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: Knockanure

Knockanure, Pres. Class of 1994 reunion and Mary John B. on TV

Knockanure, Corpus Christi Church is 50 years old

This photograph from The Kennelly Archive was taken on April 21 1964 at the opening and blessing of the new Corpus Christi Church in Knockanure. The flat roofed building was a triumph for one of Ireland’s best known architects, Michael Scott. It was regarded as a break with traditional church architecture and a modern fit- for -purpose design. The minimalist nature of the furnishings and the absence of the usual embellishments was not to everyone’s taste at first but over time people have grown to love their iconic place of worship.

The following photos and accounts were collected and shared with us by Jer. Kennelly.  Jer. has done future generations of Knockanure people a great service by photographing and collecting so much of their history. He took more photos of the celebrations on Friday night which he has shared with us and I will post later in in the week.

Above is the old church.

The Old Church in Knockanure predates any
Dominican arrival. However, the evidence in most of these refuge sites is that
the friars lived like secular clergy and worked in the churches near to the
houses of refuge. The administration appears to have turned a blind eye to secular
clergy. Their particular interest was in breaking the religious orders. The
main reason for this is that the religious orders were international
organisations and open to continental influences contrary to the policies in
Westminster. In Creggs, Milltown, Donore, Castlewellan, Sixmilebridge,
Ballingaul, Longwood, Swords, Malahde, Thomastown, Killyon, Rathcabban, Boula,
Mount Mary, Castlelyons & Kilcommac the friars were living and dressing as
secular priests at that time – there is no reasonable explanation as to why
Knockanure alone would be the only one that was different. Their poverty would
have necessitated work in the area and, whilst it is possible that they never
worked in the chapel at Knockanure they would certainly have worked in other chapels
in the area as incumbents.

The arrival in Knockanure was probably at the
invitation of the Stack family but sadly there are no documents to tell us
anything about what was happening or how the friars arrived there or why
Knocknure was chosen. The friars were also in possession of a house near Spa
but the likelihood is that the bishop of Ardfert wanted help in more remote
places of his diocese during those troubled times. The redundant friars of
Tralee would have been a welcome help in the years between the Puritan era and
the rebuilding of Catholic dioceses in the early 19th century. Sadly much of
this story remains a series of speculations as records do not exist and living
memory is long gone by now!

the altar: Corpus Christi Knockanure
church interior; Corpus Christi, Knockanure
the stations of the cross in Knockanure church.
local people at the church
people leaving the church
Knockanure church

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Raise a Glass to our class



The class of “94 in Presentation Secondary School, Listowel are about to reunite to celebrate and recall 20 years on.  If you are one of these girls expect a call from some old classmate and put Sept 13 2014 in your diary.

The event page on Facebook is here:  https://www.facebook.com/Pres.Listowel1994

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Didn’t she do well?



Mary Keane was a star for a week last week as she made two appearances on the silver screen.

Anne Cassin (pictured above) made a lovely Nationwide episode based on interviews with Mary and old footage with her beloved John B.

Mary and Billy were Ryan Tubridy’s guests on

The Late Late Show on Friday night.

Two lovely programme segments with a lovely lady as her chatty engaging personality which we all enjoy in John B. Keane’s was shared for a while with a wider audience.

The plays of John B. Keane are enjoying a revival at the moment with Sive just finished its run and Moll beginning a run in The Gaiety on May 27 2014

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Next Weekend sorted

April Fool’s Day and Knockanure

Fool’s Day



Today is April first, traditionally the day when people played pranks and made fools of their elders and betters.

There’s some uncertainty about when and where this­ bizarre tradition began, but the most accepted explanation traces April Fools’ Day back to 16th century France. Up until 1564, the accepted calendar was the Julian calendar, which observed the beginning of the New Year around April. According to “The Oxford Companion to the Year,”King Charles IX then declared that France would begin using theGregorian calendar, which shifted New Year’s Day to January 1.

Not everyone accepted this shifting of dates at the same time. Some believed that the dates should not be shifted, and it was these people who became the butt of some April jokes and were mocked as fools. People sent gifts and invited them to bogus parties. Citizens in the rural parts of France were also victims of these jokes. In those days, news traveled slowly and they might not have known about the shifting of dates for months or years. These people also endured being made fun of for celebrating the new year on the wrong day.

Today in France, people who are fooled on April 1 are called Poisson d’Avril, which literally means the “April Fish.” One common joke is to hook a cardboard fish to the back of a person. What a fish has to do with April Fools’ Day is not clear. Some believe that the fish is tied to Jesus Christ, who was often represented as a fish in early Christian times. Others say the fish is related to the zodiac sign of Pisces, which is represented by a fish, and falls near April. It’s interesting to point out that Napoleon earned the Poisson d’Avril monicker when he married Marie-Louise of Austria on April 1, 1810.

This explanation of the origin of All Fool’s Day comes from a great website called

 How Stuff Works

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Drury headstone, Kniockanure

While I was at Knockanure graveyard last week I was struck by the juxtaposition of the ancient and the modern.

As I stood outside the churchyard, on  one side of me was an ancient ring fort, thought by many of our ancestors to be the seat of supernatural powers.

Turning, with the ring fort at my back here is what I beheld.

Wind turbines, sources of modern power dominate the North Kerry landscape.

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The Cashen

Mike Enright of Ballybunion Sea angling captured these two lovely studies of sunrise and sunset over The Cashen.

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August 3 1922: Republicans burned Listowel Barracks as the Free State troops advanced towards town.  (photo; Vincent Carmody)

Paddy Drury remembered and St. Patrick’s day in South Carolina; The Listowel Connection

The Times they are a changin'”



The clocks went forward one hour at the weekend. We have always used this phrase but it struck me on Sunday that it is now true. I woke up on Sunday morning to find that all the clocks in my house had adjusted themselves to the changed time. They had “gone” forward literally. The twice yearly ritual of going round the house and manually resetting the clocks will be another story to tell the grandchildren. Woe betide you if you forgot to reset the time on the video recorder!

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Paddy Drury

A poet and wit who is remembered in many of the best Listowel stories and anecdotes is the late Paddy Drury. One Sunday recently, my good friends, Anne and Liam Dillon invited me to lunch, and, to complete a very pleasant afternoon, they took me to see Paddy Drury’s resting place in Knockanure graveyard.

His grave lies within the walls of the old Knockanure church.

The graveyard is an old but very well maintained one in an absolutely beautiful rural location.

The late Dan Keane  wrote a poem to Drury and here it is for you:

Drury’s Ghost       Dan Keane

Down Farran by the old
churchyard

One night I took a stroll

As bright aurora’s crimson
beams

Flashed upward from the pole.

From the red wine of
remembrance

To the dead I drank a toast,

Then what appeared beside me

But Paddy Drury’s ghost.

……

At length I uttered, “Drury

What brings your spirit back?

Is there anything you’re
needing? “

He answered, “Not a whack!”

………

“But the friends I loved are
parted

And the scene is not the
same.

There’s a dozen homesteads
missing

Down along my own Bog Lane.

How I loved each thatched
white cottage

When their silent signals
spoke

Like a fleet of ships in
harbour

Belching out their morning
smoke.”

“I’ve met all the friends in
Heaven;

Drurys, Dores, the Nolans,
Nashes

Fiddler Creed and Dancing
Billy

With his legs as loose a
ashes,

Tade and Jim and Dick ,the
Villain

Dan the Bucko from the Lane,

I’d a pint in Peter’s parlour

With my old friend, Daniel
Kane.”

…….

“I have toiled with many
farmers

When the grub was really bad.

I’d never live for ninety
years

But for the teeth I had.

But the frame was getting
older

And the teeth were getting
few

So I found my stimulation

In the stuff I couldn’t chew.

…….

So I said, “You are in Heaven

And what more can mortals
crave?

Do you know you’ll soon be
honoured

With a headstone o’er your
grave?

He betrayed no foolish
flatter

Gave a jovial exclamation

In the quaint old Drury
fashion

“Hope ‘twont raise my
valuation?”

“ Let the human fad be
honoured,

It will do no harm there

And some pilgrim might, in
passing

For the Drurys say a prayer.

Otherwise, above my ashes

I’ve no asset to my soul

And if Drury still was living

They’d begrudge him draw the
dole.”

The poem is a very long one so I have edited it a bit but I kept the references to Drury’s neighbours in Bog Lane, the reference to his legendary grumbling about bad grub, his capacity for drink and the fact that his headstone was paid for my monies raised by his friends, among them  John B. Keane.

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St. Patrick’s Day in South Carolina

This is Maeve Moloney Koch taking part in her local St. Patrick’s parade in Columbia, South Carolina, USA. Maeve is carrying a Kerry flag.

Maeve with her local congressman, Joe Wilson

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If you live or have ever lived with an Irish Mammy this will give you a good laugh:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m-kvto8XYNU&feature=youtu.be

John Duggan and some Ballygologue youngsters in 1975

In every family there is at least one who realises the value of the family tree and he takes it on himself to  write the story in order to preserve it for the next generation.

When people contact me looking for help with their tree, I usually refer them to NKRO but when John Duggan wrote I knew I could help him myself, since I knew just the relative he was looking for.

I demanded payment for my services, in the form of a story for this blog.

Here it is;

It’s
probably appropriate, with Listowel Writers Week looming large on the local
calendar, that I begin my story with US comedy series “Guys Book Club”. The
programme follows the misadventures of six disenchanted married men who try to
recapture their manhood by using a fictional book club to escape the clutches
of their nagging wives. It’s something that probably wouldn’t have crossed my
radar but for my ongoing research into our family tree which, as of last
weekend, now includes Chicago-born series writer and producer George
Zwierszynski, a great-grandson of Ballybunion. He became the latest in a
lengthening line of discoveries during painstaking hours, weeks and months of
trawling through archives, both online and in person. 

What began over Christmas
as a flippant comment about how interesting it might be to know a bit more
about our ancestors has now become what, to the casual observer, might appear
to be something more akin to an all-consuming obsession. And it was this
newfound devotion that led me back to Kerry over the past Easter weekend – a
location that had been a second home throughout my childhood years due to our
annual Summer holidays spent at the beach in Ballybunion, but a county that had
eluded me for over twenty years, with the exception of one wedding, possibly
due to my greater independence and spending power that prompted the exploration
of other worldly locales.

Conveniently,
the majority of my mother’s family history was centred between Ballylongford
and Ballybunion so they were the main focus of my attention as I embarked on my
journey to the past. Cognoscent of it being one of the two busiest times of the
year for the church I had contacted Fr. Kennelly in Ballylongford in advance of
my visit to assess the possibility of inspecting the parish records during the Easter
weekend. Fortunately, he welcomed my intrusion with more generosity than I
could ever have hoped for. He graciously granted me as much time as I wished
with the craggy, hard-covered ledgers that held the elusive information I
needed to solve my genealogical puzzle, and at one stage he even gave me an
impromptu linguistic lesson so that I could decipher the Latin names in the
older pre-Vatican Two records. The thick heavy pages of the book and their
elegant calligraphy transported me back in time to another world as I scanned
the pages for Bunyans and Wallaces. The circle of life would in some cases be
completed before my eyes as a name that would initially appear in the baptism
book might later be found on the marriage register and then soon afterwards in
the death records – a sobering experience.

With
my mother in tow I also visited numerous relatives and acquaintances in the
area who were mostly intrigued, but sometimes bemused, by my endeavours. All
were unfailingly helpful though, with boxes of photographs being thrust onto
tables in front of me and permission being given to record as many of them as I
wanted. Inevitably once the albums were opened the trips down Memory Lane
ensued and the stories started to flow, time passing in decades before our eyes
and in hours on our watches. It was great to meet in person the people who
constituted such a significant portion of the family tree and it gave the
project a life and a personality that had been somewhat lacking in what had
been largely an academic exercise up to that point. I presented my findings
that included records of immigrations to America and also evidence of how
long-accepted “distant” relationships had come into being, something that
always drew expressions of wonderment. The information exchange flowed both
ways though and in the course of discussions I unearthed a couple of genuine
nuggets of information that would never have registered with me if I had been
merely scanning through a record book somewhere, such was its obscure nature.

We
also dedicated nearly a full day to the more sombre duty of visiting the local
graveyards where our ancestors lay, from Aghavallen and Lislaughtin to Kilconly
and Killahenny. This was not an activity that I had much appreciation for
during my formative years but after the previous months of investigations I now
had a greater understanding of the people we were paying our respects to. After
four full days of being a general nuisance to the people of the locality it was
time to leave the Kingdom and return home for work the following Tuesday
morning. I left the area satisfied with all of the information that I had
gathered but more importantly aware that the family tree was a living thing and
not a very large piece of paper with a lot of lines and pictures in it.

After
updating my records upon my return home I noticed that there was still one
branch of the tree that had bore very few leaves. Repeated enquiries about the
Carmodys of Listowel had yielded very little except for the odd puzzled look or
the uncertain proffering of a few names hastily followed by a dismissive “sure
they’re all gone now”. Perhaps spoiled by the great success that I had enjoyed
with all of the other families I refused to believe that the Carmodys could not
be found. I bombarded Google with every combination of keywords I could think
of. I interrogated the genealogy websites relentlessly. I harangued my mother
in the forlorn hope that some long forgotten recollection would miraculously
return to her, but it was all in vain. So, in desperation, during my latest
assault on Google I happened upon a blog that branded itself as being for the
sons and daughters of Listowel who found themselves far from home. I browsed
its pages and saw photographs from the archives along with other content that
harked back to a bygone era. I decided that this might be my last hope at
tracking down the elusive Carmodys and immediately set about typing an email to
the address given on the website. Amazingly, within four hours I received a
reply from Mary Cogan acknowledging my correspondence and promising to
investigate the matter further later in the week. A couple of days later Mary sent another mail concerning a
photograph of Carmodys Bakery that had featured in a recently published local
book. Finally, a breakthrough! I was heartened by this development and eagerly
awaited the next correspondence. That Saturday my search was over. 

Despite the
presence of a TG4 camera crew for a couple of days during the week and all its
associated upheavals Mary never forgot
about my enquiry and I was overjoyed when I read the contents of the email. It triumphantly
proclaimed that the prodigal Carmodys had been found and, what’s more, they
were living in Listowel! She also provided me  with contact information for them and within a
couple of hours I was chatting on the phone to a real live Carmody, swapping
stories and filling in the blanks that had blighted my tree for so long. I had
barely hung up the phone when my mother was asking me all manner of questions
about the family and she too was delighted to hear all about them. It brought
to a close a long search and at least future generations won’t have to wonder
what became of the Carmody clan. Ironically, it’s fair to say that while we
share some ancestors we also differ in some things, because it transpires that
she is heavily involved in the upcoming Writers Week but the extent of my
literary prowess would barely qualify me for a role as an extra on the aforementioned
“Guys Book Club” show.

Thank you, John. What a great story and what a lovely collage.

 BTW his Carmodys are the Carmodys of Wonder Bakery fame.

I think you will agree that John is not too bad at the writing. We might see him yet at Writers Week.

A picture of some Wonder Bakery bread vans  from Vincent Carmody’s book

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This photo was captioned Kerry Travellers

This yesterday’s picture. Apologies to all Gardaí. The man interviewing the Travellers is not a Garda

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This photo of Ballygologue children in 1975 was first published in The Advertiser. If you recognise yourself, do write and tell me where you are now.

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Congregational singing in the church in Knockanure recently

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6ejugqDXjE&feature=youtu.be

Local heroes, collectors and sharers of our heritage

Doesn’t this photo take you back? I have no idea where it was taken. The picture is part of a huge collection of  memorabilia amassed by local historian, Jer Kennelly of Knockanure.

Jer has done us all a service in collecting materials over the years. Much of this archive stuff would have been lost were it not for collectors like Jer and Vincent. Now Jer is making his photos available to us in NKRO. We are really excited about sharing them with a huge audience. Thank you, Jer.

Another woman with an appreciation of the value to us all of collecting old photographs is Nancy McAuliffe and she has just brought out a magnificent book of photographs of Ballylongford. She has a huge number of quality pictures and, better still, she has told us who they all are.

Tonight the NKRO website will be going live. It’s just at the beginning stage but we are hoping that you will all help us is collecting and sharing a photographic, audio and video treasure trove. I’ll tell you the link tomorrow.

Our NKRO postcards are available now in shops and credit unions. We want people to send them to the diaspora to make them aware of us and hopefully to encourage them to share their photographs and stories with us. When our website is up and running, my friend Maria Leahy, another adopted daughter of Listowel, will blog about North Kerry. So we hope to bring you news of Listowel and the whole of North Kerry on a regular basis.  Exciting times indeed!

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