Showing posts with label Sinéad Halkett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sinéad Halkett. Show all posts

Monday, 14 May 2012

I know the Kerry Rose


So sad!

Listowel came to a halt on Saturday for the funeral mass of Sinéad Halkett who died before her time at age 33. The outpouring of support and love for the Halkett family on Saturday may have brought them some small crumb of comfort at this awful time. Words are totally inadequate. My only prayer for them is that, in time, it will not hurt as much as it does today.

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Now to news of another of my past pupils. The lovely Annmarie Hayes of this parish has been chosen to represent Kerry in The Rose Of Tralee competition. She is a beautiful girl who embodies all the characteristics which are sought in this competition. I hope she wins.

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Remember my post last week about Con Houlihan and The Wild Colonial Boy?
My friend, Julie, enjoyed the post and she filled me in on the Australian version of the ballad and the story behind it:

"The Wild Colonial Boy" is a traditional IrishAustralian ballad of which there are many different versions, the most prominent being the Irish and Australian versions. The original version was about Jack Donahue, an Irish rebel who became a convict, then a bushranger, who was eventually shot down by police. This version was outlawed as seditious so the name changed. The Irish version is about a young emigrant, named Jack Duggan, who left the town of Castlemaine, County Kerry, Ireland, for Australia in the 19th century. According to the song, he spent his time there 'robbing from the rich to feed the poor'. In the song, the protagonist is fatally wounded in an ambush when his heart is pierced by the bullet of Fitzroy.

The Australian version is quite different. It is about a boy named Jack Doolan, born in Castlemaine. The poem then continues to tell of his exploits without mentioning his moving to Australia, which implies that the Castlemaine in question is that in Victoria, a state of Australia.
The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature reports the following about the poem/song.

'The Wild Colonial Boy'

One of Australia's best-known folk-songs, tells the story of an Irish-born bushranger, named Jack Doolan, who terrorises the squatters, holds up the Beechworth mail coach in the 1860s, robs Judge MacEvoy, and is eventually killed when surrounded by three troopers, Kelly, Davis and FitzRoy, to whom he refuses to surrender. Several versions of 'The Wild Colonial Boy', which is often sung to the Irish tune 'The Wearing of the Green', e.g. by Ned Kelly at Glenrowan, have survived: in some of them MacEvoy is called Macaboy, and Jack Doolan is variously Jim or John Dowling/Duggan/Dublin/Dolan/Davis. That the hero of the song always has the initials 'JD' has led many folklorists, e.g. John Meredith in The Wild Colonial Boy (1982), to argue that the Wild Colonial Boy was a fictitious character and that the song is an 1860s variant of the 'Bold Jack Donahoe' (see Donohoe, John) cycle of songs and ballads, which, as a result of oral transmission, acquired a new set of characters and events. The argument is strengthened by a chorus beginning 'Come along, my hearties, we'll roam the mountains high,/ Together we will plunder, together we will die', which is common to versions of both ballads, and by the fact that the songs are traditionally linked in Irish folk-music. John Manifold, however, in Who Wrote the Ballads? (1964), speculates that there was a bushranger of the 1860s named Jack Doolan and that his experiences were celebrated by taking over the existing Bold Jack Donahoe songs. Further investigation has established a Judge Macaboy and families of Dowlings, Doolans, etc. in the Beechworth district in the 1860s, but as yet no bushranger named Doolan has emerged. Whatever the origins of the song, 'The Wild Colonial Boy' is well known overseas and is sung by John Wayne in the film The Quiet Man. In Australia, its popularity is such that 'wild colonial boys' became a phrase describing the bushrangers in general, as in Frank Clune's book Wild Colonial Boys, and, indeed, any Australian sharing their bravado and daring.



Australian lyrics

THE WILD COLONIAL BOY - Anonymous
'Tis of a wild Colonial Boy, Jack Doolan was his name,
Of poor but honest parents he was born in Castlemaine.
He was his father's only hope, his mother's pride and joy,
And dearly did his parents love the wild Colonial Boy.

Chorus
Come, all my hearties, we'll roam the mountains high,
Together we will plunder, together we will die.
We'll wander over valleys, and gallop over plains,
And we'll scorn to live in slavery, bound down with iron chains.

He was scarcely sixteen years of age when he left his father's home,
And through Australia's sunny clime a bushranger did roam.
He robbed those wealthy squatters, their stock he did destroy,
And a terror to Australia was the wild Colonial Boy.

In sixty-one this daring youth commenced his wild career,
With a heart that knew no danger, no foeman did he fear.
He stuck up the Beechworth mail-coach, and robbed Judge MacEvoy,
Who trembled, and gave up his gold to the wild Colonial Boy.

He bade the judge "Good morning", and told him to beware,
That he'd never rob a hearty chap that acted on the square,
And never to rob a mother of her son and only joy,
Or else you might turn outlaw, like the wild Colonial Boy.

One day as he was riding the mountain-side along,
A-listening to the little birds, their pleasant laughing song,
Three mounted troopers rode along - Kelly, Davis and FitzRoy -
They thought that they would capture him, the wild Colonial Boy.

"Surrender now, Jack Doolan, you see there's three to one.
Surrender now, Jack Doolan, you're a daring highwayman."
He drew a pistol from his belt, and shook the little toy,
"I'll fight, but not surrender," said the wild Colonial Boy.
 
He fired at Trooper Kelly and brought him to the ground,
And in return from Davis received a mortal wound.
All shattered through the jaws he lay still firing at FitzRoy,
And that's the way they captured him - the wild Colonial Boy.



Irish lyrics

The lyrics are as follows:
There was a wild colonial boy,
Jack Duggan was his name
He was born and raised in Ireland,
in a place called Castlemaine
He was his father's only son,
his mother's pride and joy
And dearly did his parents love
the wild colonial boy
At the early age of sixteen years,
he left his native home
And to Australia's sunny shore,
he was inclined to roam
He robbed the rich, he helped the poor,
he shot James MacEvoy
A terror to Australia was
the wild colonial boy
One morning on the prairie,
as Jack he rode along
A-listening to the mocking bird,
a-singing a cheerful song
Up stepped a band of troopers:
Kelly, Davis and Fitzroy
They all set out to capture him,
the wild colonial boy



Surrender now, Jack Duggan,
for you see we're three to one
Surrender in the Queen's high name,
you are a plundering son
Jack drew two pistols from his belt,
he proudly waved them high
I'll fight, but not surrender,
said the wild colonial boy
He fired a shot at Kelly,
which brought him to the ground
And turning round to Davis,
he received a fatal wound
A bullet pierced his proud young heart,
from the pistol of Fitzroy
And that was how they captured him,
the wild colonial boy.

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It appears that we are still sending some wild boys to Australia. Misbehaviour by Irish immigrants in Perth has led the GAA there to issue the following letter to its  members.


Hello fellow Finbarrians
The following message is not only for your perusal, but also one which you can pass on to all your fellow Irish friends here in Perth.
The WA police are extremely unhappy and appalled by the antisocial behaviour which is taking place all too often on the streets and in the pubs across Perth and its suburbs, especially in the Northbridge area [above]. Even Rental Agencies are not as willing to rent properties to Irish people here in Perth, as they are getting destroyed during parties, and being left in terrible conditions once vacated.
We have been advised, that over the next few weeks, the Perth Police will be, at random going around to all of the GAA Clubs and talking to club members, advising them of same. They want to get the message across to all Irish in Perth that what has been going on is just not acceptable, and if it continues there will be consequences. 
Police will be adopting a Zero tolerance policy for any antisocial behaviour. If individuals don’t abide by the law, and take heed of move on notices, their visas WILL firstly be investigated, before court action, meaning that deportation would be the final conclusion. This is the last thing anyone of us or our fellow Irish counterparts here in Perth want. 
This a very serious matter, and I hope that you and your friends will now be aware of the consequences should occurrences with the Police occur. Not something we are encouraging that is for sure.
Please spread the work to your fellow Irish, as this is affecting all of our reputations here not only the people who are causing the trouble.
Many Thanks for reading the above.
Regards
Linda H


PresidentSt. Finbarrs GFC
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What a pity that a small few are spoiling it for so many.






Tuesday, 1 May 2012

May Day!

If May Eve was bad, May Day was 100 times worse. Traditionally it was a "gale day", i.e. a day on which the half yearly rent had to be paid to the landlord. It was a day of bargaining and pleading and setting a rent for the coming year. The letting of grazing and meadowing usually dated from May 1st and farm hands were hired from May 1.

So this was the time of the hiring fairs.These fairs were held in Ireland since 1752. Men and women came to the fairs, often carrying the symbols of their trade. A milkman would carry a spancel, others brought a flail, a reaping hook or spade. Farmers came and struck a bargain for help on the farm for the year. Peig describes this in her autobiography. She had 2 very different experiences in her time in service, once with a lovely mistress and once with a cruel b..tch who overworked her and treated her abominably.

May Day marked the beginning of summer for the farmer. Cattle were put out to grass. All the spring work should be finished by May Day.
The weather was also watched closely on May 1. The May moon was observed, the strength and direction of the wind and the amount of rain were all carefully noted on May Day as indications of what was to come for the coming summer.


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Success on the racetrack for people with a strong Listowel connection

From last week's Kerryman


Wednesday April 25 2012
FORMER Listowel owners Maurice and Patricia Regan, proprietors of Newtown Anner Stud Farm at Clonmel, have enjoyed a tremendous seven days both here in Ireland and in America with their outstanding racehorses.
At The Curragh on Sunday, their game 4-year old Cnocan diva, scored for the second time in recent weeks, winning the Irish Field 1mile handicap, by a short head, from Susiescot, under a most polished drive by Dundalk apprentice Stephen Grey. Despite going up 10 pounds for its recent half a length Limerick success, he showed tremendous battling qualities to gain the day by the minimum margin.
At Aqueduct Park in America, the Regans International racing interests, were carried to Listed Status, when their runner My Red Bird won the Featured Listed Stakes last week, while at the same venue on Saturday night last, their runner Magical Cat, formerly trained in Tipperary by Joe Murphy, was a most impressive winner, of the nights feature event.

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A story that has touched the hearts of everyone in Listowel is the illness and passing of Sinéad Halkett.
The sympathies and prayers of the whole of Listowel go out to Anne, John, Robert and Claire and all of Sinéad's relatives and friends. There are no adequate words at this time.




This photograph was taken in happier times when the very talented young Sinéad was being presented with a prize by the then Minister for Education, Gemma Hussey.

+May she rest in peace+


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Good news surely from The Irish Times!

Three towns selected for heritage project

ALISON HEALY
Youghal, Westport and Listowel have been chosen to pilot a new heritage project which involves conserving buildings and maximising their tourism potential.

The Historic Towns Initiative for Ireland will be introduced in other locations if these projects are successful.

The plan is being led by the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht, the
Heritage Council and Fáilte Ireland.
Work will now begin in the three towns in Cork, Mayo and Kerry to conserve and protect buildings and find new uses for them where necessary.
Minister for Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht Jimmy Deenihan hosted a forum yesterday to kick-start the plan.
The forum heard that a number of international heritage-led urban regeneration projects had been completed and would provide useful case studies for Ireland.
Mr Deenihan said Ireland’s historic towns were “a significant attraction” for tourists with an interest in culture and heritage.
“The pilot of the Heritage Towns Initiative will aim to preserve existing heritage assets, stimulate heritage-led regeneration and add to the tourism offering of these locations,” Mr Deenihan said.
“The needs of the communities that live in participating towns will remain core to the process,” he added.