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: The Seanchaí

Windows, Yeats and Santa and Mrs. Claus in The Seanchaí

The Sacred and the Secular on The New Kingdom Windows 2014

My nomination for best Listowel Christmas window goes to The New Kingdom in Church St.

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A Reader spotted outside Woulfe’s Bookshop

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Rare photo of W.B. Yeats and his wife Georgia


(photo; The Wild Geese on Twitter)



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Photo; Irish Historical Pictures

A very old photo of St. Michael’s College, Listowel

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Those were the Days!




These lovely children are now all grown up and will kill me for posting this. Let’s just say they are, David, Talon, Evonne, Shane and Darren and it’s 2004.

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Meanwhile in Killarney….


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Santa in the Seanchaí Sunday Dec 14 2014


I met Santa in The Seanchaí



The Brosnan family had been very good all year too.

The Seanchaí, Weather, Listowel Courthouse and a U.S Tarbert connection


Staff at The Seanchaí, Listowel get ready for Christmas



November 2014

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Sam in Duagh



Duagh people are justifiably proud of their local football star, Anthony Maher, and they turned out in force in their new Sports Comples to see him bring the Sam Maguire trophy to The Mall.


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Sad to hear of Carrauntoohil’s Cross vandalized


( Photo Breaking News )

Piaras Kelly of KerryClimbing.ie said: “No matter what anyone’s personal views on having crosses on peaks are, this goes beyond that. It’s an iconic cross on an iconic peak.”

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The Weather


(photo: Irish Times)

A horrendous amount of rain has fallen lately. This photograph from the Irish Times shows horses being herded to safety from submerged fields in Eniscorthy two weeks ago. Thankfully, we are currently enjoying a dry spell.

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Eccentric obituary from the Times of London ….no Listowel connection




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Listowel Courthouse

This very old image of Listowel courthouse is on a postcard which Jimmy Moloney unearthed in his attic.

This is a later picture of the courthouse from the 1950s. The road is improved and building has been erected to the right of the courthouse.

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An old homestead

This house is situated outside Tarbert beside the old Kirby’s Lanterns


It is the ancestral home of one Brian C. Smith who is Mayor of the Village of Irvington and Head Trader at Blue Ridge Capital LLC. Didn’t he do well?


This is what he posted on his Facebook page after his Irish visit when he showed his children their great grandmother’s home in Ireland.

“What a great day in Ireland! Stopped by my great-grandmother’s house in Limerick (right on the Kerry border). It is still there but not in the best shape. Was great to be able to show it to my children – gotta remember your roots! The best part was my tour guide, Philip Kiely, my cousin in Ireland. Loads of laughs and lots of fun.”


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Greyhound Racing, A poem by Jet Stack and more


Gone to the Dogs


We had a great night at The Kingdom Greyhound Stadium on Friday May 2 2014 at the fundraising night for Pres. Secondary School, Listowel. I managed to make a few bob despite my lack of greyhound knowledge (or maybe because of it!)

Organisers, Eileen Keane and Lisa Whelan


The scene on the second floor. The real doggy people were downstairs and the VIPs upstairs.


Some of the greyhounds getting ready to enter the track for their race.


Fivestar Fantasy, winner of the ‘Presentation Listowel Tech. Graph & Arts Dept 525’, pictured with winning connections along with Brian Coffey (2nd from left) and Eileen Keane (4th from left) of Presentation Secondary Listowel. 


Bridget O’Connor, Breda Ferris and Theresa Deenihan

( All photos: Pádraig O’Connor)

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What a shame!

The garden at the old Kennedy Nursing Home is going to wrack and ruin. Pity!

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By way of contrast….



The well maintained old rectory

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New shop in Market Street


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Progress

Duagh Sports Complex is nearing the finish line.

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Another poem by Jet Stack, this one in praise of a local stream


That
Little Curragh Stream

There’s
a soft and purple water

Flowing
in that winding stream.

Flowing
there through Time and ages.

Scarcely
mentioned and unseen.

Through
the bog and by the meadow

Through
the sally’s sunlight beam

Flow
the soft and purple waters

Of
that little Curragh Stream.

Whence
its source in famed Clounmacon

Ripples
helpless towards the sea

Winding
‘round each hill of challenge

Flowing
gently through the lee.

Through
the rush and through the fern.

Where
it stops, as sometimes seem

Flow
the soft and purple waters.

Of
that little Curragh Stream.

Flowing
through Bedford’s glens and valleys

Down
th hillside gather speed

By
that old and silent graveyard.

Through
the gillcock stately reed.

Flowing
through Curraghatoosane and Curragh.

Through
the watercress so green.

By
the Cordal, through West Dirrha

Winding
softly ‘round Gurtcreen.

By
the road, beneath the mountain.

By
Saint Crossan’s blessed well.

Wide
and rapid through the toilery

Thus
the river Galey swell.

When
we are gone as those before us

To
that land beyond supreme

Still
will flow the purple waters

Of
that little Curragh Stream.

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Preparing for the Military Tattoo




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Ballybunion’s Happy



Warning: This catchy tune will be in your head all day. It’s a great video and a great promotion. Have fun spotting well known Ballybunion people in this great clip;

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFcONb8LDGI&app=desktop

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Kerry Crusaders ready to undertake The Limerick Run     (photo: Mary Toomey Roche)

Listowel Drama Group and a poem about football



Listowel Drama Group




I went to St. John’s on Friday night last. Arsenic and Old Lace was a triumph on so many fronts. I cannot single out any one performance because they were all excellent. The set is the talk of the town and all the productions values were so high that it will be a hard act to follow. Well done everyone and a huge congratulations to Imelda Dowling Garvey who directed it all like a professional.

This is an old photo from Vincent Carmody’s North Kerry Camera of the Drama Group’s cast of The Playboy of the Western World in 1950.

The following is a potted history of the group from the latest programme notes.

On the 12th January 1944 the group presented its first full length play in The Plaza, The Troubled Bachelors by A.J. Stanley. The play was produced by Bryan MacMahon, one of the founders of the group. Niall Stack is the sole surviving member of that  cast.

Eamon “The Seanchaí’ Kelly joined the group in 1945. He produced Bryan MacMahon’s The Bugle in the Blood which went on to The Abbey in 1949. Eamon met his wife, Maura O’Sullivan when they were both members of Listowel Drama Group.

In 1954 the group won The All Ireland One Act Drama Festival with George Fitzmaurice’s The Magic Glasses. Among the cast was Michael O’Connor, father of our present Canon Declan O’Connor.

In 1959 Brendan Carroll produced John B. Keane’s Sive. Listowel Drama Group’s finest hour had come. They won the All Ireland Drama festival’s top prize in Athlone and Listowel Drama Group achieved the status of legend locally and nationally.

In 1993 The Master performed to packed houses for sixteen nights.

The group has certainly lived up to its motto;

“The Stage shall never Die”.

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Jimmy Moloney, Senior, whose family have very close connections with The Listowel Drama Group has given me two photos to share with you.

Back Row: Bill Kearney,    Andy O’Mahoney?   , John Kirby, Brendan Carroll, Thomas O’Connor, Arthur Paige and Hilary Nielson

Front: Joan Paige?, Michael O’Connor, Margaret Moloney, John O’Flaherty and Nora Relihan

(I’ll post the other photo tomorrow)

Andy O’Mahony who went on to fame as a newsreader and broadcaster on RTE radio and television worked in one of the Listowel banks. While in town, he lodged with the Ashe family  of Lawlors Cake shop and subsequently with Máirín MacMahon, sister of the playwright, Bryan MacMahon.

Owen MacMahon is compiling an archive of old programmes and memorabilia relating to Listowel Drama Group. If you have any of this stuff in your attic, Own would love to see it. If you don’t want to part with it , he would be happy just to photocopy it.

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A poem for the year that’s in it;  World Cup Year

 (just to put things in perspective)


The Man who invented
football 

by Kit Wright

The man who invented football

He must have been dead
clever,

He hadn’t even a football
shirt

Or any clothes whatever.

The man who invented soccer,

He hadn’t even a ball

Or boots, but only his horny
feet,

And a bison’s skull, that’s
all.

The man who invented
football,

To whom our hats we doff,

Had only the sun for a yellow
card

And death to send him off.

The cave-mouth was the
goal-mouth,

The wind was the referee,

When the man who did it did
it

In 30,000 B.C.!

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Sew ‘n’ Pressed have moved shop.


This is where it is now, next to Paddypower in William St. If you lose your shirt, you will not have far to go for a new one.

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The shop which was trading in Moriarty’s is moving here, next to Woulfe’s Bookshop, I’m told.

Gleasure descendants and Dr. Michael O’Connor of 24 The Square

Listowel had some welcome visitors during the past week. Ben and Kathleen Naylor were on a trip to North Kerry to visit locations associated with Ben’s Gleasure ancestors. If you have forgotten about The Gleasure letters, here is the link.

http://gleasureharberletters.blogspot.ie

Ben’s ancestor is Frank to whom all the letters were written. Unfortunately we have none of Frank’s replies but the one sided correspondence we do have is a wonderful first person account of one family’s life in Listowel in the first half of the 20th century.

Ben consults the letters to clarify a point
Vincent Carmody points out the Gleasure names to Ben and Kathleen.
Vincent took the couple on a tour of the town pointing out places of interest.
Ben and Kathleen pose at the door of the pub which once belonged to Ben’s great great grandfather
Jacinta, Susan and Tom Quilter pose with the Naylors outside their veterinary shop, a premises once owned by the Gleasure family.

Vincent explains why this corner of town was known locally as The Custom Gap.

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If you are following my tales of the Gleasure family and descendants, you will remember a reference in a previous post to one of May Gleasure’s letters in which she referred to her father’s illness and how his life was saved by the intervention of one Dr. Michael O’Connor. The good doctor was George Gleasure’s neighbour in The Square. He lived in the house now occupied by The Seanchaí.

Dr. Michael O’Connor R.I.P.

After I had posted this story I was contacted by  Geraldine O’Sullivan who is a granddaughter of Dr. O’Connor. She sent me his obituary from the Kerryman and the above photo. The newspaper cutting was very blurry so I contacted Michael Lynch the archivist in the County library and he sent me a slightly better scan but of the whole page of the newspaper from August 25 1951.

Then the story took another twist when Eitan Elazar, another grandchild of Dr. O’Connor sent me a typed up version of the obituary and a copy of the mortuary card.

There has
passed to his eternal reward one of North Kerry’s most gentle and unassuming
sons in the person of Dr. Michael O’Connor who was M.O.H. for Listowel and
district for the past thirty-five years. He was born at Derrindaffe, Duagh and
educated at St. Michael’s College Listowel, and at the National University,
Dublin, where he took his M.D. degree in 1906. It was in that year he started
his professional career in Listowel and from then on he had the interests of
that town very closely at heart. Right through his entire life he had the
greatest consideration for the poor and needy to whom he gave of his best
without thought of gratitude or money. Apart from his medical life, he took a
leading part in the affairs of the town and was foremost in anything that
furthered the interest of Listowel. In 1918, a special branch of the Town
Tenants’ League was formed to take over portion of Lord Listowel’s estate by
negotiation for the benefit of the landless poor of the town. These negotiations
failed and with the approval of town and country, the lands known as the Lawn
and the Major’s Field were forcibly entered and ploughed up. This action led to
the arrest of Dr. O’Connor  and the members of the special committee, who
were charged and sentenced to a term of imprisonment in Cork Co. Jail. Later,
Lord Listowel decided to give the land to the people and Dr. O’Connor and
another townsman were appointed trustees. Thus by his action, plots of land
were secured for cultivation by the people and particularly the poor. He was
founder member of Sinn Fein in North Kerry and devoted much of his professional
time organizing the I.R.A and there was not a town or village in North Kerry
but had its Sinn Fein Club, due to his untiring efforts and hard work. The
first Dáil Éireann Loan was organized by him in North Kerry. As a counterblast
to the Belfast Pogrom in 1920, he took a leading part in the Belfast Boycott
and had it so perfected that not a pennyworth of Belfast or English goods
entered Listowel. Naturally, all these incidents marked him as a man to reckon
with, so the British Government decided to make its move. On the Monday
following “Bloody Sunday” in Dublin the doctor and six of his
associates were arrested and taken to Listowel Jail, later being transferred to
Kilworth Camp, Cork Co. Jail and eventually Ballykinlar, Co. Down, where they
remained until the General Amnesty in December, 1921. During his internment
(which incidentally lasted thirteen months) his residence was taken over by the
British military and his wife and young family were forced to seek shelter
among friends. After the “split” he became pro-Treaty, but still his
sacrifices for the country were not over. Coming from Tralee one evening he was
forcibly removed from his car and compelled to walk across the mountains to
Castleisland spending one night in the open country , by the side of a fence,
and was later held prisoner for several days. In later years he took little
active part in politics. With his death the nation has lost a noble son and the
poor a kind friend. May the sod rest lightly on him who spent his life doing
good to others and may God, the giver of life, have mercy on his soul.

Eitan remembers visiting Listowel and staying at number 24

“Our memories of Listowel were from many holidays spent down at the house at 24 the Square.

Vivid memories were of the market days in the square waking up to the mooing of cows, the hee haws of donkeys and the bleating of sheep.

many many outings to Ballybunion during the summer. visits to Roberts the sweet shop at the corner of the Square 

and freshly baked apple tarts from Lynch’s bakery across the square and playing in the grounds of the Castle.

Michael O’Connor jr was a very good artist who was particularly interested in Celtic manuscripts. I include one of his works, 

the breast plate of St Patrick. “

Isn’t that magnificent?

Eitan sent me some more family photographs which I will post tomorrow.

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