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I have fond memories of
The Turning
bridges: there were five such on the town section of the canal:
at Sugar Island;
Monaghan Street;
Ballybot; and Buttercrane, where the rail crossed the canal; and Dublin Bridge. This was to allow barge traffic bound for
Portadown. A bell would sound in the Harbour
Master’s Office to alert people. School
children used the cry, ‘The bridges were closed!’ as an excuse for their lack
of punctuality.
The Level
Crossings: where the rail crossed the roads. These were at Edward Street; Monaghan Street; Francis Street; Buttercrane; Dublin Bridge;
and Bridge Street,
where the Carlingford-bound train crossed. One was a few doors from my aunt’s house. It was manned by a railwayman in a raised
signal-box. When the train was due, he
rang a bell to alert the public and then closed off the street to allow the
train to pass. I fondly remember these
lumbering giants gushing steam and all the passengers hanging out the carriage
windows as the train passed.
The
Electric Tram: This
ran from Edward Street
to Bessbrook, carrying mill workers and cargo. It was by then, notoriously unreliable, resulting in workers forced to
walk, losing time and wages as a result.
Ships in Albert Basin: My father worked ‘on the
quay’ loading and unloading coal boats and other cargo. Newry remained a port into the mid-60’s.
Horse-drawn
Bakery Carts: There
were very few motor vehicles in my childhood years and bakery carts drawn by
horses were a common sight. As my aunt’s
house was directly opposite Willis’s bakery, we would see the horse-vans lined
up in the morning and evening, loading and returning. The streets were often awash with manure!
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