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: pram

Listowel, Athea and Brehon Laws

“The trees are in their Autumn beauty.

The woodland paths are dry….”

Sustainable Fashion at Listowel Races 2024

These are the Tidy Town volunteers who introduced this event which has become the Saturday highlight of race week. They turn up year after year to run this marvellous competition. It has evolved over the years from having some entries that looked like school projects to be a themed fashion competition to rival Friday’s best dressed lady’s event. Many of this year’s outfits would not have been out of place in the Friday competition.

Kathleen O’Flaherty always looks stylish.

This lady got a special prize for inventiveness.

Frances O’Keeffe was the winner of the first sustainable fashion competition at Listowel Races. Her daughter, Edel, won a few fashion prizes too.

The story of the outfit is part of the entertainment of this competition. Maria’s stories areaways the best. Maria Stack was wearing gloves and a hat gifted to her by her late friend, Mary O’Halloran. Mary was a great supporter of Listowel Races.

Tidy Town ladies and An Taisce judge are intrigued by the back stories.

Something Old

This is the kind of old fashioned pram babies slept in in the 1900s. The net over the pram was to protect the infant from flies and wasps and to deter the cat from jumping in with the baby. There was usually a string of coloured rattles across the hood in view of the baby and nearly always a holy medal pinned somewhere.

In Athea

The celtic mural in Athea celebrates Irishness in hundreds of symbols but it also celebrates local people and the enormous talent in the area.

This young flautist is like a snake charmer conjuring up shamrocks, birds, snakes and entwined celtic symbols.

What could be more Irish than a step dancing cailín?

A local young girl immortalised forever among the oak leaves in this impressive piece of wall art.

Brehon Laws

Lately I came upon this treasure of a book in the IWA charity shop. It’s all about the Brehon Laws. These laws were passed on orally since the first centuryBC. They were written down for the first time in the 7th century AD and they were in use until the reign of Elizabeth 1 who replaced the old Brehon Laws with English common law.

The laws give us a great insight into how our ancestors lived.

The great assembly was usually held on Tara. The elders came together to discuss and, if necessary, amend the laws.

Music has always been part of Irish life. There was a hierarchy of musicians with the harpist having pride of place.

A Fact

Percy Spencer invented the microwave oven. He patented it in 1945.

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Tralee approach to town, NeoData photos and Claddagh Design

This is the lovely new sign that bids you farewell as you leave Listowel on the road to Tralee.

The Kerry Group plant.

There used to be a hedge on this wall. It had suffered frost damage and was removed recently.

This says Fáilte go Lios Tuathail. You get a better view from a vehicle than on the ground.

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Lucky girls! When Santa brought me a pram just like those ones, he left a note telling me to share it with my sister!!!!!!

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This account of apprenticeship was first published in Seanchas DughEalla

Learning the Trade

by Donncadh Mac Curtáin

At the age of 16, I was apprenticed to a carpenter in Rathmore County Kerry. This was a long three
and half years in Inchabeg in Co. Kerry. I remember well my first day in the
workshop. I was amazed to see all the tools of my future profession, augars,
wood planes, chisels, saws and an array of other tools and instruments I had
never seen before. The first lesson I was taught was how to make all wedges and
dowels for cart wheels. At the time there were no motor cars or lorries and the
only means of transport were horse-drawn carts, traps and side cars. Some people will remember, the side car and
trap were the principal means of passenger transport at the time. To make the
wedges and dowels we used a long handled chisel and the first month was taken
up doing this, I well remember my bruised and blistered shoulder from pushing
and leaning on the chisel.

The next part of my training was to paint the carts and
wheels with red lead mixed with boiled linseed oil. This job was always reserved
the young apprentice. After a while I was shown how to plane the shafts for the
cars and use the draw knife to shape them.

By this time I was familiar with most of the tools such as
the hand lathe, for turning the wheel stocks. This was probably the hardest job
I ever had to do. I used the adge for shaping the fellows and the draw knife
and spoke shave for shaping the spokes. The trammel was used for defining the
circle and height of the wheels. Apart from the steel band the wheel was made
entirely from wood, oak and elm which was bought from Leaders Forest, Dromagh.

We were also taught to make tables, chairs and dressers and
coops in the workshop. I left home at six o’clock on Monday morning and walked
the nine miles to Inchabeg, returning
home again on Saturday night after work. It was a long hard 6 day week. Rising
at seven o’clock and finishing work at 7 PM there was no pay during my
apprenticeship, except for a half crown
at Christmas. This corresponded to 12 1/2 pence in today’s money. In addition my father had to pay my
master £12 to cover my training. How
things have changed! There were no holidays, apart from one week at Christmas.

During the week I stayed at the Mulcahy’s house. There were
two other apprentices and the three of us shared the same room and the same
bed. The other two were Denis Tucker, Ballydaly and Arthur Tarrantt, Ballydesmond,
both of whom have now gone to their reward. We went through tough times
together but the fact that the three of us were such great friends made life
that bit easier.

We started the day by washing in the Abha na Sciortán, which
flowed by the back of the workshop. There was no soap and our towel was a flour
bag. Our breakfast consisted of home-made bread, butter and tea, and a mid day
meal of potatoes, bacon and cabbage, or turnips, and a supper of home-made
bread, butter and tea and sometimes an egg. After supper, we occasionally went
roving to neighbours houses, to the O’Donoghues or the Caseys, where we heard ghost stories and fairy
stories and stories of haunted buildings. We had no money for pubs pictures or
dances.

The first four months we spent in the workshop, then we
moved on to housebuilding. This comprised of cutting and erecting roofs, making
doorframes, doors window frames and sashes and stairs. All were made at the
owner’s premises. While doing this work, we frequently stayed with the owner of
the house. We travelled in a pony and car, usually within a radius of 6 to 8
miles from Rathmore. I remember that at the time we never ceiled a kitchen. The
joints were planed and meat hooks were attached to them to hang the home cured
bacon. After three and a half years training in all aspects of woodwork and
carpentry, the big day arrived when I received my indentures. This document
confirmed I was now a fully qualified carpenter, free to work and earn my
living. It was the beginning of a career which spanned over 50 years in the building
industry and during this time I have witnessed many changes in the trade and in
the country.

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Were you at the NeoData social in 1979?

http://www.clearyphotoarchive.com/p819013493/h47f9b5b2#h47fa7808

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http://thedailyedge.thejournal.ie/retro-irish-school-books-760321-Jan2013/?utm_source=facebook

For a trip back to your schooldays click the above link.

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My account yesterday of Eileen Moylan of Claddagh Design’s award was missing this photo

 Eileen’s jewellery was awarded best product here

https://www.facebook.com/showcaseireland

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While I made my slow progress to Tralee yesterday morning, I took a few photos while stuck in traffic.

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