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: trees

Irish Coinage, Poor Relations, Trees and a VIP guest for Listowel Food Fair

Restaurants in Church Street, Listowel

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A quick History of Irish Coinage


In 1926 The Irish Free State set up a committee to design and plan a new Irish coinage. William Butler Yeats who combined a knowledge of poetry, art and Irish history was an inspired choice to chair this committee.

The design chosen to be used on all the coins was the Irish harp,. The Irish harp is a 16 string model. The best example is the Brian Boru harp in Trinity College, Dublin. The reverse of each coin depicted an animal.

On Feb 15 1971 decimal coinage was introduced to Ireland. The new coins were designed by Gabriel Hayes

In January 2002 the latest iteration of coinage happened with the change from the punt to the euro and then today’s coins were minted. The biggest innovation of this move was the replacement of some notes by €1 and €2 coins.

Half pennies have gone and pennies were to be phased out with the introduction of “rounding up” in 2015. This does not seen to have caught on and there are still quite a few lower denomination coins hanging about.

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Poor Relations by John B. Keane



Part 2

I was in the kitchen of a farmer’s house
one time when a poor relation called in search of a substantial sum of money.
He required it to pay a fine and compensation for an offence committed while
under the influence. If the money was not forthcoming it was certain that he would
wind up in jail, which meant in his view that not only himself but his
relations would be disgraced in the eyes of the countryside.

“My friend,” said the farmer,” if I had
money you would have no need to call because knowing your plight I would hand
it over without being asked. Would you believe,’ said the farmer, extracting a
large cigarette packet from his pocket, “that this is my last fag. God only
knows where the price of the next one is to come from.

So saying he threw the empty box on the
floor, placed the cigarette in his mouth, bent over the fire, lifted a coal,
blew on it and applied it to the cigarette and was soon puffing contentedly as
he calmly awaited the next cue of what to him was a comedy, but to his visitor
a tragedy.

“You could sell a cow,” said the poor
relation. “You wouldn’t miss one and I swear I’d pay you back before the end of
the year.”

“Of course, I could se;ll a cow,” said the
farmer,”and if you got into trouble again I could sell another one. Word would
spread and anytime a relation was in trouble I could sell a cow but what would
I do when the cows were all gone? People would ask me why did I sell all my
cows when I asked them for help.”

The poor relation held hid tongue at this
rebuff while the farmer shook his head at the injustice of it all.

“I would have nowhere to turn,” he said,
with a tear in his eye.

I almost shed a tear myself as I listened.
At first I had been sorry for the poor relation. Now I was even sorrier for the
farmer. There was a contorted look of sheer weariness on his face. He looked
wanly into the fire before he spoke.

“I have nowhere to turn,” he choked as
though his cows were sold already. “ I have no well off relations like others.
All my relations are poor. They haven’t a penny to put on top of another. You
wouldn’t like to see me pauperized, would you? You wouldn’t want to see me with
a bag on  my back walking the roads?”

Here the farmer laid a hand on the shoulder
of his poor relation. He looked him in the eye for several seconds.

“of course you wouldn’t,” he answered in
the poor fellow’s stead, “ because you are not that kind of a man. You know
what it’s like to have nothing yourself and you wouldn’t like to see another in
the same fix, especially one of your own.

After the poor relation had departed the
farmer pulled out a large packet of Gold Flakes fro another pocket, ripped off
the protective tissue and extracted a cigarette which he lit from the expiring
butt of the first.

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Poems are made by fools like me

But Only God can make a tree.



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Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner




It has been confirmed that this year’s Rose of Tralee, Jennifer Byrne will attend on Opening Night of Listowel Food Fair, November 9 2017

Trees, Little Lilac Studio and Listowel ESB 1958

Santa Claus is Coming to Town… and I met himself and the Missus




Saturday November 26 in Listowel Community Centre with the Clauses of The Seanchaí

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Refurbishment Underway at Listowel Community Centre

The diggers moving in

 The work is going on at the pitches side of the centre. It will include accessible changing rooms and storage space for all the equipment which is currently in unsightly containers. The long term plans include a café and enhanced gym.

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Beautiful Trees in Listowel Town Park

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Rugby Training



It is heartening to see so many young boys and girls out training on a Saturday Morning.

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Little Lilac Studio


If you have children to entertain, be it a birthday party or just children at a loose end, this is the place to take them. The Little Lilac Studio in Listowel’s Main Street was where I took my grandchildren during Halloween. They all loved the experience and they created a personalised bowl and plate each. These items of tableware are now in daily use at home in Cork.


We ran into Gabrielle McGrath and friends who were doing a special project. They were making and decorating bowls. Like us they were all loving the studio .

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Humans of Listowel



I met Nancy, Mary and Maura in one of my favourite haunts. These ladies are three of the lovely volunteers in the St. Vincent de Paul Second Time Around Shop. It opens on Thursdays and Fridays from 11.00 until 5.00 at Upper William Street.

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Listowel ESB staff 1958



This is a combined effort. Jer Kennelly found the Kerryman photo. Vincent Carmody provided the names and the context.

Front,

from left, George Brooks, ( Contracts man, afterwards transferred to Dublin) Jerry O O’Keeffe, (Charles Street), Walter Doyle,Greenville and now Meadowlands, Tralee, Clare O Connor, 108 Church Street, Brendan Stack, Ballybunion, Jackie Buckley, 22 Upper William Street

Back, 

on left, man down from Dublin, on the right, Tony Walsh, Tralee.

The new E.S. B. offices were located at the corner of Church Street and Colbert Street. The refurbished building was originally the home of the Cain family, locally known as,  ‘Cains of the Bridewell’, due to the fact that the house was built on the ground where an earlier Bridewell had stood. One of those Cain’s had also been employed as ‘a Jail-keeper’ .

The window reflection shows the houses across the road, above the archway, Nurse O Donavans, where she had a little private nursing home. Many of the town’s children first saw the light of day here. Sadness also darkened the door. when on a summer day in the early nineteen fifties, a young Dublin boy, Gabriel Cummins, nephew of Nurse Donavans, who was spending his summer holidays in Listowel,  was drowned accidentally while swimming with friends in the Corporal’s, one of the favoured swimming locations on the river, which was located at the back of where the present Kerry Co-Op is built.

Below the Archway, was the public house, known as the Bon-Ton, home of Eamon Tarrant, This house was once the meeting place of the Young Irelanders.


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Tree project and the woman who slew the Dragons

Tidy Town’s Tree Project

John Corridan has contacted me to ask for your help with this one. Listowel Tidy Town’s committee is promoting a very interesting and innovative project. They want us to photograph and document local trees. They just want your favorite tree, a tree that has a story or any tree that is of interest. All you have to do is photograph it and send it along with a few words of description like location and anything else you know about or associate with the tree to tidytownstrees@gmail.com

The photographs and data will be displayed in the library.

Here are a few examples:

This magnificent horse chestnut stands at the old convent school gate. It was a great source of conkers for the boys of the town at one tine.

This oak stands in the carpark of the secondary school. It was presented to the school by the staff  to mark 150 years of Presentation secondary education in Listowel. The acorn is a symbol of the Presentation order.

This Cherrytree grows in James McCarthy’s garden at the entrance to Cherrytree Drive.

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Last week I visited the Friday Market and I met up with these three lovely ladies.

Aoife Hannon (Miss Universe Ireland) had stopped for a chat with her friends, Leisha Keane and Laura Keane who have just started a summer enterprise selling periwinkles. If you are in the market tomorrow, buy a bag from the girls and enjoy this traditional local delicacy.

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Psssst!  You read it here first.

When I called to my friend,  Máire, the genial and very able administrator of Writers’ Week, I found her in conversation with a slayer of Dragons.

Kate Carmody became a legend in The Den when she turned the tables on two investors and held out for the bargain she wanted. See http://www.rte.ie/tv/dragonsden/s2ep6.html

Read about Kate’s organic cheese business here: http://www.bealorganiccheese.com/blog/about-us/

and look out for her on Newstalk’s business programme which will be broadcast from Listowel in early June.

But why the psst!!!?

Well, I can reveal that she was in the Writers’ Week office paying the registration fee for the writing workshop which she is going to take. Could an autobiography or a cheese making book be on the cards?

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Isn’t this special?

It’s a bus shelter in Dingle.

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