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: McKennas

Christmas Comes to Listowel and Clonmel and Limerick and Cork……

Santa Parade in Listowel Sunday December 7 2014



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Scoil Realta na Maidine carol singing In The Square December 5 2014

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Community Centre Fundraising Spinathon December 5 2014



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Memories, memories

Two people wrote to me to give me the names of the people in this photograph.

Beta O’Brien names them as: “Dr Wm Enright (Dentist) Mr Maloney, his Dental mechanic Mrs Enright and daughter Teresa (Dentist) father of Todd( Dentist)”



Liam Enright, formerly of Cahirdown wrote:



In the photo were my grandfather William B., Jim “the Chum” Moloney, my grandmother Sheila, and my aunt, Teresa.



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Boats at Beal 1964



Liam Enright wrote;

  I found the photo of the blessing of the boats very interesting . On the left of the photo there is a wheeled vehicle. This is a “DUKW”.  It was a type of amphibious troop landing vehicle that was used in large numbers in WW2. They were US made. This one could well have seen action in Normandy or Anzio or some other landing site. I remember seeing that DUKW in  Ballybunion. There was great excitement on the men’s beach one day when it drove down the road into the beach and entered the water. I must be getting old because I often asked people if they remember it around Ballybunion and not too many do. It was very interesting to see a photo of it. …


Anyone know anything about this vehicle?


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Enjoying a Break




My good friends, Anne and Liam Dillon enjoying a weekend break in Cork recently.

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A Corner of Listowel that is forever Chinese

McKenna’s Does Christmas

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Parish Bazaar 2014


(photo; Denis Carroll)

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Nice Christmas Story from Clonmel


(photo and story ;Morning Ireland)


Clonmel, like many Irish towns has suffered a hemorrhage of emigration in recent years. Nowhere is this more noticeable than in local teams where the loss of so many young people often leaves once strong clubs unable to field a team.

Clonmel have hit on an innovative fun event for St. Stephen’s Day. It’s called Home to Hurl and eighteen young men are returning from Australia, the U.S., Britain and Saudi Arabia to take on the team they left behind.

The photo above shows their mammies eagerly awaiting the return of the hurlers.

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On Your Bike, Limerick



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Cork Knits for Simon


(photo: Vibes and Scribes)


Vibes and Scribes is a great Cork knitting and craft supplies shop. This is the scene in the shop this week where many women are knitting caps, socks, gloves and other woolies for rough sleepers and people in the Simon Community hostel.

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The late Jackie Healy Rae



This great photo of the late jackie Healy Rae and supporters was taken by MacMonagle Photographers in Killarney in 2007.

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Savannah McCarthy (of Listowel): the rock on which Irish success is being built



Great writeup in yesterday’s  (Dec 8 2014) Irish Times


http://www.irishtimes.com/sport/soccer/savannah-mccarthy-the-leading-light-in-ireland-s-bright-under-19-side-1.2029934

Listowel changes

One little corner of Listowel is badly hit by the downturn.

I only moved a few paces to take these three photos yesterday. Sad!

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This was the scene in Cahirdown last week as a new pedestrian crossing was being put in place outside Topaz.

As you can see the crossing is between the entrance and the exit of the busy filling station.

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This corner looks great now.

And this one.

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Kay Caball of Find Your Kerry Ancestors has a great blogpost here:

http://mykerryancestors.com/blog/

Muiris OSuilleabháin was one of the famous Blasket writers. Kay tells us that his daughter was a friend of Anne Moloney’s. This is what she says:

Muiris’ s daughter Máire
Ní Shúilleabháin-UíChiobháin
, who is now a retired Nurse. living in
Galway.   My  sister-in-law, Anne Moloney (Scully) got this lovely
letter from Máire reminiscing about their schooldays  in Dingle.  

We left Connemara
in 1954, four years after my father, Muiris Ó Súilleabháin, had
drowned.   At this point his sister Eibhlín, nó Neilí Sheáin Lís, had
died in Springfield and also her brother Séan – both in their forties – of
heart disease or heartache and loneliness.   A mixture of all I would
say, as their sister Máire had returned to Ireland and married Pádraig Ó
Ciobháin, and settled in Carraig, Baile na nGall.  Máire was the eldest of
the three Súilleabháins who had lived in Springfield.  It was said that
Máire leaving to go home affected them greatly and thit an tóin as an sail and
cailleadh le huaigneas an bheirt.  Níor phos cheachtar acu.

   This left my father Muiris, who
was drowned in 1950 and Mike who was now a tailor in Dingle, married to Hannah
Philí Ni Chearna, with no family.  Mike had served his time in the
tailoring trade with the Lynch family in the Cottges in Dingle.   He
had died in 1951 of heart disease.

   Hannah was now alone in Goat St,
as was the custom in those dark days, she was ‘mad to have me stay with her for
a while’ for the company.   So in 1954, I landed in Dingle where I spent
three magical eccentric years, leaving an imprint on my soul forever more.

    The small house backed onto
the Convent wall where I went to school at the age of 10 and spent three happy
years.  The nuns were wonderful women, totally dedicated, be it in the
classroom, or in the large welcoming kitchen with the Aga and its warmth, where
I was brought on a few occasions.  I must mention Sr. Mary of the Sacred
Heart or Sr. Mary Tarrant, who arrived as a fresh-faced new teacher and
mothered and cared for me whilst I was there.   She certainly
influenced us all greatly and we never forgot all she taught us.

   Three years afterwards, I was to
attend a Catholic girls’ school in West Yorkshire, run by the Passionist
Sisters, and found that what I carried with me from Dingle, placed me in a
different

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Don’t forget that special guest is turning on the lights in The Square tonight, Nov 22 2013





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Did you see this one? 

From the Surrey police!






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The Christmas lights go on tonight. Here is a pic from last year to get you in the festive spirit.








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A Lidl Bit of Lidl Magic


Lidl, John B. Keane Road, Listowel on Weds. Nov 20 2013

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I saw this in St. John’s last night.  Great play, great show…well done all. The 2 remaining shows are fully booked. There is an extra show on Monday night but book early.

(John Kelliher took the photos)

McKenna’s social and Parker’s Pub

Ger Greaney came into possession of this great photo from McKenna’s social in 1968. Junior Griffin can name everyone and he will in time.

In the meantime I bring you a short history of the social as told to me by Junior. The Kerryman photos and ads were kindly sought out for me by the County Archivist, Michael Lynch.

Back in the 1960s very few young people had cars and an excursion in a bus was a real treat. Junior organized just such a treat for McKenna’s staff. They went on a day trip around the Ring of Kerry in August 1961. Unfortunately no photos remain of that great day out.

As Michael O’Neill was thanking Junior for organizing the trip he put it to him that they should have another treat in Winter and he proposed that they organize a Social. For the benefit of my younger followers, a Social was a dinner dance, organized for a group who worked together or who belonged to the same club. They were very popular in the 60s and 70s.

Junior ran with the idea and, beginning in 1962, McKenna’s Social became the most sought after ticket in town. You did not have to work in McKenna’s to attend and sometimes between 260 and 300 people were there.

The organizing committee brought bands from as far away as Tipperary and spot prizes were sourced from far and near. In fact the spot prizes were often the talk of the town for long after.

Word of this glittering social event reached the national media and Patsy Dyke, social columnist with The Sunday Press was dispatched to cover it one year. I wonder if anyone kept the cutting!

Many a Listowel romance started on the first or second Monday in January at McKenna’s Social.

Mrs. McKenna presenting the door prize to Jim Sheahan in 1962. A young Jack McKenna is also in the photo

John Griffin, Richard Kiely, Michael O’Neill, Brendan Daly and J.J. Daly who organised McKenna’s Social in 1962

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Dame St. Dublin on Saturday last Jan 26 2013. What an ass!

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Rathkeale in the 1950s. Gone for a quick one on the way home from the creamery, perhaps.

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Danny Healy-Rae’s daft and totally unenforceable cure for the loneliness of isolated rural people, which he managed to get through Kerry County Council with the help of three publicans and the son of a publican got way too much publicity for my liking.

Very little publicity is being given to a North Kerry publican who has a way better solution to the problem.

Parker’s pub in Kilflynn provide a taxi service to get their customers home safely. All the fun of the school bus and no ridiculous “permits” necessary.

Parker’s also have a great website to keep Kilflynn people up to date with what’s happening in their area, all from the comfort of your own home.

http://www.parkerspub.com/index.htm

Now that’s a sensible method of combatting the problem of rural isolation. Why is the media giving this no publicity?

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R.I.P. Eamon de Buitléar

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Jer brings us this piece of football news;

Stephen Stack winner of All-Ireland SFC medals in 1986 and 1997,  will take charge of Austin Stacks in 2013. Stephen  played with and managed Listowel Emmets. Then last year he  managed Bray Emmets. 

Listowel; snapshots of a market town 1850 to 1950

Everyone is invited to the launch of Vincent Carmody’s magnum opus in the Listowel Arms on Sunday next at 5.00. It promises to be a good do.

Vincent is familiar to readers of this blog as a collaborator and someone to whom I turn for verification of stories pertaining to Listowel. He is a dedicated local historian and has an insatiable interest in everything and everyone who has lived or traded in Listowel in the 19th and 20th century.

He appreciates the value of a photograph, a letter, a poster or shop bill as a first hand account of how people lived, what they bought and how they disported themselves. He has a huge collection of memorabilia, much of which would have been discarded long ago had Vincent not rescued and preserved it for us. His book is a very valuable social document and Listowel is lucky to have someone to tell the future generations how their ancestors lived. AND he has documentary evidence to back up his account.

Every town should have a Vincent Carmody.

 Vincent proudly displays a first copy of his great book.

Vincent gives his good friend, Jim Cogan, a sneak preview before Sunday’s launch.

If you love Listowel and you are only going to buy one book this year, I think it should be Vincent Carmody’s Listowel, Snapshots of an Irish market town. Up there with Listowel and its Vicinity as a collectors’ item. Well done, Vincent. As the young people say, “Respect!”

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The lights are up in William St.

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Listening to the match. I remember such a scene well and like the lady in the picture my mother wrote down each score as it came. Those were the days of the legendary Micheál OHehir. Ní chloisfimid a leithéad arís, is baolach.

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Recently I had an email from a lady called Susan Twomey of California who traces her McKenna ancestors back to North Kerry. Here are some extracts from our correspondence.

“My great-great grandfather Patrick McKenna from Listowel was born c. 1802, married Sarah/Sally M Stack from Duagh…they married c. 1832 and had their 14 children in Ireland before moving to America c. 1862 and settling in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.  Pat died in 1865 in Negaunee, Marquette County, Michigan. Pat and Sally were my mother’s great grandparents.”

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“Another cousin Sister Mary Brendan Brosnan who came from Kerry to America when she was 13 to enter the Mercy Convent in Los Angeles was somehow connected with a Father Hegarty also from Kerry, priest of the San Diego diocese here, who is responsible for the gravestone for Thomas and Jane McKenna and their children in the cemetery of Kilshenane (sp?).  Sister Mary Brendan was always part of our family gatherings when I was growing up in southern California.  I am not sure how she was related either…but she was close to my grandmother Jane/Jenny McKenna Lynch, my mother’s mother. “

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Re: Brosnans – my relative was born in 1897, Mary Elizabeth Brosnan, from Knochreagh, Irremore, Listowel, Kerry.  Parents John and Nellie (Ellen?). She came to America in 1908 to join her aunt  (Sister Mary Pius) who had joined the Sisters of Mercy some years before.  Mary Elizabeth/Sister Mary Brendan Brosnan was 13 when she arrived, but they would not let her enter the community as a postulant until she was 15, in 1910.  She died in 1970 while visiting relatives in Philadephia, Pennsylvania…she had been living in Burlingame, near San Francisco, California.  She was a teacher most of her life. Last year her community sent me a copy of a short biography of her…I am happy to send you a copy of the couple of pages.

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Susan was as good as her word and sent me the account of Sr. Mary Brendan Brosnan’s life. I’ll post it on the blog tomorrow.

McKenna’s of Listowel

The following is a short history of of the origins of McKenna’s  in 

Listowel. I took it from their website.

Johanna McKenna

On the 17th October 1871 one Jeremiah Mckenna married Johanna 

Horgan and started a business at No.3 Market street Listowel selling 

general hardware. Very general. It’s likely that there would have 

been vegetables for sale alongside the ironmongery in the early days.

But all to the good; in 1875 the couple bought  No.3.  Then in 1880

 tragedy struck, taking the form so well known in those times; 

Jeremiah succumbed to tuberculosis and died, still a young man.

                                                        

Alone with two small children Johanna had an overwhelming battle,

and the little business went into bankruptcy within a short time. This

much is known; what’s not known is how she raised the funds to get

going again. But having recovered, she  repaid all debts, a feature of

Mckenna’s history to have a lasting effect on it’s reputation well down

 the road.

In 1907 her son John emigrated to America. A young man with his life

all ahead could find much opportunity there by comparison with the

Listowel of the time. But the letters from home kept drawing his

mind back to his mother who would persist in carrying on the business

at No.3. He well knew how much of a struggle it was for her, and

sailed out of New York before a year had passed.

John married Grace McMahon in 1909 and settled back in. Simply

supporting his Mother’s efforts to keep the shop open wasn’t enough

for him; he could feel some ideas of his own coming on. By 1912

Enright’s creamery had been acquired. Here the stocking of building

supplies began and the creamery site eventually became known as

the Mill Yard.

In 1913 Johanna bought out the ground rent on No.3 Market street.

She died three years later, as John became a member of Kerry 

County Council, and missed by a year his election to chairman.

This is an old McKenna’s calendar Tom Fitzgerald found on the internet

P.S. 

Manny, the bearded dragon, is developing quite a following. 

I shall call to his place of residence during the week and I’ll see

if he is up to being photographed.

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