Showing posts with label Kay Caball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kay Caball. Show all posts

Tuesday, 31 March 2020

Jill Friedman's Listowel, poet John McGrath, Lord Omathwaite and Spanish Flu


Still Working
A KWD refuse truck passes Listowel Garda Station on March 26 2020

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Local poet, John McGrath shared this poem on Facebook. I know it will resonate with many of my emigrant readers.


The Week after St Patrick’s


The week after St Patrick’s, my mother
pressed his suit and packed his case,
Then drove him to the station for the early train
from Ballyhaunis to the crowded boat,
Then on to Manchester and solitude
until All Souls came slowly round again.
I don’t remember ever saying Goodbye.

At seventeen I took the train myself
and saw first-hand my father’s box-room life,
the Woodbines by his shabby single bed.
I don’t remember ever saying Hello
Just sat beside this stranger in the gloom
and talked of home and life, and all the while
I wanted to be gone, get on with mine.

Westerns and ‘The Western’ kept him sane,
newspapers from home until the time
to take the train came slowly round once more.
Lost in Louis L’Amour, he seldom heard
the toilet’s ugly flush, the gurgling bath
next door. Zane Grey dulled the traffic’s
angry roar, outside his grimy window.

Back home the year before he died we spoke
at last as equals, smoked our cigarettes,
his a Woodbine still, and mine a tipped;
My mother would have killed us if she’d known.
The phone-call came as Winter turned to Spring
I stood beside him, touched his face of ice
And knew our last Hello had been Goodbye.


John McGrath March 2018



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Jill Friedman's Kerry

Internationally renowned photographer, Jill Friedman took these photographs on trip to The Kingdom.






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Lord Ormathwaite

Lord Ormathwaite was mentioned in one of the old stories last week. Kay Caball has come across him in her research.

In 1770, John Walsh  (uncle-in-law of John Benn Walsh, Lord Ormathwaite) had purchased land from Francis Thomas Fitzmaurice, 3rd earl of Kerry, in both Clanmaurice and Iraghticonnor for £15,230, and again, in 1774, for £5,944.  John Walsh, was a wealthy nabob, born in Madras, who returned from India to Britain after the battle Plassey.  He became an MP, with a country estate in Berkshire.  He bequeathed his Irish estates after his death to his niece Margaret Benn-Walsh in trust for her son, who became Lord Ormathwaite, owning  9,000 acres in north Kerry at the time of the Great Famine.[1]
Sir John Benn WLSH (later Lord Ormathwaite) visited north Kerry in 1823 -1864 and kept a journal relating  these visits to the different [named] tenants.     Excerpts from this journal are published in John D. Pierse's book Teampall Bán: Aspects of the Famine in north Kerry 1845-1852, p. 241


[1] Kay Caball, The Fall of the Fitzmaurices: The Demise of Kerry's First Family.

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North Kerry and The Spanish Flu

The last great pandemic was the Spanish flu, which ravaged the world in the years after World War 2


Photo from Ballydonoghue Parish Magazine 2018 shows workmen wearing masks.
This magazine has a very informative article about the pandemic.

 North Kerry was particularly hard hit, with many deaths.
In 1918 532 deaths were reported in the Listowel district. As well as the flu, people died of TB and  natural causes and many had lingering injuries acquired on the battle front.

Irishgenealogy,ie has a database of civil and church records that hold fascinating information. If you want to know how your ancestors fared during this last pandemic you could search the death records. Each entry records the cause of death and the duration of the final illness. If you make any interesting discoveries, we'd love to know.


Friday, 28 June 2019

New Potatoes, A Book launch remembered and train Station memorials


A Cottage Window


This is one of the lovely traditional sash windows in Sheahan's Thatched House in Finuge.


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The Humble Spud

(Photo and text from Raymond O'Sullivan on Facebook)


Midsummer’s Day and the first of my own new potatoes. Modern potatoes mature much earlier than their antecedents which were not ready until around Lá Lughnassa, 1st August. In the time of our grandparents and great grandparents, when potatoes were the staple diet of the Irish people, it was a very fortunate family who had enough to last from one harvest to another. By the middle of June the potatoe pit would be empty or whatever was left uneatable. ‘The bitter 6 weeks’ they called the period from Midsummer’s Day to the 1st August. ‘Iúil an Ghorta’, hungry July, that’s what they called it, when all they had to eat was kale, cabbage and onion dip (if they were lucky). I count my blessings on this Mid Summer’s Day. 

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Launch of Robert Pierse's Book

Robert Pierse lunched his memoir, Under the Bed, on the same evening as President Michael D. Higgins and Sabina Higgins came to town. So I was late to the party. There was a great crowd gathered in the back bar of the Arms and a lively and entertaining launch was in full swing. I took a few pictures and then forgot all about them. Here they are at last.




Eibhlín Pierse and friend

Old friends, Kay Caball and Danny Hannon

Section of the large crowd


Billy Keane who launched the book, Cyril Kelly who read from it and Jeremy Murphy who edited it.

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Train Station Memorials




In Cork



In Portlaoise

Monday, 8 April 2019

Fitzmaurice of Old Court, Lixnaw, lartigue Theatre Company, Listowel

The Mermaids nightclub, formerly The Three Mermaids and before that Fealey's shop

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The Fall of the Fitzmaurices of Old Court, Lixnaw



The first notable date in the Fitzmaurice calendar is 1280 when the first Lord of Kerry founded a convent in Lixnaw. In 1614 The Lord of Kerry was deemed Premier Baron of Ireland. This will give you an idea of how old and how prestigious the Fitzmaurice were.
The newly formed Lixnaw Heritage and Historical Society held a great event in The Ceolann, Lixnaw on Sunday April 28 2019.

We were treated to informative and entertaining presentations and we got great insight into how the other half lived. This family owned huge tracts of land acquired through purchase and marriage, they built lots of houses here, in the UK and in France. They amassed and squandered fortunes and they had their fair share of scandal and court appearances to their name.

 Ballyheigue historian, Bryan MacMahon with Kay Caball who was one of the speakers. Kay's tale was spiced with accounts of lavish spending fuelled by the sale of many of the family assets.
"After a gather comes a scaterer"


Rosemary Raughter gave us a presentation on the very interesting life of Arabella Denny who married into the Fitzmaurice family and redeemed it for a while. She is pictured here with Mairead Pierse of Listowel and Joe Harrington of Lyreacrompane.



Listowel folk came to hear about the antics of their Lixnaw neighbours.

Jeremy Murphy, Patrick Gilbert and Kay Caball

Kay's book on the Fall of the Fitzmaurice is due out in November.

Below are a few Lixnaw stories from the Dúchas collection.

Language
English
Collector
Tom Foley
Informant
Mrs Kate Lovett
There are the ruins of the Old Courts near my district. The castle was built by Thomas Fitzmaurice in the year 1200. It is derelict since the 1780. It is situated in the townland of the Old Courts, in the parish of Lixnaw and in the barony of Clanmauricce and in the County of Kerry. Thomas Fitzmaurice was the some of Maurice Fitzgeraldd and Maurice Fitzgerald for Lixnaw from Raymond Le (Gos) Gros. The Lady of Kerry once said there were no places worth living in but London and Lixnaw.
The Castle long ago was an important and majestic building. There were grand rooms in it with beautifully decorated offices and there were costly paintings on the walls and a beautiful, ornamental entrance. There were beautiful gardens near the castle. They gave banquets and parties at night to their friends. They gave entertainment of music and song and dance. A huge bullock and fat sheep and dozens of wild fowl were brought to the various tables

Language
English
Collector
Willie B. Lawlor
Informant
Mr Beasley
Occupation
teacher
There is an old ruin in Lixnaw and another in Listowel. They belong to the Norman times. The Fitzmaurice family lived in Lixnaw Castle 1215-1582. These two castles Lixnaw and Listowel were built about the same time as the castles around this district and they were destroyed about the same time also. If you go to Lixnaw the old people would show you the "Cockhouse" and the Hermitage and the "old Court". Lixnaw was the seat of the Geraldine family in Munster. There was a young child in the Listowel castle, he was brought out dressed in rags in order to save his life. He was taken secretly to England and educated there. He was allowed back in later years and in changed times and made governor of Kerry.

Lixnaw Monument

Language
English
Collector
Michael Lynch
38
Lixnaw Monument
The Monument of Lixnaw was built about the year 1692. It was erected by Fitzmaurice. He got married to a protestant lady called Constance Long and Fitzmaurice preverted after his marriage. Fitzmaurice was the 20th Baron of Lixnaw and the 22nd in descent to Raymond le Gros. When his wife died in 1685 his people who remained Catholics did not want her to be buried in the family tomb in Kiltomey near by. He buried her outside the tomb but this did not satisfy them fully, however she was not disinterred. Fitzmaurice did not want any further trouble so he built this Monument for himself and his successors. He and his son and grandson were buried in this Monument. Fitzmaurice died in 1687. McCarthy Mor owned these lands first and he gave them to Fitzmaurice and they later came into the hands of Lord Listowel who sold them to his tenants under the Wyndham Act of 1903.
Micheal Lynch,
Soon, Ballybunion
19-7-'38
Note_ This Fitzmaurice 21st Baron married Anne, daughter of Sir Wm Petty of Down Survey fame, who had 50,000 acres. Her dowry was the Petty estate in South Kerry. The late Lord Lansdowne was a descendant.

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An Old Lartigue Theatre Group programme






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A Map of Listowel by Amy Sheehy

from the programme of the Acting Irish Theatre Festival 2019


Friday, 14 December 2018

Boy at the Window, Killarney at Christmas and the Launch of Listowel, A Printer's Legacy



Killarney, December 2018

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A Winter Poem




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Old Post Box in Killarney



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Christmas in Killarney

I was lucky enough to spend a weekend in Killarney recently and they are pulling out all the stops to make it a Christmas destination.



The jaunting cars and horses were converted to sleighs and were filled with children singing carols.



The bollards were converted into tin soldiers.










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Launch of Listowel, A Printer's Legacy

We had a great night in The Listowel Arms on Dec. 9th for the launch of Vincent Carmody's book.


Finbarr and Cathy Mawe were helping out with the selling of the books.


Mary and Joe Hanlon came early on their way to St. John's for Mike O'Donnell's Goddess of Lust.


John Pierse is adding another book to his library of Kerry history books.


Gerald Fitzgerald with his book



Declan Downey and Paddy Keane exchange a word .


Kay and Arthur Caball with John Pierse


Derry and Marie Reen with Kathleen Carmody


Tim O'Leary and Michael Guerin


Ruth O'Quigley buys her book from Kathy Mawe.