The Plants won’t be safe from Frost until the Scaraveens are Gone 15th April to 15th May, (Scairbhín)
13 Wednesday May 2015
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13 Wednesday May 2015
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13 Wednesday May 2015
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This gallery contains 11 photos.
Originally posted on A SILVER VOICE FROM IRELAND:
? Sun setting over Bushland in Australia In James Joyce’s Ulysses,Mr.Deasy asks Stephen Dedalus what an Englishman’s…
12 Tuesday May 2015
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11 Monday May 2015
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ps://www.google.ie/maps/place/The+Tin+Pub/@51.5999618,-9.6358044,19z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x0000000000000000:0x8584b90eac3ed79d
One of the all time greats of Irish Music much unknown. wwww
The Buachallán Bawn, Spinning Duet, probably pre 1800 sung by girls spinning flax or wool
http://www.freddiewhite.com/news.htm
http://www.freddiewhite.com/video1.htm
http://www.freddiewhite.com/video2.htm
10 Sunday May 2015
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A little chapel was built here as early as 1761 and evidence of it remained into the 20th century. “The ruins were in the corner of Edward Gibson’s field. The wicker ceiling was made of locally grown sally rods, peeled, interlaced and varnished. Sacking was laid on top of it and the thatch above it.”
However, it was Rev Zechariah Worrell (1760 – 1834) , a poet as well as an itinerant preacher, who was to write the little congregation into the annals of Irish Methodist history. In 1808, when leaving there, after a period of service, he wrote the poem ‘Farewell to Tagherdoo’ (sic) to be sung to the tune of ‘Haste again ye days of grace’. In fourteen verses he praised the Christian commitment and friendship he had experienced there.
Tradition records that his successor was less popular with the people and he sent some lines of his own to his predecessor ‘I…
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10 Sunday May 2015
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| Alice Milligan was born at Gortmore, Omagh, County Tyrone the third of 13 children. She was educated at Methodist College, Belfast, Magee College, Derry, and King’s College, London and learned Irish in Dublin.
She was a friend of James Connolly, a member of Inghinidhe na hEireann and of Sinn Fein. For some years Alice was organiser for the Gaelic League. She published poetry in the United Irishman among other journals, and in 1895, with Ethna Carbery founded and edited the Northern Patriot. She also edited the Shan Van Vocht from 1896 to 1899. She was a founder member of the Ulster Anti-Partition Council. In 1900 she wrote a play, The Last Feast of the Fianna, for the Irish Literary Theatre, and The Daughter of Donagh for the Abbey Theatre. In 1898 she published a Life of Wolfe Tone and later a novel, A Royal Democrat as well as… |
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10 Sunday May 2015
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Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley, KG, PC (1867-1947) was a British Conservative politician who served on three occasions as Prime Minister of the UK. (1923-4; 1924-9; 1935-7). During his latter period in office he oversaw the abdication of King Edward VIII.
His mother, Louisa MacDonald, was the grand-daughter of James MacDonald who was called into the ministry in Ireland by John Wesley in 1784. Her father was George B MacDonald who entered the itinerancy in 1825 and her brother was Frederic W MacDonald who served as President of the British Wesleyan Conference in 1899. There were also Methodists on the Baldwin side of the family descended from Rev Jacob Stanley, Sen.
Through his mother’s family, Stanley Baldwin was also a first cousin of the writer and poet Rudyard Kipling.
10 Sunday May 2015
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At the request of a small society formed by a soldier in 1745, John Cennick who had been one of Wesley’s preachers but was now a Moravian, came to Dublin in June 1746 and began to preach in a chapel in Skinner’s Alley hired from the Baptists.
Charles Wesley explained how the ‘Swaddler’ title originated (in his diary entry for 10th September 1747).
“One I observed crying, ‘Swaddler,swaddler!’ (our usual title here). ……. We dined with a gentleman, who explained our name to us. It seems we are beholden to Mr Cennick for it, who abounds in such like expressions as ‘I curse and blaspheme all the gods in heaven, but the babe that lay in the manger, the babe that lay in Mary’s lap, the babe that lay in swaddling clouts [clothes], etc’. Hence they nicknamed him ‘Swaddler, or Swaddling John’. And the word sticks to us all, not excepting the clergy.”
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10 Sunday May 2015
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More interesting facts from Irish Methodist Genealogy ……..
“In 1824 a House of Commons committee recommended a townland survey of Ireland, with maps at a scale of 6 inches, to facilitate a uniform valuation for local taxation. The Duke of Wellington, then prime minister, authorised this, the first Ordnance Survey of Ireland. The survey was directed by Colonel Thomas Colby, who commanded officers of the Royal Engineers and three companies of sappers and miners.” (Ordnance Survey Memoirs of Ireland)
The Methodist Church at Athlone bears the British Government arrow survey mark where the Ordnance Surveyors started mapping Ireland – it was regarded as the centre point of Ireland.
10 Sunday May 2015
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Those of us who pursue an interest in Irish Methodist genealogy look to John Wesley as having been the instigator of the eighteenth century religious revival in Ireland.
He arrived for the first time at St. George’s Quay in Dublin on Sunday, 9th August 1747 and bade farewell in the same city on Sunday, 12th July 1789. In the intervening forty-two years, about five and a half were spent in Ireland, during the course of twenty-one visits. The County of Kerry appears to have been the only one he failed to reach as he travelled through the length and breadth of the land. When English Methodists questioned his allocation of so much time he responded, “Have patience, and Ireland will repay you”.
History has proved his words to have been prophetic and Irish Methodists have carried their faith with them as they have become widely dispersed throughout the world.