Category Archives: Ward Events

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 20 June 2013

696a. Recent sunset on Douglas Road highlighting the workhouse memorial plaque

 

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 20 June 2013

Workhouse, JFK and Docklands Tours

 

Aside from the summer city walking tours running at the moment, I have two suburb walking tours coming up across the next week. Next Saturday morning, 22 June at 12noon in association with the summer garden fete of the Friends of St Finbarr’s Hospital, I will conduct a historical walking tour of St Finbarr’s Hospital with special reference to its workhouse and Great Famine history (meet at gate, free, as part of my community work in the south-east ward). The second tour is the following Friday evening, 28 June at 7pm of Cork Docklands (free) at Kennedy Park, Victoria Road. Special focus will be given on marking the fiftieth anniversary of John F Kennedy coming to Cork and getting Freeman of the City on 28 June 1963. He left Cork by helicopter from the park now named after him. The tour will also take in Albert Road/ Jewtown/ Hibernian Buildings and the city’s docks.

On St Finbarr’s Hospital, I have always admired the view from the entrance gate onto the rolling topography extending to beyond the southern boundaries of the City. Here also is the intersection of the built heritage of Turners Cross, Ballinlough and Douglas. These are Cork’s self sufficient, confident and settled suburbs, which encompass former traditions of market gardening to Victorian and Edwardian housing on the Douglas Road. Then there is the Free State private housing by the Bradley Brothers such as in Ballinlough and Cork Corporation’s social housing developments, designed by Daniel Levie, on Capwell Road. Douglas Road as a routeway has seen many changes over the centuries from being a rough trackway probably to begin with to the gauntlet it has become today during the work and school start and finish hours.

With mid nineteenth century roots, the hospital was the site of the city’s former workhouse but as such here is one of Cork’s and Ireland’s national historic markers. Written in depth over the years by scholars such as Sr M Emmanuel Browne and Colman O’Mahony, many in-depth primary documents have survived to outline the history of the hospital. What shines out are the memories of how people have struggled at this site since its creation in 1841. Other topics perhaps can also be pursued here such as the history of social justice at the site, why and how society takes care of the vulnerable in society and the framing of questions on ideas of giving humanity and dignity to people and how they have evolved over the centuries.

The Hospital serves as a vast repository of memories, symbolism, iconography and cultural debate. Standing at the former workhouse buildings, which opened in December 1841, there is much to think about – humanity and the human experience. The architect to the Poor Law Commissioners in Ireland from 1839 until 1855 was George Wilkinson. Nearly all the workhouses, accommodating between 200 and 2000 persons apiece, were designed in a Tudor domestic idiom, with picturesque gabled entrance buildings which contracted the size and comfortlessness of the institutions which lay behind them. By April 1847 all 130 workhouses were complete, the Douglas Road being one of the first.

With its association with the memory of the Great Famine, there are also many threads of the history of the hospital to interweave – the political, economic and social framework of Ireland at that time plus the on the ground reality of life in the early 1800s – family, cultural contexts, individual portraits. In the present day history books in school, the reader is drawn to very traumatic terms. The recurring visions comprise human destruction, trauma, devastation, loss. One can see why the Great Famine is more on the forgetting list than on the remembering one.

At the same time as the development of the workhouse on Douglas Road was struggling, the city continued to extend its docks area. In the late 1800s, the port of Cork was the leading commercial port of Ireland. The export of pickled pork, bacon, butter, corn, porter, and spirits was considerable. The manufactures of the city were brewing, distilling and coach-building, which were all carried on extensively. I’m a big fan of the different shapes of these wharfs, especially the timber ones that have survived since the 1870s. A myriad of timbers still prop up the wharves in our modern port area, protecting the city from the ebb and flow of the tide and also the river’s erosive qualities. The mixture of styles of buildings etch themselves into the skyline, Add in the tales of ships over the centuries connecting Cork to other places and a community of dockers, and one gets a site which has always looked in a sense beyond its horizons. Indeed, perhaps the theme that runs through the docklands walking tour is about connections and explores sites such as Jewtown, the National Sculpture Factory, the Docks, the old Park Racecourse, and the early story of Fords. All these topics are all about connecting the city to wider themes of exportation and importation of goods, people and ideas into the city through the ages. I hope to have a page on John F Kennedy’s visit to Cork in 1963 next week.

 

Captions:

696a. Recent sunset on Douglas Road highlighting the workhouse memorial plaque (source: Kieran McCarthy)

McCarthy’s Walking Tours, June 2013

 

Kieran McCarthy’s summer walking tours of Cork City centre will take place during the month of June, on Tuesday evenings (18th, 25th). The tours begin at the National Monument on the Grand Parade, at 7pm on those evenings and explore the City Centre’s early development on a swamp. The tour costs e.10 per person and children under 12 are free. No booking is required, just turn up on the evening. Further information, if needed, can be attained from Kieran at 0876553389.

 

On Saturday, 22 June, the Friends of St Finbarr’s Hospital will be holding its annual garden party from 1.30 to 4.30 pm. As part of a whole series of events planned, Cllr Kieran McCarthy invites the general public to take part in a historical walking tour of St. Finbarre’s Hospital at 12noon.  (meet at gate; the event is free as part of Cllr McCarthy’s community work). The workhouse, which opened in December 1841, was an isolated place – built beyond the toll house and toll gates, which gave entry to the city and which stood just below the end of the wall of St. Finbarr’s Hospital in the vicinity of the junction of the Douglas and Ballinlough Roads. The Douglas Road workhouse was also one of the first of over 130 workhouses to be designed by the Poor Law Commissioners’ architect George Wilkinson.

 

To mark the day of the actual fiftieth anniversary of John F Kennedy receiving the freedom of the city and taking off by helicopter from what is now Kennedy Park, Cllr Kieran McCarthy’s tour of Cork Docklands will take place on Friday, 28 June leaving at 7pm from Kennedy Park, Victoria Road (free, 1 1/2 hours).  Some of the themes covered in the talk will be John F Kennedy’s visit to Cork and the development of the areas surrounding Albert Road and the Docklands itself.

McCarthy’s Walking Tours, June 2013

 

Kieran McCarthy’s summer walking tours of Cork City centre will take place during the month of June, on Tuesday evenings (11th, 18th, 25th), and Friday evening, 14th. The tours begin at the National Monument on the Grand Parade, at 7pm on those evenings and explore the City Centre’s early development on a swamp. The tour costs e.10 per person and children under 12 are free. No booking is required, just turn up on the evening. Further information, if needed, can be attained from Kieran at 0876553389.

 

On Saturday, 22 June, the Friends of St Finbarr’s Hospital will be holding its annual garden party from 1.30 to 4.30 pm. As part of a whole series of events planned, Cllr Kieran McCarthy invites the general public to take part in a historical walking tour of St. Finbarre’s Hospital at 12noon.  (meet at gate; the event is free as part of Cllr McCarthy’s community work). The workhouse, which opened in December 1841, was an isolated place – built beyond the toll house and toll gates, which gave entry to the city and which stood just below the end of the wall of St. Finbarr’s Hospital in the vicinity of the junction of the Douglas and Ballinlough Roads. The Douglas Road workhouse was also one of the first of over 130 workhouses to be designed by the Poor Law Commissioners’ architect George Wilkinson.

 

To mark the day of the actual fiftieth anniversary of John F Kennedy receiving the freedom of the city and taking off by helicopter from what is now Kennedy Park, Cllr Kieran McCarthy’s tour of Cork Docklands will take place on Friday, 28 June leaving at 7pm from Kennedy Park, Victoria Road (free, 1 1/2 hours).  Some of the themes covered in the talk will be John F Kennedy’s visit to Cork and the development of the areas surrounding Albert Road and the Docklands itself.

McCarthy’s History in Action, 9 June 2013, 2-5pm

McCarthy’s History in Action in association with Ballinlough’s Our Lady of Lourdes National School summer fair will take place at the school on Sunday 9 June 2013 between 2pm and 5pm. The re-enactment event, supported by Cllr Kieran McCarthy, brings history alive for all the family, with the participation of re-enactment groups, storytellers and more.

Cllr McCarthy noted: “The vision for the afternoon is one of encouraging community participation.  Join re-enactors to honour the past, where there is much to learn, as one helps build the future; I am encouraging people to actively engage with life around them, as well as examine the history that brought us here. I believe that growth and transformation in society is affected positively by respecting our heritage in this way”.

Final, McCarthy’s Community Talent Competition 2013

Thanks to everyone who recently supported McCarthy’s Community Talent Competition 2013. Forty audition acts came to the Lifetime Lab to audition. My thanks to Yvonne Coughlan or RSVP for producing the projects. The finalists and winners are listed below. They recently performed at the Firkin Crane.

Primary School Finalists:

 

Beat That (Roisin Fahey, Benushila Tripathi)

Roisin Mulcahy

Amy Clarke

Anabel Hedman

Raw (Alexaner Bevkh & Raymond Felano, *3rd

Katie Flynn

Daniel Cremin

Zoe Olden

Lyrical (Mia Dorney, Kaitlin O’Regan, Ciara Coughlan, Faye Mullane) *Winner

Tamara Lawlor O’Driscoll, * 2nd Remix (Kaci White, Amy Fitzgerald, Anna & Tara Cosgrove)

Beat That (Roisín Fahey, Benushila Tripathi)

Roisín Mulcahy

Remix (Kaci White, Amy Fitzgerald, Anna & Tara Cosgrove)

 Secondary School Finalists:

Cian Mullane
Shauna Nolan *Winner
Mayowa Arikawe *2nd (joint 2nd)
Jordan Morrison * 2nd (joint 2nd)
Máirín Rua Ní Aodha
Fiona O Donovan
Billy O Dwyer
Emma Hayes Sarah Cremin and Emma Field
Erin O Regan

Sarah Cremin and Emma Field

Erin O Regan

Dynamite (Jay Dondolo and Caitlin Creamer) *3rd

Remix (Kaci White, Amy Fitzgerald, Anna & Tara Cosgrove)

 

winner, primary category, McCarthy's Community Talent Competition 2013

winner, Secondary school category, McCarthy's Community Talent Competition 2013

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 2 May 2013

689a. Interior of Our Lady of Lourdes, Church, Ballinlough

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town Article,

Cork Independent, 2 May 2013

A Gate of Heaven

 

“Take ship and travel into strange lands; go into strange villages, towns and cities. You may not know the roads or streets; you may not understand the human language. The first road or street you will discover is the one that leads to the Church. Enter it, you will always understand the language in it- it is the language of prayer, adoration and love” (Fr Kieran, OFM CAP, 11 September, 1938, Sermon, Dedication of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Ballinlough).

As a side topic this week, I’m currently doing research on Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Ballinlough to mark its 75th anniversary. This is an article looking for memories of the people involved in its design, construction, and fundraising.  If anyone has information, I’d love to hear from them (087 655 3389). The Church of Our Lady of Lourdes at Ballinlough was solemnly blessed by Bishop Daniel Cohalan, Bishop of Cork in September 1938. The church as a project followed shortly after the opening of Christ the King Church in Turners Cross in 1931.

The solemn ceremonies in 1938 marked the realisation of a long cherished hope of priests and people of the extensive Parish of Blackrock. The new church was a long felt want in the Ballinlough area of the parish due to the rapid growth of it as a residential suburb of the city. The project had been envisaged for some years and in 1935 the Bishop of Cork laid the foundation stone. The design was quite different to the elaborate concrete Christ the King Church. Simplicity of design was the keynote of the Ballinlough building in regard to both exterior and interior. Despite this, passing this building and viewing it from a distance especially from the northside, its striking lines do make an immediate impression on its limestone ridge. The altar is of a beautiful design. The tabernacle stands out impressively as a separate unit. The Stations of the Cross are also of a distinctive pattern.

There was a large attendance of the parishioners for the 1938 dedication ceremonies and when the time came for the public to enter the church, the accommodation for 1,000 worshippers was well taxed. Bishop Cohalan in his address highlighted the importance of having a temple to worship God thanked all those involved in it; “I would like to thank all who have helped to provide the means of meeting the cost of this new church. About £10,000 has been already expended and paid out on this church. That was a notable sum for the organisers and collectors to collect…there remains a debt of £1,000 and a house must be provided for the priest in charge of this church…And I appeal to the parishioners and to charitable friends to help Canon Murphy to wipe off the debt and to provide the small sum required. And not to confine myself to mere words, to appeal by example, I am myself giving the Canon £100 to meet the remaining liability”.

The architects were Messrs. Ryan and Fitzbibbon, 21 South Mall (looking for information on?). The building is in a Romanesque style and is faced externally with bricks and white cement. It was originally decorated internally in cream coloured paints. The flooring in the nave was timber, with the centre and side passages of terrazzo and the sanctuary floor was in cream, white, brown and blue mosaic. The altar rail, altar, or predella (the platform or step on which an altar stands), and steps are of marble. In the sacristy, there was ample room for space a mortuary. The baptismal font was situated at the west end of the nave. Two recessed confessionals were provided, and space was provided for an organ.

Messrs. Coveney Brothers, West Douglas, Cork (information needed?) were entrusted the important job of chief contractors in the erection of the new church. They were specialists in the work of church and school erection. They were known for their attention to detail in making structures solid and lasting. Their name was linked to many projects of note in the city and outside of it. The products of Ballinphellic Brick Company, Ltd (information needed?) were widely known and appreciated. Their works were at Ballygarvan and their offices at 29, Watercourse Road. To Messrs. Lynch’s Joinery Works, Kyrl Street (information needed on?) was entrusted the work of the seating and other joinery works. The firm had a reputation as manufacturers of joinery of a very high standard of quality.

In his sermon, Fr Kieran OFM CAP eloquently wove themes of the importance of community coming together in changing the nature of a building into something more sacred; “We are gathered and united in one living Holy Faith this morning in this beautiful little church, planned by Christ-like minds and built by human hands and generous hearts. We have witnessed a simple and significant ceremony of the Mother Church, a ceremony that has changed this chaste material building, making it now and for years to come, no longer a mere house, but a house of prayer, a house of God, A gate of heaven”.

 

Caption:

689a. Interior of Our Lady of Lourdes Church, Ballinlough (picture: Kieran McCarthy)

 

McCarthy’s Community Talent Competition 2013

 Launch of McCarthy's Community Talent Competition 2013 with last year's winners and Cllr Kieran McCarthy

 

 

Cork’s young people are invited to participate in the fifth year of ‘Cllr Kieran McCarthy’s Community Talent Competition’. The auditions will take place on Sunday 28 April 2013 between 9am-5pm in the Lifetime Lab, Lee Road. There are no entry fees and all talents are valid for consideration. The final will be held over one week later. There are two categories, one for primary school children and one for secondary school students. Winners will be awarded a perpetual trophy and prize money of €150 (two by €150). The project is being organised and funded by Cllr Kieran McCarthy in association with Red Sandstone Varied Productions (RSVP). 

Cllr. McCarthy noted: “The talent competition is a community initiative. It encourages all young people to develop their talents and creative skills, to push forward with their lives and to embrace their community positively”. Further details can be got from Kieran at 087 6553389 or info@kieranmccarthy.ie from the talent show producer (RSVP), Yvonne Coughlan, 085 1798695.

Kieran’s Events, Lifelong Learning Festival Week 2013

Wednesday morning, 20 March 2013, 10.30am, Talk: From Workhouse to Hospital, The Early Story of the St Finbarr’s Hospital, Curaheen Family Centre, Meeting Room, Church of the Real Presence, Curaheen Road, Bishopstown & Sunday afternoon, 24 March 2013, 2pm, Historical Walking Tour of St Finbarr’s Hospital, Meet at gate, Douglas Road (duration: 1 ½ hours).

Friday afternoon, 22 March 2013, Douglas historical walking tour; meet at St. Columba’s Church Car Park, Douglas, In association with Douglas Young At Heart, 12noon (duration: 1 ½ hours).

Saturday afternoon, 23 March 2013, 2pm; From Standing Stones to Market Gardens:  A Historical Walking Tour Through Ballinlough and Environs; start point: Beaumont Park adjacent Beaumont National Schools (duration: approx 2 hours).