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: Michael D. Higgins

Old photos and new

WW1

This photograph taken 96 years ago , shows an officer of the York and Lancaster Regiment with a small dog, 13 January 1918. Image taken on the 62nd Division front near Roclincourt, France.

From collection of Imperial War Museum, © IWM (Q 8439).

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Some interesting old photos


This photo is in the Library of Congress. It shows a Connemara woman spinning, another lady stands at the cottage door knitting and in the foreground are some hens and a wash tub.

 This photo is in a collection of old photos of Travellers in The National Library. The poor woman is trying  to wash clothes in a tub at the side of the road, while her children play around her. In the background is her barrel top caravan.

These ladies are standing on a carriage and waving a flag over the perimeter wall of Mountjoy. They are showing their support for the jailed rebels.  The photo was taken in 1920 and is part of a collection in the National Library..

The man who would be president and his wife, Sabina

Bill and Hillary in 1972

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I found this hilarious story in the British National Archive

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The Big Wave




The above 3 pictures are all posted on JD’s  Facebook page. This is just one of the many events organized for the big push to get behind the Sea Rescue service. Ironically it all came from some negative comments posted online about the service.

People like Mike Enright of Ballybunion Sea Angling were so incensed by the lack of support and criticism of people who do such a vital service that they decided to show Ballybunion’s pride in the Sea Rescue personnel and their support for the great good they do by organizing a big weekend of fundraising. It deserves everyone’s support. If you are reading this from abroad and want to help, the rescue service have a donate button on their website.



Ballybunion Sea and Cliff Rescue

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This photo was taken in Fota Wildlife Park by my friend, Jim MacSweeney

Who is Jim MacSweeney?

This is he

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Tarbert North Kerry Junior Championship Winners 2013
Sponsored by Moloney Financial Services Listowel after defeating Beale in the final played in Ballylongford on Sunday19th January 2014

Nunday and Writers’ Week

Michael D. Higgins with Sean Lyons approaching Listowel Arms  where he officially opened Writers’ Week last night.

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From Herald.ie  (the writer is not credited on the website)

Wednesday May 30 2012

HOW TIME flies. I cannot believe that it’s 10 years today since the death of the Bard of Listowel, John B Keane.

It’s hard to believe the voice of this brilliant man, playwright and author, has been silent for a decade.

From a room above his pub on Market Street in my Co Kerry hometown, John B surveyed his kingdom, giving us world-renowned plays, and even a weekly column in the Herald.

From his little eyrie he crafted the flow of humanity into unforgettable prose.

John B was a classmate of my elder brothers. He was a private man and he could be caustic in his way, not suffering fools gladly.

I remember an American visiting his bar once. Before he left he told the writer that he really enjoyed meeting him, but he had a complaint: “There is no lock in your men’s room.”

The playwright replied: “Musha, you needn’t worry your head about that. I’m here for 30 years and there was nothing ever stolen from that place.”

Listowel Writers’ Week starts today. It’s a fitting tribute to the great man.

One of the first events of Writers’ Week was our schools’ programme. Áine Ní Ghlinn, writer, poet, lecturer and journalist visited 5 schools in North Kerry on Tuesday and Wednesday. My picture was taken in Gaelscoil Lios Tuathail.

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Looking good! This is how this corner of William St. will look. Renovations continue in The Keg, now rebranded as Behans.

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Now to something far more serious:

photo by Dominick Walsh

‘Anyone
can give up, it’s the easiest thing in the world to do. But to hold it together
when everyone else would understand if you fell apart, that’s true strength.’
~Jane Addams

Cora O’Brien could have given up but she didn’t. Out of her immeasurable grief and desolation at the loss of her lovely son, she has found the strength to reach a hand of help to other people struggling with thoughts of suicide and self harm. I am printing here Majella O’Sullivan’s article from Friday’s Irish Independent.

CORA O’Brien has no idea what
caused her teenage son David to take his own life five years ago.

She and her husband Martin and
their two younger children have understandably struggled to come to terms with
it since.

However, she feels strongly that
parents need to talk to their children about suicide the same way they would
about other topics like drugs or alcohol.

“We just have no clue what
happened,” she told the Irish Independent. “There was no one thing
that you could say was big enough by any means for him to do that.”

David was in hisLeaving Certyear at St Michael’s
College in Listowel, Co Kerry.

The popular student had filled in
his driving licence application, hoped to study in the University of Limerick
the following year, coached his school’s basketball team and worked two jobs at
weekends for pocket money.

“There was just no possible
way you could think he was depressed, if anything he was the opposite,”
his mother added.

Mrs O’Brien is hoping to break theGuinnessworld record of getting as
many people as possible in the one place dressed as nuns to raise buckets of
money for Pieta House — the self-harm and suicide prevention organisation.

“I think a lot of people don’t
even know Pieta House is there or about what it does, so this is about raising
awareness that there is help out there,” she said.

‘Nunday’ in Listowel will be on June
30, and Mrs O’Brien is hoping the idea will inspire people to turn up to help
break the record of 250, which she hopes they’ll easily achieve.

“Well, I have 500 habits so
hopefully we’ll get enough heads to put them on,” Mrs O’Brien said.”

– Majella O’Sullivan


I urge everyone who can to make it to Listowel on Saturday June 30th 2012  at 5.30. If you can call to Finesse, Christy’s, John B’s or Easons in the next few weeks, you can pay your €20 there, collect your habit and get all the paperwork out of the way before the event. You can register online at http://nunday.eventbrite.ie/

 If you can’t make it to Listowel or if dressing up as a nun is a step too far for you, you can also donate to the charity in the above shops or through the website.


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I got lots of great pictures at opening night of Writers’ Week. I’ll post them next week,D.V.





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