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: Patrick McCrea

Tanavalla House, Tennis and a Hugeonot prisoner with a Listowel Connection

Curtain Call

Molly likes to sit on the window sill and keep a close eye on what is happening both indoors and outside.

<<<<<<<





A St. Valentine’s Day (though a bit late) Treat






Listowel/North Kerry branch of MS annual St Valentine’s Day Coffee Morning on Saturday next, February 16th 2019 at Tomáisín’s. 11.00am – 1pm. Come along and catch up with the neighbours as Spring approaches. Delicious home baked treats and great raffle prizes. 



<<<<<<




Tanavalla House


John Buckley found this old photo of Tanavalla House and Dave O’Sullivan looked up what happened to it.

The original house was destroyed by fire in the 1820s and rebuilt in Regency style. The Elliotts owned the property until the 1870s after which it was the occupied by the Cooke family. It was burned in 1920.



It was burned at the same time as the old library on Bridge Road as local republican forces believed that both buildings were to be occupied by the British military. In his  witness statement in1955 Patrick McElligott stated that  Information had been received locally that the library and Cooke’s mansion in Tanavalla were to be taken over by the British military. He issued orders for their destruction by burning.”

<<<<<<



Some Tennis Players in Action



Here are some sweet photos from Danny Gordon of Listowel youngsters playing tennis in 1987. Lots more to come in the next few days.







 <<<<<


Armstrong Sweet Factory

On the far right in this lovely Fr. Browne photo you can see the Armstrong, North Kerry sweet factory.


Dave O’Sullivan enhanced the image of the two garsúns but I don’t suppose we’ll ever know who they were.


This is an old sweet tin. There are still a few about.

Because an Armstrong descendant, Patrick McCrea, has been contributing to our blog, I have become very interested in this family who once upon a time had a strong Listowel connection.

Patrick’s latest email sheds light on an illustrious ancestor of his and considerably broadens the reach of Listowel Connection.

“Gabriel Mathurin was a 17th century ancestor of Kathleen Johnson who was married to Tom Armstrong .

Recently a genealogical research showed that she was descended from Gabriel

Mathurin who was a Hugeonot Protestant priest locked up for 25 years in solitary

confinement on the Island Political Prison just off Cannes .”

If you are following the story of the Armstrongs here you will remember that Tom was the owner of the sweet factory and he married Kathleen who was the daughter of the local bank manager.


Here is the story of the famous ancestor;



The Dandy Lodge, Presentation sisters R.I.P. and the big fair remembered

Storm damage at Rossbeigh in January 2014    photo by Margaret O’Shea


Beautiful Rossbeigh last week       photos by Chris Grayson

<<<<<<<<<

The Dandy Lodge

This is the Dandy Lodge with the pitch and putt clubroom at the back. Can anyone tell me something about the setting up of the pitch and putt club in Listowel?

The Dandy Lodge was apparently a library, a private residence (of the Hannon family) and a video rental shop before it was moved into Childers’ Park.

 This year I’d love to share with readers of Listowel Connection something of the history of clubs and organisations in the town. But to do this I need your help……please!

<<<<<<<<


Do you remember the nuns?


This year we are embarking on a project to commemorate Presentation Secondary Education in Listowel. We are planning a commemorative book. 

Take a look at the names of these nuns on their headstone and see if you remember any of them. If you have any pleasant memories of these women or if you have photos or anecdotes, please send them to me at listowelconnection@gmail.com

It is chilling to read all these names and to realise that we are witnessing the end of an era. The next generation will not know nuns.

<<<<<<<

The Big Fair as remembered by Delia O’Sullivan

Last week we had the first of the 2018 horse fairs. To mark that, I am reproducing an account of the big October fairs of long ago as detailed in Striking a Chord by Delia O’Sullivan

THE FAIR

By Delia O’Sullivan  in Striking a Chord

The big fair day in Listowel, the October fair, was the topic of conversation among the farmers for weeks afterwards. Exaggerations and downright lies were swapped outside the church gates and continued at the holy water font, to the fury of the priest. It finished over a couple of pints in the pub.  None of them could be cajoled into giving the actual price, always sidestepping with,”I got what I asked for,” or, “I got a good price.” There were tales of outsmarting the cattle jobbers – an impossible task.

The farmers on our road set out on foot for thwe seven mile journey at 4 a.m. It was their last chamce to sell their calves until the spring. Now nine months old, these calves were wild and unused to the road. Traffic confused them, so their only aim was to get into every field they passed to graze or rest. Each farmer took a helper. Those eho had decided to wait until the spring fair would go along later to size up the form.

The battle would commence at the Feale Bridge where the farmers were accosted by the jobbers- men trying to buy at the lowest price. These offers were treated with contempt and a verbal slagging would follow. “You’ll be glad to give them away before evening,” or, more insulting, “Shoudn’t you have taken them to Roscrea?” 

(Roscrea was a meat and bone meal processing plant where old cows that could not be sold for meat were sent for slaughter.)

The shopkeepers and publicans in Listowel were well prepared for the influx; trays of ham sandwiches sitting on the counter of each pub where most of the men finished up. The jobbers, being suitably attired, would have their dinner at the hotel and the farmers who wanted to avoid the pubs would go to Sandy’s for tea and ham. The shopkeepers kept a smile on their faces when calves marched through their doors upsetting merchandise and, sometime, leaving their calling card. The bank manager was equally excited, greeting each man as “Sir”. He found trhis was the safest approach as it was hard to distinguish them. They all looked alike in their wellingtons, coats tied with binder twine and the caps pulled well down on the foreheads.

My father arrived home late. It was obvious he was in a bad mood though he didn’t arrive home with the calves. He said he was cold and hungry and sat in silence at the table, while my mother served up bis dinner which had been kept warm for hours over a pint of hot water. As he was half way through eating his bacon and turnip, he looked at my mother saying, “I’ve never met such a stupid man in all my life.”  The quizzical look on her face showed she didn’t have a clue wht he was talking about and didn’t dare ask. It took the mug of tea and the pipe of tobacco to get him started again.

My uncle Dan, my mother’s brother was his helper. Dan was a mild softly spoken man who had little knowledge of cattle. It was a a sluggish fair; prices only fair. My father held out until he was approached by a man he had dealt with often in the past.  They followed the usual ritual arguments- offers, refusals, the jobber walking away, returning with his last offer. This was on a par with what my father was expecting so he winked at Dan, which was his cue to say, “Split the difference.” . Instead Dan winked back. My father gave him a more pronounced wink. This elicited the same response from Dan. The day was only saved by a neighbor, who, on noticing the problem, jumped inn, spat on his palms and shouted, “Shake on it, lads, and give the man a luck penny.”

Over a very silent pint and sandwich Dan mournfully remarked, “If Mike hadn’t butted in you’d have got a better price for the calves.”

<<<<<<


Light a Penny Candle


My lovely grandsons, Sean and Killian, lighting candles in the cathedral, Killarney at Christmas 2017.

<<<<<<<<



Synchronicity



This is the word from when two things chance to happen together and they are in some way connected.

Yesterday I told you that Brigita, who is originally from Lithuania, had taken over at Scribes while Namir heads off to concentrate on his Ballybunion businesses.

Well, in a piece of synchronicity, Patrick McCrea, who is descended from the Armstrong family who had the sweet factory in Listowel, sent me this encouraging email;

“Thank you for a brilliant Listowelconnection mail – loved the TS Eliot poem and your report on the Galette des Rois- I lived 45 years in France 🇫🇷!  Now live in snowbound Lithuania 🇱🇹Happy New Year -Patrick McCrea”

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén