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: public phone boxes

Aspects of Listowel Childers’ park, Mike the Pies for Music and Phone box or WiFi hub

Chaffinch photographed by Chris Grayson

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Awakening Trees


Our trees in public places are a delight to watch as they change from the dullness of winter into the glorious colours of spring and summer.

These trees in the park were planted by Scoil Realta na Maidine.

This dense copse has grown really quickly.

Magnificent trees on the pitch and putt course will soon bud into leaf.

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More Progress on the commemorative garden



This beautiful golden sand adds to the jewelled effect.



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Prestigious Award for Mike the Pies




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We have Phone Boxes with Working? Phone in Listowel too



On William Street




According to the sign its a WiFi hub. I must test it out.

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When You’re making plans for Easter Monday…..



If you’ve overindulged with the Easter eggs or even if you haven’t, Listowel Writers’ Week’s Cruinniú na Cásca event is just the ticket:


Beginning at 11am on
Monday 17th April from The Seanchai Centre in Listowel Square, the morning walk
will take you around the beautiful and resourceful River Feale. You will see
and hear some dramatised stories, poems and excerpts from the plays of
Listowel’s literary giants such as Bryan MacMahon, John B. Keane, Dan Keane,
Maurice Walsh, Gabriel Fitzmaurice, Brendan Kennelly, Billy Keane and many
more.

The walk is free, and
will begin with the opening of an open art exhibition by local artists both
professional and amateur followed by a brief introduction to the walk. Along
the walk we will be entertained with short performances by local actors. After
the walk, we will return to the Seanchai Centre for complimentary tea &
coffee.

Castleisland and a super volunteer

Majestic Corrantuathail photographed by Deirdre Lyons

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Aspects of Castleisland


I had my lunch in Castleisland in this lovely friendly restaurant. Everywhere there were displays of vintage china.


The whole experience was so pleasant that I forgave them their dreadful translation of the café name.

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Phone Boxes with real working phones in them



The phone boxes are located outside the post office.

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Mary Keogh in Kerry’s Eye



Listowel’s hard working Mary Keogh has been recognised for her dedication to Daffodil Day down through the years. Mary is a good example of a salt of the earth community volunteer. She has made and is still making a huge contribution to life in North Kerry.

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On Courthouse Road




Betty McGrath and Anne Moloney on a sunny Saturday morning, March 25 2017

Phone Boxes

Notice anything missing?

Clue: It used to stand in this corner of The Square.

Yes, it’s the public phone box. I never spotted when they took it away.

Maybe we should have kept it as an artefact and worked it into the heritage trail. Remember there is a generation growing up for whom the concept of a public telephone is very hard to get your head around.

As far as I know, these are  the only phoneboxes left in Listowel.

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The late, great John B Keane
was a Leader columnist for more than 30 years. This column first appeared in
our edition of April 29, 1972

JOE QUAID, formerly of
Athea, but now resident in Knockadirreen, Duagh, has just completed his
autobiography. The book, which he originally called “Hook, Line and Sinker,”
tells of his life and times from his childhood in Athea to his present state.

He has re-titled the book as
many patient readers of these columns will be well aware. It is now called
“Quaid’s County” and it is at present in the hands of the Mercier Press of Cork
where it is being studied with a view to publication.

When I rang the Mercier
Press for word of their plans regarding the long manuscript last week the only
information they were willing to vouchsafe consisted of two words. These were:
“original” and “satisfactory”.

Not bad when one considers
all the unfavourable things they might have said. The book consists of twenty
chapters and is four hundred pages long. Every townland and parish in North
Kerry and West Limerick receives mention and there are some amusing stories
about Knocknaboul, Knockadirreen, The Black Stick, the Cot Hole, and other
historic fishing pools along the Feale River.

There is a whole chapter
devoted to poaching around Abbeyfeale cut for obvious reasons, the names of the
poachers are fictitious.

Buckshee Laama

THERE is the story of the
famous Buckshee Laama of Duagh. The Buckshee Laama is as mysterious an entity
as the Loch Ness Monster. Those who have seen the Buckshee Laama in the wooded
depths between Duagh and the Knight of Kerry’s Castle at Woodford insist that
it is the ugliest creature in creation.

It is of giant proportions,
with the body of a shark or blue whale only more leathery and an unprepossessing
off-white in colour. It has a head like a horse. Personally speaking, I have
never seen it but Joe Quaid maintains that the creature still lurks in the
middle of the Feale.

Could it be that the
Buckshee Laama is a relation to that other mythical fish of grand proportions:
“The One That Got Away?”

If Joe Quaid fails to find a
publisher it will be Ireland’s loss not Joe’s because this is a book about the
real people of Ireland from the War of Independence to the present time.

Here is all the poverty and
frustration of the starving ‘thirties, the tension of the fighting ‘forties and
so on ‘till we come to the long hair of today’s young man.

About long hair Joe has this
to say: “Give me anything bar black nails and snotty noses.”

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Kerry pilgrims, Listowel Town Park and phone boxes

Autumnal Morning in Ballybunion 2014

Photo: Ballybunion Angling and Coastal Views.    

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+

+      R.I.P. Sr. Nuala O’Leary     +




Sr. Nuala O’Leary, former principal of Presentation Secondary School, Listowel passed away on October 31st. 2014. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam.

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Kerry pilgrims at The Yeats County Hotel



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Abbeydorney Ploughing 2014



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OiO5Znqx1kM&feature=em-upload_owner

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Entrance to the Town Park

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Does anyone use these any more?




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A shot across the bows


Our young sniper squirts her water pistol over the boundary wall.

Ned Kelly, Fr. Scanlon and the demise of phone boxes

Ta Dah! This is it…the winning design at Showcase Ireland 2013. It has everything, classic style, simplicity and wearability. It appeals to both men and women, young and all. 

And it has a great back story, symbolizing love, loyalty and generosity.

Here it is in the winners enclosure in the RDS.

AND

Here she is, Eileen Moylan, the winner, the Listowel born designer and maker, receiving her award from the minister.

Read the story in her own words here

http://www.claddaghdesign.com/blog/our-news/claddagh-design-wins-best-product-award-at-showcase-2013/

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Ned Kelly;  the Kerry connection

The notorious Australian/ Irish criminal, Ned Kelly was in the news recently as his remains were finally interred in his family grave.

Jer looked up and found a contemporary newspaper account of this highway man’s antics.

“NED Kelly and his gang killed Constable Michael Kennedy and Constable Michael Scanlon in October 1878

Newspaper reports,

Writing about the police.

The breeches of some of them were so much injured with wet and wear that they tore into rags as they were pulled off. It is to be hoped that the Government will deal somewhat liberally with the police employed in searching for the Kellys, and not cut them down to the new regulation allowance of 1s. 6d. a day. Should a constable be out for more than eight hours during the day he is allowed, as above, 1s. 6d.―the price of three-quarters of one meal; and if out for a night also, he is allowed 3s. 6d. more, of which 2s. go to pay for a bed, and 1s. 6d. for tea or breakfast. This is very chilling encouragement for the police under ordinary circumstances; on special occasions, doubtless, some special provision will be made. The allowance granted to an officer is 7s. a day―a sum which compels him to exercise the strictest economy on the roadside, and carefully abstain from extra refreshments. Small as his allowance is―a commercial traveller would raise his eyebrows at the amount―yet it would nearly cover the authorised expenses of five constables.

No details have yet reached Benalla to enable us to determine whether the Kellys are still near the Murray, or have turned back to Greta. The ranges haunted by the Kellys are prolonged beyond the North-Eastern line. One obstacle they would meet with if they turned back immediately is the flooded state of the Ovens, which they would hardly be able to cross on horseback with safety between Bright and Wangaratta, or even lower down.

On Sunday Father Scanlan, at the Roman Catholic Church, called upon all right-minded people to help the police and maintain the authority of the law. He said that numerous friends had condoled with him on account of the death of Constable Scanlan, whom they had heard was his cousin. There was no relationship between them, but the manner in which the deceased trooper had conducted himself in the district would have made him (Father Scanlan) proud to call him a kinsman. The reverend gentleman is bestirring himself about the erection of a monument in the Mansfield Cemetery.

FR SCANLON

Born, John L Scanlon at Ballylongford, Lisselton in Jan. 1847, Ordained at All Hallows  1871, died 8th January 1880


Until 1874 the entire colony of Victoria was under the care of the arch diocese of Melbourne.   The suffragen Dioceses of Ballarat and Sandhurst came into being. Sandhurst was then served by seven priests and the four parishes forming the new diocese were Bendigo, Echuca, Wangaratta and Beechworth. In 1876, two years later, the parishes of Chiltern, Benalla and Nagambie were established.

1855 – From Beechworth, a potential Federal Capital, Fr Patrick Smyth came to Benalla to build its first Church/School in 1855. The 1st mass offered in Benalla was on the site of what was later to become the “Liverpool Arms” hotel

1858 – St Joseph’s School established.

1866 – First St Joseph’s church built.

1876 – Benalla remained under the guidance of Wangaratta until 1876 when Fr John Scanlon, the assistant priest of Beechworth, became the 1st pastor with headquarters in Benalla. His health deteriorated and at an early age of 33, he died in January 1880. Our Lady’s altar in St Joseph’s was erected in his memory.”

Scanlon is a name we often meet in North Kerry.  Maybe Fr. Scanlon still has relatives living here.

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Both of these photos were taken in the same location, Limerick Railway Station. It looks very much the same today, except of course for the soldiers and horse drawn carriages.

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Bye, Bye Now

This is one of the loveliest (and saddest) films I have seen in a long time.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=agRwRf6JoyE

This is a little gem of a  film about the demise of the public phone box, with poignant footage of some older people talking about the role of the phone box in their lives.

The film prompted me to go out and photograph what was left in the way of public phone booths in Listowel. I’d welcome anyone’s reminiscences of using public phones in these parts. I know some people have interesting stories to  tell.

2 phone booth in The Square

William St.
vandalised

There used to be one in O’Connell’s Ave., in Ballygologue Park, in Main Street and one inside and one outside the post office. All of these are gone now.

Do you know that the minimum charge for a call from a public phone box is now €2. It increased 100% this month. The rate per minute has also doubled so a five minute chat on a public phone in Ireland will cost you €5.

Since Ireland has one of the highest instances of mobile phone ownership, this new price hike ensures that public phones will be used even less than at present.

“But the 1,051,947 calls made in 2012 is small compared to 5,929,791 calls in 2007. There were 2,287 pay phones at the end of 2012 compared to 5,523 payphones six years ago.”




These are Eircom figures. I think there might be a few phone boxes from other providers in large areas of population.






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