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: WW1 Page 2 of 5

Holiday Time

On The Banks of My Own Lovely Lee



I have just spent a happy week bonding with some of the Cork branch of the family.

It was end of term and I had sports days, end of term drama and gymnastic performances to attend, some of the lovely events one gets to go to as a proud Nana.

The Cork Primary School Sports is an major event in Cork schools calendar. It was a triumph of organization. There were a few traffic glitches but once I got into the sports field, I was amazed at the professionalism of the organizers who saw this huge event run with military precision. I’d say half of Cork were there between athletes and supporters.

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My granddaughters attend Ballincollig Gymnastics Club and their end of year show features European class routines. I got to attend 3 shows, as all of the 400 pupils got to perform and I had an interest in all three shows.


Róisín before her routine

 Gymnasts watch and support their friends.

One routine at the gymnastics display went down a treat, i.e. the Dads and Daughters sequence. Here are Colm and Aisling in the centre doing their bit to the country tune, Cotton Eye Joe.

There is always a Listowel connection.

Brian MacAulliffe was there to support his daughter who is just starting on her gymnastic career.

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Meanwhile in Belgium




In the background is the Tyne Cot memorial on which the names of so many idealistic young people who fought and died in Ypres during WW1are inscribed. This graveyard and all the other memorials in the region are a chilling reminder of that “world’s worst wound”.  Seán McKenna took the photos on a recent trip to the battlefields.

On Passing the New Menin Gate, by Siegfried Sassoon

Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
The unheroic Dead who fed the guns?
Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate, –
Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones?
Crudely renewed, the Salient holds its own.
Paid are its dim defenders by this pomp;
Paid, with a pile of peace-complacent stone,
The armies who endured that sullen swamp.

Here was the world’s worst wound. And here with pride
‘Their name liveth for evermore the Gateway claims.
Was ever an immolation so belied
As these intolerably nameless names?
Well might the Dead who struggled in the slime
Rise and deride this sepulchre of crime.



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Meanwhile in France

For the French branch of the family it’s all sun, sand, al fresco dining and tennis

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One of the highlights  of Summer 2015 in Listowel was the Willis Clan concert in St. John’s on June 19th.

I was privileged to be there to hear Ciarán Sheehan, star of musical theatre in the US (1000 performances in Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables and many more) make an emotional return to the stage in his father’s hometown. He got a rapturous reception from a very appreciative audience.

Ciarán greeted Sheehan, Hennessey and Curtin cousins in the audience and he paid a special tribute to Vincent Carmody, also a cousin, and who has been his guide for his visit to Listowel.

The Willis Clan are a force of Nature. All 12 of them sang, danced and played one or many of a multitude of musical instruments on this night to remember. They gained many fans in Listowel in June 2015.

Jeremiah Willis singing in St. John’s June 19 2015
Jessica Willis on stage in St. John’s Listowel
Jennifer Willis June 19 2015
Jeanette Willis
The Willis Clan

Ciarán Sheehan signing a cd for a happy punter.

I recorded him from my seat in the audience. It’s here

Ciarán Sheehan in St. John’s


Veterans’ Parade, Listowel Pitch and Putt, 2007 telethon and crafts and baking at The Kingdom County Fair 2015

Veterans Parade at Listowel Military Tattoo 2015

The leading flag party

 The drums of the Killorglin Pipe Band

Michael Guerin

 Veterans

Band of The Ambulance Service

The excellent M.C. for the ceremony was Damien Stack.

Wreath Laying

A line of wreaths, a moving tribute.

The buzz of the helicopter was heard. Everyone looked up and cheered as the Irish Coast Guard chopper flew round the square, a symbol of modern day heroes who guard our waters.

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Listowel Pitch and Putt



The course looks absolutely world class these days.  Take a bow Listowel Pitch and Putt Club



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Telethon in Pres 2007



A no uniform telethon fundraiser in Pres. Listowel . Were you there?

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Kingdom County Fair 2015

Unless the organizers do something drastic to revive interest in the baking and craft classes at next year’s show, I think it is time to abandon these classes. While there was some lovely work on display, in many classes there was only one or two entrants. To enter was to win even though the product was well short of show standard.

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Boxing Star in Town this weekend



A wartime story

Today is Monday, May 4 2015. It is the day after Listowel Military Tattoo. I was going to post photos and an account of the weekend but I’ll leave that for later in the week and today I will tell you my late mother-in law’s story.

My
mother-in law, Betty Cogan, became an Irish citizen in 1967. This extraordinary
event marked her as a special woman, an independent soul, a woman willing to
defy family and tradition to be as close as possible to the man she loved.

Betty White at age 21

Irish
citizenship was definitely not in the picture when Betty was growing up in
Monument Road in Birmingham in the 1900’s. Her family was thoroughly British.
Her father, Henton White, was a local doctor, and a member of St. John’s
Ambulance. During WW1 he did his civic duty; he enlisted in the navy and served
as a ship’s doctor on board HMS Neuralia. He was knighted by the king, was awarded
a medal and his own coat of arms. He was appointed to the post of assistant physician to the king.
This meant that, if the king was in the Birmingham area, Henton White was
responsible for looking after his health.

Henton White

Betty
grew up in this most loyal of households. She trained as a physiotherapist. At 21 she met and fell in love with a
dashing young graphic artist. His name was John Patrick Thompson and he worked
in Benson’s Advertising Agency. A big client of this agency was Guinness. John Patrick drew the cartoons for the “But
there is nothing like a Guinness” series and he gave the first drafts of
“walrus and keeper” and “fish in tank” to his girlfriend, Betty. Betty kept them all her life and they are
still in the family. Unfortunately, they are not signed but one is marked
“official secret”. Even in those days,
advertisers liked an element of surprise when they unveiled a new campaign.

John Patrick is on the right

Betty
had experienced her father’s long absences and all the attendant worry for the
family during the First World War so she was none too happy when John Patrick
“went for a soldier” in 1939, a few months into WW2. He was killed in action in
France shortly after landing there. 

He wrote Betty a letter dated 6 Sept. 1939
from HMS Arethusa on his way to the front. We found this letter among her
treasures after her death. John
Patrick describes in detail the awful conditions aboard ship. Because they were
sailing through dense fog, John Patrick went below to avoid the cold and damp,
The decks “had become cold, slippery and draughty and most people seemed to
prefer the sweating between decks.” “I
went below once during the night, and some 350 men occupied the saloons and
gangways-all asleep, on stairs, across tables- it was as if living men had been
killed by gas. It was an amazing sight.”

John
Patrick describes in detail arriving in Dieppe and his journey through the
French countryside. “France looked so soft and peaceful.” He had visited France
previously and had hoped to see some of the sights again but their train
journey was through the night. “Arles looked like a special kind of dream
city.” He finishes by saying that the adventure was not as bad as he feared and
“that is all I can say until the whole journey is a thing of the past.”

Alas,
it was his last letter and he, like so many thousands of likeminded young men
perished in the following days.

We
can only imagine how devastated Betty was on hearing of his death. She
remembered him always and told her children about him.

Of all the
words of tongue and pen                                                      

The saddest are; It might have been.

Tom Cogan, my father in law, and his brother John (seated)

In
Cork in 1921 another young man was growing up and becoming embroiled in another
war. Tom Cogan had seen his older brother, coincidentally also named John
Patrick, enlist in the British Army and
die in the third battle of Ypres in WW1. 
His name is engraved, with thousands of other casualties on the Tynecot
Memorial. 

Tom took a different course. He took an active part in the  War of Independence.

Tom
was working as an apprentice fitter in Haulbowline, Co. Cork. and living at
home with his mother and unmarried sister. He was a trusted employee and no one
suspected that he was smuggling out materials under the noses of the British
Army and using his skills as a fitter to make  “metal plates” to be used in the making of
ammunition.

When
he finished his apprenticeship, he secured a job in Ford’s of Cork. Like many
other young Cork men at the time he moved to work in Fords in Dagenham in the
early 1940s. He did not work in the main plant but in the Ford foundry in
Leamington. In the boarding house where he lodged he met and fell in love with another lodger, Betty White. They were married in Birmingham in June 1944 and relocated to Cork
with their firstborn in 1945.

A
letter from his workmates to him as he was leaving England shows that Tom was a
poacher turned gamekeeper. He kept a close eye on all of Ford’s materials and
every screw was accounted for.

Betty
Cogan, my mother-in –law, lived through two world wars. She had 2 great loves
in her life, each of them an honorable hard working young man. The fickle finger of Fate decided which one she was to lose and which one to marry.

(Jim’s family,  Patricia Cogan Tangney and Martin Cogan helped me with some of
the details of this story.)

Christmas at the front in WW1, An Gleann and some Christmas windows

Jim Halpin, curator of a great collection of war and other military memorabilia at his museum in Church St. invited me to photograph his Princess Mary tin and he told two very interesting stories apropos the tin.

The idea of sending a tin to the soldiers was not an original one. Princess Mary’s aunt, Queen Victoria had sent such a present to soldiers during the Boer War. Jim has one of these in his collection and it contains the original straw packaging used to protect the enclosed gifts.

The Princess Mary story is fascinating. Apparently, the young princess went to the warehouse where these tins were being packed and she brought a hand written note to enclose in one tin. The note asked the finder to contact her. The story goes that the note was found by a Munster Fusilier from Limerick.

This old photo of 4th battalion of The Munsters comes from Historical Tralee

The tin is inscribed Christmas 1914. It has a cameo of Princess Mary surrounded by a laurel wreath. In the corners are the names of Britain’s allies in the Great War. Other symbols of the British Empire at war adorn the box as well.

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Last Rites 1915

Chaplain to the Munsters was a Fr. F. Gleeson from Tipperary. In this famous painting he is depicted giving last absolution to the troops as they paused on their way to the front.

Whilst moving forwards to the trenches on 8 May 1915, in preparation for the Battle of Aubers Ridge, Lieutenant-Colonel Victor Rickard ordered the battalion to halt at a roadside shrine in Rue du Bois, near Fleurbaix.  Gleeson, who had ridden at the front of the column, addressed the assembled 800 men and gave them the general absolution whilst still mounted on his horse. The men then sang the hymns Hail, Queen of Heaven, the Te Deum and Hail Glorious Saint Patrick before Gleeson moved along the ranks bidding farewell to the officers and encouraging the men to maintain the honour of the regiment.The battalion then moved off to the trenches from which they launched their attack at 5.30 the next morning. The Munsters were largely cut down by machine gun fire before they had advanced more than a few yards although enough men survived to capture the German trenches, the only unit to do so that day, before being forced to withdraw. (Wikipaedia)




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Football

Denis Carroll posted this old one on Facebook. The Mart Field is now Feale Drive.

Back row L-R: Gigs Nolan,?, Pa Kennedy, Miley Fitz, Jerry Kelliher, Bob O Brien, Buster Lynch, PJ Kelliher, Jimmy Griffin, Manager Roche.

Front L-R, Denny Carroll, Peter Sugrue, Kempes Kelliher, Kevin Sheehy, Liam Kelliher & Noel Roche

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The Kerry Football team is one of Six Nominees for Rte Sport Team of the Year 2014



(photo; The Sunday Game )

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This cool vehicles was spotted in Limerick this week



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Christmas 2014 Scenes from Listowel





November, graveyards and remembering our WW1 fallen

November



This is the time of year when we remember our loved ones who are no longer with us. I took these photos in a very old churchyard in Kilbrin in Co. Cork, where some of my paternal ancestors are buried. The local committee have done a great restoration and preservation job on the old graves.

Obviously different laws applied in the 18th century as to size of burial plot.

Many of the inscriptions are illegible but this one from 1769 was in great nick.

My parents and older sister are buried here.

My grandfather is buried here.  As far as we can make out, his wife, my grandmother, is buried with her own people. She died at a very young age, leaving my poor grandfather with six very young children to raise with the help of his kind neighbours. It is a great credit to him that he kept them together in very tough times. They and all of us, their descendants,  are a credit to him and to the community who helped him to survive this awful tragedy. I pray with thanks for Philip Ahern of Knockalohert, Kilbrin this November.

Sign at the entrance

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This is Lyre churchyard in Co. Cork where my maternal ancestors are buried.

This is my great-grandfather’s grave in Lyre. My grandmother is  buried here

Lyre is a little village near Banteer in North Cork. My grandmother, Mary Cronin, was a lovely kind  strong woman, who played a big part in my childhood. As a young girl she saw most of her family emigrate to the U.S. to a little town called Attleboro in Massachusetts. In the way of the times, people from a certain area emigrated to the same area in the U.S. so they had a little home away from home in the new country. Some of today’s citizens of Attleboro have roots in this little North Cork village or its nearby neighbour, Banteer.

This sign at the entrance is an unfortunate sign of the times we live in.

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Listowel Military Tattoo remembers

There will be a short Remembrance Service at the rear of St John’s at the Remembrance Stone on Sunday 9th Nov. AFTER 11 o clock Mass to remember all those from North Kerry who died in WW1. A list of names will be read out. If you would like to check if your loved one’s name is on the register, then you can call in to Jim Halpin’s Museum in Church St..



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Tonight’s The Night




The very best of luck to all the brave participants. It promises to be a blast!

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