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: Mary Moylan

St. Mary’s Listowel, Jesse tree, Travellers and Limerick at Christmas in 1972

Radio Kerry in Town last Week


The panto crew, Maria, Danny and Mary were one of the groups interviewed

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Changes at Christmas






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St. Mary’s in Advent 2015

The Jesse Tree is one of the oldest Christian Christmas traditions. It often appears in stain glass windows. The most famous Jesse tree window is in Chartres Cathedral which was dedicated in 1260.

Jesse was the oldest known ancestor of Jesus so the tree is a kind of family tree for Jesus. Our one in St. Mary’s Listowel is decorated with symbols from the old and new testaments.

The tablets of stone with  The Commandments

Noah’s Ark

 The angel Gabriel, I think

 Crown of Mary Queen of Heaven

The apple that brought about our downfall.

David’s harp

Joseph’s coat of many colours

The manger at Bethlehem.

Do drop in and see these and many more.

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Traveller Encampment




Liam O’Hainnín posted this great old photo of travelers on their way to the races in the bad old days.

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Road works off Colbert Street

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Limerick at Christmas time in 1972


Limerick.ie

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Neighbours and Friends

Christy and Noreen Brennan in The Square on Sunday December 6 2015

Mary Moylan and Clíona Cogan

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Seeing Red!


Apologies friends. Every now and again, despite my best efforts, some text appears in red. It is black when I type it and then when the post uploads it is red. I thought the techie in the family had solved it, but alas, no. Just now it’s happening again. If anyone is  reading this who knows anything about Blogger, I’d really appreciate if you could tell me how to correct this annoying quirk.

On the streets in Listowel



Listowel basked in glorious sunshine for the Easter weekend and spirits lifted visibly.


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I was in town with my camera

 I met Vincent and Kathleen Carmody and their lovely grandchildren on Upper William Street.

My good friends, Anne and Liam Dillon were out and about on Church Street.

I ran into Mary Moylan, home from Cork on Sunday and later on I saw the same lady head out on her training cycle as part of her preparations for the Ring of Kerry Cycle. She is doing it for Ard Churam.

My visitors love Listowel and would happily spend all their time here out and about.

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Other odds and Ends from town

We now have 2 vamping shops.

 These Listowel souvenir fridge magnets are on sale in shops in town. Where, oh where is the building on the bottom right?

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Jer. Kennelly spotted this in the Knockdown notes on the Athea site

“Thanks to my good friend George Langan for the following interesting bit of news. George says “ Wasn’t there a sense of pride on hearing President Michael D. Higgins mention one of our own fighting Irish when addressing the House of Commons last week. I refer to no other than Tom Kettle MP whose grandmother was one of the McCoy’s from Ballyhahill. I don’t know who drew up Michael D’s speech, maybe he had an input into it himself, he being an avid historian but it was moving to say the least. In addition I would like to add a few extra words quoting the great patriot himself who lost his life at the battle of the Somme in September 1916. Five days before he was mortally wounded he wrote the following lines in a letter home to his little daughter in Ireland, describing the soldiers going into battle he said ‘ Not for flag, nor King, nor Emperor, but for a dream born in a herdsman’s hut and for the secret scripture of the poor.’ and as Michael D alluded to – ‘Kettle died as an Irish patriot, a British soldier and a true European.”

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Doreen Buckley posted this lovely photo on Facebook.  She took it before  the dawn mass in Duagh on Easter Sunday morning 2014.

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.

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

John McGrath
Johnny Cronin dancing school
Johnny Cronin
John Stack

Mary Moylan

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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.



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

Digging up The Square again?

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

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More from March 17 and famous ancestors

A few more from March 17th

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Mary Moylan sings Sweet Listowel. I apologise in advance for all the background noise that I have no clue how to filter out.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BHMzVqqNRg&feature=youtu.be

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MIchael Collins throws in the sliotar to start the All Ireland Hurling Final in 1921

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Girls remember some famous ancestors 

 ( From Pres. Secondary School yearbook 1992 )

Michael
Collins – Eilín Olive Pierse, 1 Bríd

Michael
Collins, Commander – in – Chief of the Free State Army during the Civil War,
was killed at Beal na mBláth on 22nd August 1922.

            His brother Johnny had lived at the
family home at Woodfield, near Clonakilty with his wife Kate and their eight
children. Kate died in February, 1921. 
Woodfield was burned by the Black and Tans and the children were forced
to live with relations.

            One of the eight was Mary.  She married Richard (Dick) Pierse of Listowel
and had seven sons.  The second eldest –
Robert- is my father so this makes Michael Collins my great-grand uncle.




Patrick De Woulfe
Scanlon (1862 – 1893), Karen Kennelly, 1 Bríd

The anniversary of the death of Patrick de Woulfe Scanlon
brings to mind the taking off in the springtime of his life of a talented young
North Kerry man whom the Pittsburgh, Pa. press described, at his demise, “as
one of the brightest and most talented young men that city had ever known”.

            A
journalist, and an artist, whom disease cut down more than a quarter of a
century ago, just as fame had dawned on the marvels of his brush.  De Woulfe Scanlon was born close to the
village of Newtownsandes in North Kerry and, when quite a young lad, emigrated
to America and, for a while, settled in Philadelphia, Pa. where he accepted a
position on the clerical staff of the Pennsylvania railroad.  He was shortly afterwards promoted to
Pittsburgh, Pa.  Having always a taste
for literature and art, his spare time was devoted to the cultivation of both,
and shortly after his arrival in the great iron smelting city of the west, he
was looked on as a brilliant and effective writer.

            The brush,
however, dominated the pen in his ambition, and after four years he had spared
sufficient money to enable him to set out for Europe to pursue his artistic
studies.  In Paris he studied painting
under the leading masters of the period and there became associated with Mr. J.
Elmar Salsibury, the well known Pittsburgh artist, who took a keen interest in
the work of young Scanlon.

            Outside the
studio he still continued to write for the American press and supplied art
critiques and articles under the pen name of “Vandyke”.  After the Paris Exhibition he studied in
Florence and Rome and, having toured France, Germany and Africa, he returned to
Ireland on way back to America, having taken in the principal cities of England
in his route.

            During this
itinerary many interesting sketches and articles found their way into the
leading journals of the States, while yet he was laying the foundation of the
more solid and enduring forms of art. 
Returning to Pittsburgh he opened a studio in 4th Avenue and
soon his paintings attracted a number of patrons through whom his work was
gradually attracting lucrative attention. 
Death claimed him at the age of 31.

            For many
years afterwards in his old home – a pretty homestead on the roadside between
Newtownsandes and Tarbert – numbers of his earlier school day sketches were to
be seen up to a few years ago, but they have gradually found their way into the
hands of his many friends and admirers. 

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