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 9 of 10

Vincent Carmody and the late Mike Sheehy remember football in 1957

(Timothy John MacSweeney)

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Listowel Emmetts, North Kerry Champions 1957



This picture, taken in the sports field is fairly poor quality but Vincent Carmody tells me that these are the men in it:

Players in the photo,

Front L to R

John (Nobby) Canty-Connell, Pat Whelan, John Murphy, Thomas Grogan, Timmy Walsh (capt) Michael Dowling, Bert Griffin, John Healy.

Back,

Tom Fitzgerald ( between supporters), Phil Healy, Celestine Stack, Andy Molyneaux (behind Cel. Stack), Bob Murphy ,Jim Guerin, Paddy O’Connor,  Jim Harmon, Fr. Teddy Molyneaux, Billy Kelly.

Supporters included and identified, 

Front,

Denny Carroll, Mossy Walsh, Canon Peter O’Sullivan, Patsy Leahy, (Trainer)

Back,

Sean O’Sullivan, Jack and Jim Galvin,Chuck Roche, Michael Carey, Toddy O’Connor (Chairman).

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These players were the heroes of a young Michael Sheehy of Main Street. Years later he recalled and posted on the internet his experience of playing in the street league in Listowel in 1957.

I remember the town league as if it
was yesterday. What great games between the different streets. I remember playing
with the Ashes around 1960 and the Ashes winning and still have the medal but
it says 1957 which would have made me 12. We had guys like the MacMahons, Toddy Enright, Junior & Bert Griffin, Frank Murray etc. What great times they were
just to have the bragging rights for a year. Now as I think of the places that
made up the “Ashes” I doubt if you could field a team. How sad it
is. Now as I think in The Small Sguare the only person to live there over the last
many years was Mrs. Scully. R.I.P. Everyone else closes their business and lives
somewhere else.

Happy memories for Mike. May he rest in peace.


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Summer Days are on the way again



 A photo reminder of things to come on Ballybunion beach from Ballybunion Prints Beach

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Mass in Pres. Listowel

The late Bishop Diarmuid O’Suilleabháin concelebrated mass to mark a refurbishment at Presentation Secondary School

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How many of you have heard of this famous scholar?


Michael
MacAuliffe, also known as Max Arthur Macauliffe, was a senior British
administrator in India, a scholar and author, renowned for his translation of
Sikh scripture and history into English.

Born
Michael MacAuliffe at Newcastle West, County Limerick on 10 September 1841, he
was educated at Newcastle School, Limerick, and Springfield College. He
attended Queen’s College Galway between 1857 and 1863, being awarded junior
scholarships in the Literary Division of the Arts Faculty for 1857-8, 1858-9,
and 1859-60. He was awarded a B.A. degree with first class honours in Modern
Languages in 1860. He obtained a senior scholarship in Ancient Classics for
1860-1, and a senior scholarship in Modern Languages and History for 1861-2. He
also served as Secretary of the college’s Literary and Debating Society for the
1860-1861 session.

Max
Arthur Macauliffe entered the Indian Civil Service in 1862, and arrived in the
Punjab in February 1864. He was appointed Deputy Commissioner of the Punjab in
1882,and a Divisional Judge in 1884. He retired from the Indian Civil Service
in 1893.

Max
Arthur Macauliffe wrote the definitive English translation of the Sacred Book
of the Sikh religion, the Guru Granth Sahib. He also wrote The Sikh Religion:
its Gurus, Sacred Writings and Authors (six volumes, Oxford University Press,
1909). He was assisted in his works by Pratap Singh Giani, a Sikh scholar.

It is widely believed that Max Arthur
converted to Sikhism before his death. He is held in high esteem among the Sikh
communion, in particular the intelligentsia, for his monumental translation
into English of the Sikh Scriptures, the Guru Granth Sahib. He was awarded the
degree of M.A. (honoris causa) by his alma mater in 1882. Max Arthur Macauliffe
died at his home in London on 15 March 1913

Reminiscences





Ah, The Tuck Shop!




Pres. Girls, do you remember the school tuck shop? This photo is from the eighties. Can you name the shop assistants?

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Another Great story from the old Rathea and Irremore Journal


The
parish of Lixnaw covers a big area of North Kerry. It stretches from the bounds
of Ballyduff to Lyrecrompane. There are three churches in the parish, Lixnaw,
Irremore and Rathea. Rathea was the last church to be built in the 19th
century. My grandmother told me that before Rathea church was built the people
of the upper region attended mass in Irremore. They came through the fields
with their shoes in their hands and put them on when they were near the church.
So much for the faith of our ancestors.

My
grandmother was Mary Dillon and was born in Gortacloghane. She was known as
“Marie the glen” as she was born down in the valley. There is a field
there in Tim Kennelly’s farm that is still known as the Glennies field. Close
by is Gleann an Aifreann (the mass glen). There is a mass rock there where
priests said mass during the penal days. My father was Ger Lynch a native of
Lyrecrompane and a tailor by trade. My mother was Liz Kirby from Mountcoal.
They lived in a thatched house at the crossroads in Rathea where the Grotto now
stands. There was another house joined to ours occupied by Maurice and Mary Mc
Elligott and he was known as Maurice Bán. To look at that site today you would
wonder how two houses fitted there never mind a rick of turf at the end of each
house. Those were the days of the horse and cart – there were not many motor
cars then. The crossroads were known as the “Tailors Cross”.

If
ever there was a rambling house ours was one. All the elderly men of the
locality would assemble at our house every night each one having their own
piece of news of the day. Men like Garret Galvin – he was the Father of the house.
Jack (Garret) Galvin Micky óg Galvin, Paddy (Con) Galvin, Jeremiah (Ger)
Galvin, Tim Kennelly, Mort Donoghue and many more. Where they all got room I do
not know but they did. My father had a big table at the end of the house for
cutting out the suits of clothes on. Jack (Garret) Galvin would always lie up
on it with his knees up and his hands under his head. When it would be nearing
my bedtime I would slip up and lie flat inside Jack to keep out of my mother’s
view trying to stay up as long as I could. I was very good for doing jobs for
my mother especially bringing the spring water. I had a small container and I
would make a number of trips to Micky óg Galvin’s every day. The daughter of
the house Julia Galvin (Shiels I used to call her) would raise the water for me
from a pump in the yard. When she had it she would always give me a cut of
currant bread or failing that a cut of bread and jam. (You see now how I was so
good for drawing the water).

Television
was not even heard of then and the radio was just coming on the market. I
remember the first radio to come to Rathea. It was to Jack’s (Garret) house in
the early thirties and it was worked by batteries. People had to depend then on
the paper for all the daily news. The paper came to our house every day. The
price of it was one old penny and each of the ramblers would buy it in turn. It
was bought by a young student from Lyrecrompane who was attending St. Michael’s
College in Listowel  a long cycle then
over rough country roads. There was no tarmacadam then. That student was later
to become Fr. Jack Nolan and he ministered in 
Australia. A lot of water has gone under the bridge since then. He is
now retired in his native Lyrecrompane.

Since
everyone could not get a piece of the paper, the set up was that Paddy (Con)
Galvin would stand up to the oil lamp then and read out all the news to his
audience. You could hear a pin drop while he was reading. When I look back on
it now it was like watching the newscaster on the television.

I
started school in Rathea at the age of four. The school was only a couple of
hundred yards over the road. My first teacher there was Mrs. Peggy O’Shea. She
was staying at Micky óg Galvins. She was later transferred to Dromclough and
married the principal of that school 
Master Bartholmew Rohan. She was the mother of the present principal
Master Kieran Rohan.

I
was only eight years when my parents left Rathea and went to live in my
grandmother’s house in Mountcoal. My three brothers went to Dromclough school,
it was nearer but I would not change from Rathea. I had great school pals there
in Denis and Bill Kennelly, Michael and Brendan Galvin, Seán (Neon) Trant and
many more. It was a good journey for an eight year old but come early Spring I
would jog along that road barefooted as happy as the birds on the trees. My
first port of call every morning would be to Mary (Carey) Greaney. She was an
early riser and she would be always baking her bread for the day when I would
call.

It
was in Mountcoal I grew from boyhood to manhood and I have many memories of
those days. During the winter, Sunday would be spent hunting hares with Tom and
Dick Fitzmaurice, Tom Fitzgerald, Tom Joy and that great huntsman himself
Jerheen Hayes. During the summer there would be a great crowd playing football
in Relihan’s field. Mountcoal Cross or “The Hut” as it was known was
a great meeting place for all the boys around. There was a big population in
Mountcoal then. About 1950 the crowd at the cross started to get small.
Emigration opened up and all the young men and women took the boat to England.
There was only a small number of us left.

Jim
(Tade) Galvin was a great favourite at the cross. He was a Rathea man himself.
He bought a farm near Mountcoal Cross in the estate of Arthur Gentleman and
built a house there. He did not smoke – he always chewed his tobacco he said it
was more satisfactory. He was a great man to tell stories of bygone days and if
you quizzed him his answer would be “Tameneys man that was no
treble”. Another man who was a great friend of mine was Denny Flaherty
(Senior). He was a low sized stocky little man that would play cards until the
cows came home. As a young lad he often played cards with me by the fire on a
board on our knees. During the winter his house was a great gambling house. The
players were John Hartnett, Ned Fitzgerald, Jerry Mulvihill, Jack Sullivan and
many more. The stake would be a penny in forty one.  The last game of the night would be for
tuppence, this was called a rubber. You would be anxious to win that game as a
shilling then was money when the farm wage was fifteen shillings a week. (75p
today). Out of that you had to pay for your keep at home, you also had the
money for the Crosses dance on Friday and Sunday nights not forgetting the
packet of Woodbines and the bottle of Brillantine. 

Here I must sing the praises
of three great women in the locality. They were Mai Flaherty and the late Molly
Mulvihill and Mary Joy. They were midwife and undertaker in our locality. They
brought many a one into the world and laid out many more including my own
father for their last journey. There was no funeral homes then. I am sure God
will reward them for their work.

Dinny
Flaherty went to the rambling house at Pike every Sunday night for a game of
cards with his old mates. They would have the house to themselves that night as
all the younger crowd would be gone to the dance at the Crosses. During that
time I met Babell Mahony. She was later to become my wife. She worked for a
number of years with Mrs. Trant in Tournageehy. On our way home from the
Crosses dance we would nearly always meet Dinny coming from Pike. You would
hear him coming along. He would be smoking his pipe and humming away to
himself. I would say to him “well Dinny how was the going tonight “.
He would say “Yerra I was left holding my own Teagheen. What about
yourself, did you get a Kit-Kat”. He was one jolly little man. May God be good
to his noble soul.

In
1954 Babell and I got married and I came to live at her place in Tournageehy.
We had five children, four boys and one girl. They are all now fledged and
flown, two in America, one in Belgium, one in Dublin. The only girl I had is
married to local man Mike Dowling, Bunglasha, Duagh. We are once again back to
square one where we started. The clock has gone well around. We will be
celebrating our ruby anniversary (forty years of marriage) this year. Maybe
with God’s help and a bit of luck we might see our golden jubilee.

  “I remember the first time I met her,

   Those days I often recall,

   when we danced hand in hand,

   to Bunny’s great band,

   down in Regan’s dance hall”.

Ted
Lynch.  


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St. John’s then and now



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Galvin’s Back


The reaction in the Kingdom to this second coming is bordering on hysteria. Can’t a man change his mind?

Form is temporary; class is permanent

Kerry’s Green and Gold, Christmas in Dublin and Listowel and a carol service in our parish church

Kerry Christmas Tree in the U.S.

(photo: Jim Horgan)

This green and gold Christmas tree is in Atlanta, Georgia.

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Ballybunion Eco Trek



Danny Houlihan is launching this great new venture right on our doorsteps. He is extremely knowledgeable about history, nature and the whole eco system in Ballybunion and he has now developed a series of walks and treks which will put Ballybunion well on the tourist walking map. Everyone is invited to come and hear all about it on Friday night.

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Christmas in the City



A Listowel Writers’ Week contingent went to Dublin on business recently and took a few snaps while there. Here are a few they posted on Facebook.

Liz and Jackie at Dublin Castle

Christmas Market in St. Stephen’s Green

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Presentation Sisters, Rathmore 2010

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Craft Fair in The Seanchaí December 14 2014


Anne Egan surrounded by her beautiful knitted creations

Seasonal mulled wine was proving popular. I bought some. It was delicious.

These young people were enjoying having their faces painted.


Santa and Mrs Claus were on hand to chat to the children.

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Music Department at Presentation Secondary School



Singers and musicians from Presentation Listowel at their Christmas musical event in St. Mary’s on Sunday evening, December 14 2014. It was a lovely event in our beautiful parish church filled with heavenly music. A big thank you to all involved.

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KDYS Live Crib and Parade today

Class of ‘ 94 reunion, Scouts and Duagh Sports Complex and Sea Angling in Ballybunion

Past pupils of Presentation Secondary School, Listowel celebrated the 20th anniversary of their schooldays. With them in the picture is their principal, Sr. Consolata. Copies of the picture are available by contacting Aisling Griffin of the organizing committee.

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Scouting in Listowel (continued)



Fr. Anthony Gaughan




     In 1945 the annual
camp was held partly in Dublin and partly in the an Óige hostel in Enniskerry.
This enabled the members to realise that their county did not have a monopoly
of Ireland’s scenic beauty. In 1946 the annual camp was at Gweedore in County
Donegal.  The jouney to camp involved a flight from Rineanna (later
Shannon Airport) to Collinstown (later Dublin Airport) and a journey on a
narrow-gauge railway from Letterkenny to Burtonport. In 1947 Kennelly took his
troop to camp at Knaresborough, near Harrogate in Yorkshire. The camp was
shared with troops from Leeds and Skipton. The English scout leaders had seen
active service in the British army and the camp was run along military lines.

     In the autumn of 1947
Kennelly was informed that it was not the policy of the CBSI to organise annual
camps outside the country. This prompted him almost a year later to affiliate
the troop with the B-P scouts and the 4th Kerry became the 1st Listowel Boy
Scouts. Thus in 1948 the summer was at Gilwell Park, London, training centre of
the B-P scouts. There members benefited from rigorous training in basic scouting
and had an opportunity to visit the major sights of London and other places
such as the nearby Epping Forest.

     For summer camp in
1949 the Listowel scouts spent some days in Paris before travelling on to
Lourdes. In Paris they were accommodated by Abbé Pierre Conan. He and a troop
of boy scouts from his parish of St Severin, near the Sorbonne, had been guests
of the Listowel scouts in 1946 and 1948. In 1950 the Listowel troop travelled
to Rome for the Holy Year celebrations. After stopovers at Aix-les-Bains and
Zurich, they arrived at a huge camp site near the church of St Paul outside the
walls of Rome. This had been prepared by the Italian Federation of Boy Scouts
for scouts arriving from all over the world. Kennelly, in a typical imaginative
gesture, at a general audience handed Pius XII a roll of Irish tweed for poor
children in Rome.

   In 1951 the troop travelled to the
7th World Scout Jamboree at ad Ischl, near Salzburg. The Listowel scouts and
some from Tuam, who travelled with them, were accommodated in the visitors’
section of the camp. The jamboree was dominated by American scouts and the US
8th Army seemed to be everywhere helping their compatriots.  The journey
through Austria, then occupied by the US, USSR, UK and France, and the sight of
trains filled with flag-waving communist youth on their way to a huge rally left one in no doubt about the tenuous nature
of the post-World-War-II peace in Europe.

   Throughout his years as a
scoutmaster, apart from showing outstanding imagination in choosing
destinations for the annual camp, Kennelly was most adept at organising
concerts and other functions to subsidise the troop’s trips abroad.

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More from the Michael Kennelly archive



The following photos were taken at the jamborette in Listowel in 1948. Michael’s caption says “Mass in the Paris camp”. Scouts from all over Europe attended this event and they camped by the banks of the Feale in a field near where Kerry Group have their plant today.



Duagh Sport and Leisure Complex

(Photo:   Duagh Sports Complex)

Work is almost finished on this very impressive addition to sports mad Duagh.

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Angling in Ballybunion in October 2014



(photo: Ballybunion Angling and Coastal Views)

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My Basque Connection



Dont foget to check in with my little grandsons in France. Their blog is Discovering Basque

My Silver River Feale, Dromclough, St. Mary’s and Fungie

My Silver River Feale



“My heart tonight is lonely for my sireland,

Though many miles of ocean lie between,

My heart tonight is home again in Ireland

Upon thy banks, my silver River Feale.”

The words of Bryan MacMahon are the inspiration behind a beautiful piece of jewellery soon to be unveiled in Craftshop na Méar.

This is Eileen Moylan of Claddagh Designs pictured at her work bench in Macroom.

This is a sneak preview of her Listowel piece, My Silver River Feale which will be launched in Craftshop na Méar, Listowel on Saturday May 31 2014 as part of Listowel Writers’ Week fringe. The solid silver hallmarked piece will be available as a pendant, bracelet or cuff links. The design shows St. John’s, Listowel Castle and The Bridge over The Feale.

If you love Listowel you will want one of these.

Everyone is welcome to the launch. Standing room is limited. We will have to close the doors when the shop is full so come early and browse some of the lovely crafts in the shop. We plan to have a little music, a few nibbles and a video showing how the silver piece was designed and crafted. Owen MacMahon, son of the author of My Silver River Feale will be the guest of honour on the night,

May 31 2014 at 7.00 p.m.


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A newspaper picture of the opening of Dromclough National School

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St. Mary’s in Listowel Square is due to close its doors for refurbishment for the months of June and July 2014. Daily masses will be celebrated in St. John’s and Sunday Mass in St. Michael’s College.

Below are some photos of the lovely interior of our parish church.

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Fungie the Dingle dolphin

Two more recent action shots from his friends at Fungie Forever

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Nano Nagle award

Eileen Keane, Acting Vice Principal, Clodagh Kissane with her Nano Nagle Award and Elaine Kinsella who presented the awards on Awards Day at Presentation Secondary School, Listowel

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