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: Tarbert Page 3 of 5

Listowel Children in the 1960s, A Holy Well and Armistice Day Centenary Commemorations in Listowel






The River Feale behind the Listowel Arms; Photo: Charlie Nolan

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Old Pals

“Fond memory brings the light of other days around me.”

Bernard O’Connell who lived in Upper William Street Listowel and now lives in Canada posted to Facebook this picture of his childhood friends.

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A Holy Well



From the schools folklore collection at Dúchas


Tarbert School collection. Nora Scanlon, Dooncaha.

Our Holy Wells

There is a well in Tarmons known as St. Senan’s. It is in the corner of Buckley’s field in Ballintubber.

This well is not deep and a stream flows out of it. Always in the month of May people pay rounds at this well on every Saturday of the month.

This is how people pay rounds. People pick up seven pebbles out of the stream and then kneel down at the well and start reciting the Rosary. Then they start at the right hand side of the well and walk slowly all round reciting a decade of the Rosary while going round. At the end of each decade they throw one pebble away. Then when the seventh round is paid they kneel down and finish the Rosary. Then they take three drinks out of the well and wash their faces at the stream. Then they usually tie a piece of cloth on an overhanging bush. It is said that according as the cloth wears away the disease wears off the patient.

It is called St. Senan’s well because it was St. Senan who blessed its waters. From the well you can see the ruins of seven churches and round tower in Scattery built by St. Senan.

There are no fish in the well and the water is not used for household purposes. Once a woman went to fill her kettle at the well. She forgot to bring a vessel with which to fill her kettle. She left her kettle at the well and went back for a saucepan. When she returned the well had disappeared and the bush with it. It went from the top of the hill to the side where it is now.

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A Thought


As Asphalt and concrete

 Replace bushes and trees,

As highways and buildings 

Replace marshes and woods

What will replace the song of the birds?

Tony Chen

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Only in Ireland


Photo; Random Cork Stuff

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People at the Armistice Day Centenary Commemoration in Listowel




On a cold showery Sunday a good crowd turned up to commemorate the men who endured appalling hardship in the most awful of wars. Cold and rain were nothing compared to weeks spent in wet trenches with rats for company.

Carmel Gornall was there with her brother and two sisters in law.

Carmel’s sisters in law had grandfathers who served in The Great war.

Great to see Jim Halpin brave the cold to be part of it. Jim has done more than most in North Kerry to make sure that the names of the brave men who fought will be remembered.




Local history lovers and retired military men turned out in numbers to remember.

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One to Watch

 Bánú nó Slánú:  Thursday TG4  9.30p.m.

This documentary looks at the small town way of life that is dying a death in Ireland, as illustrated by a visit to once thriving towns in Kerry and Leitrim. Ballylongford in north Kerry has seen its mill, creamery and many businesses close over the last 30 years. In 2017, no new children started in the national school for the first time in living memory and its post office is now under threat.  One of the last small farmers in the village, Donal O’Connor, who’s in his 70s, sums things up: “I’m the last of the family. There are no small farmers anymore.”  Kiltyclogher in north Leitrim made the headlines when it launched a media campaign to attract people to move to the village. Six  families made the move, helping to save the local school  – but one year on, how does the future look? Did the newcomers stay? And have they done enough?

(Photo and text from Irish Times TV Guide)

Feale, Childhood Friends, Rose of Tralee 2019, a holy well and Armistice Day Ceremony in Listowel

River Feale, November 3 2018

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Childhood Friends on Facebook


Bernard O’Connell of Listowel and Canada posted this great old picture on Facebook.

far left Mary Brosnan, Katrina Lyons, Myself, Noreen Holyoake, Mary Lyons, Mary Carmody, Maura Moriarity

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Big Year next year for the Rose Festival



(Photo and text from Traleetoday.ie)



NEXT year is a very special one for the Rose of Tralee International Festival as it celebrates its 60th anniversary.

It’s already been announced that there will be no regional finals and centres will put forward a Rose every two years (apart from Kerry, Cork and Dublin) resulting in just 32 Roses coming to Tralee next year for the festival.

Now, in another change, it’s been decided that the Festival will move back a few days. It will start on Friday, August 23 and the  2019 Rose of Tralee will be announced on Tuesday, August 27.

For the past number of years the Festival has started slightly later than mid-August (this year it began on August 17), but next year will bring it closer to what it used to be years ago, with the winner announced closer to the end of the month.

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Holy Well in Tarbert



from the Dúchas folklore collection

There was a blessed well in Jim Woulfe’s field and one day they washed clothes in it and that night the well changed out to Tom O’Connor field which was two fields away. People used go there on Sundays and especially Sundays of May. Some people used go there to get cured from some disease they had and they would leave a piece of cloth of the bushes round the well. There used also around the well three times to every rosary they would say. It is called Sundays Well. If you were to be cured at some wells you would see a fish.
Eileen Shine
Address
Gortdromasillahy, Co. Kerry

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Armistice Day Centenary in Listowel



On Sunday Nov. 11 2018 the Listowel History Society organised a moving commemorative ceremony to honour all the North Kerry men who served in WW1. In the church, after an evocative memorial mass, local school children read out the names of men from their area who had died in the Great War.

I dont know if other people saw something very poignant in the sight of this drummer boy. 

Drummer boys were part of armies as far back as history goes. They were originally tasked with ensuring soldiers marched in time. By the time of WW1 these young boys (they were not actually soldiers as they were usually under 18) were more like regimental mascots. But young and all as they were, they went into battle alongside their regiment and many of them died.

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Wreath laying Ceremony at the war memorial stone.



Sunday November 11 2018

Wreaths were laid.

The tricolour was lowered and then raised again.

The bugler played the last post.  We stood for two minutes silence and we played the National Anthem.

And we remembered.

John Stack shared with us this photo of those who were part of the Armistice Day Ceremony in Listowel on Sunday, November 11 2018

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The Ball Alley Today




A blank canvas

Tarbert children 1809, De Valera and Fleadh Cheoil 1981




Signs of Spring…tulips in bloom in Market Street in April 2018

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Tarbert pupils in 1809



Somebody doing a bit of ancestor research found these names on this website

Ancestor Network

A list of 39 schoolchildren in Tarbert, Co. Kerry in 1809 from NLI Ms 17,935 (5). if you make a connection, we would love to hear about it to jim.ryan@Flyleaf.ie 

‘A list of the Scholars educating (sic) at the english school founded at Tarbert by the Governors of Erasmus Smith’s Schools. May 1809. 

Mary Kelly

Sarah Fowler (?)

James Fowler (?)

Michael Finucane

Ann Finucane

Catherine Finucane

Elizabeth McCormick

Catherine Ware

Mary Ware

James Supple

John Eggleston

Hannah Nott

Charles Conner

Mary Conner

George Ware

William Dillane

Margaret Dillane

Michl. Dillane

John Dillane

William Murray

John Enright

Edmond Fowlove (?)

John Finucane

Michael Finucane

William Cummins

Pat Cummins

Margaret Cummins

Abigail Murray

A list of Free Boys

Francis Kelly

Thos. Kelly

Willm. King

David Ferguson

Henry McCormick

John Nott

Thos. Nott

Thos. Murray

Charles Murray

Thos. Ware

George Farrel ‘







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Dev’s love of Turf


This story and picture are from Bord na Móna Living History blog





When Todd Andrews took charge of the Turf Development Board in 1934, Eamon de Valera made sure to inform Andrews of the importance which he personally attached to the development of the bogs. He also assured Andrews that he would always be available to help with any problems he encountered.

Dev was deeply interested in the progress of bog development and took pains to make his support known in public. Year after year from the beginning of the scheme he visited the bogs every Good Friday. Frank Aiken usually tagged along as he was even more interested in the success of the scheme. There was a picnic lunch on those occasions and Andrews and the other Board members tried to get Dev to drink a bottle of beer as proof of his assertion that he was not a teetotaller. On the bog visits Dev made a point of greeting the staff at all levels and discussed issues with them.

During the war Dev toured the bog areas of the west in support of the Emergency turf campaign.

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Fleadh Cheoil na hEireann  in Listowel



Johnny Hannon took this photo during Fleadh Cheoil na hEireann 1981. The hunger strikes in Long Kesh were on at the time and you can see posters of the hunger strikers on a caravan in the background. During the fleadh, sympathisers with the cause of the hunger strikers held a mock funeral  and some people hung black flags from their windows.

Little Lilac Studio, The Lartigue, Tarbert,Beale long ago

Darkness falls over Ballybunion playground in July 2017

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Being a Tourist


When you live in Kerry people like to visit you in summer. I find it frees me up to be a tourist. I drop everything and take to the tourist trail; with my guests. Regular readers will be familiar with the places I love. One of these is Listowel’s Lilac Studio.

My little ones love to indulge their creative impulses. They have many useful and decorative creations at home, souvenirs of happy days in this lovely little studio.

On this visit we ran into some really artistic little girls who were making memories with their very artistic granddad.

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We’re on the Train


Another favourite spot to take my visitors is the Lartigue.

All aboard! Tony Behan was the volunteer guard on the afternoon of our visit.

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Tarbert Bridewell





The girls struck the same pose as the prisoner in the yard.

They briefly shared a cell with Mary McCarthy and they felt her pain as she and her infant were condemned to deportation for the crime of stealing cabbage to feed her starving children.

The children were horrified by the punishments doled out in the bridewell in years gone by.


These are my three little visitors as we set out down the ferry road in a mission to visit of fairies.

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Blessing of the Boats in Beale


Once upon a time the blessing of the boats in Beale was an important ceremony in the lives of the boatmen. Liam O’Hainnín and his family photographed this blessing and he shared these photos recently on Facebook

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A Change at Jerome Murphy’s Corner

Regions I.T. and computer shop has relocated here from Church Street.



The Lartigue, Listowel news in 1966 and Tarbert church

Ballybunion from the air


Ian Flavin posted this lovely picture on This is Kerry

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The Lartigue Listowel Visitor Attraction


When I visited the Lartigue with my two visitors, we had a great time.

Junior Griffin was the guardsman.

The tickets have the look and feel of the original ones.

At the desk on the day we visited were Valerie and Helen. Valerie has recently got engaged.

Micheál Kelliher was also bringing  a visitor to experience one of the best visitor experiences in town.

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Time is Cruel

I was doing a bit of a clearcut of my inbox, when I came across this photo that Vincent Carmody sent me some time ago. It features four old friends on the Lartigue.

Vincent, Liam, Mike (now sadly deceased)

and Paddy were classmates.

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Listowel News from the Sixties


 The Kerryman Sept. 24 1966

Listowel

WHETHER it was due to the recent protest made by the Listowel Urban District Council or otherwise T.V. reception in Listowel was slightly improved during the past week. Let us hope the improvement will continue.

CARNIVAL APPROACHES; Listowel it already en fete for the Carnival and Race week which opens on Sunday next. All the week, the U.D.C. workmen were engaged in making sockets in the streets for the erection of the branch lights which Tralee has lent to the Decorations Committee, so that, bright as Listowel always has been during its festive week, it promises this year to outshine itself.

LINK WITH THE PAST

John Nolan, whose death occurred recently at his home in Killarney at an advanced age was a member of one of Listowel oldest and most respected families, all of whom came from Cleveragh.

His death had more than ordinary significance for the ‘oldsters” as it has removed one of the few remaining links with the old “Gym”. Long before the frantic high-pressure sounds of pop music were heard Johnny and his accordion, or as he used to call it, “the gadget,” reigned supreme as the one man band for all functions which were held there, a position which he held unchallenged until it was burned down.

He is survived by his wife, his sons, one of whom is Jeremiah Nolan, who is engaged with Mr. Thos, Murphy. Victualler. Listowel, and other sons and daughters; Mrs. Aggie Walshe, Listowel and Mrs. Skidmore, London (sisters).

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Tarbert Church

Tarbert like so many parishes nowadays has no resident priest. The church is beautifully kept by the parishioners.

The windows in Tarbert church are simple. I could see no example of the elaborate stained glass which is a feature of so many places of worship.

One of them was donated by Brendan Kennelly’s old teacher. Brendan often mentions in interviews that he attributes his early love of English literature to her influence.


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The Sydney Rose



These are just some of the many supporters of the Sydney Rose. This lovely girl, Aisling Walshe seems to tick all the boxes but then so do so many of the other Roses. Fingers crossed.

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Meanwhile in Tralee…




Photo; Traleetoday.ie

A new mural is being painted in Abbey Street. It will tell the story of the first Rose, Mary O’Connor and her fiancé, William Pembroke Mulchinock.


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