Thursday, 26 March 2015

Daffodil Day 2015

I wandered lonely as a cloud
That floats on high o'er vales and hills
When all at once I saw a crowd
A host of golden daffodils


Daffodils are the symbol chosen by the Irish Cancer Society to symbolize its fundraising campaign. Listowel has always put in a great effort in supporting the cause which supports people who have cancer and families who suffer because of it.

On their Facebook page Listowel Daffodil Day they have posted photos of the Daffodil Day committee down through the years. It is great to see all the people who have worked so hard on this over the years but very sad to see the lovely faces of so many who have passed away. To celebrate Daffodil Day 2015 and to honour all of the local people who have lost the fight against this disease here are some of the photos.









Thank you all!

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Confirmation Day 2015


Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Agricultural Show in 1953 and other old stuff


June 29 1953



Margaret Ward gave me this photo from 1953. The occasion is the annual agricultural show and the place is the sports field. If you recognize yourself or your family, do tell us. The two girls in the middle of the picture with big bows in their hair and eating ice creams are daughters of the local garda, Barney Scanlon. Mrs. O'Flaherty, formerly Walshe is there and so is Gene Moriarty. Mrs Kennelly and Ned Browne are in the photo as well.

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Kanturk Arts Festival 2015

They had a great arts festival in my home town in the weekend before St. Patrick's Day. I took part in a  photographic event. We went on a little tour of the town snapping away. Then we compared our snaps and shared them with the group. The Mallow Camera Club facilitated it all. We had a reading of some hilarious one act plays. Hazel Gaynor gave a great author reading and talk and I'm told that the poetry slam was brilliant but I had left by then. It's a lovely event. I'd advise local people to take a trip there next year. It's only down the road.

During the arts festival a local man displayed his old record collection in a shop window. Do you remember these?







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No Mail Today



I took this photo of a deserted mail box in a wall beside the castle in Kanturk. I think it used to be an An Post postbox but its an unusual one.

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 Reminder; Daffodil Day 2015, March 27



(photo; Listowel Daffodil Day)

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

Tractors on Parade and Con and Paddy Minogue of Rathea


Vehicles in the St. Patrick's Day Parade 2015




























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Kennedy Home



The former Greenlawn/ Kennedy Home is to get a new lease of life soon.


The notice on the gate says that the Brothers of Charity are asking for planning permission to change the use to a Family Resource Centre.

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Minogues of Rathea

A few weeks back I reproduced a story first told in the Rathe Irremore Journal. It was one of my most popular posts in a long time.  

Today I bring you another story from the same journal. This time is Kitty Sweeney's account of a man who lived a sad and lonely life but who had many friends and admirers in Rathea.

THE MINOGUES.
It is said when we start looking back over our lives, it's a sure sign of old age creeping up on us. When we think back and once again draw from the archives of our minds, all that is stored in there for as far back as we can remember, things  that happened are partly forgotten and have laid dormant for so long. These memories can belong to faces, places, the sound of voices that come re-echoing out of the past, friends, neighbours, family long  gone, but some little figment of remembrance lingers on. When we draw these out again and re-live them, it's amazing how much is stored away in the caverns of our minds. The friends and people we knew so well who formed our community one big family and whose names have been erased as it were forever. It's nearly half a century since these people walked among us. The family I am going to tell you about, are a father and son, Con and Paddy Minogue. It doesn't seem that long ago since they left us, but I recently asked someone who is in his fiftieth year,"Do you remember Paddy Minogue". Never heard of him was the reply.

Con and Paddy Minogue lived in a thatched little "cot", consisting of one room, a stones throw from Brown's Bridge. The father a poet, the son the singer - that's why I would like to write a little memorial to them. Con was a farm labourer, his family were of Clare extraction, but he came to these parts at the time of the "hiring fairs", when labourers went to market places and were hired by the farmers. He also broke stones on the road for the council, drew turf to Tralee with a jennit and cart - a hard life by any standards, but these people never complained.

Con was a poet and he wrote plenty of poetry - a lot of comic commentary on happenings in the locality and Skelligs lists. I can remember him rhyming them off at our house during the dinner when he worked with my father. He would be eating and reciting. Some of these local verses were frowned upon by the "boyos" they were written about. But his serious ballads were beautiful - the one surviving one, the well known song "The Banks of the Sweet Smerla Side". He also wrote other lovely songs, one about the "Mass Rocks of Ireland", but sadly they are all lost. Today he could hold his own with the best poets of the day. But alas he was born too soon and his work was not appreciated. I don't think he lived to pension age. He is laid to rest in Finuge cemetery.

While the father was the poet and balladeer, his son Paddy was the singer, and anyone who remembers him singing will agree that he had a glorious voice. He could use his voice so well for someone who never had a singing lesson - it was melodious and beautiful. Paddy had the misfortune of losing his mother when he was only a few years old, he didn't remember her. His father re-married, but his step-mother didn't have much authority over Paddy. He didn't bother with school too much, he didn't believe in spending his day at a bench learning the three R's. He was like an adopted son of every family in the surrounding townlands, everyone liked him. Paddy spent his years singing and enjoying himself. He was welcome at every hooley and invited or not he turned up, his hair shining with "Brillantine" (it could be bought at Pike for 2d. a Bottle). Paddy had a very narrow little head, he couldn't get a peaked cap small enough, so he had to roll several sheets of the "Kerryman" lenghtwise and fit it inside the cap to keep it from falling down over his eyes.

He was very popular when it came to the saving of the hay or the turf cutting. He would promise faithfully to come, but if he got a "wink" from a girl somewhere else, he was like an elusive butterfly, he was gone - he loved the girls. During the many days he spent on our farm doing the chores, we would have him singing all his newest songs. At milking time, in the times of stools and buckets, we would sing along with him, the same at meadow time and at the picking of the spuds or at whatever job we were lucky enough to have Paddy doing. He was innocent and harmless, everyone's friend, he had no foes and he never missed Mass on Sundays. He lived life without worries or cares, he never took a wife, he said they were too troublesome and of course maybe they let him down. When Paddy was in his late thirties he became a diabetic. He didn't have anyone to look after him - his latter life was mostly spent in hospital and eventually he went to Killarney and never came home again. When he died, he didn't have one single family member alive. He died rather suddenly and by the time the news reached Rathea, he was already buried in Aghadoe - a beautiful place - His neighbours were very upset as they would have brought Paddy back to be buried beside his father - not that it mattered where he was laid to rest.

He was certainly one of the decent flowers that blushed unseen. I hope there are hoolies up in heaven because if there are, Paddy is there for sure giving his rendering as only he could of the "Bold Gatty Boy" - the last verse went like this,
"Tomorrow Mulcahy will stand on the dock
 watching forever the turns of the book.
The judge will reply, with a wink in his eye,
 Ten more years for the Bold Gatty Boy".

Kitty Sweeney.


Monday, 23 March 2015

Folklore, Green shoots and Tadhg Kennelly honoured in Sydney

The country has gone rugby mad


puts it best.


Together, standing tall

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Folklore



This is the Kerry County Library in Tralee. I was here last week on a mission.

I'll begin at the beginning.

In the school year 1937/38 the Irish Folklore Commission undertook a great project. They got teachers around the country to encourage their pupils to collect lore from their elders. The boys and girls undertook the task with varying degrees of enthusiasm and success.  The results of their efforts are now stored in archives around the country.  It is no surprise to see that one of the biggest files is the one collected by pupils in Scoil Realt na Maidine, Listowel. Their teacher, Bryan MacMahon had a deep appreciation of the value of this project .

A past pupil of my own, Emma MacElligott, now herself a teacher, alerted me to this rich store of stories, sayings, placenames etc. I visited the archive in the Kerry County Library, Tralee and there the archivist, Michael Lynch introduced me to this treasure trove. I will share with you some of the stories I read there.


One boy wrote about a woman called Madge Shine who lived in The Red Cottages, Cahirdown. Madge used to make baskets from hazel. She used to place the hazel twigs over the fire to soften before weaving them into baskets.

Another local man, Martin Sheehy, made ‘sgiaths” from “scallops”. I’m guessing that sciaths are the kind of flat basket used for gathering flowers or vegetables, which, in English, we call a trug. According to Michael O’Brien of Ashe Street who recorded the story, “he bended the sticks in and through one another until he had his sgiaths made.”

Other basketmakers used rushes.


Before candles were commercially made people used to make their own from “fat.” They used the fat of goats and other animals according to Mary Hickey of O’Connell’s Avenue who was 85 when she told her stories to B. Holyoake of Railway House. According to Mary, they got a mould, put a stick across the top. Attached to the stick were 6 or 7 “cotton threads”  These were obviously the wicks. Then they “rendered the fat”.
(I remember well my own mother rendering suet in the days before cooking oil.  There was always a bowl of fat at the ready for frying.)
Back to 1937…the hot fat was poured into the mould and left to set overnight. In the morning they had 6 candles. Half penny candles were called “padogues”.

More stories to come….

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County Colours



Do you remember the days before scarves and county jerseys, people showed their support by wearing crepe paper badges and caps? These things inevitably ran all over  your face and clothes…happy days!

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Progress Report on Listowel Revival





The rebuilding of The Plaza is moving along nicely.



The rumour mill says that this premises is to be a medical centre.


Rumour has it that this will be a veterinary clinic.
If true, all of this is great news.

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Hall of Fame



Tadhg Kennelly of Listowel has been inducted into the Sydney Swans Hall of Fame. What an honour!

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Tidy Town Awareness Day in Super Valu



Photo;  Listowel Tidy Towns

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+   R.I.P. Ann Cox  +



My very stylish, feisty, animal loving former colleagues in Pres. Listowel has gone to her eternal reward.
Ann was a fashionista before the term was invented. She was always beautifully groomed, softly spoken and ladylike.
Ann loved her dogs. When she brought them from the rescue home they were the luckiest dogs in Kerry for Ann lavished love and care on them to their final days.
She loved the Irish language and promoted Irish culture and traditions in everything she did.
She took up golf late in life but she enjoyed immensely the whole new circle of friends it brought her.
Ann contracted Parkinsons Disease in her late sixties but due to her fighting spirit and the great care of her neighbours and friends she continued to live in her own home until two years ago.
She passed away on March 21 2015.

Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam uasal.

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Sunday Morning in Brosna, March 2015

photo; Ballybunion Prints Beach