Monthly Archives: June 2012

Kieran’s Comments, Cork City Council’s Tourism Plan, Cork City Council Meeting, 11 June 2012

Well done to all involved in the tourism document.

If the points within it are achieved, I think we are well on the way in re-positioning Cork City as a tourism hub for the southern part of Ireland and developing new methodologies in the marketing the city.

Plus that instead of us building around places such as Fota Wildlife Park or Cobh, that we centre Cork with those locations around us – I think it’s important the city keeps the mantra that we are the heart of the energy that does exist in this region. We shouldn’t be against the rest of the country but a leader.

We should keep pushing to get Cork out of Cork…I think it’s important that we up our game in keeping the city as the second city.

On that note I would like to note the Titanic exhibition outside City Hall, which is very good plus very attractive but I would like to play the Devil’s Advocate card on it. Here we are promoting the cultural history of Belfast in front of our City Hall with no real mention to our strong port history – I say all of that in light of Belfast’s promotion as a heritage city through its various social media.  I think there should be our port history as well on display. I don’t like the idea of Cork being a pawn in Belfast’s tourism expansion.

I’m excited about the turn to promoting the actual history of Cork City, its 1400 year history through the re-opening of Elizabeth Fort, which is very diverse and should be tapped into more and more.

I’m very excited about the new tourism ambassadors and some of these need to be placed at the gateway points to the city, Kent Station and Cork Airport.

I think and it’s probably not the role of Team’s but the city should be providing ongoing training in what is going on in the city – especially the B&Bs and guest houses should be targeted in place along Western Road. There is room for training programmes for festival co-ordinators and service providers.

The role of our student population should be tapped into and how they could promote the city, they’re 20,000 of them there and more often than not the city never thanks them for their input into the economics fortunes of the city plus how can we strengthen their involvement in the festivals of the City. I think certainly the two student Union Presidents should be chatted to.

On the Gathering of 2012, Cork should be promoted as the south of Ireland gateway for this festival, plus we should write to our international contacts inviting them over here.

I think the more the city thinks about how to harness its strong assets the better, even items such as the Knitting Map, which I would ask the manager to find a home for are all things that up this city’s game in promoting itself.

Kieran’s Motions and Question to the City Manager, Cork City Council Meeting, 11 June 2012

 

Question to the Manager:

 To ask the City Manager what is being done to tackle the high level of illegal postering on Douglas Street (Cllr Kieran McCarthy)

 

 

Motions:

 

That the Council consider the following correspondence received from Churchyard Lane residents on the removal of the Skehard Road Roundabout:

 “The roundabout is the only piece of road infrastructure in the area that does not cause problems. The other works on the Skehard Road could easily have been done without the removal of this roundabout. We feel it is a complete waste of tax payers money. There are 3 dangerous crossings here. The junction of the Well Road and Churchyard Lane known as Greggs Cross- this junction is 40 metres wide and pedestrians coming from the Well Road cannot cross this junction safely. The other junction of the Ballinlough Road and Churchyard Lane by the Silver Key known as Murray’s Cross- this junction is 44 metres across and again pedestrians risk their lives trying to cross this junction with traffic coming from behind. The third junction is the junction of Churchyard Lane and Boreenmanna Road at Temple Hill- this junction is a concave convex junction with no pedestrian crossing of any kind and no site lines visible for motorists or pedestrians. The money saved by retaining the roundabout and not putting traffic lights there would be better spent on making Churchyard Lane a one way system and installing demand pedestrian lights at the above junctions” Cllr Kieran McCarthy).

 

That the City Council install pedestrian crossings at Tory Top Road Intersection i.e. the Aldi and AIB road cross sections as a traffic calming method and in the interest of pedestrian safety (Cllr Kieran McCarthy).

 

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy’s Make a Model Boat Project 2012

Thanks to all the participants of the 2012 McCarthy’s Make a Model Boat Project. Thanks to our judges Siobhan and Donncha of Meitheal Mara plus project support from Mervyn of the Lifetime Lab and Yvonne from Red Sandstone Varied Productions. Below are pictures of some of the entries plus my thanks to TG4 news for coming along and doing a story on the event. I’ll post the winners online soon.

 McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

McCarthy's Make a Model Boat Project 2012

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town, 7 June 2012

Kieran’s Our City, Our Town 

Cork Independent, 7 June 2012

Technical Memories (Part 19)

Experiments in a Shed

 

 “It was my goof fortune in the early nineties to attend St. Luke’s National School, Cork, the headmaster of which, John B. Crawford ruled metaphorically with rod of iron. Crawford was a giant in stature and was known generally as ‘Long John’. He was a gifted teacher and in addition to the ordinary routine subjects gave us instruction in the fundamentals of sound, light, magnetism, electricity, anatomy and physiology…such experiments may seem trivial to the youth of today, but appeared very wonderful and intriguing to us, youngsters of fifty years ago” (Alfred Godfrey Leonard, address to Institute of Chemistry of Ireland, 22 November 1950).

The lecturer in physics and chemistry at the Crawford Municipal Technical Institute in 1912 was Alfred Godfrey G. Leonard. He gave an address to the Institute of Chemistry of Ireland in 1951, which was published in their journal called Orbital. An obituary to Dr. Leonard is also listed in the same journal in 1966. Over his career, he worked with others in making chemistry a main stream subject in educational organisations across Ireland.

A native of Cork, Alfred Leonard received his early education at St Luke’s National School in Montenotte. In 1898, he moved to the Cork Grammar School, at Sidney Place on Wellington Road. The school was the property of, and under the general control of, the City of Cork Church School Board. In street directories in the early 1900s, this boarding and day school prepared boys for the university, army, navy, civil service, legal and medical professions and mercantile pursuits. There were a few scholarships from the elementary schools. The general work of the school included training for the Intermediate Examinations, Science and Art Department, Agricultural and Technical Department, and the General Synod’s examination in Holy Scripture.

 

Alfred received teaching from the headmaster Rev. Ralph Harvey, Osborn Bergin, George Taylor and Louis McNamara. Osborn Joseph Bergin (1873-1950), an eminent scholar in the field of Irish Studies, was a native of Cork. He was educated at Cork Grammar School and Queen’s College Cork (now University College Cork). He learned Irish from Pádraig Ó Laoghaire, a national teacher in Beara. Bergin was appointed a lecturer in Celtic at Queen’s College Cork in 1897. Bergin was elected a Member of the Royal Irish Academy in March 1907. He held the post of Professor of Old and Middle Irish at University College Dublin from 1909 to 1940.

 

On the teaching of science at the Cork Grammar School, Alfred Leonard notes that:

“Prior to 1900, the teaching of science was under the control of the Science and Art Department, South Kensington. We received oral instruction in sound, light, heat and mechanics which enabled some of us to pass examinations conducted annually by the Department. On rare occasions inspectors from the Department visited the school and when this occurred prompt warning was sent to the Christian Brothers’ School next door, a friendly act, which was reciprocated by them should an inspector arrive there first. On one occasion, I remember, we were engaged in mathematics when the warning arrived and promptly the few pieces of apparatus possessed by the school were brought out and the instruction was changed to Natural Philosophy; but all to no purpose, as the inspector did not appear.”

 

When the Department of Agriculture and Technical Instruction was established in 1900, Alfred remembers the starting of a campaign for the introduction of experimental science teaching in schools, and laboratories were established in almost secondary schools. When the laboratory was under construction in the Grammar School, Mr. England, who had been trained in Owen’s College, Manchester taught Alfred and his class. Alfred notes that he and his friend wished to move beyond oral teaching and wished to have practical experience;

“Most of our pocket-money went in the purchase of small quantities of very ordinary chemicals. These we used at home in an outhouse for the preparation of hydrogen, oxygen, sulphur dioxide, hydrogen sulphide, chlorine, bromine, iodine, carbon dioxide and such like substances. Instead of flasks we used stoneware pickle jars; corks were bored with red-hot skewers and heating effected by a spirit lamp.”

In 1902 Alfred won a Government Scholarship to the Royal College of Science in Dublin. The scholarship amounted to 21/- per week of the college (30 weeks) with a travelling allowance to and from home. Some 40 students entered the college each year. The first year course was common to all faculties and laid a sound foundation in mathematics, mechanics, chemistry, physics, practical geometry, and free-hand drawing. Professor Walter Hartley delivered the first year lectures, which were fully illustrated with experimental demonstrations. A pioneer in the area of spectroscopy, Hartley was the recipient of many international honours. Among his most significant analysis was his work on the relationship between molecular structure and absorption spectra, and his discovery of the absorption of ultraviolet radiation by ozone. Many of his studies addressed practical applications of scientific research, covering subjects such as dyes for the Irish textile industry, studies for the brewing and distilling industries and chemicals for the prevention of potato blight.

To be continued…

 

Caption:

644a. Alfred Godfrey Leonard, c.1960 (source: Institute of Chemistry of Ireland)