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: John Stack Page 2 of 3

Feale, Childhood Friends, Rose of Tralee 2019, a holy well and Armistice Day Ceremony in Listowel

River Feale, November 3 2018

<<<<<<<<


Childhood Friends on Facebook


Bernard O’Connell of Listowel and Canada posted this great old picture on Facebook.

far left Mary Brosnan, Katrina Lyons, Myself, Noreen Holyoake, Mary Lyons, Mary Carmody, Maura Moriarity

<<<<<<<<,



Big Year next year for the Rose Festival



(Photo and text from Traleetoday.ie)



NEXT year is a very special one for the Rose of Tralee International Festival as it celebrates its 60th anniversary.

It’s already been announced that there will be no regional finals and centres will put forward a Rose every two years (apart from Kerry, Cork and Dublin) resulting in just 32 Roses coming to Tralee next year for the festival.

Now, in another change, it’s been decided that the Festival will move back a few days. It will start on Friday, August 23 and the  2019 Rose of Tralee will be announced on Tuesday, August 27.

For the past number of years the Festival has started slightly later than mid-August (this year it began on August 17), but next year will bring it closer to what it used to be years ago, with the winner announced closer to the end of the month.

<<<<<<<<<<



Holy Well in Tarbert



from the Dúchas folklore collection

There was a blessed well in Jim Woulfe’s field and one day they washed clothes in it and that night the well changed out to Tom O’Connor field which was two fields away. People used go there on Sundays and especially Sundays of May. Some people used go there to get cured from some disease they had and they would leave a piece of cloth of the bushes round the well. There used also around the well three times to every rosary they would say. It is called Sundays Well. If you were to be cured at some wells you would see a fish.
Eileen Shine
Address
Gortdromasillahy, Co. Kerry

<<<<<<<,



Armistice Day Centenary in Listowel



On Sunday Nov. 11 2018 the Listowel History Society organised a moving commemorative ceremony to honour all the North Kerry men who served in WW1. In the church, after an evocative memorial mass, local school children read out the names of men from their area who had died in the Great War.

I dont know if other people saw something very poignant in the sight of this drummer boy. 

Drummer boys were part of armies as far back as history goes. They were originally tasked with ensuring soldiers marched in time. By the time of WW1 these young boys (they were not actually soldiers as they were usually under 18) were more like regimental mascots. But young and all as they were, they went into battle alongside their regiment and many of them died.

<<<<<<



Wreath laying Ceremony at the war memorial stone.



Sunday November 11 2018

Wreaths were laid.

The tricolour was lowered and then raised again.

The bugler played the last post.  We stood for two minutes silence and we played the National Anthem.

And we remembered.

John Stack shared with us this photo of those who were part of the Armistice Day Ceremony in Listowel on Sunday, November 11 2018

<<<<<<<<



The Ball Alley Today




A blank canvas

McKennas, Donoghues in Glenderry and Australia and a look back at St. Patrick’s Day



Beautiful Kerry



Chris Grayson snapped this robin in The National Park in Killarney last week.

<<<<<<<<<<



McKennas






Photo: Mike Hannon

Do you remember when it looked like this?

<<<<<<<<<



From a Land Down Under


All over the world there are Listowel people searching for their roots. I am always delighted when someone makes contact to say that Listowel Connection has helped in that search. Here is an email I received from Nan Bailey in Queensland.

“I found your blog Listowel Connection this evening when I googled Glanderry, Ireland to see just where it was. I still don’t know, but presume it must be in the Listowel district.

My Fathers Mother, Mary Donoghue was born in Listowel area as were several of her siblings and tonight, for the first time I saw a baptism record for one of them in Family Search, that had Glanderry named as the Fathers place of birth.

This is the first time I have ever seen where my Great Grandfather John Donoghue was from and I was stoked. They were supposed to have lived at some stage above a post office, but I only have that 3rd hand, so don’t know exactly where

I have subscribed to your blog and am looking forward to reading more about Listowel and the surrounding area and learning about where some of my Irish ancestors come from.”

I know I have lots of Donoghue and O’Donoghue followers who might just be able to help Nan in her search for her Listowel connection.

<<<<<<<<<<



Two More Sleeps to St. Patrick’s Day 2017




<<<<<<



Shenanigans at a Hooley in Listowel in 1839


Kerry Evening
Post Wednesday, November 13, 1839; 

TO THE EDITOR
OF THE KERRY EVENING POST

Listowel. 9th November, 1839. 

Dear Mr. Editor.—A
series of political dinners have been given, during the past and present week,
in our town and neighbourhood; But the grand coalition festival of that exotic
and eccentric Maurice Mac O’Connor to Morgan O Connell, M.P.; Pierce Mahony,
ex-M.P.; John Cronin of park; Rev Mr Harrington, C.C.; Rev Mr Simple, C.C.; Mr
Marshall, Auctioneer and many others.

 The letter goes on to explain the
expensive and lavish preparations, items from Limerick and ornaments, wreaths
and greens from Ballinruddery , used in decorations. Their motto was “Céad
Míle Failte.  Being market day many came to admire the show. 

Pierce Mahony
spoke in very dull and prosy language. Morgan O’C admitted that Tories had
political interests to support and rights to contend for, as well as the
Radicals. Third Toast was The National Board of Education and Fr Mahony who had
recently erected a school, but later on in the letter, it noted that the school
was, not finished yet and badly needed to educate the children who had bad
habits wandering around the Market place. 
Mr Marshall speaking under the influence of spirits, it was alleged, mentioned Mr Mc O’Connor being good at feeding pigs and jack asses. Ned Cain
gave an explanation the following day about the exaggerated speeches….

<<<<<<



Listowel Cyclists




Early one Saturday morning I snapped these cyclists pedalling through town on their weekly training spin.

Writers Week chairs, Fr. O’Connor of Knockanure and a few holiday snaps

Some past chairpeople of Listowel Writers Week who attended the Writers Week 2014 programme launch; David Browne, Michael Lynch, Seán Lyons, Nora Relihan and Madeleine O’Sullivan.

<<<<<<

Yes we can!

<<<<<<<<

Knockanure church commemoration April 25 2014








Bishop Browne and Fr. Lucid

Bishop Browne planted 2 yew trees watched by Fr. Moore


<<<<<<<

A Better Class of holiday snap!

John Stack took these stunningly beautiful photos on his recent trip to Italy and Switzerland.

<<<<<<<

Below is an extract from a school folklore project:

Fr O’Connor was my granduncle. He was a powerful strong man. Lord Adare was building a castle one time the gave the contract to a Englishman, but he told him the Irish were to get work. The contractor brought a great big strong man from England with him, and any one that could bar stones with him got work .  Labour men brought a letter from FR. O Connor of Shanagolden looking for work but they could not bar stones with the English man so they were sent away. Fr. O Connor gave a letter to a poor man and he went to Lord Adare to get work. He was barring stones with the strong man and he was sent away because he couldn`t  keep up with him .

 ” For Fr. O Connor’s sake give me work” said the poor man. 

“If Fr. O Connor were here himself  I’d give him work” said the foreman. 

When Fr. O Connor heard it, he got an old suit of clothes and he put them on and carried his letter to Adare looking for work. He started working with the strong man. When the bar was full Fr. O Connor said ” Is that all you`re going to carry?” 

The strong man said “The load maybe be too heavy when you get to the top with it.” 

With that Fr. O Connor put on a few more stones on the load. When they were going to start he gave a little shake and broke the Englishman’s back. Everyone got work after that. 

He died in Shanagolden and some friends were there when he dying and he said to them “If the parishioners want to keep me don`t go against them. 

The parishioners buried him in Knockanure graveyard beside the wall.

 (This story was told by C. Shine a Carpenter at Newtownsands)

<<<<<<<

Cheeky robin….great photo from Timothy John MacSweeney.

<<<<<<

The Diaspora


I met Graham and Terence Healey in the parish office. They were searching for Healey relatives. They had come all the way from New South Wales in Australia to visit the home of their Healy and Linnane ancestors. They had a great story to tell. More later……


Keith and Chris Stack from New Zealand were in The Horseshoe with Damien tracing their North Kerry Stack roots.

Football Supporters, Ballybunion and Maeve Moloney of Listowel and South Carolina

Ballybunion Sea Angling took this extraordinary photo of the sky over Ballybunion on Tuesday morning last, Oct 15 2013.

<<<<<<<

John Stack took this and lots of photos of the Tommy Madden Tournament and they are all available  from 

http://northkerryfootball.com

<<<<<<<<




Ballybunion in the 1950s complete with changing huts. Does anyone remember them there on the shoreline? I certainly don’t.



<<<<<<<






This fossil found in Ballybunion is 300 million years old. Ballybunion Sea Angling posted this photo of it on his Facebook page.



<<<<<<<<


Maeve Moloney contacted me from South Carolina. She hails from Skehenerin. Maeve remembers Listowel with fondness and she has sent me some photos and a brief biography to let people know how she has fared since she left Listowel.

“I am the daughter of Mary Murphy and Jimmy (The Chum) Moloney.
My father was the dental technician for the Enrights when the father and then
his son had a dental practice in the Square for many years. There were six of
us children, all of whom had to emigrate to the U.S.A. Best known in Listowel
is my younger brother Tim (Teddy) who played with the Bunny Dalton Showband
before coming to America where he has been very successful with his own band
and his ownership of The Dublin Pub on Long Island. He visits Listowel
frequently. Among his very good friends in Listowel is Danny Hannon, the
bookseller. I and my husband, Robert, a now-retired U.S. Government lawyer,
have lived over the years in New York City, Washington D.C., Phoenix, Arizona,
and now we live in retirement in Columbia, South Carolina, where one of our
sons, Paul, also a lawyer, lives with his wife and two children. We have one
other child, Robert — yet another lawyer — who currently resides in Kansas
and has one son, Seamus. I’ve had a few careers myself. I was an interior
designer in Washington for many years and then, until a few years ago, ran an
Irish import business, mainly online. We were last in Listowel about 7 years
ago and are planning a trip with the whole family, including the three
grandchildren, for a year or two from now.”


Captions to the photos are clockwise beginning with the upper left.      

1)Maeve footing the turf, 1960;

2)William St., Ash Wednesday, 1984;

3)Taking It Easy, Standing on a Corner in Winslow, Arizona,
1996;

 4)Advertising on a Saguaro cactus outside my home in Arizona, 1997.







1)Ballybunion, 2007;

2)Washington DC, family picture, 1987;

3)James Joyce & Maeve, O’Connell St., 2007;

4)My Dad & his friend, The Pecker Dunne, 1980s.  



3:

1)Maeve at the Castle, 1960;

2)With US Congressman Joe Wilson on Maeve’s left, St. Patrick’s
Day Parade, Columbia, South Carolina, 2013;

3) At the newly dedicated Irish Memorial Park, Charleston, South
Carolina, in memory of 17th, 18th, & 19th Century Irish settlers in South
Carolina, note the raised granite map of Ireland, 2013;

 4) In my azalea garden
with my Yorkshire terrier, Maeveen, named after me.

<<<<<

Ballybunion Sea Angling posted this lovely photo from late evening in October 2013 in Ballybunion.

<<<<<

Next week I’ll tell you all about my experience of The parish mission.

<<<<<<<

 Meanwhile over on  The Listowel Thread someone is trying to organise  a group to play board games in The Listowel Arms on  Wednesday evenings.

Hoarders, Mike Aylmer R.I.P. and a cigarette card

Congratulations Boys!

Moyvane brothers, Aaron and Sean Slemon who came 15th and 1st in The World Irish Dancing Championships in Boston.

<<<<<

We are not done with St. Patrick’s Day yet!!

John McGrath
Johnny Cronin dancing school
Johnny Cronin
John Stack

Mary Moylan

>>>>>>>

People who hoard photos and old newspapers, magazines and programmes are to be treasured. These people are an invaluable help to me in compiling the blog.  My newest collaborator is Tom  O’Connor of the well known local Mike the Pie family.  Recently Tom brought me 2 old GAA commemorative programmes and a copy of The North Kerry Chronicle. 

The North Kerry Chronicle was a free newspaper before The Advertiser was heard of. Tom had kept the paper from June 1966 because in it there was a tribute to his old friend, Mike Aylmer. Customers of McGuire’s will remember Mike as he was pharmacist  there for years and he was a valued member of Listowel Tennis Club.

 His friend, Gerard Leahy wrote this obituary. If you knew Mike, take a minute to read it and remember a “character” who is gone but not forgotten.

Tribute to a nice man

 from The North Kerry Chronicle 1996

(Gerard Leahy)

The death of Mike Alymer on
May 12 1996 was an irreplaceable loss for the town of Listowel and an occasion
of shattering sadness for his many friends and admirers.

Mike was born in
Castledermot, Co, Kildare, a village nestling in lush Kildare pastureland,
enriched by the River barrow. His father was editor of The Carlow Nationalist
and his mother was headmistress of Castledermot National School, next door to
the family home. He was the eldest of two sisters and four brothers, all of
whom went on to achieve distinction in the medical and legal professions. Mike
went to Rockwell College and although his initial passion was architecture,
because of the cost and length of this course at the time he decided to study
Pharmacy. He qualified with distinction and set up a successful in Carlow Town.
The death of Mike’s wife, Frances prompted him to move on. He came to McGuire’s
Pharmacy and stayed her until his death.

Mike was a man of tremendous
intellect, combined with personal sensitivity and humility. He had a unique
ability to size people and situations and to transform these observations into
a witty analysis, which he would quietly confide with his friends over a pint.
He was not opinionated or particularly well informed on current affairs but he
had a view on most aspects and situations in life based on his own acute
observations down through the years. Above all he loved to spice his
observations with a quotation or a good yarn gleaned from his own experiences.
He was a renowned wit and the nicknames he invented for local and national
characters combined a roguish sense of fun with a penetrating sense of
observation.

After forsaking his practice
in Carlow he lived life on his own terms and discarded material goods. He lived
humbly, his only prized possessions, his tennis racquet, his classical music
tapes and his 2 budgies. He had little time for religion and nothing was
guaranteed to irritate him more than the clickety clack of high heels going
down Church Street to mass on a Sunday morning. He was amused at the changeover
to Saturday night mass, describing it as “going to mass today for tomorrow.” He
expressed is personal philosophy on life as “Life is like a blossoming flower
which eventually withers and dies.’ He lived his own life accordingly.  He was mildly suspicious of women of whom he
used to say, in a deliberate misquote from Macbeth, “She looketh like the
innocent flower but she the serpent under it.” At the same time he had great
admiration for many of those females he met through tennis and through his
work. He would not tolerate the company of fools but he was incapable of
insulting anyone, preferring to quietly avoid their company. He needed neither
people nor distractions and h spent his life in Listowel at work, having a few pints
in O’Connor’s Bar, walking in the park or playing tennis in the town courts and
placing the odd cross double on a Saturday afternoon. To my knowledge he never
progressed beyond McKenna’s Corner in either direction in his 17 years in
Listowel.

Mike’s great passions and
consolations were tennis and classical music. I first met him through an
arranged tennis match in 1979 and we remained firm friends since. He loved
tennis, particularly men’s doubles, and nothing would give him greater
satisfaction than to send a winner past a beaten opponent. He would invariably
turn and describe the shot as “one from the bottom drawer”. He helped to
revitalize Listowel Tennis Clun in the 1980’s and was its chairman for two
years. During one of these years the club held a fancy dress social. Mike
arrived, dressed impeccably in uniform as Adolf Hitler. After the meal he stood
up to give the club chairman’s annual address. For 10 minutes he recited in
strident and vociferous German a prepared Hitlerite speech and then he sat down
without a word of English or any comment whatsoever on the previous tennis
season.  He brought the house down and
the affectionate applause was thunderous.

Mike’s friends transcended
all class boundaries. He had friends from all walks of life who will miss him
dearly. He loved good sunny weather and he always said that the best time of
year was the last two weeks of April and the first two weeks of May when the
effervescence of life was at its most potent.

He fell ill during this
period in 1996, died on May 12 and was buried on a beautiful day in
Castledermot on May 14th. On the way back to Listowel, I went
through the nearby village of Moone. I pictured Mike on a tennis court
receiving a weak second serve which his legs would not carry him in quickly
enough to return properly after which he would describe the serve with sneering
disgust to his opponent “like the women’s sodality up in Moone”. Passions may
come and go, but friendships are forged through years of trust and can only die
with death. Mike’s friends remembered him at his month’s mind mass in the
convent chapel on June 12th followed by refreshments in O’Connor’s
Bar.



<<<<<<<

Listowel Garden Centre decorated with flags and daffodils for the national holiday.

Digging up The Square again?

<<<<<<<

This artefact is a cigarette card with a very strange tale.

>>>>>>

Page 2 of 3

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén