When I started on this weeks “Eye on the Past” I planned to write an
article in celebration of the life of Alice Myles who was born in 1906. I interviewed Alice on the occasion of her 96th
birthday and found a delightfully active woman, full of wit and the joys of
life. Last week, preparations were in
hand to celebrate her centenary with a birthday party in Athy Golf Club, which
by a happy coincidence is this year also celebrating its own centenary. Members of the Myles extended family arranged
to travel from America and England for the planned celebrations, but even as
some had arrived in Athy and others were in transit, news arrived of Alice’s
unexpected death on Thursday night, just over one day short of her 100th
birthday.
The centenary of a life is a lifespan few of us can ever hope to
enjoy. Alice Myles lived not only a long
life, but also a happy contented life surrounded by her extended family,
neighbours and friends. She was born at
a time when our country was still governed from Westminister and lived through
periods of great change. Born three
years after the Gordon Bennett Race had brought racing cars on to the streets
of Athy giving locals their first sight of motor cars, Alice would live to see
the same town streets become an almost permanent traffic jam. A school girl at the local convent schools
which had opened in 1852, she witnessed the closure of the Convent of Mercy and
the departure some years earlier of the Christian Brothers from the town of
Athy.
As a young girl of eight years she would have seen the young men
from the town, who following behind one of the local bands, marched to the
railway station to start the first leg of a journey, which for many of them,
there was no return. The year was 1914
and over the following four years as the numbers enlisting in the Army grew,
the young girl would have noticed the frequency with which telegram boys from
the local Post Office brought the dreaded news of another death to local
families.
She remembered her mother’s brother, Patrick Donohue, who at the age
of forty years went to war and died on the 31st of May 1915 from the
effects of gas poisoning. She recalled
her mother receiving a letter from an officer at the war front, with which he
enclosed a photograph showing Patrick Donohue lying on what was to be his death
bed, just an hour and a half before he died.
The photograph is one of the most unique wartime photographs I have ever
seen and with the accompanying letter dated 9th June with the line “I enclose a photograph I took about an hour
and a half before your boy died”, is perhaps one of the most poignant
reminders of a sad period in the history of our town.
I was reminded of Patrick Donohue and the many other Athy men who
died in the 1914-18 war when I heard Jacinta O’Donnell’s wonderful rendition of
Alice’s favourite song, “Bunch of Violets
Blue” at her funeral mass on Friday last.
“A soldier boy lay dying,
Out in the battle field,
A bunch of withered violets,
On his breast were still to be seen,
And turning to his comrades,
With the life blood flowing fast,
Take them to her and tell her that,
I wore them to the last.”
Alice was a young girl of fifteen when the news of the shooting of
Connor and Lacy in nearby Barrowhouse filtered back to Athy in the afternoon of
16th May 1921. The news
created excitement and some fear amongst the locals who were becoming more and
more aware of the changes in attitudes and allegiances in Ireland after the
rebellion of 1916. The Civil War came at
a time when Alice worked as a childminder for Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Minch at
Cardenton. She was employed by them for
five years, caring for the Minch’s only child Claire, and it was while working
there that she met her future husband, William Myles, who was chauffeur to
Eugene’s brother, Matthew P. Minch.
However, before she married, Alice spent four years working for another
family in Dun Laoghaire, then known as Kingstown. Returning to Athy in 1930 she married William
and the Myles family moved to live in a small house in Rockfield which is part
of the Minch’s estate.
It was in the early 1930’s that Alice witnessed the greatest changes
ever made in the physical makeup of her home town. The Slum Clearance Programmes initiated by
the De Valera government first elected in 1932 saw the removal of many of the
courtyards, alleys and laneways of the historic town. Up to then Athy, like so many other Irish
provincial towns, was a claustrophobic centre of life where Dickensian living
conditions were to be found in the alleys and laneways which lead off the main
thoroughfares of the town. Families
lived in the small substandard hovels which lined those darkened lanes and
alleyways, prone to disease and illness and relying for water on public water
pumps which were serviced from the piped water scheme completed by the local
council just one year after Alice Myles was born. Up to then the town population relied on nine
wells which local medical officer, Dr. James Kilbride, claimed were “situated within closely inhabited areas and
from their faulty construction are liable to contamination and permit of the
access of surface water and percolation from drains.” Prior to the provision of the towns pipe
water scheme, which incidentally was opposed for several years by local ratepayers,
the contaminated water from the towns wells resulted in several deaths from
typhoid fever each year.
The destruction of the slum dwellings started in 1934 after the
re-housing of families from Kelly’s Lane, Garden Lane, Chapel Lane, Barkers
Row, Barrack Street, Shrewleen Lane and New Gardens. The clearance programme continued until the
last vestige of “old Athy” was gone
with the demolition of houses in Janeville Lane and Butler’s Row, both lying on
either side of Offaly Street or Preston’s Gate, as the lower section of the
street was once called.
Over the years Alice, now the mother of a young family, witnessed
the changes in the working life of Athy.
Where previously local men were dependent on farm work or the local
brickyards for seasonal employment, the opportunities for full time employment
became a reality by the 1930’s. The
I.V.I. and the newly opened Asbestos factory ushered in a period of industrial
activity which the town had never before experienced. It brought a welcome improvement in living
standards for some but for many more, the emigration boat offered the only hope
of breaking the perennial cycle of unemployment.
The Second World War followed and coincided with William Myles’
prolonged illness which required his confinement for several weeks in Kildare
District Hospital. Alice once told me of
the many trips she made on a bike to Kildare hospital to see her husband and of
the difficult times experienced by her young family during her husband’s
prolonged illness. Throughout it all
Alice never lost heart or allowed her good humour to be submerged, an attitude
which prevailed throughout her long happy life.
Her husband William who spent his working life with the Minch’s died 31
years ago aged 72. By then the Myles
family had moved to the old Fever Hospital on the Stradbally Road which they
shared with the three Moyladd sisters.
The Fever Hospital was where another of her mother’s brothers, John
Donohue, died some years before the First World War. In telling me this, Alice was unconsciously
perhaps, reaffirming how her own life resonated with history and the people who
were part of that history.
Last week as Alice’s 100th birthday approached her family
and friends prepared to gather to celebrate the event in the surroundings of
the other local centenarian, the Athy Golf Club. The good humour which marked Alice’s long
life was evident to the last. Her
nephew, Ned Conway, who spoke to her early on Wednesday morning and
complimented her on her hair she had styled for the upcoming celebrations,
received a quick response, “all I need
now is a facelift”. It was so
typical of the quick-witted and pleasant lady whose passing later that same day
was greeted with disbelief and sadness throughout the locality.
Her funeral to St. Michael’s Cemetery took place on the 100th
anniversary of her birth on 4th March 1906. As Alice Lacey, and later as Alice Myles, she
lived through one hundred years of enormous changes in Irish life and
society. In that time Athy had undergone
enormous changes including the eradication of the tenements and the laneways of
impoverished urban life which marked its uneasy transition from a garrison town
to one of the first industrialised provincial towns in Ireland. It was sadly a leading role which Athy did
not maintain in the face of a demand for industry from other Irish provincial
towns over the decades.
Alice Myles was privileged to live a long happy life and all who
knew her were privileged to have shared in her good nature and shared in the
sheer delight she enjoyed in the company of her 8 children, 33 grandchildren,
34 great grandchildren and 2 great great grandchildren..
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