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Written by John McCullagh
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Thursday, 02 February 2006 |
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To
leave the subject of Linenhall
Square personalities without reference to the
ubiquitous Lottie McKeown would be a travesty.
No matter which area
of Newry she settled in, she was immediately to the forefront of community life
there.

Yet
Charlotte (her real name) hailed originally from
Randalstown, County
Antrim. The family moved first to Seapatrick,
Banbridge before settling here.
Their
first home in Newry was in Cecil
Street (The Valley) where her father worked in the
local Wilson’s
Mill. After leaving St Joseph’s Primary School Lottie got a job
in Bessbrook Mill. Conditions were
harsh: the girls had to work, from eight
in the morning till six at night, barefoot in wet and humid conditions, for
eighteen shillings a week. The tram
terminus was just round the corner in Edward
Street but still she’d sometimes miss it and have
to run all the way to Bessbrook. Lottie
recalled light-hearted banter journeying home in the open bogey. (By the way, the decaying hulk of the last of
these can still be seen in a field on Sturgan Brae, just opposite Ballinalack Road).

In
those early days, without television, entertainment was provided with dancing
at the Federation Hall in Catherine
Street or at the AOH Hall in The Mall. Occasionally they’d catch the train to
Warrenpoint on Saturday afternoons to attend the dance in the local INF Hall
there.

Girls
would wander out the Belfast Road,
sometimes pursued by a few boys. One
night Lottie and a girlfriend were confronted by a couple of young fellows who
ran after them. A few nights later, they
met the same boys and the two parties joined up. Lottie was paired with Owen McKeown. They later became man and wife!
More……….
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