The River Liffey Reservoir Scheme, popularly known as the Poulaphouca
Scheme, saw the E.S.B. and Dublin Corporation coming together in 1937 in a
venture which would give the Electricity Board an enormous new source of power
generation and the Corporation a fresh source of water for the city of
Dublin. Work on the scheme commenced in
November of that year and before the civil engineering work was completed some
years later two young men from Athy had died in tragic accidents on the site. Both men were carpenters. Jim Lawler of the well known Lawler family of
Woodstock Street was only a short time married when tragedy struck, leaving a young
widow who was expecting their first child.
He was just 29 years of age when he died in 1940. By an extraordinary but tragic coincidence
his brother John would die in similar circumstances 13 years later while
working for the same employer on the Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal Hydro Electric
Scheme.
Bill Carbery was 41 years old when he fell from a crane on the
Poulaphouca site and died from his injuries on 14th June 1941. He was the son of Joe and Brigid Carbery who
once lived in Ballintubbert but who later farmed land at Ballyadams before
opening a small shop at the Bleach, Athy.
Another son was Tom Carbery, the legendary local politician who had a
remarkable long career as a member of Athy Urban District Council and Kildare
County Council and who has given his name to a housing estate in the Woodstock
Castle area.
Bill Carbery emigrated to America at 22 years of age, as had so many
of his generation. He worked in the
construction industry in New York and like many other hundreds of his fellow
Irishmen he was employed on the building of the Empire State building. Built during the American Depression it was
to be the highest building in the world.
Construction work commenced on St. Patrick’s Day 1930 with at times
upwards of 3000 men employed and in quite an extraordinary feat of engineering
the 103 storey building was completed and opened by President Hoover on 1st
May 1931.
Four years after he had arrived in New York Bill met and married Anna
Hegarty whom I understand came from Co. Kerry.
They had two children, Eileen and Joe, who were born in New York. Like so many Irishmen and women who had
emigrated to America during and in the immediate aftermath of the Irish Civil
War, the young Carbery family found the American depression years very
difficult. The hope and optimism of the
early years of America’s laissez faire economy turned sour with the Wall Street
crash of 1929. It would take almost
another 10 years before the American economy recovered. In the meantime many of the young Irish
emigrants of the 1920s returned to their home country and amongst them was Bill
and Anna Carbery with their two American born children.
In time the Carbery family settled at No. 20 St. Patrick’s Avenue
where three more Carbery children, Liam, Anna and David were to be born. The children grew up in the small housing
estate which had been opened by Athy Urban District Council in March 1931,
having been built on land acquired from Miss Kilbride and Dr. Jeremiah
O’Neill. The Council documents relating
to the St. Patrick’s Avenue Housing Scheme referred to the “Jail Field” as it formed part of the local penitentiary complex
opened up on the Carlow Road in 1830.
Youthful friends remembered by Joe Carbery, his brothers Liam and
David and his sister Anna from the 1940s include Alfie Rafferty who tragically
died in a road traffic accident in London, Brian O’Hara, Cecil Carroll, Mary
Keogh, Mary Noonan, Vinnie and Paul Smith, Andy and Peter Smith. The Carbery boys and girls attended the
Christian Brothers School and the local Convent and Joe also attended Athy’s Technical
School where T.C. Walsh was headmaster. They all have fond memories of their school
days and of St. Patrick’s Avenue and of Athy town. Indeed Anna who now lives in America has
corresponded for many years with one of her teachers, Sr. Carmel.
In 1948 the Carbery family moved to Co. Kerry when their mother
married widower Roger O’Donoghue who was a hotelier based in Killarney
town. Joe, like his father before him,
emigrated to America a year later and it was Joe I first contacted when with
other family members he attended a Carbery clan re-union in Athy Golf Club
earlier this year. Now 77 years of age he
lives in Pomona New York. Located in
Rockland County, New York, Ponoma is one
of New York State’s newest urban settlements, having been established in
February 1967. Joe served as the fourth Mayor
of Ponoma following municipal elections in 1980 and he held that position for
the following six years.
His brother Liam who now lives in retirement in North Wembley,
London was a member of the Kerry football squad in the days when the legendary
John Culloty and Tadghie Lyne were players.
He was a sub on the Kerry senior team in 1957 and also played minor
county hurling. In London he featured on
the Round Towers team, where a playing colleague was the future Kildare County Board
Secretary, Seamus Aldridge. Employed by
British Rail, he was chief steward on the Royal Train for 7 years. His son Peter is Deputy Editor of the UK
National newspaper, the Daily Star on Sunday.
The youngest member of the Carbery family, David, is also retired,
but unlike his siblings he still lives in the country of his birth. North County Kildare and more specifically
Donadea is home to David who retired some time ago as Director of Catering in
Maynooth College.
Their sister Eileen is married and living in America and she
recalled for me when we met earlier this year friends from her school days. They included Mary Smith, now also living in
America, and former neighbours Noreen Dooley and Pauline Rowan, both of whom
sadly have since passed on but who were remembered with fondness.
Eileen, the eldest member of the Carbery family, died some years ago
in America. During the 1940s she was a
member of the local musical society and participated in many of the shows which
were put on in the Town Hall. The
photograph reproduced with this article comes from the Carbery family album and
shows young locals dressed as fairy tale characters for a Town Hall show. They have been identified as Una McHugh, Mrs.
Crampton, Vera Cross in the front row, Mona Farrell, Eileen Carbery, May Fenlon
in the middle row and at the back Maura Blanchfield and Frank Prendergast. I have not been able to identify the show or
when it was put on but no doubt many of you can help me in that regard.
The extended Carbery family has had at least two reunions in Athy in
recent years, organised by amongst others Jerry Carbery, formerly of St. Johns
and now of Farmhill. The members of Bill
and Anna Carberys family travelled from America, England and nearby Donadea to
attend the most recent gathering held in Athy Golf Club and I was privileged to
meet them and hear of their high regard for the town where they spent many
happy years in the 1940s and 50s.
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