Showing posts with label North Kerry MS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Kerry MS. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 February 2019

NKM Strike, MS Coffee Morning and Denny Factory is No More and some early spring flowers in Lyreacrompasne



Abandoned House; Photo; Chris Grayson

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Employment Unrest in Listowel in 1922

NKM on the banks of The Feale was going along nicely until 1922 . A strike at the factory caused the owners to relocate their business to Dublin leaving many in Listowel disappointed. Dave O'Sullivan did the research.



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There it is....Gone




Photo: Seán Lyons


The old Denny factory in Tralee has been levelled and the site cleared.


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North Kerry MS Coffee Morning

On Saturday February  16 2019 the North Kerry branch of MS Ireland held a very popular coffee morning in Tomáisíns in Lisselton.
I was there enjoying the fare and taking a few photos.






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Road Signs



At the junction of Charles St. and Courthouse Road

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February 2019 in Lyreacrompane







The green fingers  and the photographs are those of Joe Harrington and Kay O'Leary. Doesn't warm the cockles of your heart to see such beauty and such promise of Spring?

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Looking for Love Second Time Around

Tune in to First Dates Ireland  on RTE 2 tonight, February 28 2019 at 9.30. Pamela Behan, formerly of Listowel, is one of the ladies looking to find love.

Wednesday, 27 February 2019

NKM Leaves Listowel, Account of an Old School in Derrindaffe and North Kerry MS Fundraiser



Photo: Chris Grayson

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Two Gentlemen


The late Jim Cogan and the late Dan Browne stop for a chat on a summer morning in 2004.
May the sod lie gently on both their souls.

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Maurice Mul in Ballybunion



Poster thanks; Liam OHainnín

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Listowel's First Strike







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An Old School 

(In the Dúchas Folklore collection )


Mrs Quill of Derridaff told this story to an unnamed schoolgirl. 

There was a school in Meenganare. It was a low thatched building with only one very small window.The floor was earth and in Winter, when the roof leaked, the children’s feet were mired in muck.  Seating for the pupils was a plank of wood resting on two blocks of wood.

It was a one teacher school. The teacher was a Mr. Purcell, a native of Cork. He taught there from 1844 to 1879. Mr. Purcell lived in lodgings near the school and he was paid every Friday.

Both pupils and teacher spoke only Irish. The only subjects that were taught were Irish and English. The teacher wrote on a large stone flag which rested against the wall and the children wrote on slates.


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M.S. North Kerry Fundraiser

On Saturday February16 2019, I spent a very pleasant morning in Tomáisín's in Lisselton. My old friends in the North Kerry branch of MS Ireland were holding their annual Valentine's coffee   morning.
The confectionery was mouthwatering, all made locally by volunteer bakers. The company was good and there were lovely raffle prizes. It was a very enjoyable event.
Here are some of my photos from the day.







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Mystery Solved




I asked someone who knew. It's a traffic counter according to Jimmy Moloney.

Monday, 3 June 2013

People at North Kerry MS Annual Busking Day 2012

It has been a hectic week in Listowel, sunshine, crowds, ceol, craic and culture. I've been out and about since Thursday and I have hundreds of photos to look through, cull and choose from to bring you a flavour of Writers' Week 2013.
To give you a foretaste, here is Jer.'s video of the Poetry without Pints event and Mike O'Donnell's sketch of Máire Mhac an tSaoi which he presented to her after her tribute event on Saturday evening

http://youtu.be/URupXdu_h7g



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You will have to wait just a little longer for my Writers Week photos. In the meantime, here are a few photos I took on MS Busking Day.


















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John Stack's photo says it all


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Best dressed lady at yesterday's race meeting


Nollaig MacCarthy

Monday, 27 May 2013

An Rás leaves town, Busking Day and some gathering events

Photo by Denis OCarroll of Listowel's Big Bridge and the River Feale taken on May 23 2013. Superb!

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These are some of the musicians and volunteers who worked so hard to make Friday's MS fundraiser such a hit.

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On May 21, as The Rás came through, the boys from Scoil Realt na Maidine were safely positioned behind the wall at The Slua Hall.


The following photos are of local people out in the sunshine to enjoy the excitement. It was great to see such a positive buzz in town and everyone forgot about recession for a day or two.







Some people were working; John McCarthy is welcomed home by his daughter after the finish in his hometown, Listowel. Press photographer, John Reidy was snapping some local colour.






Some local media and local supporters.

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The Gathering

Dont forget tomorrow night Tuesday May 28 RTE will repeat The Gathering Homeward Bound with Tadhg Kennelly.

In conjunction with The Gathering there are lots and lots of Clan and family gatherings taking place.



On the left is Martin Griffin. He, along with the Lartigue crew, is planning a gathering of descendants of people who worked on the monorail. This is planned for later on in the year. I'll keep you posted.

Junior tells me that he is Griffin from both sides of his family. Both Griffin sides are planning a family reunion .


This is Damien Stack's photo of his family shop which was established in 1910. The gathering of the Stack clan back to their Listowel roots promises to be a great hooley.

The Stack Clan and all its branches and adopted sons and daughters will make their way to Listowel  from July 19 to July 22 for a packed weekend.


Meanwhile in Dingle all this week a week of events to welcome scattered descendants of Corcha Dhuibhne emigrants is taking place.

I read all about it here:

"The Dingle Peninsula has a unique and complex history.   A lot of damage was inflicted on the Peninsula during the course of the Second Desmond Rebellion, the Nine Years War and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. Its remoteness and isolation may have protected it from the worst excesses of the Williamite War and the 1798 Rebellion.  
 It is one of the places in Kerry thas has experienced the highest level of emigration over the past  three hundred years.   
 It was particularly devastated during the Famine, with up to 5000 people dying in the Dingle Workhouse alone.   The Kerry Examiner of 8 February 1847, records ‘The state of the people in Dingle is horrifying.  Fever, famine and dysentery are daily increasing, deaths from hunger daily occurring.  From all parts of the country, they crowd into the town for relief and not a pound of meal is to be had in the wretched town for any price’.   
Thankfully all these wars and famines are behind us and the Dingle Peninsula has survived.

This year, the year of The Gathering, the people of the Dingle Peninsula are taking the opportunity to welcome back our diaspora from all over the world so as that they too might experience The Corca Dhuibhne Peninsula, the Gaeltacht, the friendliness of our people, the goodness of our food and the wealth of our culture, language and heritage.  
Corca Dhuibhne – one of the most beautiful places on earth. 
 23rd May to 30th May 2013."

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Joanne Dillon sends us this link to a very poignant article from Irish Central.  It tells the fate of many Irish immigrants who died in quarantine.