The
Frontier Sentinel reporter of the time – December 1947 – himself visited one of
the new homes in Rooney’s Meadow – as he said, “Clanrye Avenue, to be exact” –
to make his personal assessment.
“They
are not spacious houses but palaces in comparison with the majority of houses
in Newry at present. Spick and span
walls, three fine bedrooms, a small box-room and all with built-in wardrobes,
sitting-room, bathroom, with a space beneath the stairs for holding a
pram.
I
was almost forgetting to mention the modern kitchenette – the pride of the
home.”
Your
present writer is somewhat confused. It
is not my recollection that any of the houses on what is presently termed
Clanrye Avenue – stretching from the Monaghan Street roundabout to the
‘phone-box’ [that was!] – were constructed until much later. Slieve
Gullion Road – a straight continuation of this
Avenue - may have got its own name immediately after this time. Yet if
the reporter was viewing the Slieve Gullion Road homes, the first to be
occupied, he strangely omitted to mention the ‘back-hall’ which in end houses
at least was as spacious as the lauded “kitchenette” – and today in most serves
as a useful laundry room - and in ‘mid-terrace’ homes permitted access to the
rear gardens and became the children’s play-room in the early days!
The
housing shortage of the time was dire – there were 650 applicants for these
first few homes - and the conditions in which Newry people were rearing large
families were Third World. The reporter interviewed some who joined the
long queue of applicants. One young
woman with five children had married nine years previously and reared her large
family in a single room on the second floor of a tenement. A man with eight children all under 20 years
of age had lived since his marriage in a small, condemned two-roomed
house.
“One
young woman took me to her ‘home’. It
was a disused office which she, her husband and six children had occupied for a
number of years. In Castle Street I saw a young woman with
five children living in a large house which was disintegrating round her
head. In North Street I was shown a bedroom in
which slept four children. Half the
flooring was missing and I looked down through the space to the cellar
beneath. The supporting joists had
rotten away and the floor swayed perilously beneath me.”
In December 1947 the position was this. ‘Sixteen of the Trust’s houses have now been
occupied and a further twelve will be ready in the New Year. Altogether forty-eight houses are in various
degrees of construction but tenders have not yet been accepted for the
construction of the other one hundred and forty houses to be erected on the
site.
In
addition to the one hundred and eighty two houses of the Housing Trust, the
Newry Urban Council have already erected twenty-four in Needham Street (James Connolly and Michael Mallin Parks in
present-day Patrick Street) and are now putting finishing touches to
fifty-six in Canal Street.
During
the past year the Council has been pressing for more speed in erection and
finishing of houses which are held up for the sake of such things as baths,
which are considered by some to be non-essential! With future immediate plans the number of
new homes might reach 382 with 650 applicants for them.
The
Council debate of that week centred on the allocation of the completed homes on
Canal Street,
actually Emmett Street
and Davis Street,
and perhaps a few on Cochran Road.
In open defiance of the harsh Ministry
ruling that large families should not be accommodated the Council selected the
following – from whom the lucky sixteen would be finally selected.
|
Name
|
Address
of the time
|
Number
in family
|
|
Thomas
McGuigan
|
Sinclair Street
|
12
|
|
Owen
McKevitt
|
Chapel
Street
|
11
|
|
Michael
Kelly
|
Canal
Street
|
10
|
|
John
McElroy
|
North Street
|
12
|
|
Felix
Loughran
|
Queen
Street
|
9
|
|
John
Fegan
|
Bell’s Row
|
11
|
|
Robert
McKee
|
Queen
Street
|
9
|
|
Frank
Curran
|
Orchard Gardens
|
9
|
|
John
Smith
|
Pound Street
|
9
|
|
Joseph
Ferris
|
Stream
Street
|
10
|
|
John
Campbell
|
John Martin Street
|
9
|
|
James
Rooney
|
John Mitchel Street
|
9
|
|
Joseph
Fee
|
George’s
Lane
|
7
|
|
James
Fearon
|
Monaghan
Row
|
7
|
|
John
Monaghan
|
Bridge
Street
|
7
|
|
John
McParland
|
Chapel
Street
|
8
|
|
Mary
O’Brien
|
Water
Street
|
6
|
|
W
J Donegan
|
Market
Street
|
4
|
|
Hugh
Quinn
|
Edward Street
|
6
|
|
Robert
Kane
|
Kilmorey Street
|
7
|
|
P
McAlinden
|
Chapel
Street
|
6
|
|
Patrick
Watson
|
Lindsay
Hill
|
6
|
|
D
Crilly
|
River
Street
|
5
|
|
John
McCann
|
Bell’s Row
|
5
|
|
John
Johnson
|
Mill Street
|
5
|
|
William
McMahon
|
Castle Street
|
7
|
|
Mrs
Boots
|
North Street
|
6
|
|
Mr
McEvoy
|
Canal
Street
|
8
|
|
B
Gribbon
|
Bell’s Row
|
7
|