Michael
retired finally from the clothing making/adjusting business more than a decade
ago, when his business had been located in Kildare Street, above Gerry Devine’s
barbers.
Michael
was one of six sons of Tom and Anne Gallagher of 33 North Street. Tom before him was a tailor and his wife Anne
ran a dress-making business also on the premises. Brother Lenny once had the newsagents shop
across from the Cathedral, then known as the Leprechaun. Frank was – and remains a prominent community
worker of Derrybeg
Park. Others among you will have known Michael’s
other brothers, Patsy and Eugene.
In
retirement Michael was often to be seen in Michael Toner’s Bridge Bar where he
made many friends.
As
a young man Michael practised his skills in the window of their shop at 33 North Street. Friends of mine can recall pressing their
faces to the shop’s plate glass window, studiously ignored by Michael who was
constantly intent upon his sewing. Theirs was the last old business to survive on North Street right up until its
demolition in the 1960s.

At
its height their shop employed up to twelve people, among them Hughie McGeough,
Tom Doyle, Michael John Manley, Michael McArdle, Julia O’Mahoney, Mary Kenny,
Delia Fahy, Lala Fitzpatrick, Lily O’Hanlon, May Mallon, Annie Connolly, Mary
White and Hughie Quinn.
A
side-door from North Street
opened onto a big yard with a cow-byre, hayloft, pig and hen-houses. This was a small farm in the centre of the
town! The Gallaghers made their own
butter once a week. At the back of the
yard, a steep flight of steps led to a large garden which flanked Lindsay Hill
and the rear of St Clare’s Avenue.
May
God have mercy on the soul of Michael Gallagher, one of nature’s gentlemen.