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: Vincent Carmody Page 10 of 18

Tom Doodle and other Listowel Characters and U. S. Success or John Daniel Guiney

These four men were our entertainers on Vincent Carmody’s morning walk on June 1 2017 as part of Listowel Writers’ Week 2017. They are John Looney, Seán Moriarty, Vincent Carmody and Sonny Egan.

Our starting point as usual was the hotel. Here our young soundman, John, met up with some English visitors, the Hewitts with a different Hannon connection. These people have fallen in love with Listowel and are now frequent visitors.

Mark Hewitt is a member of a rock band and he  brought the band with him on this visit. One of their number has just written a book whose title I love. It’s called;

Rock, Paper, Slippers.

Sonny came in character as the bellman or town crier.

Rose Wall greeted us and saw us on our way.

And we’re off.

First stop was the home of the O’Rahilly family …arguably the brainiest family in Ireland at one time.

Then on to The Small Square and tales of Tom Sommers and other local characters.

Vincent had an appreciative audience despite the cold and intermittent rain.

Then out from the Freezer’s pub came none other than Tom Doodle. Click HERE to hear the story from Vincent Carmody.

Doodle distributed his election literature and canvassed for votes promising among other unlikely actions to  give leprechauns the vote and to give free treatment for sore heads.

Use your noodle

Vote for Doodle

Doodle on the ball

Next stop the dáil.



Doodle ran into an old friend, Paddy Fitzgibbon, and posed for a photo with him.

Then on to William Street and tales of D.C. Hennessey and another cry from the bellman.

We admired the Horseshoe Bar and Vincent pointed out the plasterwork of Pat MacAulliffe and the detail on the wall for which he had used bicycle bells as moulds.

At Galvin’s Vincent pointed out the beautiful mosaic name  over the door.

We mosied on to Market Street and on to the home of Cathy Buckley in Upper William Street.

We had another rhyme from the bellman  and the sad story  of Bob Cuthbertson.

We paused at the corner of William Street and Charles Street and Vincent pointed out to us a strange Listowel phenomenon. The Irish version of the street names is not a translation of the English names. The English street names were given by Lord Listowel who called the streets after his sons, William and Charles. in 1966 a wave of nationalism swept through Listowel and a plebiscite was held to change the street names to the names of the signatories of the Proclamation of 1916.

Changing the name of a street has all sorts of implications, particularly for businesses who have to change their business address. The outcome was a hung vote so what was decided in the end was that each street would have 2 names, one in Irish and one in English and they are totally unrelated to one another. So, for instance, Charles Street is, in Irish, Connolly Street/ Sráid Uí Chonghaile.

The bellman stopped us again and Vincent pointed out the detail in the plasterwork of The Emporium, one of the finest examples of the work of Pat MacAulliffe.

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Success in the U.S. for Listowel Golfer


(Photo and text from Newsday on the internet)



John Daniel Guiney with Long
Island Golf Association president Marty Winkelman, left, and tournament
director John McGrath after he won the Long Island Open at 4 under par with a
final round of two-under 68 at Westhampton Country Club on June 8, 2017. Photo
Credit: Long Island Golf Association

Westhampton Country Club’s waterfront winds, slick greens, tall
fescue and Old World bunkers presented a different, disorienting challenge to
just about all of Long Island’s top golfers. To John Daniel Guiney, those
elements represented something else entirely. He is from Ballybunion, Ireland
and he felt right at home.

Big time. Coming up that 18th hole, it’s like you’re in Britain
or something, like you’re playing on a links golf course. It’s just a great
setting,” Guiney, a first-year PGA apprentice at Piping Rock Club, said after
he won the Long Island Open at 4 under par with a final round of two-under 68.
He beat Poxabogue teaching pro Rob Corcoran (67) by two shots in the 54-hole
championship while no one else beat par.

It took patience and resourcefulness —
hallmark demands of links golf — to take the $9,000 first prize on the vintage
Seth Raynor layout. The check and the whole week made the 32-year-old winner
even happier that he entered the tournament at the last minute and that he
moved to Long Island a few months ago.

Guiney played college
golf at Rollins, then remained in Florida to play minitours. He became friends
with peers such as Keegan Bradley and Jim Renner, caddied for the latter on the
PGA Tour, then pursued his own pro golf career in Europe for four years

“I ended up quitting tournament golf for the last year and a
half. I kind of ran out of money,” he said. “That happens. I was like what am I
going to do? I have an economics background but I don’t want to do that. I want
to stay in golf.”

What he did was place a call to an old friend from Ballybunion,
Piping Rock head pro Sean Quinlivan, who offered him the apprentice spot.
Guiney (pronounced GUY-knee) does a lot of caddying and works in the pro shop
two days a week, he said, “Just learning the ropes.” At Quinlivan’s suggestion,
he signed up for a Long Island Open qualifier just before the deadline. “And lo
and behold, here we are,” he said.

 He was only one shot ahead of Corcoran after the latter eagled
the par-5 14th hole. Quiney, playing in the final twosome with Tam O’Shanter
head pro Mark Brown, hooked his tee shot on 14 into high grass. He punched out
into a terrible lie (“It looked like it was in a deer hoof print,” he said) but
then hit to within 15 feet and made birdie. He followed with another birdie on
15 and finished with three pars.

“Very steady, very patient,” Brown said of the champion. “He’s
got a good all-around game. Very good, I’d say.”

Summer 2017, Ciarán Sheehan celebrates Kathy Buckley and home remedies in the 1950s

In Listowel Town Square




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Sign of Summer

Putting merchandise on the pavement outside your shop is an age old tradition in rural towns. This sight in the Square recently lifted my spirits. It heralds the arrival of summer.

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At Olive Stack’s Gallery



Olive’s artists in residence bring a touch of the exotic to Listowel’s streetscape. This beautiful window display and street installation cheered my morning on March 30 2017.

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Remember these?


Photos; Joe Downes

These two bottles were in every mammy’s arsenal of remedies when I was growing up. The taste of cod liver oil is so embedded in my memory that looking at the bottle I can taste it again with all the revulsion it always engendered. Even the name is distasteful!

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When Broadway came to William Street



Kathy Buckley, late of William Street Listowel worked in The White House. During the Listowel Food Fair of June 2015, Kathy was honoured in a ceremony attended by the then U.S. ambassador, Kevin O’Malley and his wife. One of the highlights of the day was the singing of the Irish and U’S. National Anthems by Ciarán Sheehan, a very successful Broadway star with strong ties to Listowel and William Street.

You can listen him here;   Ciarán Sheehan sings anthems in William St.

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A Sign of things to Come?



I felt a shiver of premonition when I read this in Saturday’s paper

Convent Cross, Kerry lorries in the seventies and Christmas cards

Convent Cross in January 2017



This is on the wall beside the cross near the secondary school. It looks like some sort of hatch. Its concrete.

Ballybunion Road at Convent Cross

 The path to town

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Happy Days

To counteract the sad photos of the convent, Vincent Carmody sent me these two photos taken on the convent grounds after his daughter Norma’s wedding to Mark Boyle from Co. Waterford. The picture shows the Carmody and Boyle families at the main door to Presentation Convent, Listowel in 1998. Norma and Mark were married in the convent chapel while the parish church was under repair.

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Postbox at Convent Cross



This Christmas there were less Christmas cards posted then ever before. Are we witnessing the end of an era? 

Snail mail is far too slow for the millennial generation. But surely the custom of connecting with people at Christmastime is too precious to lose. Ideally it is a time for visiting and partying. The next best thing to a personal encounter is a greeting card, carefully chosen and written, bringing good wishes from afar.

Christmas card buying, writing and sending is a custom passed on to us from our parents. Carrying on this tradition connects us to our forefathers and keeps happy memories alive.

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From The Kerryman archive

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Big Plans for Áras Mhuire



Áras Mhuire are fund raising and they’re doing it in style. All the information is on the

Aras Mhuire

The story is that they have acquired valuable jerseys to auction to raise funds for their vital services.

Dublin jersey signed by the All Ireland winning team

All Blacks jersey

Ireland rugby jersey signed by all of the Irish team who defeated the All Blacks in Chicago in 2016

Listowel Connections

This Made my Day

I receive a good few messages from grateful blog followers. I do love a word of thanks every now and again. In terms of words of thanks, Eileen Herman, formerly of Brosna, went the extra mile and An Post deserves thanks as well. Who needs eircodes?

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One I missed while I was ill

John Carpenter came and went while I was indisposed but he sent me a few photos of his visit. John’s Listowel ancestral home is in Upper William Street where his cousin still lives.

John’s late mother, Mary Elizabeth was born a Moore in New York City to William Moore of Port Henry, NY and Johanna Buckley of Listowel.  Johanna was the daughter of Laurence “Lar” Buckley and Ellen Kearney.  Johanna and William Moore had 4 children, William, Mary, George and Regina.  Only George and Regina remain.  Both Johanna and William died relatively young and both had passed by the end of 1940.  Mary Elizabeth was predeceased in 2001 by her beloved daughter Mary.

John with his Irish relatives at The Horseshoe

Taking a dip with his family in the icy waters at Ballybunion

Bill Keane gave him a lesson on how to pull a pint.

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Some things change, some stay the same


2007

Back Lane opposite the offices of the Revenue Commissioners


Now Tan.N.Go

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Ballyduff felt a bit neglected in 1899


Kerry Evening Post , Wednesday, June 21, 1899

LOCAL QUESTIONS IN PARLIAMENT London, Monday Night

NORTH KERRT POSTAL QUESTION.

Mr Flavin asked the Secretary to the Treasury, as representing the Postmaster-General, whether he was aware that a petition largely signed by residents in the Ballyduff postal district of the County of Kerry was presented to the Postmaster-General praying for a Sunday delivery of letters, a money order office, and either telegraphic or telephone facilities; and would he explain why, seeing that all the surrounding villages are in the enjoyment of those benefits, the application of the memorialists of the Ballyduff district had been so long delayed from getting equal facilities in post office affairs?

Mr Hanbury—A petition we have received early last year asking for a Sunday delivery of letters and a money order office, but there is no trace of any application for the establishment of telegraphic or telephonic facilities. A money order office was established at Ballyduff under guarantee a year ago, but a Sunday post could not be sanctioned, because the existing service on week days was found to be remunerative, and additional expense for affording a Sunday service is therefore not warranted.


Ard Churam Official Opening, Upper William Street, Siamsa in London in 1991and WIM 2016

Mallard duck photographed by Chris Grayson

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Some More Local People at the Ard Churam Opening



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Siamsa in London 1991


From the archives of The Kerryman

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Correcting a Mistake

Upper William Street, early April 2016

County Council workers are replacing the window in the house next to St. Patrick’s Hall and restoring the streetscape to its original beauty.

This is how Upper William Street has looked as far back as anyone can remember. Then in 2014 when the council bought and refurbished the house next to St. Patrick’s Hall they replaced the upstairs window with a tiny one.

How it looked up to the mid eighties. Photo: Vincent Carmody

You can see in this photo how in 2014 they bricked up the lower half of the window and installed  a window half the size of the original.

The window ruined the uniformity of the streetscape. Vincent Carmody who is a lifelong resident of the street was determined to have the situation remedied. He complained to all the relevant bodies and singlehandedly fought a battle to have the historic panorama of the street restored. Last week he was thrilled to see that his perseverance was vindicated and a new window of the original shape was installed. Harmony is restored on Upper william Street.

Follow Vincent Camody’s very interesting Living History posts on Facebook to learn all about this street and its residents.

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An Invitation for You




Among the Listowel people featured in the book are;

Patrick ‘Sonny’ Griffin

Servelus Jones

Patrick (Paddy) Landers

James Sugrue

And the book also has an essay by Fr. Antony Gaughan entitled Austin Stack, a portrait of a Kerry separatist.

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I was in Ballybunion at the Weekend


Once again the Women in Media Weekend was a Great Success. I’m sorting my photos for you. Check back here during the week for my account of my trip.


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