The Lislea Drama Festival will close on Saturday evening with Frank MacGuinness’s Carthaginians.
Newry News and Irish Fun
The Lislea Drama Festival will close on Saturday evening with Frank MacGuinness’s Carthaginians.
Some short time ago we concluded our account of the sixteenth century history of Newry and of the Bagenals’ role in it in particular. Before we enter the fateful seventeenth century, we should perhaps reflect again on the results of ‘The Last Conquest of Ireland’ in the words of our own John Mitchel.
We have been offered the personal history of one of the Great War recruits, which we will serialise shortly. Meanwhile here are the N and O recruits of that fateful year.
My friend and colleague Michael McNamee was kind enough to supply the following review of Sunday night’s performance by Ardagh Drama Group of Limerick.
This Martin McDonagh play – a comedy with sinister undertones – was well performed by Kilrush, Wexford who scored highly last year with another McDonagh, The Cripple of Innisman.
Naturally the longest of our lists is the Mc / Mac people : I’m confident many of you have relatives listed here! Those recruits starred have stories told about them on this site (or will shortly!).
The photo below is of your editor’s relative and namesake John Wallace McCullagh from Australia who fell in 1916 in World War I aged just 24 years.
With deep sadness but also with many fond memories, I record the passing of a great childhood companion Brian Hayes, formerly of Killeavey Road.
Of course there are plenty whose surnames began with M who enlisted in the Armed Forces in the first six months of the Great War. And we have here the only female volunteer, a Miss Mears from Bridge Street. Here is the list.
These are men whose surname began with “L” and who volunteered for military service in the first months of the Great War.