I am writing this just a few hours after our Taoiseach announced in
the Dáil the cutbacks planned to lead us out of the current recession. Last August when talks of a recession were
still in the future I spent an enjoyable couple of hours in the company of 82
year old Seamus Farrell of Skehana, Ballylinan who claims he was ‘born in a recession, reared in a recession
and lived through a recession.’ I
had previously met Seamus when he played his tin whistle to a small gathering
in what was once the Grand Canal Hotel at the Canal Harbour where, courtesy of
Gargoyles Restaurant, a few hardy souls came together to celebrate the birthday
of Monaghan poet Patrick Kavanagh. It
was an enjoyable evening of song, music and recitation and Seamus played a
number of Irish tunes on the tin whistle with a vigour and an enthusiasm which
belied his 82 years. His expertise on
the whistle was matched by a facility with words which was amply confirmed when
we later met in his snug cottage in Skehana some weeks later.
His story and that of his father and grandfather is a most
interesting one, typical in so many ways of Irish families who in Seamus’s
words ‘always seemed to live through recessions.’ For a man who lived through a succession of
recessions Seamus can proudly claim never to have drawn the dole. He worked ‘at
everything for a while’, as he explained himself, including two years in
the Air Corps, then on the roads with Laois County Council and on the local
bogs before going underground in the Wolfhill Coalmines. After that he worked 9 years in the I.V.I. Foundry
in Athy, followed by 29 years in the local Asbestos factory from where he
retired in 1984.
Interestingly he worked there when Charlie Stephens was the manager,
a time when a workman could be sacked for taking a tea break or smoking a
cigarette. The arrival of Jens Preisler
brought changes, with organised tea breaks and a more relaxed working
environment introduced by the new manager who was described by Seamus as ‘well liked, and a very fair man’.
Seamus’s first memories were of the national school in Ballylinan
where one of his teachers was Mrs. Fleckney, a sister of Val Vousden, actor and
music hall star whose recitations and monologues were at one time very popular
on Radio Eireann. Vousden, Seamus tells
me, often visited the school in Ballylinan where his sister taught, travelling
over from Carlow where he lived for a while.
Seamus was the youngest of nine children born to Dan and Mary
Farrell. Dan, who was born in 1882, went
to work for a farmer at 12 years of age after his father’s British Army pension
was withdrawn. Patrick Farrell had been
granted a pension following Army service in India and the loss of four fingers
and the pension of 9 pence a day supplemented his earnings as a shoemaker. Its withdrawal because of his conviction and imprisonment
in Kilkenny Jail for involvement in anti-government activities caused family
hardships which necessitated his 12 year old son joining the adult working
world. Dan Farrell worked for James
Furney who was the local Resident Magistrate and also in Hannons Mills at
Ardreigh. During that latter period he
lived in Ardreigh where Seamus’s eldest sister was born.
The nine members of Dan and Mary Farrell’s family, 7 girls and 2
boys, all emigrated to England as they reached adulthood and only Seamus, the youngest
of the Farrell family, returned to live in Ireland. The emigrant boat always played a huge part
in the life of Irish society, but dependency on overseas employment became even
more acute following the foundation of the Irish Free State. The sadness and loneliness which this caused
can be imagined and was brought home to me when Seamus, now well into his 9th
decade, said ‘the family were only once
together and that was for my mother’s funeral’. But even then Seamus had overlooked the fact
that his father had predeceased his mother 15 years earlier.
Mary Farrell died aged 75 years in Scunthorpe England in 1962, to
where she had travelled some months earlier to see her children for the last
time. Seamus was working the day shift in
the Asbestos factory the day she travelled by car from Ballylinan to catch the
boat at Dun Laoghaire. He well remembers
his mother calling to the factory to say goodbye to her youngest son and
telling him, ‘this is the last time we
will meet.’ She obviously knew that
her end was near and yet made what must have been a difficult sea journey to
see her children who had emigrated years earlier.
Another story connected with the passing of Seamus’s mother was the
kindness and generosity prompted in a local man when he saw the grieving son
wearing the diamond shaped black patch on his coat sleeve as was the usual then
to indicate the death of a family member.
Sam Shaw enquired of Seamus as to who had died and on being told, later
gave him a gift of £30, knowing perhaps all too well that Seamus was unlikely
to have enough money to attend his mother’s funeral in England. It was an unsolicited gesture which still
evokes Seamus’s admiration and respect 47 years later.
Apart from a few short periods he spent in the Air Corps and in
England, Ballylinan has been home to Seamus all of his life. Like everyone else in the area he
participated in the local community events and especially recalls the local
Fife and Drum Band which was reformed around 1936. An earlier band which had been based in
Ballylinan during the First World War died out soon after the start of the War
of Independence. In 1936 a committee of
local men under the chairmanship of Jim Wynne was elected to reform the Fife
and Drum band using the original band instruments including a British Army big
drum which had been stored in Jim Hurley’s house. The Ballylinan Fife and Drum band continued
in existence until 1943 and featured at many events in the Athy and Carlow
areas. One of the big occasions on which
the band participated was the opening of Flemings Fireclay Factory. Among the fife players was Seamus Farrell who
joined in 1937 and he vividly remembers the band practices held two nights a
week in the local national school. The
first band master was Bill Day of Athy and later when Tom Wrafter of Abbeyleix
took over, the old fifes were replaced by new five keyed flutes, effectively
making the band a flute band, although it still continued to be known as the
Ballylinan Fife and Drum band. It disbanded
in 1943 and the surviving band members
are Tom McDonnell, Paddy McDonnell, Jimmy Farrell and Seamus Farrell.
Seamus was also a member of the local L.D.F. unit which he joined in
1941 when he was just 15 years of age. The
local L.D.F. captain was Mr. Fleckney whose wife was a teacher in the local
national school. Tom Flood, publican of
Leinster Street, Athy and a former member of the Dublin Brigade I.R.A. during
the War of Independence was the area commander.
Other L.D.F. officers remembered by Seamus were Bill Horgan, Des McHugh,
Tim McCarthy and Frank Gibbons. Seamus
is very proud of the service medal he received for his wartime service after
the LDF was disbanded in 1946.
Seamus married in 1956, his bride being Mary Walsh of Rossmore in
Carlow and they were blessed with five sons, Donal, Paddy, Anthony, Michael and
Brian. Sadly Mary died in December 2006
and was buried on Christmas Eve. The
effervescent 82 year old Seamus has an extraordinary memory of times past and
his telling of what must have been difficult times is full of joyful and
cheerful recollections which charm the listener and show the benefit of a
positive outlook on life.
Athy Heritage Centre is still receiving material for the War of
Independence Exhibition which will open on Easter Monday to coincide with the
first day of the 1916 Easter Rebellion.
If you have any photographs, press cuttings, memorabilia or anything
related to the War of Independence Margaret Walsh of the Heritage Centre would
welcome the loan of the material for inclusion in the Exhibition. Margaret can be contacted on (059) 8633075.
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