Fr. Frank Mitchell
spent some years as a young curate in Athy in the late 1950’s and 1960’s. He was actively involved with the Geraldine
Gaelic Football Club and on a few occasions togged out for club games but always
under a non de plume, given Archbishop McQuaids, aversion to diocesan clergy
playing contact sports in public. Fr.
Frank was also a member of the Geraldine Parks Grounds Committee and I recall
him compering the annual monster draw which the local club held in the Grove
Cinema in the late 1950’s. It was John
W. Kehoe, the proprietor of Offaly Street’s only pub who as chairman of the
grounds committee started the annual G.A.A. draw. The draws which were held for four years up
to 1960 had a Hillman car and a caravan as the first prize and John W. and his
team of helpers travelled the length and breadth of the countryside selling
tickets while using the car and the caravan as transport and sleeping
accommodation.
Fr. Mitchell
during his time in Athy endeared himself to the parishioners of St. Michael’s
and indeed to everyone with whom he came in contact. This morning I was told of his death and my
informant at the same time told me something I had not previously known. Fr. Mitchell, she claimed, left Athy in
November 1965, the same week as my brother Seamus was tragically killed in a
road traffic accident on the Dublin road.
May they both rest in peace.
A few weeks ago,
Clare O’Flaherty who was born in Athy in 1947 passed away following a
debilitating illness. Clare was the
eldest daughter of Jim and Carmel O’Flaherty formerly of St. Patrick’s Avenue. Jim for many years was a Post Office Official
in Athy and will be remembered as one of the founder members and the first
President of the local Credit Union which was established in 1968. The O’Flaherty family left Athy in 1975 when
Jim was promoted to the position of Postmaster of Greystones, county
Wicklow.
Clare attended the
local convent school and by coincidence sat her Leaving Certificate examination
the same year as Fr. Frank Mitchell left Athy.
Among her school colleagues were Statia Harris, Renee Mullen, Stephanie
Brophy, Patricia Kelly, Joan Mortimer, Bernadette Howard and Valerie
Gibbons. When the class of 1965
organised a reunion some years ago, Clare travelled from Brussels to be
present.
Clare joined the
Department of Foreign Affairs in 1972 and served in Rome, Paris, Geneva,
Bussels, Dublin and Washington. She was
appointed by the Government as the Irish Ambassador to Finland in February 2002
but tragically, soon afterwards, the symptoms of the illness which would proved
fatal became apparent. Clare passed away
on the 11th September survived by her parents Carmel and Jim, her
brothers Paschal, Gerard and Seamus and her sister Colette.
Her mother will be
remembered by the older residents as Carmel Glespen who lived in Duke Street
where her father James Glespen carried on business as a coach builder. Her brother Seamus who was born in 1920
entered the Christian Brothers and while teaching in St. James’s Grammer School
in Belfast undertook research on the United Irishman, Thomas Russell. Awarded an M.A. by University College Galway
for his thesis on Russell, he published the work two years later under the
title “Tomás Ruiséil”. Some time ago, I
purchased in a Dublin antiquarian book shop a copy of Br. Glespen’s original
typed and bound thesis which he had submitted to U.C.G. in 1955. He was only the second Athy man to write of
the 1798 Rebellion and like the published work of Patrick O’Kelly, Br.
Glespen’s contribution to the historiography of ‘98 will always merit
consultation.
The paths of Clare
O’Flaherty and Fr. Frank Mitchell who passed away within a few weeks of each
other, may not have crossed after the young curate left Athy just as a school
girl from St. Patrick’s Avenue was finishing her Leaving Certificate
examination. Both went on to greater
achievements, one to minister to the pastoral needs of his Blackrock based
parishioners and the other to represent her country in the Finnish capital of
Helsinki. When Clare O’Flaherty was
appointed, I noted her elevation within the diplomatic ranks in this column,
little realising that within a brief period, her career and ultimately her life
would be cut short. She was the first
person from Athy to have reached Ambassadorial rank and the pride we in Athy
took in her appointment is now submerged in the sorrow we feel for her parents
and family members.
Fr. Frank Mitchell
was a young cleric when he came to Athy and when the time came for him to leave
south Kildare, youthfulness still marked his features as pleasantness marked
his personality. He will be remembered with
fondness by his old parishioners.
Writing of death
prompts me to recall that Sunday, 14th November will be set aside to
remember the thousands and thousands of men and women whose lives were brutally
torn apart during World War I. I will
write of this at length next week but in the meantime, let me give advance
notice of the ceremony which will take place in St. Michael’s cemetery on
Sunday, 14th at 3.00 p.m. to remember and respect the menfolk of
Athy whose violent deaths during 1914-1918 created social and economic shock
waves, which, some would say, are still felt to this today.
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