Showing posts with label Bridge Road. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bridge Road. Show all posts

Wednesday, 5 December 2018

Bridge Road, Listowel children, A Christmas Stccking in the 1940s and a Fire at The Races in 1959



Millenium Arch and Bridge Road

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The Good Old Days?

From Patrick O'Sullivan's A Year in Kerry



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Listowel Children

These are children  (and a few adults including Michael Dowling R.I.P. )  photographed by John Lynch at parades in 2003 and years after to 2007














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Christmas Lights in Dublin


 When I was in the Big Smoke to see the Haunting Soldier they already had their Christmas lights up even though it was only mid November.


And in Listowel


On Saturday Dec 1 2018, Listowel Tidy Town Committee switched on the very colourful lights on Listowel's Christmas tree.  (Photo; North Pole Express 2018)

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Fire in the Stands

Do you remember this from 1959?



Photo from The Kerryman

Monday, 30 July 2018

Green Guide to Listowel 1965, Mosaics in The Garden of Europe and Bridge Road Then and Now

Listowel Town Square, July 2018

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More from The Green Guide





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Art Installations in The Garden of Europe




 Lovely pebble mosaics have appeared in The Garden recently. There is no artists credited with the pieces and there should be because they are beautiful.


Patrick Tarrant's John B. Keane sculpture is looking lovely in Summer 2018.


The Holocaust Memorial is central to the Garden. Lest we forget....

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Sign Upgrading

This sign at the Millenium Arch was badly in need of a facelift.

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Bridge Road Then and Now



Photo by John Hannon



Photos by Listowel Connection

Wednesday, 23 May 2018

Buttevant, Bridge Road, a tip for Town Planners and Rás Tailteann 2018

 Photo: Chris Grayson

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 I was in Buttevant

Butevant is a very historic town in North Cork. I was there recently and I made a few observations.





Isn't this a good idea? They have  seats celebrating local families and the history of the family in a notice close by.



There are lots of old shopfronts left unchanged.


Just like us they have a castle in the middle of the town. Ours is in better nick though.








The convent in Buttevant has been sold.  The identity of the buyer was a topic of speculation on the day I was in town.




This old graveyard is in the grounds of the church. It is ironic that the man whose funeral brought me to the town would be the very man who could have told me all of the history.



The church had an ancient feel to it too. The galleries, there were three, are accessed by a stairs from the outside.

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Bridge Road



Prompted by Derry Buckley's account of Bridge Road houses, Kay Caball who also came from Bridge Road, wrote the following;

".....In connection with Derry Buckley's photo of  the Bridge Rd.,  my parents rented one of the three houses built and owned by his grandfather, facing the river.  Then they moved to the left hand side of the bridge to what must have been new houses in the early 1940s.  We lived in the second from the stone wall - I think it was owned by Mrs. Murray who had a shop in Main St., selling religious goods - rosary beads, holy pictures, scapulars etc.  (The Murray also must have had the 'franchise' for holy goods at the missions in all the north Kerry churches. They would have covered stall in the yards of the churches at .mission time' selling all these good like hot cakes.

Other people who lived down our (left hand side) of the Bridge Rd., were the Nielsens (Hilary Nielsen taught in the tech), the O'Sheas (Fr Kieran O'Shea), Mr. O'Sullivan the Creamery Manager, (we called everyone Mr. or Mrs. then, had no idea of their christian names). the McElligotts (I think Mr. McElligott sold encyclopedias) and the Woulfes (Mr Woulfe worked in McKennas).   Accross the road we the Griffins (Juniors people) the Kennys, Hassetts, Rita Purcell and her lodger Dan Daly, the Callagys and at the top of this side there were two shops- beside the road going down to the track - Bolsters who sold lovely Lucan Ice Creams and Moloneys (no relation) who had a large shop selling everything, tea, sugar, meal  and shoes."

Peggy Brick who also lived in Bridge Road remembers a Mulligan's shop as well.

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Seen on Twitter


A picture paints a thousand words

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Neighbourly chat in Charles Street


I met Jerry and Violet on a sunny morning in May 2018

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Rás Tailteann in Listowel May 22 2018...a little known Listowel Connection




It's May 22 2018. There I was on Market Street waiting for the Rás to hit town and filling my time by taking a few snaps of the locals when.........


who do I spot across the street but my old school friend from Scoil Mhuire, Kanturk? 
Why was Mary Kiely (now Corkery) in Listowel at the Rás finish?


This is why. Her lovely grandson is riding in the race. Here is Dylan Corkery with three proud grandparents.  
\And here is the Listowel connection or, to be more precise, the Duagh connection. Dylan's grandfather is an O'Keeffe from Trienireach, Duagh. Dylan at 19 is one of the youngest riders in Rás Tailteann.

(More from the Rás to come)