wild food foraged earlier in the year.

Derval O’Rourke’s book and food label is The Fit Foodie. I bought the energy treats. They were delicious.

These people were selling cds and books and raising awareness of the charity. Hope Guatemala.

Near 2 nature had some delicious energy bars. They were lovely too.


Maura Gleasure had her aprons and tea cosies on display.

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Sheila in the Grounds of The Seanchaí


Local lady, Sheila Horan with the statue of Bryan MacMahon





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One of the Final Events of our 1916 Commemoration



Owen O’Shea sent us an account of this event which will be a must for all historians.

TALK ON THE 5TH KERRYMAN KILLED DURING THE RISING 

FEATURING READINGS BY POET BRENDAN KENNELLY

Duagh native and UCD historian Dr Mary McAuliffe will give a talk at 8pm on Thursday, November 24th in Duagh national school hall on Robert Dillon, from Lyreacrompane, who has now become known as the ‘Fifth Kerryman’ killed during the Easter Rising. 

Dr McAuliffe – one of the co-editors of ‘Kerry 1916: Histories and Legacies of the Easter Rising – has researched the story of the north Kerry native who was a successful businessman in Dublin’s Moore Street. He died tragically while trying to get his family to safety during the worst fighting of the Rising. Witnessing Dillon’s death on Moore Street, Pádraig Pearse is said to have finally decided to surrender to prevent further civilian casualties. Robert Dillon’s name is now on the list of the Rising dead in Glasnevin Cemetery. His descendants are the Dillon family in the parish. 

Dr McAuliffe and fellow author Owen O’Shea will also talk on the other north Kerry men and women who took part in the Rising and who were active during the Revolutionary Years. Poet and Ballylongford native Brendan Kennelly will give a poetry reading and there will also be a musical interlude with a 1916 theme. 

This event is a fundraiser for the local Transition Year students who are travelling with the Hope Foundation to Kolkata and entry is €5 per family. The book on the period, Kerry 1916: Histories and Legacies of the Easter Rising – A Centenary Record will be for sale at a special price on the night. All are welcome.

1916 Commemorative garden, Ribbon Dance in Athea and a new Feature in Listowel Town Park

1916 Commemorative installation in Listowel Town Park….The Early Days

This is how it looked as it was laid out before the planting.

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From a Park Bench






This is just one of the many magnificent trees that surround the pitch and putt course.



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More from Jimmy Hickey


The Liam Dineen Ribbon Dance is beloved of all Listowel girls down through the years. The story, as Jimmy members it, is that Liam, when talking to a friend who was also a dancing master, came up with the idea of a dance involving ribbons, something like a traditional maypole dance. When you watch the video you will see that the maypole element is included.

Liam Dineen came away from that conversation with the germ of an idea. From that he developed his  Ribbon dance. Liam taught all over North Kerry and West Limerick in convent schools and he taught this dance to the girls. It became associated with St. Patrick’s Day and the ribbons used were green, white and gold.

In this video, kindly given to me by Kathleen McCarthy, you will see a group of adult dancers who relearned this dance to perform it in Athea earlier this year, 2016.

The dancers line up with Jimmy at the end of the video.

They are:

 Left to
Right;  Jimmy Hickey, dancing teacher,
Kathleen McCarthy, Margaret Regan, Peggy Williams, Carmel O’Mahoney, Miley
Costelooe, Bridie Keane, Kathleen Stack, Noreen McEvoy, Carmel Keane, Mary O’Flaherty,
Eileen Costeloe and Peggy Brick

Ribbon Dance in Athea

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Remembrance Day in St. John’s Sunday November 13 2016


This was the scene on the stage in St. John’s as we remembered the dead of all wars.

Earlier a special mass of commemoration was celebrated in St. Mary’s. The remembering continued in St. John’s with school children reading out the names of the soldiers from their areas who had died in two world wars.

Jim Halpin of Listowel does trojan work in ensuring that those young men who gave their lives in two world wars will not be forgotten.

I photographed Michael Guerin on his way to mass.

The names of the North Kerry men who lost their lives in WW1 took centre stage.

A hush fell over the audience as Mick McConnell sang is poignant ballad of a Christmas truce when for one night humanity cut through the horrors of war.

Listen Here

Jimmy Hickey today, Moyvane church bell in 1856 and an old cigarette card

Autumn in Childers’ Park, Listowel

photo: Deirdre Lyons

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The Dance Continues



Jimmy Hickey has lost none of his enthusiasm for the dance. He is passionate about his craft and he acknowledges his responsibility to pass on the steps to the next generation.

 Jimmy teaching the young boys in Scoil Realta na Maidine recently. This is where his own dancing career began.                                                                                                          (photo: Facebook)

St. Patrick’s day parade some years ago.

St. Patrick’s Day Céilí

Jimmy with Canon Declan O’Connor at last year’s St. Patrick’s Day parade

The link below is to a clip from St. Patrick’s Day 2014 when Jimmy danced with two of his pupils, Patrick and Mairead Brosnan

St. Patrick’s Day 2014

Like all good teachers Jimmy accepts that he can also learn from his pupils. He told me that he often taught a child a step one week, only to have that child come back the following week with a completely different interpretation of the same step. “And it was often better.”

Long may Jimmy Hickey, master dancer and dancing master, continue dancing, teaching and learning.

Now to finish with, Charlie Nolan has prepared a compilation of his videos of Jimmy Hickey and his dancers down through the years from 1985 to 1991. This video includes feiseanna, St. Patrick Day Ceilithe in the boys school, Jimmy dancing with two of his star pupils, the late Mary Murphy and Mary Hartnett and, the icing on the cake, the Liam Dineen Ribbon Dance.

Dancing Down the Years

Jimmy wears his fame lightly. It was my great pleasure to tell his story.

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Moyvane; A Bell and a Well

Moyvane’s 160 year old church bell and a recently rediscovered well.

 Below is from The Freemans Journal  20.03.1856

The novel and interesting pontifical ceremony of blessing of a Church

bell was performed in all its solemn forms on Palm Sunday, at the

chapel of Newtownsandes, in the North East of County Kerry, by the

Right Rev. Dr Moriarty. The bell, which was manufactured by Mr John

Murphy, of Dublin, is a very beautiful one. It was placed on a

platform before the altar in the Sanctuary. The local clergy and a

large multitude of people, who seemed to take the deepest interest in

the proceedings, were in attendance on the occasion. The Bishop

addressed the congregation a touching and suitable discourse, which

was listened to with almost breathless attention. It was the first

ceremony of the kind performed in Kerry since the reformation and the

bell is the first Church bell tooled in the parish of Murhur since the

same period.

Dublin’s “freedom bell”, the first Catholic Church bell to ring in

Dublin in breach of the Penal Laws 200 years ago,

Fr Michael Blake defied penal laws by tolling the bell in 1811, 18

years before Catholic emancipation. He faced charges, but was

successfully defended by O’Connell, then a young lawyer.

Legend has it that O’Connell rang the bell to celebrate emancipation

in 1829, creating the crack which remains visible today.

Moyvane is quiet these days

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Mike Enright found these great cigarette cards online. He thinks they date from 1924.

Sunday October 30 2016

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A New Career Beckons for your Blogger



No, not really …more like a minute of local fame.

My moments in the sun will come courtesy of Radio Kerry. Next week from November 7 to 11th at 7.30a.m. and 12.00 noon I will be bringing you Just a Thought. Next week my “thoughts”  will be available online.

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A Sad Old Memory



Does anyone remember a tragic house fire in 1965 when a lady by the name of Kitty Reidy was burned to death?

Junior Griffin remembers it because on that night, in Nurse Chapman’s lying in hospital in William Street, Junior’s late sister, Patsy, was giving birth to her son, Sean Breen. She remembered the commotion and sirens as the house fire was in a house on Charles St. next to Carmody’s corner.

Jimmy Hickey, Poetry in Motion and Knitwits go to Holy Smoke

The Millennium Arch leads to The River Feale

Trees by the bridge

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Jimmy Hickey’s story continued

The late Mary Doyle with Jimmy Hickey in 1999

One of the many feathers in
Jimmy’s cap is that he danced to poetry in The National Concert Hall in Dublin.
How did this come about?  Like many
things in Jimmy’s life it happened because someone saw him dance and was so
impressed, they invited him to a bigger show.

Listowel Writers Week invited
Jimmy to give a talk and demonstration on The History of Irish Dance  in 1996 

At the end of the talk Jimmy gave a demonstration of some of the dances and he had dancers on hand to show the steps. He then invited the audience to come and dance with them.  They danced the Patsy Haley.  By the way, The Patsy Haley or Shoe the Donkey is a version of an old European dance called the Versa Vienna.

Jimmy’s dancing partner was Welsh poet, Anne Drysdale, and she enjoyed herself so much she wrote a poem commemorating the occasion.

The Leprechaun Dances

The Pure Drop   Listowel May 19
1996

There’s a knowing look on the
face of the woman

With the big blonde hair and
the succulent bosom

As she reaches deep in the
recessed cleft

And hefts her tits to right
and left

In the swift deft fishing for
a silver string

Whence dangles an amulet, a
pretty little thing

In the shape of a perfect
tiny man.

“I am a man of Ireland

Of the holy land of Ireland;

You sir; whoso’er ye be

If ye’ve an ounce of charity

I pray to God ye’ll dance with me

In Ireland.”

She draws him forth from her
deep dark place

And she wipes the fluff off
his fierce little face

He has eyes all lined from
winking and grinning,

A head like a hazelnut, black
hair thinning,

And a serge suit shining at
the pressure points.

Then, whipping the linchpins
out of his joints

She sets him dancing on the
polished floor.

I am etc.”

Like the ring of a hammer on
my hard heart’s door

Is the knocking of his hard
little shoes on the floor

High in the sir he twists and
prances

While my stomach plummets and
my hard heart dances

And the taut serge shines on
his dear little bum

As it hovers out of reach
like a shrink wrapped plum

And the loose change jiggles
in his pocket.

I am etc.”

And now in the night when
sleep comes hard

And the old dog howls in the
empty yard

I can hear the sound of the
dancing man

Like an old tin whistle or a
sad bodhrán

And I make him a promise that
as soon as can be

I will go to Listowel and
I’ll set him free

And I’ll wind him up and
he’ll dance for me

For I’ve seen the place where
he keeps his key…

And I’ll remember it for as long as I live!

Anne Drysdale

Another lady who was present was Anne
Hartigan, poet. She admired Jimmy’s dancing and proposed that he compose a
dance to which she would write a poem. The dance and the poem were composed and
Jimmy and Anne practiced it in Ballygrennan, with Jimmy dancing on an old half
door.

“My feet were the music to
her poetry.”

Later that year the
Kerryman’s association in Dublin were organizing a big £100 a ticket
fundraiser. They asked Jimmy and Anne to perform their unique dance to poetry.
There were 1,000 people in attendance and Dan Collins was the M.C. The audience
were spellbound by the rhythmic taps of the dancer to the cadence of Anne
Hartigan’s poem, What Way the Wind Blows which Jimmy choreographed in jig time
and Little Lord of Death which he danced in reel time. Jimmy wrote out the
steps in the old Gaelic notation of seimhiús and síne fades. 

This unique
performance was greatly appreciated by the audience.

As far as Jimmy knows this
has never been done before or since.

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Listowel Knitwits at Holy Smoke


It’s Friday October 22 2016 and Listowel Knitwits are on tour. The party included shopping, an overnight stay in the Silver Springs hotel and the highlight, a meal in Cork’s most talked about new restaurant, Holy Smoke.


 Holy Smoke is the Cork restaurant where chef, John Relihan of Duagh, Allos and Barbacoa is now delighting palates. I met him by chance on Patrick Street as he was returning to his kitchen with produce fresh from Cork’s famous English Market.

 The restaurant is not easy to find. All the young folks know it though as it is situated in a complex with a popular bar and club.

This is the entrance to the complex. Holy Smoke is round the corner in Little Hanover Street.

This is the gang at the door. We were a little older than most of the other clientele. The restaurant specialises in good value meat dishes cooked “low and slow” accompanied by slaws and salads.


One of our Knitwits has a special relationship with John Relihan. Helen OConnor is John’s godmother. Little did she think when he was a pageboy at her wedding that one day she would dine in his restaurant when he was a celebrity chef.

I apologise for the poor quality of the photographs. The lighting was not designed with photographers in mind. The gang had a great night and a great meal and we all enjoyed the V.I.P. treatment.

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A Pig and A Nun Walked into a Bar…..

My niece Christine won the prize for best costume at her boyfriend, Andrew’s, Halloween party at the weekend.

Harmonie Festival 1999, Listowel politics in 1910 and 1916 commemorative installations


The Bend for Home




This is the road out of town for Tralee or Limerick. The Millennium arch is on the left and the cars are on the Big Bridge.



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Jimmy Hickey brings international honour to Listowel in 1999


The high point of Jimmy Hickey’s career as a dancer and dancing teacher was the winning of this magnificent trophy in 1999.

Here is the story

The HARMONIE FESTIVAL is a festival of
peace, friendship and international understanding.

It takes
place in Germany every six years. There are competitions for traditional
singing, dancing and music. Participation is by invitation only. To this day the
organisers are inviting Jimmy to come back, despite receiving hundreds of
applications from other Irish dancing schools to participate. I think he might
be thinking of having one last go at it. I hope he does. The next Harmonie is
in 2017.

Winning group Harmonie festival 1999

Back Ted Kenny, Mary Doyle, Michelle Mulvihill, Donncha
Quill, Jimmy Hickey, dancing master, Mary Ellen Quill and Ellen Quill

Front:

 Sarah O’Mahoney,
Fiona Twomey, Una Nolan, Lorraine O’Brien, Seán Browne, musician, Margaret
Prendeville, Jean O’Connor, Marion O’Connell and Helena O’Connell.

Harmonie Festival, Lindenholzhausen 1999

42 nations from all over the world each with their own
cultural dance.

Arriving back in Shannon with the trophy.

When the Kerry dancers went
first there was no competition, just exhibition and just five countries took part. When it developed into a competition Jimmy
Hickey’s dancers took first prize in 1999 and 2005. This was a huge honour,
which deserved wider recognition at home. They represented their country in an
international competition, competing against 42 other countries and came home with this unique and valuable trophy.
It depicts the town, Lindenholzhausen, where the competition took place. It has the symbol of the
competition and symbols representing the traditions of music and dance that
were celebrated.  Each dance group contributed one judge to the panel, so they
were judged by an international jury of their peers.

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Kerry Evening Star 1902-1914, Thursday, January 13, 1910; 

An account of a fairly lively political meeting in Listowel in 1910



The famous George Sandes.  Mr. Flavin,  living in Listowel,

could not stand his conduct,  so he took off his coat, fought him

fearlessly and well, and beat him all along the line. He hunted him

from every public Board in the county, and from the Bench he disgraced

him, until finally he hunted him to his dishonoured grave, he having

died a broken-hearted brute.

 Again they found Mr. Flavin , when there was confusion in the Irish Party, he proved himself loyal

to the authority of the chair. They found him in Meath assisting

another honest Irishman, Michael Davitt. (Cheers). They all remembered

the testimony of Michl. Davitt to honest Michael Flavin—that if he had

the giving away of his seat in the morning, the one man he would

select as a fearless fighter, as an honest man, was Michael Joseph

Flavin. (Cheers). 

Fourteen years ago Mr. Flavin was selected by a

Convention In North Kerry, and he got a mandate then from this

constituency telling him to bear the Home Rule flag in the English

House of Commons, and Rev. Speaker asked them had he not proved

himself an honest man since then, practically attending to his duties,

fruitfully doing them and doing them well. (Cheers). 

He had given the

best years of his life in the service of his country, regardless of

the consequence to his health. They found him once brought to death’s

door by the strife and turmoil of the battle, and now he would ask

them was that the man they should change for this gentleman from

London town?—(cries of of “Never”)—a man they had never heard in

politics up to the present time, and who heard of now, Rev. Chairman

had no doubt, for a sinister purpose. (“BOO for Neville Stack.”) They

were passing through a critical crisis, perhaps one of the most

critical that had ever arisen in their country’s history. Home Rule,

the desire of every Irishman, was now within measurable distance of

them. The Cabinet Ministers were proclaiming from the platforms all

through England that if returned to power they had committed

themselves to the granting of a full measure of Home Rule to Ireland.

(Cheers). 

While the hands of the Irish people were stretched out for

that long denied measure of justice to this country, the right of

Irishmen to make their own laws had in their own Parliament,  Joe

Chamberlain issuing his manifesto the other day to the electors of

Birmingham, appealing to their prejudices as Englishmen, not to vote

for the Liberals, because if they were returned to power they would

give Home Rule to Ireland. (Cries of “Shame.”) While their hands were

stretched out, they had the Unionists of Ireland subscribing twenty

thousand pounds for the purpose of scattering foul literature and to

defray the expenses of every foul-mouthed ruffian that was willing to

go across to villify their country. They had seen where the Tories had

opened the war chest and had given generously of it to every renegade

Irishman who was prepared to go across and fight a constituency in

Ireland, and Rev. Chairman had no doubt that this Mr. Thos. Neville

Stack was there for that purpose.

 He was supposed to contest that

division of North Kerry. He did not do it with a hope of winning,

unless he was an unmitigated fool, because he had as much chance of

winning as Rev. Chairman’s dog, Macnab. (Cheers and laughter). But if

by any chance he was returned, what would that mean? It would mean one

more voice in the wilderness, away from the Irish Party in a position

to do no good, but a lot of mischief. (Cheers). 

He would give them an

idea of what a humbug this gentleman was. He had gone to Mr. Redmond

and had stated he was willing to submit himself to the Convention. He

had not turned up, because he knew he would not get a man to propose

him, and if he did he would not get a seconder. (Cheers). Then he

issued his manifesto telling Mr. Redmond that the Convention would be

packed, and that it was a bogus one—which was a lie—and that he would

go forward and fight as an independent Nationalist “morryeah,” laughed

Rev. Chairman, amidst cheers and laughter. He was to his (Rev.

Chairman’s) mind an independent humbug, and when the fight was over

and the battle won, and he thought he could trust the sons of the

patriotic fathers in North Kerry, the first district in Ireland that

struck a blow for Home Rule and the extinction of landlordism in 1872;

when the day came for the counting of the votes, that they would prove

themselves worthy sons of those patriotic fathers, and give to this

London Stageen such a whipping in the race that never again would he

have the hardihood of entering for the North Kerry “Cup.” (Loud and

prolonged cheering).



Mr. Flavin, who next addressed the meeting and was received with

applause, expressed his confidence in the support he would get if Mr.

Neville Stack had the impudence to force the electors. He (Mr. Flavin)

had no doubt about winning, but one he would like to have made clear,

and that was on the day of the polling, many of his supporters might

say, “Well what is the use voting  he is bound to win easily, and

voting won’t make any difference.” Well they should no give way to

such apathy, but  come up and record their votes  so that factionism

for all time should be  blotted off the map of at leaat North Kerry.

(Loud cheers).



A warm vote of thanks was passed to the Rev. Chairman to which he

suitably replied terminated the proceedings.

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Listowel’s permanent 1916 memorial


David Toomey told me all about this when I met him at work in the park last week. The tarmac bit is in the shape of a Tara Brooch. It’s going to have commemorative plaques of the 1916 signatories in the circle of the brooch. All round the edge will be two rows of box hedge in different colours of green. It looks promising. I’ll keep you updated as it takes shape.

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Dublin City Marathon


Kerry Crusaders were well represented at the Dublin Marathon this year. (photo:Tommy Commane)

This year too a special medal to acknowledge their participation in 25 marathons was presented to the Kerr family. They run with their son Aaron who uses a wheelchair. Two Listowel sisters, Rochelle and Tena Griffin, are part of the team of people who help them push the chair for some of the way



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Moyvane 1916 Garden of Remembrance




Highlights of the ceremony to open the 1916 Garden of Remembrance and the village Vintage festival and dog show 2016



 HERE

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