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: Presentation Secondary School Listowel Page 8 of 10

Lislaughtin,Rattoo Mural and a Presentation Mystery

Historic Ballylongford


My good friend, Breda Ferris recently took a group of us on a mini tour of Ballylongford. We visited all the places Fr. Pat Moore visited on his first day out.

I will first let you read Fr. Pat’s Caring Bridge account of his day and then I will add my photos from my excursion to the same locations.

An update from Fr Pat Moore.

Today is Wednesday!! August 25th. A Slow move out!

By Fr. Pat Moore

Yesterday was a day of difference and newness. In the morning it rained, monsoon like, as it did last night. Yesterday afternoon, the sun shone and transported us into a different world, every place dry and bright. After lunch, Debbie, Sr. Kathleen and myself ventured on a small tour. We drove up along the Shannon, into Ballylongford Creek via Killelton and stopped first at Carrigafoyle Castle. It has now become a very busy hub for tourists and locals judging from all the entries on the visitors book. The Wild Atlantic Way has made a difference. The two women took the 104 steps to the top of the Castle and later we sensed its history back until its destruction in 1583. On we journied to Ahavallin Graveyard where our family are buried. Around the ruined Church where Lord Kitchener of Karthoom was baptised we remembered so many family and neighbours among ” the unforgettable dead”. We connected through prayer with” those that had gone before us marked with the sign of faith”. 

On to Lislaughtin Abbey with its sad history. There we prayed over neighbours and friends like Michael Linnane.

“Flashing starlings twist and turn in the sky above my head

While in Lislaughtin lie the packed anticipating dead.

Silent generations there that long had been the knee

Endowing the Shannon with the grace of reaching to the sea. Brendan Kennelly.

Back to Ballylongford and to St. Michael’s Church where I was ordained to priesthood in 1982. There in the grounds of the Church is the bust of our local poet. There is an extraordinary quote there, words that hung in his brothers garage for years from “The Crooked Cross”. “If the life of little places dies, greater places share the loss. Life if you wish, may not be worth one passing game of pitch and toss and yet a nation’s life is laid in places like the Crooked Cross”.

As we travelled home through the storied countryside we had travelled less than 15 kilometres, feeling into the past yet there is a great sense that the countryside is emptying out. “The silence of unlaboured fields stands like a judgement in the air”. Though we met people, moved among fields that each held a story, there is a sense of rural depopulation. Some have ” fled the fields that lied them down”, so many of a certain age have gone to work elsewhere. The changes of the past are a reminder that ” to live is to change and to change often is to become perfect”  as J.H. Newman said.

This iconic window at Lislaughtin Abbey is one of the strongest symbol of Ballylongford. There are several more beautiful windows and other features here in what was once the finest Franciscan Abbey in all of Europe.

There are graves everywhere within the Abbey and in the adjoining graveyard. The big memorial above is to the O’Rahilly family.

We also visited the 5 story high Carrigafoyle Castle, an O’Connor stronghold.

Next stop Saleen pier…lovely spot. The old boat below added a touch of mystery to the place.

From peaceful Saleen we could see Lislaughtin in the distance.

This is the Moneen, a kind of mudflat that is at times submerged.

On to Ahavallen and the tomb of the reviled Sandes family

Our last stop was St. Michael’s church. The grounds of this church are beautifully maintained with sculptures and plaques recounting Ballylongford’s history. There is also a beautiful parish centre and a a little rock garden. The recently unveiled bust of Brendan Kennelly is another milestone in Ballylonford history recorded here.

<<<<<<<<

Rattoo Mural at Ballyduff Post Office

Bob Scott; Artist

all photos; Bridget O’Connor

<<<<<<<

Presentation Girls

I posted one of these photos before and got no replies. I’m posting a slightly better image this time along with another photo taken in the same classroom on the same day. They’ re definitely taken in Pres. Listowel, not sure primary or secondary school. Surely someone recognizes someone or remembers the day.

Schoolgirls in 1953, Changes in town and Sr. Elizabeth Starken

Presentation Secondary School pupils in 1953

Jimmy Magee couldn’t hold a candle to Betty Stack of Greenville. She gave me this great photograph of the whole school cohort in 1953 and she remembers all the names.

Betty gave me lots more photos and press cuttings. I will be sharing these with you over the next few days.

Front Row;

Margaret Keane, Joan McElligott, J. Halpin,–O’Sullivan, May
Noonan, Noreen Guiney, Theresa Walsh, Delia Duggan, Claire O’Connor, Imelda
Sheehy, Peggy Brennan, Maureen Stack, Betty Sheehan, Maureen McElligott, Maura
O’Connor, Helen Hanrahan, Betty Walsh, Theresa Enright, Margaret Mooney, May
Grogan, Pay Murray, Maria Hegarty,Theresa Hegarty, Eileen Fitzgerald, Maria
O’Connor.

Middle:

Pat O’Connor, Kathleen Enright, Maureen Guerin, Eleanor
Scanlon, Joan Stack, Maureen Hunt, Margaret Keane, Maria Buckley, Maura Grimes,
Claire Broderick, Maria Kirby, Renee Buckley, Margaret Galvin, Nora Dillon and
Irene Nolan.

Back Row:

Carmel Sheehy, Laoise O’Connell, May Walsh, Bridie Mooney,
Ellen O’Sullivan, Maureen Buckley, Beta Whelan, Ina Leahy, Mary Ahern, Peggy
Buckley, Bridie Godley and May Dillon.

<<<<<<<


Big Reburbishment Going on at Maguires Pharmacy





 <<<<<<<


Blast from the Past from The Kerryman



<<<<<<<

Now and Then

<<<<<<<


Bord na Mona, Lyreacrumpane



 The woman on the right here is Sr. Elizabeth Starken a member of the Presentation Order. She was born in Kerry when her father Harry Starken was based there at the BnM works. This photo shows Michael Casey, from Longford presenting a bog oak chalice to Brother Joseph Bell and Sr Starken. The chalice was then brought to Rome, presented to Pope John Paul II and used on 6th October 1996 during the Beatification Ceremony of Brother Edmund Ignatious Rice. A long way from Lyrecrumpane.

(text and photo; Bord na Mona Heartland)

<<<<<<<


You’re Ugly Too



This is Mark Noonan He is in Japan promoting his new film, You’re Ugly too. Mark is an up and coming writer director. He is a nephew of Helen Moylan and Tess Noonan of Listowel.

<<<<<<<<



The Games have Begun




Team Ireland at the Special Olympics was lead out by Colin Farrell.

Friends Reunited, Listowel Food fair 2015 and some Listowel Patricians

This is a group of happy Listowel ladies who got together in The Listowel Arms on Saturday June 27 2015 to catch up with each other and to reminisce about old times. They are Grace Beasley O’Sullivan, Jean Kiely O’Leary, Rose Woulfe West, Mary Stack Kelly, Sr. Una Harman, Norma Lynch McIlvenna, Hilary Nielson Kelly, Mary King, Eileen Greaney and Mary Kelly Gore.

<<<<<<<


Listowel Food Fair  June 18 to June 21 2015


The first Food Fair event I attended was the Kathy (White House) Buckley plaque unveiling ceremony. Here are a few more photos from that lovely afternoon on Upper William Street.


Ciarán Sheehan and Donal Nolan

 Clodagh Murphy


There was some great jazz in The Square at The Friday Market.

On Sunday I was in The Square again with my family for the fun day with food and entertainment galore.

queueing for  a crepe

 I met my former neighbour, Gerard Nugent  who grew up in Listowel. He was in town for the food fair  with his gourmet pie business.

Damien Stack shared his pie with Marie Regan….delicious!

Xistance members were painting faces.

 Drumdance Ireland was a great hit with my crowd.

 The Stack/Scanlon family were enjoying themselves.

 That’s Róisín in the gingham giving it all she’s got.

 This man was in charge of the music session. He was brilliant.

Face painting was available all day.

The girls got a balloon each.

and a crepe

Great day out, despite the cold weather. 

Roll on next year!

<<<<<<<<


Some of Listowel’s Venerable Forefathers


Photos from The commemorative booklet produced in 1960 for the opening of the sports field.



A.P. McCoy to be celebrated at Writers’ Week, Liam Healy and Pres. Girls in 2007

Fungi Again



photo: Fungie Forever

<<<<<



Remember this?




<<<<<<



Racing photography at Writers’ Week 2015


This great photograph of the recently retired jockey A.P. McCoy is one of the masterpieces by Healyracing that will feature in a not to be missed local event during this year’s festival.

The Healy family have been taking  photographs on racecourses now for 3 generations. Pat Healy is the master of the art of capturing it all in one image. His photographs have appeared in all of the best sporting publications and daily newspapers in Ireland and around the world. It’s a hard job that sees him out in all weathers, jostling his way through the media scrum to capture that iconic shot. This one of A.P. McCoy is just that.

Racing strangely now combines the hard graft of the working jockeys with the glamour of “best dressed ladies”. Could there be a greater contrast than this mud spattered working man and the buffed and polished glamour pusses that grace our racecourses? Pat Healy has photographed them all and you can see them at this special exhibition in The Listowel Arms during  Listowel Writers’ Week 2015

The exhibition is a tribute to A. P. McCoy and it opens at 11.00 on Thursday 28 May 2015



<<<<<



Liam Healy, Listowel man, Racing photographer and family man


 Mary Cogan and liam Healy

For the next few days I am going to bring you, in installments, the story of the man who started it all, Liam Healy.

Liam Healy, founder of
Healyracing, entrepreneur, family man, Listowel man and all round sound man.

Recently I spend a very happy hour and a half in the company of
Liam Healy. Liam is an extraordinary man who has built up a successful business
which now employs all of his family. Liam has none of the trappings of the
successful businessman. He lives a quiet humble life in the bosom of his family
in Ballygologue. He has worked hard all his life, and he is filled with
gratitude to all the people who have shaped and made him what he is today.

 Liam has fond memories of
his early life in Convent Street. He was born on June 12 1945 to Kitty and
Paddy Healy of Number 11 Convent Street. Paddy was the only son of a second
marriage so there were no Healy aunts and uncles in the young Liam’s life. This was significant
because tragedy struck the family in 1948. Kitty died in childbirth leaving
Paddy with 4 very young children to rear.

Paddy had to work to earn a living for his family so the obvious
course of action in his circumstances would have been to put the children into
care. Liam had an Uncle Gerard, a Carmelite brother in Drumcondra who begged
Liam’s dad to keep the family
together and at home with him. They had suffered the loss of their mother,
losing their home would have been an unbearable second blow.

(treasured old photos of Liam and his brothers)

Generous Listowel people rallied round and helped Paddy to look
after the children during the day. No
matter where they were during the daytime they always all returned home to
their father in the evening.

The young Liam was taken under their wing by a neighbouring
childless couple, Hannie and Garrett Carey. Liam speaks of them and of his time
spent with them with great fondness and abiding gratitude. Garrett was a
painter and Hannie was one of the Mixum Hennessey family. Liam was very well
looked after and he was happy with his new arrangement, returning home every
night to his father and his brothers, Pat & Michael and sister, Margaret.

The Careys were betting people and they used to send Liam with
the money for their little wager to Moriarty’s Betting Shop, which was on William Street in a shop that is now
part of Damien Stack’s
Arcade. Liam credits those early trips to the turf accountants with sparking
his interest in photos of horses. The man behind the counter in Johnny Moriarty’s shop was Roddy O’Sullivan and he was always kind to the
young Liam. Liam was fascinated by the photos of horses on the pages of the
newspapers that lined the walls. Because he was anxious that the youngster would
not be seen to linger too long in the shop, but recognizing Liam’s genuine interest in the photographs,
Roddy agreed to keep the papers for him. Liam remembers especially The Sporting
Life. It was a newspaper devoted to Horse Racing and little did he know Healy
Racing would supply them with photographs in later life.

(More tomorrow)

<<<<<<<



Listowel Tennis Club




The Listowel Tennis Club’s Facebook page is  Here

<<<<<<<



School Memories




Pres. girls with the Heiniken Cup in 2007

Listowel Military Tattoo 2015 continued, In Flanders Fields and some Pres. girls

Remembering

This is now a permanent North Kerry War Memorial on Church St. Listowel.

Jim Halpin, seen here outside his shop and museum does trojan work in keeping the sacrifice of those who fell in war before our minds. His latest memorial on the wall outside his shop lists the names of all the North Kerry men who fell in World War 1. He has done the town a service. My photos do not do justice to the memorial. If you are in town, take a good look and say a prayer for the fallen.

<<<<<<<

Vintage Bridal Car


Snapped on Charles Street on Saturday May 2 2015

<<<<<<<<<<







Presentation Secondary School


Any idea who these girls are, where was the photo taken and why?

<<<<<<<<<

From the 1960s GAA brochure











<<<<<<<<





In Flanders Fields

This week exactly 100 years ago, Canadian Major John McCrae wrote his poem ‘In Flanders Fields’ as a reaction to the death of his close friend in battle. McCrae discarded the poem but luckily a fellow officer saved it and sent it to a British newspaper. The Advanced Dressing Station near the Essex Farm Cemetery in Ypres marks the site where John McCrae wrote his poem.

(Photo: Flanders Fields 14-18)

In Flanders fields the poppies blow

Between the crosses, row on row,

That mark our place; and in the sky

The larks, still bravely singing, fly

Scarce heard amid the guns below.

We are the Dead. Short days ago

We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow,

Loved and were loved, and now we lie

In Flanders fields.

Take up our quarrel with the foe:

To you from failing hands we throw

The torch; be yours to hold it high.

If ye break faith with us who die

We shall not sleep, though poppies grow

In Flanders fields.

The story behind the poem:

During the early days of the Second Battle of Ypres a young Canadian artillery officer, Lieutenant Alexis Helmer, was killed on 2nd May, 1915 in the gun positions near Ypres. An exploding German artillery shell landed near him. He was serving in the same Canadian artillery unit as a friend of his, the Canadian military doctor and artillery commander Major John McCrae.

As the brigade doctor, John McCrae was asked to conduct the burial service for Alexis because the chaplain had been called away somewhere else on duty that evening. It is believed that later that evening, after the burial, John began the draft for his now famous poem “In Flanders Fields”.

<<<<<<<

New Business in Town




Best of luck to MK Beauty. It’s a joy to see young people investing in the future of our town.

Page 8 of 10

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén