Showing posts with label BOI Enterprise town 2017. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BOI Enterprise town 2017. Show all posts

Thursday, 14 December 2017

€3 Note, Enterprise Town and Eamon Kelly's Christmas long ago


Not exactly Rudolf but a red stag in Killarney last week. Photo by Chris Grayson

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Well, I never

I thought you might be as surprised as I was by this fact from Durrus History

While reading the evidence before a parliamentary enquiry into land tenure taken in Bantry in 1844 I came across a reference to a tenant paying his landlord with a £3 note.  I never came across this before, I do remember the old orange 10 shilling note.
When I checked it out the history was interesting.  Ireland apparently joined sterling in 1825 (currency fluctuations are not new) and the Bank of Ireland was given authority to issue notes.  Included was the £3 and 30 shilling notes.
In 1844 a farm laborer was lucky to get 8p. per day and the salary of a Resident Magistrate started at £300 per annum.  If you took  a laborer now at a low €75 a day that would give the value of £3 at €6,750 or the pay of the modern equivalent of a Resident Magistrate a District Justice at €123K then the value of £3 would be €12,300. Obviously the differential between £1 and £5 was too much hence the £3 note!

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The Last of the Enterprise Town photos



















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Christmas in Kerry in the 1920s

This account by Eamon Kelly of his childhood Christmas is from a book called Christmas in Ireland by Colin Morrison

....It was the quality of the candlelight, too shy you’d say to penetrate into every nook and corner, and giving the kitchen the appearance of an old oil painting that I remember from Christmases long ago. I remember too all the work that went into making the house ready for  the feast -bringing in the berry holly to deck out the kitchen, fixing the candles and cutting the log, Bloc na Nollag, and placing it in position in the hearth lying flat as it fell, we were told, and the sods of turf standing as they were cut. It took the block some time to take fire but when it did the chairs had to be moved back, even the cat had to shift herself when the little jets of steam and sparks making loud reports came from the log. In the wider circle, we, the small lads sat on the floor with cups of lemonade and sweet cake after the Christmas Eve supper of ling, white onion sauce and laughing potatoes. And we made room for a neighbor or two while my father uncorked a big earthenware jar and landed out a few healthy taoscáns of the dark liquid and it was  “Happy Christmas, Merry Christmas everyone” reechoing what was painted on the mottos pinned to the chimney breast.

(more tomorrow)

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An Invitation for You 


Wednesday, 13 December 2017

Xmas, North Kerry Harriers, The Catechism, more Enterprise photos and Christmas in Ballylongford


Gurtinard Wood in Winter 2017

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A Modern Christmas Poem

Xmas by Wes Magee

Not a twig stirs. The frost bitten garden
Huddles under a heaped duvet of snow.
Pond, tree, sky and street are granite with cold.

In the house electronic games warble;
Holly awaits the advent of balloons
And the TV set glows tipsy with joy.


This is a great poem about the secularization of Christmas. Christ is taken out and the Xbox takes his place centre stage.

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It's That Time of Year

North Kerry Harriers met in the grounds of Glin castle on December 3 2017. Local Limerick photographers, Liam Downes and Estelle O'Donoghue, took some  photos to record the occasion.



Estelle O'Donoghue  took this fabulous photo.




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A Relic left behind from our Youth


Call it brainwashing if you like, but I and my school fellows had the answers to the questions set out in this green book so dinned into us in school that most of us could, to this day, with just a little prompting, reel off all those answers.

This copy turned up among the National Treasures collected recently. I'm sure the very sight of it will send shivers down a few spines.

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Some More People at BOI Enterprise Town Evening















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Christmas Long Ago


Christmas for us Small Lads    by Eamon Kelly

Christmas for us small lads growing up in the 1920s was a pool of light in the inky darkness of the winter. A soft amber pool of light which came from three sources- the big log and turf fire, the oil lamp with the hairpin straddling the glass chimney and the stately white candles, one in every window, spreading their light out into the yard and road and showing the way, the old people told us, to Mary and Joseph should they be passing in search of shelter on Christmas night. Although my father used to say that if they happened to be passing our house the blessed pair would have strayed a tiny step on the road to Bethlehem.


In the month of December there was no road darker than the road outside our house, for we were living in the depths of the country, and as yet the ESB poles had not come marching down the valley bringing a brighter but a harsher light. And it cuts me to the quick today when I hear that instead of the old tallow candle there is a new garish electric imitation lighting in many of the windows I looked on as a lad.

(Continued tomorrow)

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Ballylongford at Christmas 2017

They switched on their Christmas tree lights in Bally on Saturday December 9 2017 and Ballylongford Snaps took lots of great photos. Here are a few and there are lots more HERE





Tuesday, 12 December 2017

A Poem or Two, a snap or three and an extraordinary crowd in Cork in 1932


Little Drummer Boy



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Switching on the Christmas lights, November 26 2017

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We had one of these


This pump is in a lawn outside the Tinteán Theatre in Ballybunion. I remember a pump just like this in what we called the pump field at home. It used to take a lot of elbow grease to get water out of it.

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I try to include this poem/song every Christmas as I know it means a lot to Listowel people

Kerry Candlelight by Bryan MacMahon


I am standing here at Euston, and my heart is light and gay,
For ‘tis soon I’ll see the moonlight all a- dance on Dingle Bay,
So behind me, then, is London, with the magic of its night,
And before me is a window filled with Kerry Candlelight.

CHORUS
‘Tis the lovely light of glory that came down from heav’n on high,
And, whenever I recall it, there’s a teardrop in my eye,
By the mountainside at twilight, in a cottage gleaming white,
There my true love sits a dreaming in the Kerry Candlelight.

She’ll be waiting by the turf fire; soon our arms will be entwined,
And the loneliness of exile will be lost or cast behind,
As we hear the Christmas greetings of the neighbours in the night,
Then our hearts will beat together in the blessed Candlelight.

Now the train is moving westwards, so God speed its racing wheels,
And God speed its whistle ringing o’er the sleeping English fields,
For I’m dreaming of an altar where, beside my Breda bright,
I will whisper vows of true love in the Kerry Candlelight.

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Walking the Kerry Way




David Breen took this photo as he was walking The Kerry Way

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Home in Asdee


Liam OHainnín found this one and posted it on Facebook



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A Few More Photos from Enterprise Evening


The special guest on the night was Rachel Allen. She was interviewed by Billy Keane.























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Would you believe it?


Tony Leen shared this photo on Twitter with this caption:
An extraordinary picture of the crowds outside the office in 1932 awaiting news of the Jack Doyle-Jack Peterson world heavyweight title fight at White City in London.