Founded by French speaking Normans at the end of the 12th
century, Athy has over the centuries played host to a variety of migrants and
immigrants. They ranged from descendents
of the Anglo Saxon to the earlier mentioned Anglo Normans to 19th
century Scottish folk who came here to tenant lands which were vacated during
the Famine years. All have found a home,
sometimes, but not always, welcoming, amongst a folk whose town’s history was
marked by wars, plague and disease.
In more recent years the town has witnessed a house building explosion
which compared to our neighbouring towns was somewhat late in starting. However, when the new housing estates in Athy
were built at the height of the property boom, the majority of those, mostly
young families, who made their new homes in the South Kildare town came from
our capital city of Dublin.
I made that same journey 27 years ago when I returned to Athy after
spending 12 years in Dublin and 21 years out of Athy. Notwithstanding my previous connections with
the town the move was somewhat of a cultural shock. I can only imagine what it has been like for
the hundreds of Dublin folk who came to live in Athy in recent years.
One Dubliner who has been in Athy for almost 60 years is Connie Stafford. She’s a ‘Dub’
from the area around Dublin’s Portobello Harbour, an area linked with Athy by
the Grand Canal and an area which was built during the 19th century
with bricks manufactured in the brick yards of Athy and South Kildare. Connie’s father had served in the First World
War and lost his right arm in that awful conflict which also ended the life of
his brother who served in the same regiment.
Her maternal grandfather Matt Gore was a member of the Irish Republican
Brotherhood, while her Aunt Kitty was an activist in the Cumann na mBan.
When Connie Russell, as she then was, married Eamon Stafford of Athy
in 1946 the extended family history of involvement in national politics and the
Great War was further widened. Eamon’s
uncles, Edward and Thomas, of Butlers Row, Athy were victims of the first World
War, both of whom were killed in action in France, while their sister Julia Cleary
was a fervent supporter of Cumann na mBan.
Eamon was then working in Dublin as a fitter and his uncle, John Stafford
of Duke Street, suggested that he apply for a job in the new Wallboard factory
which Bowaters were about to open in Athy.
The young married couple decided to come to Athy for one year, with the
declared intention of saving enough money to put a deposit on a house in
Dublin. The attractive wages on offer in
the Wallboard factory at £11 per week made their plans very feasible and the
offer of a rented house in Athy was also very persuasive.
The Pairc Bhride Housing Scheme was just then completed in 1950 and
six of the houses were allocated to key workers in the new Wallboard
factory. Eamon and Connie took up
residence in No. 74 Pairc Bhride, while fellow workers Tommy Nevin, Jack
Finnerty, Andy Coughlan, Jack Hynes and Chris McKenna also moved into the
houses reserved for Wallboard staff. Now
59 years later Connie is one of the last, if not the last, of the original
tenants in Pairc Bhride.
Connie liked Athy so much that the Stafford family remained here
after 12 months had passed. She recalls
the good humoured way the locals responded to what she describes as her typical
Dublin greeting of ‘Good morning pet’. In those days young Dublin girls out on the
town invariably wore hats, a practice which Connie persisted with when she came
to the provincial town. That is until
she encountered Miss Dallon, remembered by those of us who lived here in the
1950’s. Dallon’s Corner was a well known
landmark in the centre of the town which owed its title to the lady whose sweet
shop occupied the Emily Square side of the former Leinster Arms Hotel. Connie, suitably hatted, called to Miss
Dallon one morning to be asked ‘What Mass
are you going to – you know that down here we don’t wear hats in the day time.’
Connie who had been a member of the Harrington Street Choir in
Dublin as well as the Oratorio Society got involved in the very vibrant musical
scene in Athy as soon as she arrived here.
This was the heyday of the Musical Society and Connie featured in ‘Dick Whittington’ which was performed
in the Town Hall in 1953, just one year after her first daughter was born. She was to be involved in all the subsequent
musical societies started in Athy, including the South Kildare Musical Society
of the early 1960s and the Musical and Dramatic Society reformed in 1984.
I returned to Athy two years before the current society performed its
first musical and I recall the fine shows put on, initially in the Lions Centre
on the Kilkenny Road and later in the school hall attached to Scoil Eoin. The first show was ‘Curtain Call’, followed by ‘Annie
Get Your Gun’, ‘Carrousel’, ‘Oklahoma’, ‘My Fair Lady’, ‘Guys and Dolls’,
‘Brigadoon’ and ‘South Pacific’. The
Stafford family’s involvement was not confined to Connie, as her daughters
Imelda, Celine and Ann were also very active in the local musical scene. As well as performing up to her 74th
year Connie served as secretary of the Society for four years before being
appointed President of Athy Musical and Dramatic Society.
As well as her involvement in the local musical scene Connie is also
an active member since 1962 of the local I.C.A. Guild which was formed in Athy
in 1957.
Sadly Connie’s husband Eamon died in 1986, aged 66 years, having
retired nine years earlier due to ill health.
Their son Paul who was the only one of their four children born in
Dublin, returned to Athy from England in the early 1990s and produced ‘Oliver’ and ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ for the Athy Musical and Dramatic
Society. In or about 1994 Paul produced
the first ‘While Shepherds Watched’
in the Dominican Church, and 15 years later this annual Christmas concert is
one of the most successful and enduring events of the local musical
calendar. Sadly Paul died in December
2007.
Connie during her 59 years in Athy has made a well recognised
contribution to the musical traditions of the town. Defined by the city where she was born and
reared and where she spent her early adult life, Connie is living proof of how
involvement in local community life enriches both the participant and the
community. An open invitation perhaps to
those who have joined our community in recent years and one which would undoubtedly
be endorsed by that great lady of song, Connie Stafford.
Thanks Granny for everything, you were a true inspiration to me and I remember you every single day
ReplyDeleteI love and miss you every single day, Granny. I will strive to be like you for the rest of my life, but there never will be a woman truly as great as you.
ReplyDeleteDo you have any pictures of the Stafford family? My step dad who raised me is related to them out of athy....his grandfather was anthony stafford...thomas staffords and julia (hardies) son. Any info I could get on them would be so helpful!! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteMy email is mizznunez87@gmail.com thank you. I now see that the person who wrote this blog has since passed away....may she r.i.p. if anyone else may have any helpful information please message me. I've been actively searching for a very long time and just found this blog.
ReplyDelete