Tags
Glandore Stone Circle.
23 Tuesday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
23 Tuesday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
23 Tuesday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
22 Monday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
Cork Grand Jury/Agents 1765.
The Grand Jury was 23 in number and was dominated by the same Protestant families. It is sometimes forgotten that they and the Quakers and Huguenots created the modern Cork from the ruins of 1690 to the thriving port and trading centre of 1800. The entirety of the modern city centre was reclaimed much of it by these families in the 18th century with Dutch assistance.
The excerpt is from John T Collins Newspaper extracts.
22 Monday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
22 Monday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
In this part of Ireland putting up a nativity scene at Christmas time is as natural as breathing. Known as cribs, they appear everywhere at the beginning of December. Every Irish home has one, perhaps passed down through the generations, and they come out from the attic storage boxes along with the decorations to be displayed in a window or on a mantlepiece or hall table. Even for families that consider themselves non-religious, the crib is an essential part of getting a house ready for Christmas.
Large cribs are erected in town squares and in churches. Sometimes the figures in a church crib will be inserted slowly, one a day, in little ceremonies involving children. Traditionally, the baby Jesus, was not placed in the manger until Christmas Eve. Live cribs, where the nativity figures and animals are alive, are often mounted as fundraisers…
View original post 467 more words
21 Sunday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized


At the fireplace in the Anchor Hotel Bantry, the Future Governor General Tim Healy (1855-1931) with friends asked as a parting gift that ‘something be done about the path from Adrigole to Lauragh’ now the Healy pass and Bill O’Donnell’s Memoir ‘The Shortest Way Home’
The Anchor Hotel used to belong to Bill O’Donnell, who a few months ago at the age of 86 brought out a memoir of his journey around the world in the early 1950s. Inspire.ieproduction. He had earlier written a novel ‘The Small Kingdom’ and has a third book in his head.
His brother Brian owns the famous Pub in Cork the ‘Hi B’
Tim Healy Governor General Irish Free State Census Return 1901
21 Sunday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
Images of St Brigid and her Cross by Harry Clarke
It’s St Brigid’s Day, and Danny is teaching Finola how to make a Brigid’s Cross with which to safeguard Nead an Iolair from fire and lightning. When his family and ours lived in Devon, Danny faithfully provided us with a new Brigid’s Cross every year. I always kept the old ones – until they disintegrated: that’s the tradition. Now we have both made our homes in West Cork and it seems appropriate that Danny is still the provider of these essential tokens of protection – which should be placed above the hearth, at the threshold of the byre or in the rafters.
February 1st: Tradition under way in the McCormack household
There are far more stories told about the Irish Saint Brigid, Brigit, Brighid or Bride than there are about Saint Patrick himself: if I wrote down here everything I…
View original post 845 more words
21 Sunday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
This gallery contains 8 photos.
Originally posted on Roaringwater Journal:
Church of St Barrahane, Castletownshend, East Window Images of the nativity are a special part of…
16 Tuesday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Some West Cork, Placenames and Townlands c 1913, James E. Burke, BL, Justice of the Peace, Member County Council, one time Editor Southern Star
https://plus.google.com/photos/100968344231272482288/albums/6093584769833323681
16 Tuesday Dec 2014
Posted in Uncategorized