To complete the list of Poor Clare nuns resident at 7a High Street in the 1950s, taken from the Elector Roll …
Month: January 2011
Cecil Street, Newry, of old
Just for the Cecil Street young-at-heart, hoping this will jog a few memories!
I hope that I have got the addresses right!
Newry Nuns of Yesteryear
I was reliably informed that there are literally dozens (70+) of retired nuns resident in the new Poor Clares Convent in Ashgrove Avenue. I will ask the next one I see out walking and confirm with you.
Rankin Memoirs 3
Early in January 1914 I informed the Irish Club that I was going home to Ireland and they gave me a letter to deliver to John Devoy in New York (my point of embarkation).
Newry Vintners …
There was a time when several dozen local bar owners and their spouses attended the annual Vintners night-out in Newry.
Rankin Memoirs 2
After a month in Philadelphia in 1914, I joined the state’s National Guard. The Irish friends I had made at the Irish Club would not hear of joining, claiming that it was composed of the worst elements in the city. But I wanted military experience for the future. Also I wanted to acquire some ammunition.
Burke and Hare murders
Perhaps the most infamous character ever to come from Newry (it is said) in the past two centuries is William Hare.
Carlingford: Lewis 1837
‘Carlingford is beautifully situated on the south-west side of the spacious lough or bay to which it gives its name, and immediately at the base of an extensive range of mountains which terminate at this point.
Hector: in Penny Apples
On Santanta’s instigation I took another look recently at Bill Cullen’s ‘It’s a Long Way from Penny Apples’. A decade old now, it feels as if it’s of another age. And it tells of another earlier age, the 40s and 50s in working-class Dublin.