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Derrybeg Villas revisited |
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Written by John Clements
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Tuesday, 30 May 2006 |
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Many thanks for the prompt and informative
response, John. Really appreciate the
pictures too. Firstly, about Derrybeg
Villas itself.
 I too
went to Dorothy Shea for elocution lessons and even participated in the Newry
Festival. But I was no star and one year
was it. I was more successful playing
the piano and competed for several years. At that time Newry enjoyed a surprisingly high
talent in the arts and the music and drama
festivals were very well supported. We
had top level adjudicators from England.
Leslie Woodgate officiated one of the
years I competed.
Derrybeg
Villas was built sometime in the 1930's, I believe, by Frank Tredgold and he
was our landlord. He lived in the house
nearest the railway line. I believe we
were the second tenant in our house. Strangely there was only one house changed
tenants in the thirteen years we were there.
The family names, in order, were Tredgold, Findlay, Clements, Gunn,
Shea and Robb. The houses all had large
vegetable gardens in front and a plantation of tall fir trees provided privacy
from the traffic on the Camlough
Road. Going
on up the lane there were two semi-detached houses on the left and maybe a
quarter mile further the Kelly farm on the right.
That is where I had to walk to every Thursday,
after school, to bring back a half gallon can full of fresh buttermilk and a
couple of 'pats' of country butter floating on the top. A rare luxury during the war years.
more ..........
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