I have been
spending some time during the month of August in our National Library in Dublin
reading contemporary newspaper accounts of the early part of the last
century. All the newspapers of the time
are on microfilm and so one does not have the luxury of handling and turning
the pages of the newspapers. A small
screen allows you to scroll up and down through the long forgotten national and
local news of the day, bringing to life the incidents and happenings of a time
beyond any of our experiences.
Last week Annie
Timoney whom I never met died at the age of 103 in Sligo. Her memories stretched back to the time when
as a young girl she accompanied her brother Tommy on his way to the local
railway station to join up for the 1914/18 war.
He was killed in action and now lies buried in a grave in Egypt. That same period which saw Tommy Timoney
enlisting was the centre of my research in the National Library. Reading the newspapers of the day confirmed
for me how little of what happened then is known today. Even the important events and incidents of
the time are lost, but thankfully not irretrievably so, due to the lasting
qualities of the printers ink.
Bands proliferated
in Irish towns and villages in the early years of the last century. Here in Athy we had at least three bands, the
Barrack Street Band, the Leinster Street Band and the Pipers Band. The Pipers Band accompanied by a large
following paraded the streets of Athy on New Years Eve 1916 playing what the
‘Nationalist and Leinster Times’ described as “national airs”. The Pipers Band was formed in or about 1914
due to the efforts of J.J. Bergin of Maybrook and for the first few years of
the band’s existence members practised in the Hibernian Hall in Duke
Street. The hall was the premises of the
Ancient Order of Hibernians, located in what was subsequently the Garda
Barracks and is now O’Neill’s. I was
intrigued to read in the Nationalist of January 1917 that Francis Joseph Biggar,
a Belfast Solicitor and historian, presented to Athy Piper’s Band an Irish
poplin flag on which the arms of the ancient borough of Athy were painted. This representation of the castle and bridge
of Athy was painted in dark colours in the centre of the flag and in the top
left hand corner, “Athí Abú”, was artistically worked in Celtic lettering. The flag was surrounded by a deep fringe,
dark green in colour, and massive red cords secured the flag to the staff which
was finished with a large brass spearhead.
The flag was
blessed and presented to the pipers by Canon Mackey, P.P. at a special mass in
St. Michael’s Church on Saturday, 6th January 1917. Subsequently the band was at the centre of
local controversy when in February 1918 the band members were asked to leave
the Hibernian hall as a result of the band’s association with the local Sinn
Fein club. As the Secretary of the
A.O.H. indicated in a letter to the Nationalist “Athy Piper’s Club was not
associated with the A.O.H. other than as occupiers of a room in the Hibernian
Hall for band practice and storing band instruments.” However, late in 1917 the
Piper’s Band took part in a Sinn Fein demonstration and the A.O.H. decided that
if there was a repetition of this the band would be asked to vacate the Duke
Street premises. Inevitably a time came
when the band were asked to leave, because as the A.O.H. Secretary Peter P.
Timmons wrote “the A.O.H. as a body refuses to be identified even in the most
remote degree with the republican lunacy”.
The Pipe Band members removed their instrument to the Sinn Fein Club
premises across the road in Duke Street and thereafter became more closely
linked with the developing republican movement.
The third local
band, the Leinster Street Band, had lost several members at the start of the
War. This accounted for a newspaper
report of 13th January 1917 “on Sunday, the Leinster Street Band
which has not been heard in Athy for a considerable period, made a welcome
appearance. Despite the absence of some
members at the front the band played with customary finesse the stirring airs
so appreciated locally when the Irish Volunteers were such a fine force in
Athy”.
I wonder whatever
happened the band instruments of these three local bands? Their banners, especially the banner
presented by Frank Biggar, cannot have disappeared without trace. Does anyone know the whereabouts of any of
these items?
Around the same
time as the fallout between the Pipers Club and the A.O.H., Gaelic games were
going through something of a revival in Athy.
Brother Hoctor who was principal in the C.B.S. formed a juvenile club
called “Geraldines” for under age players around the same time the Athy Club
called “the Young Emmets” was established and at a meeting on the 13th
of January 1917 the club rules were adopted and a decision made to affiliate
the club and enter the County Championship.
Soon after the
“Geraldines” were formed, Mr. Mara who was described as a “popular local sport”
presented the young club members with a set of caps which were apparently an
important part of a footballers outfit.
The club colours were blue, red and yellow, a colourful eye catching
combination for the time.
1917 was described
by a reporter on Gaelic games as “a stirring one in Gaelic circles in
Athy.” The reason for this was the Young
Emmet club’s success in eleven of the thirteen matches played that year. Unfortunately one of the games lost was in
the senior football semi-final where the club was defeated due, it was claimed,
“to some players not travelling to the venue as a result of petty
jealousies”.
An interesting
find among the papers of the day was the following report.
“While digging in
the garden of St. John’s Mr. M. Heffernan unearthed a large bust or model it is
thought the figure was one time in a garden attached to the Monastery of St.
John.”
The bust
discovered in May 1917 is now on display in the Heritage Centre to where it was
removed prior to the sale of St. John’s by the Carbery Family some years ago.
Today Athy is
actively looking for industry but back in May 1917 a new industry was set up in
the town. The local papers reported the
opening of a factory in Convent Place (Sic) where local women were working from
8.00 a.m. to 6.00 p.m. grading and washing scutch roots prior to shipment to
America. There the scutch roots were used
in the preparation of medicine.
Apparently the scutch root was previously harvested and processed on the
Continent, but because of the War, Ireland now met the needs of the American
market. The bands, the football teams
and the scutch root processing plant have all passed on and out of memory. No doubt there still remains in our midst,
some tangible evidence of those days, in the form of an unrecognised football
jersey or cap or perhaps a battered musical instrument or a torn flag or
banner. History is all around us, even
if most times it goes unrecognised.
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