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 4 of 5

Tarbert, Listowel and Kilguilkey

Flowery Market Street, Listowel in Summer 2017



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Kilguilkey Internation Horse Trials


Maybe you’ve heard of Badminton Horse Trials. I bet you didn’t know that down the road from us in a beautiful setting between Mallow and Buttevant is an equestrian centre to rival Badminton. It’s called Kilguilkey(the g is silent) House and recently it hosted a huge international Horse Trials event.

The flags of the nations taking part flew over the stands.

The green canvas is covering some of the temporary stables erected around the periphery.

I was visiting home on the weekend of the Trials and I was only delighted to spend some time here with my horse loving family on a sunny Sunday afternoon in June 2017.

I stood by the water hazard since this spot often sees a bit of excitement. This water feature was surrounded by gigantic carved water creatures, crocodiles and fish etc. All the jumps in the arena were interestingly carved.

There’s my gang enjoying the spectacle.



Its a bit of a minority sport. But if you enjoy watching showjumping on the telly here is a chance to see it live in a beautiful part of the country.

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A Few More Pictures of Tarbert


Tarbert is a hub. It is sited at a junction and there are signs all around sending you off in other directions. Tarbert is well worth lingering a while in. I saw a few nice looking restaurants on my visit so maybe next time you will make it your stop off on the way to or from Limerick.



The Marian grotto is centrally located on the main street.

I don’t know about the silver paint. They were never silver in my day but to a thirsty scholar on the way home from school they were priceless. I’m delighted to see it preserved.


Local people are running a campaign to prevent any further erosion of commerce in their lovely little town. Signs encouraging people to support their local economy were displayed in most shops. The town was neat, tidy and interesting. I was well impressed.

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Passing of One of Listowel’s Old Stock




I took this photograph in St. John’s a few years ago when Sue and Jack McKenna were in the audience for a showing of old film footage of Listowel, a town to which they both contributed so much.

I was saddened then to read on R.I.P. ie that Mrs. McKenna passed away on Monday July 17 2017

Susan McKenna nee Kelliher, Greenville, Listowel and formerly of Tralee, Co. Kerry. Beloved wife of Jack McKenna and dearly loved Mum of Louise, Grace, SuEllen, John, Linda and Simon. Grandmother of Lisa, Amy, Mark, Jack, Sinead, Shay and Eve and great grandmother of Ellie, Brendan and Mícheál.

May She Rest In Peace


Reposing at O’Carroll’s Funeral Home, Listowel, Wednesday from 5pm to 7pm followed by removal to St. Mary’s Church, Listowel. Requiem Mass will take place on Thursday at 11.30am. Burial afterwards in St. Michael’s Cemetery, Listowel. Donations in lieu of flowers to Aras Mhuire Nursing Home, Listowel.

Tarbert, O’Connell’s Avenue and Sewing Needles

Tarbert’s Swanky Bar

I looked up the adjective swanky in the online dictionary. It said it meant stylishly luxurious and expensive. US.  also swank very expensive and fashionable, in a way that is intended to attract people’s attention and admiration: We stayed in a swanky hotel.

I’ll have to leave it to its patrons to decide if Tarbert’s hostelry fits the bill. It was closed the day I visited.

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Beautiful Historic Tarbert


Tarbert is located a mere hop, skip and jump from Listowel but it is a town I only always seem to see in passing. I corrected that error recently and I visited on a Sunday morning. I discovered that Tarbert is lovely.

I parked by the bridewell which was, on this Sunday, hosting an indoor car boot sale. I don’t know why it was called a car boot sale as no  one I saw was selling from a car boot.

The bridewell is not the only old building which Tarbert has preserved.

I was struck by Tarbert’s awareness of its rich history and I saw the work of the local historical society everywhere I turned.

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Commemorating a Painful Past

This colourful corner is dedicated to the memories of men who died for an ideal and for the young victims of a local tragedy in 1893. Here too is a seat dedicated to a local man who was obviously well loved.

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Forge Park




Across the road from the flagstaff and memorials is Forge Park. I’m presuming it got its name from the place it is located; probably the site of an old forge.

Among the daisies and clovers in a wild meadow setting are these carved trees….intriguing.

This little bridge leads to a short riverside walk that brings you back to the Bridewell.

Looking the other way along the well kept path you can see the national flag and the 1916 memorial.

 The seating in the little park is semicircular and sheltered. I sat for a minute to enjoy the birdsong and the peace in this little oasis of calm.

On this seat too another of Tarbert’s citizens is honoured.

The wooden cart wheel with its steel bands a reminder of the work that went on here long ago.

This weekend is the perfect time to visit Tarbert. The annual summer festival starts tomorrow Friday July 21 2017. Find out what’s on HERE

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O’Connell’s Avenue, Listowel



This old telephone exchange building is an ugly mass at the end of this picture perfect street.

Feale Drive from O’Connell’s Avenue

O’Connell’s Avenue

The Marian Grotto always looks beautiful. It is a credit to the local residents who look after it.

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Easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter Heaven



I think this packet of sewing needles is in my possession for over 50 years. It certainly belongs to the days when my eyesight was better and my hand steadier. The eyes on these little blighters are tiny. And what on earth has Flora MacDonald to do with them?

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Game of Thrones….the Listowel Connection




 Everyone is talking about Ed. Sheeran’s part in Game of Thrones. But did you know that Seán McGillicuddy had a cameo role in the same episode. Here he is on the the left of the three on the right of Ed. Thank you Gerard Mulvihill for the heads up.

O’Connell’s Ave. Neighbours revisited and a raffle in 1929

Kanturk’s T.J. MacSweeney is out early in 2016 continuing  taking his great wildlife photos. Here he is up close and personal with a rabbit.

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O’Connell’s Ave Neighbours Remembered



Maria Sham has been having a think since she sent this photo and here are her memories of some of these lovely people and where they went after this photo was taken.

“A little added history to the O’Connell’s Ave photos. 

Tadhg and Mary Murphy came from Brosna. They lived in the house next door to my home in Clieveragh when I was a teenager.(where the Grimes family lived after that). They had four girls: Bridie, Kitty, Mary (known as Babe) and Eileen. They moved to O’Connell’s Ave in the late 50″s. Somewhere in the sixties, they moved to England. Mary spent some time in Alberta, Canada but I believe moved back to England. Bridie married a Mulvihill man from Tarbert and passed away a few years ago. Don’t have an update on the others.

Molly Coppinger was married and living in England. After her husband died she moved to NY and was a housekeeper for a very prominent English movie producer/director called John Hayman (not sure of the spelling) for many years. I remember visiting there for dinner on 5th Ave in that luxurious apartment. She met all of Hollywood in that capacity. Elizabeth Taylor, Ingrid Bergman,
Richard Harris etc.


Jackie Hurley was in some way related to my father. I believe it was through the Reidy family since my grandmother was a Mary Reidy.
Just a little additional background on those whom I remember.”

Thank you Maria. Your old photos have brought back happy memories to so many people. 

Again can I make my appeal. If  anyone else has old photos or stories, will you please share them. They mean very much to a very scattered Listowel diaspora.






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And now for something completely different





These “penguins’ are, in fact, hot air balloons based in Trim. Co. Meath. You can read about their amorous flying adventures Here

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Another Prize Wireless




Liam OHainnín’s story of the radio his father won in a fundraising raffle reminded Vincent Carmody that he had this old raffle ticket.

The raffle in question was held as part of the annual garden fete that used to be held in the grounds of Gurtenard House. Canon Adderley would have been the vicar in 1929 and the fete was held in the garden of his residence.

First prize was a radio. These would have been common in well off houses at the time. 

The second prize is most intriguing. I was reminded of the people we often encounter at The Races raffling a goat or a calf for some cause. You’d be afraid to buy a ticket in case you won. Vincent assures me that lots of people had poultry in their backyards in those days and would have been delighted with a hen and chickens.

I suppose the box of chocolates were “handsome” in so far as they had a nice picture on the top. At home we often kept chocolate boxes for years. They were sturdy and pretty and were used for sewing notions etc.

“Winners will be notified by letter” Evidence of a much slower age.

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Calling Tarbert People


A very exciting an important job is being undertaken by Tarbert Development association. They are compiling a cultural directory. Take a minute to read the following bulletin and  help if you can.

Tarbert Development Association would like to thank everyone who came to the public meeting about the Digital Marketing platform last Saturday evening and are pleased to announce that the initiative has taken great steps forward with the addition of volunteers in key areas of the project.

The project has many sections but the first to get underway is our local “Cultural Directory“. We are an area steeped in culture, with local families having over the years produced an abundance of performers and indeed champions in traditional and contemporary music, dance, song, poetry and storytelling. We would very much like to gather any recordings that exist of these performances into an online directory of our cultural history that allows us to preserve it for future generations.

Already in the last few days we have had audio and video recordings submitted from poets and traditional musicians and we would like to build on this collection greatly.

We are asking families in the area to submit any recordings they have (as either audio or video) to this project so we can preserve them in this collection. We can accept any cassette tapes, cd’s, Reel-to-reel tapes, VCR video tapes or dvd’s. (Indeed, if anybody is interested in making a recording – playing an instrument, singing or spoken word – we have the capability to do so also.) We know that tucked away in the drawers and presses, sheds and attics of the community there is a treasure trove of valuable recordings from days gone by.

All items will be signed in, bagged, converted into a useable format by our team, and signed back to you again when returning them. The items will not leave the community as all the conversion of the material into digital formats is being done by our local volunteers, and we will endeavour to return these materials to you in a timely manner once we receive and process them. We will also accept any collections of old photographs pertaining to past events in the area to be included in the historical galleries of our site.

If you know of anyone that might be interested in contributing and would likely not see this facebook post then please do tell them of what is happening and ask them to be involved.

There are four methods by which you can contribute materials.

  1. There is a meeting at 3pm (not 6pm as previously indicated) this Sunday 31st January in the Bridewell where we can accept materials or schedule a recording session for sometime in the next couple of weeks.
  2. If you can’t make it to the meeting then Michelle Woods has established a drop-off point for the collection and return of materials at Tarbert Post Office, where they will also be bagged and signed in.
  3.  If you are competent with computers and have files in a digital format we will send you a dropbox link to upload them to. Please email project@tarbert.ie for details.
  4.  Alternatively ring Niall Fitzgerald 087 7847181 and he will be glad to arrange a pickup of the materials or answer any questions as to the process.

This will end up being a significant resource for both ourselves and future generations of people in the area.
We would like to thank you for your help in advance.

Tarbert Development Association.


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Awesome talent



Kelly St. John has just finished her latest crochet project, a really amazing throw.

After she had sewn in all the ends, Kelly had lots of colorful little scraps of yarn left. She will put them outdoors in a container for the birds to pick up for their nests.

John B. Keane, Listowel Credit Union and Tarbert 1990

As we face into Autumn, here is  a lovely Ballybunion sunset to remember Summer 2015  (photo:Ballybunion Prints)

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Old Photos of John B. Keane


If you have never been in the Seanchaí Writers Museum, this photo will mean nothing to you. This is the shy singer and you’ll have to take the tour to get the full story. While I was in the John B. Keane room I took a photo of some of the photos under glass on the tables.

John B. Keane with Fr. Seamus Linnane.

Mary and John B’ Keane with their granddaughter, Anne.


Noelle Campbell Sharpe with John B.


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Listowel Credit Union Repainted

This is the old colour scheme

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Down Memory Lane with The Kerryman




How wrong can one be?  Dr. Diamuid OSuilleabháin got his predictions for future growth in Tarbert’s Catholic population fairly wrong in 1990.

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Dates for the Diary

Listowel Railway, Cork Summer Sing and Tarbert then and now

Tiger on the Beach?


(photo and tiger; Ballybunion Prints)

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Denis Carroll on Facebook

-Listowel Railway Station-

In 1865 the Limerick and Kerry Railway was proposed and in the late 1870’s the 43 mile line from Newcastle(West) to Tralee was built. It was opened on 20th December 1880 with intermediate stations at Barnagh, Devon Road, Abbeyfeale, Kilmorna, Listowel, Lixnaw, Abbeydorney and Ardfert.

The Lartigue (Listowel – Ballybunion Monorail) terminus was nearby to here too.

In 1963 the passenger service was withdrawn but despite this occasional passenger specials continued to use the line and then finally on the 10th of January 1977 the last goods train ran on the Listowel-Tralee section of the line. Track lifting began in January ’88 and despite concerted efforts to use the track bed as a walkway/trail this never came to pass. The original picture here was taken around 1988 before the track was lifted. The station house is now in private ownership and has been restored to a fine standard, also note that the platform is still there on both sides, just the track bed has been filled in and made into a roadway.
No credit info on the original picture although I suspect it may have been Michael Geurin.

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Summer Sing Cork 2015


This is me with David Brophy. Those of you who watched the TV series, High Hopes will recognize David as the conductor who recruited and trained a choir of homeless people and in the process turned their lives around. The project was so successful that they repeated it in Cork and Waterford. David was in Cork  to film the Cork choir in action. I met him in Cork City hall.

This is my little group of singers, 3 family, 2 friends and chauffeur (also family). They are not part of the High Hopes Choir. They are Summer Singers.

This is the scene in City Hall Cork when the High Hopes choir sang to an audience of Summer Singers.



Cork High Hopes Choir under their conductor, Sonja Keogh.


(These 3 photos are from the Summer Sing website)

Summer Sing is a summer camp with a difference. 370 Cork children learned a repertoire of songs and then went out on to the streets of Cork to sing. There were two base camps for the children, Cork City Hall and The Triskel Arts Centre. My Aisling and Róisín were in City Hall. They started out each day there but they got to sing in The Crawford art gallery, St. FinBarre’s Cathedral, The Freemasons Lodge and Bishop Lucey Park.

On the day I went to hear them, they had a special visiting conductor, David Brophy of High Hopes Choir fame. He conducted the children in their outdoor performance and then the children were treated to a concert by the Cork High Hopes Choir. This concert was being televised for the next series of High Hopes. Summer Sing is an absolutely brilliant initiative which should be held everywhere. It does take massive organizing and requires lots of volunteers.  Take a bow,  Music Generation Cork

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A Couple who made a big contribution

From an old Clounmacon magazine a lovely photo of Maureen and Michael Dowling R.I.P.

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Tarbert Now and Then




-Tarbert main St-
The name Tarbert is from the Irish ‘Tairbeart’ drawn from an Old Norse term meaning ‘draw-boat’.
This picture is taken on the Listowel road into the village at the end of the 19th century and again in June ’15. 
The thatched cottage on the left appears to still exist today albeit with a slate roof.



Photo and text from; Kerry Time Travel

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+  R.I.P. Sr. Nora Carmody  +


Sr. Nora Carmody, on left, with her sister, Maura on the occasion of Nora’s final profession.

Nora was born in Upper William Street on 20th March 1938, she was the fourth of five children born to John and Josie Carmody, the others being, John P., Maura, Maurice and Vincent. She went to both Presentation Convent Listowel, Primary and  Secondary schools. Having completed her Leaving Certificate, she went to study nursing at Dollis Hill Hospital in London. Having qualified, she applied and was accepted as a novice in the English Province of the Little Company of Mary ( affectionally called The Blue Nuns). Nora made her final profession in 1970. As both a nun and a theatre nurse she served in Dollis Hill, Harrow, Edinburgh, Nottingham, Liverpool, West-cliff On Sea and finally in Ealing.

Nora passed to eternal reward at St David’s Nursing Home, Ealing, on the 14th of July 2015. There was Requiem Mass for Nora at the nursing home oratory on Tuesday 21st, this was celebrated by Abbot Fr. Francis of Ealing Abbey, By strange coincidence, Fr. Francis also officiated at Nora’s final profession in 1970.

Nora’s body was brought back to Limerick on Thursday 23rd. There was visitation at Griffin’s funeral home. Her funeral mass took place on Friday 24th at Castletroy. Her burial was afterwards at Milford House Convent Cemetery.  May she rest in peace.

Our sympathies to her brother, Vincent and her sister, Sr. Maura.     

 

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