I opened the letter with some anticipation. I was 16 years of age and rarely got anything in the post except the occasional birthday card. I recognised the postmark, as it was the same as other letters that arrived regularly for my parents. It was August 1977. We were huddled around a tape recorder listening to the Sex Pistols …. Hello there Banjo! And what’s the craic? I hope they’ve all made you welcome back? I ignored my wife’s advice and walked barefoot along the black volcanic sand. I reacted to her shouted warnings with a feeble rendition of the Highland fling, dancing towards breaking waves. One day when I was not at home and our mother was helping Mrs Jeffrey gather wild strawberries in the cow pasture, Sally and Mary Ann watched closely as a large shaggy dog came trotting leisurely down the road from the South. Soon after our arrival in Bridge Street, Newry 1914 1 William Hardy 1a Mary Neary 2 Margaret Fisher I t was Christmas morning and the phones in the various homes belonging to the Martin family had been in overdrive since breakfast time. The women of the family … I will transport you now to the other end of town – the South-East – at the outbreak of the Great War. Who lived there?
Canal Street used to have its own Police Barracks and its own My father once worked for Joe McCullough of Number 19 who was a carpenter. So who were the other town’s tradesmen way back in 1916? This is a second list.Prison Visit
Punk with Wellies
Banjo on Popacatepetyl
Here comes the Sun
Shaggy Dog Story
Wolves on the prowl
Bridge Street 1914
Turkey Sandwiches
Boat Street etc 1914
Canal Street Residents 1914
1916 Fruiterers etc














