The journey of life which started in Kilbeggan 66 years ago ended in
Athy this week for the lady described by Fr. Philip Dennehy as an
educationalist, a Christian lady and a Sister of Mercy. Sr. Francis, as she was once known but who in
later years reverted to her own name of Sister Helen Keegan, was buried in the
Mercy plot in the new St. Michael’s Cemetery.
A soft drizzle of rain fell as her cortege wound its way up the cemetery
avenue leading from the Dublin Road only to ease as the final parting prayers
were said. As the assembled Sisters of
Mercy raised their voices as one in rendering the Salve Regina as a final
farewell to their colleague the rain stopped as suddenly as it had
started. It contrasted with the stormy weather
which greeted the young Helen Keegan as she journeyed from Kilbeggan to Athy 49
years ago to enter the independent Mercy House of Athy. The Annals of the local Convent of Mercy simply
note on 29th October 1961 ‘Miss
Helen Keegan entered’. What it did
not record was the terrible weather conditions on that late October day which
were so bad that the young Helen Keegan, accompanied by her parents, very
nearly never completed the journey to Athy.
That same year Sr. Dominic celebrated her Silver Jubilee, while her
successor as Matron of St. Vincent’s Hospital, Sr. Canice, made her first
profession the previous Easter Sunday.
1961 was also the centenary year of the coming of the Christian Brothers
to Athy, celebrated that year with festivities which lasted for one week from
June 27th.
On the 8th of July 1964 Sr. Francis was called to teacher
training in Carysfort College and 17 days later she made her triennial
vows. She made her final profession on
the 25th of July 1967 with Sr. Mary Ann and a year later Sr. Francis
obtained her teachers Diploma. She
taught in Scoil Mhuire where she was appointed Superior in 1986, finally
retiring from teaching 13 years later.
As a member of that dedicated community of teachers, nurses and
community workers who comprised the Sisters of Mercy in Athy she followed in
the footsteps of Mother Catherine McAuley, as did so many others who since 1852
worked ceaselessly and with great effect amongst the people of Athy and
district.
The Mercy Order which was once the only religious order to have a
convent in every diocese in Ireland is now sadly in decline. The first Sister of Mercy was professed in
December 1831 just a few years after the granting of Catholic Emancipation. For many decades religious professions were
more than enough to maintain a vibrant Mercy community here in Athy but they fell
sharply in recent decades prompting the closing of the Mercy Convent. The closure of the Convent due to falling
numbers leaves us today with approximately 21, most elderly nuns, living in
different addresses throughout the town.
Their legacy of good work amongst the local community which first
welcomed the Sisters of Mercy to Athy just a few years after the Great Famine
is one which will never be forgotten.
The passing of Sr. Helen at 66 years of age was a sad blow for the
local Mercy community where she had spent many happy and productive years. It was during her term as Principal of Scoil
Mhuire that the girls secondary school and the Christian Brothers boys school
were brought together in the same school complex. Both schools amalgamated within recent years to
give us the rather strangely named Ard Scoil Na Trionoide.
Sr. Helen, whose journey to Athy 49 years ago commenced in a storm
and ended last week with soft drizzling rain falling on those who followed her
coffined remains to St. Michael’s Cemetery, earned the respect and admiration of
the people of Athy for her work as an educationalist and as a Sister of Mercy.
A few hours after Sister Helen’s funeral 97 year old Bridget Hughes
was laid to rest in Old St. Michael’s Cemetery.
Bridget was the last of three Hughes sisters who lived for many years in
Janeville House just off Offaly Street.
Bridget and her sister Alice Lawler worked for decades for the late Bob
Osborne and his son Cyril in their Emily Square offices. The Hughes sisters were of an old Athy family
which for generations were involved with the freight business on the Grand
Canal and the Barrow Navigation. Three
generations back Martin, James, Thomas and Patrick Hughes were boatmen based in
Athy enjoying a way of life which has long since disappeared. All that was left after their time were secondhand
memories of a boating lifestyle which once made Athy a thriving hub of
commercial activity involving shopkeepers, farmers and boatmen. With the passing of the last of the Hughes
sisters those memories of the past have receded yet further back.
A man whose company I have enjoyed for many years reached an
important milestone with the celebration of his recent birthday. Michael Wall, now of Chanterlands but
originally of the Mayo landscape, continues to nurse the ambition of delivering
the country’s affairs into the hands of his beloved Fine Gael much to the
dismay of his much better informed wife Moya!
I have enjoyed many a ‘discussion’
with Michael as to the merits or demerits of certain Irish political leaders
and while we cannot hope to agree, may I nevertheless wish him a well merited
Happy Birthday.
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