<span class="postTitle">Recent G.A.A. Publications (2004)</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2005, p 193

Recent G.A.A. Publications (2004)

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2005, p 193

 

This column has been flagging the immediate publication of the Galtee Rovers G.A.A. Story for some years now. It has had the longest gestation period of any book I know, but I believe I can now give you the expected date of arrival, 2006! That is according to author, Seamus McCarthy, and fellow Galtee Rovers man, John Moloney. That year will see the publication of the book plus the official opening of the new reconstructed G.A.A. field in the parish.

There wasn't much of in the line of local publications during the year. I should like to draw attention to a number of books that will have a wider interest.

Croke Park -A History
by Tim Carey, a former curator of the G.A.A. Museum at headquarters, is a book of outstanding pictures and a fine evocative cover. Published by the Collins Press in large format, it runs to 200 pages and retails for €30.

One of the earliest photographs is of the Arravale Rovers football team in the Dr. Croke Cup football final, Jones's Road, on June 13th, 1897. It is taken from a contemporary supplement to the 'Gaelic News' , and is of outstanding quality. It is captioned as 'the earliest known team photograph from Jones's Road.'

There's an interesting juxtaposition of photographs on pages 44 and 45. In the first Eamon de Valera is throwing in a football at the start of a match there in April 1919, and in the second Michael Collins is doing the honours with a sliotar.

The book contains a detailed account of Bloody Sunday with a full-page photo of Michael Hogan of Grangernockler.

There is good coverage of the Tailteann Garnes in 1924, which, we are told , were followed by a Rodeo.

There is much, much more, and the many pictures and the text are interspersed by memories of great players, who played there. Interestingly the first game that D. J. Carey played in Croke Park was in football for Kilkenny Schools under-12 team in 1982.

Finally, the history tells us about the record crowd of 90,556 at the Offaly Down All -Ireland football final in 1961.  The gates closed at 1-45, locking out between 25,000 and 30,000 more trying to get in. Mind boggling!

 

From Dun Sion to Croke Park
Micheal O Muircheartaigh's autobiography, 'From Dun Sion to Croke Park' tells of his progress from his Kerry birthplace to his established place in Irish broadcasting. Published by Penguin Ireland, the book contains 257 pages and retails for €22.99.

One day in 1949, Micheal took part in a competition at Croke Park for an Irish-language commentator's job. He was just eighteen and had never seen a hurling match in his life, but he got the job, and the rest is broadcasting history.

He tells us that he set out to be him self in the interview, rather than ape existing broadcasters, and it worked .

He learned about hurling and came to admire the majestic technique of Christy Ring. He also writes about his love of greyhounds and golf, and the pictures include one of him in Augusta.

The book is as easy to read, as Micheal is to listen to, and is dedicated to the memory of Cormac McAnallen, the young Tyrone footballer, who died in March 2004.

 

I Crossed the Line - The Liam Dunne Story

Probably the most exciting book on a G.A.A. theme is 'I Crossed the Line - The Liam Dunne Story' with Damian Lawlor. Damian is the G.A.A. correspondent for the ‘Daily 'Star', and a
native of Kilruane MacDonaghs.

The book is a page turner from chapter 1: ' It's a story that needs to be told. I want to give you a look beyond the tunnell, an insight into what 16 turbulent years as an inter-county hurler were like, how you can isolate those close to you and instead build a life to revolve around sport. The game has thrown everything at me, good, bad and ugly.

Most of it has been my own doing too.  But not all of it. It's time to get some stuff off my chest.'

And that's exactly what Liam Dunne has done . He goes through his hurling life, faces up to his indulgence in alcohol, to his three successive sendings-off in championship hurling , his descent into hell and his redemption. The story is a great one, greatly helped by the writing skills of Damian Lawlor. The book, published by Sliabh Ban Publications, retails for €14.99


Cashel King Cormac's - County Junior Hurling Champions 1953

A much different kind of pub lication is a sixteen-page booklet entitled 'Cashel King Cormac's - County Junior Hurling Champions 1953', produced by the club in connection with the fiftieth anniversary of that historic occasion, that saw the club win its first county title. Apart from presenting a history of the games and the people that played them in that year, the book also includes some pictures taken at the presentation of medals in the old Town Hall. These add enormously to the value of the publication. It is available from the club for €5.

As welI as the above mentioned there are a number of other publications worth recording. Match programmes for division and county senior finals, as well as the county intermediate final, are well wort h keeping. Also divisional and county convention reports amass between their covers an amazing amount of relevant material. This year's county senior hurling final program included a four-page spread on the Thurles Sarsfields team that won the 197 4 county final.

 

<span class="postTitle">Tommy Prendergast (1916-2005)</span> Oration at his graveside in Dangan Cemetery, Feb 1 2005

Tommy Prendergast (1916-2005)

Oration at his graveside in Dangan Cemetery, Feb 1 2005

 

Members of the Prendergast family, friends and neighbours of Tommy, ladies and gentleman. We are gathered here today to say our farewells to Tommy Prendergast, who made his mark on life over 89 years.

Born not so far from here in the ancient townsland of Killeenasteena, in the historic year of 1916, he remained a countryman all his life, even if he lived in the City of the Kings for most of it The other place, with which he was long associated, was another townsland, Shanballyduff, one of the most historic old farmyards in County Tipperary. It is only fitting then that we should lay him to rest in this country graveyard.

As we gather this morning to pay our last respects, we think of the influences that may have formed him. They include his parents and ten siblings, his teachers, particularly Tom Keegan, in Templenoe National School. They must also include Tom Semple of Thurles Blues fame, who was born close by, and the famous Ryans of the Racecourse, who were colossal figures in the world of sport. Finally there was the towering figure of E. D. Ryan of Tubberadora fame, with whom Tommy worked in the drapery business for all of thirty-five years.

Tom Keegan recognised the brightness in Tommy and wanted him to go to secondary school, but times were poor in 1932 and work was more important However, Tommy got the chance of further education later, and took it. After starting his apprenticeship with E. D. Ryan in 1934, he enrolled in the first evening class in the new Technical School in Hogan Square, studying shorthand, typing, Irish, English and History. When he completed that course he went on to study carpentry, spending almost a decade in all advancing his education.

Tommy became an important influence in Cashel King Cormac's soon after the end of the Second World War. The club was in need of a secretary at the time and Tommy seemed the obvious choice. As the chairman of the time, Fr. English, put it: 'If we have no secretary, we can have no club.' Never a hurler of note, Tommy's love of gaelic games was fostered by reading the reports of games in the 'Nationalist', and that interest burgeoned after commencing work for E.D. Ryan.
There was another good reason why Tommy was the man for the job. The club was deep in debt and Tommy had the kind of business acumen that might get in out of trouble. In fact he inherited a debt of nearly £3,000. He set about reducing it through regular '25' drives and holding occasional dances, especially on St Patrick's Day and Easter Sunday in the old City Hall. His efforts succeeded and the debt was cleared.

Tommy was the man for the hard road. When one compares the financial resources of clubs in the early fifties with a half-century later, there is a world of difference. These were difficult days and to Tommy we must pay thanks for keeping the ship afloat in these tough times. One hears stories of him putting his hand in his pocket to pay for sliotars, when the club couldn't afford them. He brought the club through this difficult time and set it on the road to its later prosperity. On this occasion, on behalf of Cashel King Cor mac's. I want to thank him.

He was to remain as secretary or treasurer, and sometimes both, over a period of twenty years. Even though these years are regarded as a low point in the history of the club, when it went for seventeen years without winning a divisional senior title, there were high points. The greatest was in 1954 when the first county adult title was won, the 1953 county junior hurling championship. The other was the purchase and development of Leahy Park. With both of these Tommy was intimately connected. Not only was he secretary in 1953, he was also a selector on the team. The club were delighted to include him in the fiftieth anniversary celebrations for the team at Bru Boru last September.

When he ceased to be an officer of the club, Tommy retained a huge interest in the fortunes of Cashel King Cormac's, attending matches and supporting the club in any way he could.
His other great interest was local history and he was proud of the historic farm he inherited from relations in Shanballyduff. He took me around it on one occasion and recorded on tape the historic associations of the place. He liked tracing the history of people and places, and he had a large amount of lore about Cashel over a long period of time. While he never lived in Shanballyduff, I always felt it was a kind of spiritual home, with the farming that he loved and the historic ruins that he cherished.

Today we say goodbye to a man, who played a major role in the history of the King Cormacs Club. We were proud to walk beside the funeral cortege through the streets of Cashel last night and to see the club colours fluttering in the breeze as his coffin was borne to the church. Today we are gathered to pay our last respects to him in this ancient graveyard. To his wife, Mairead, his four sons and three daughters, we express our sincerest sympathy.

Ar dheis De go raibh an ainm dilis.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Post Cashel By-Pass, Peace Reigns</span> The Tipperary Star, 23rd October, 2004

Post Cashel By-Pass, Peace Reigns

The Tipperary Star, 23rd October, 2004

Cashel has settled down to the peace and quiet of the post by-pass period.  The final piece of the new rorld system, the link road between the N8 and the N74, was opened on Friday evening.  The construction of this road is rather puzzling because nobody has informed us what traffic it is relieving. Golden traffic to Clonmel will probably travel via New Inn. Whatever traffic travels from Clonmel to Golden may take it, though it may find the journey through the town to be quicker.

There is also a certain confusion about access to the town from the Clonmel Road. The demands of the town have been half met. There is access to the bypass towards Dublin at the Clonmel road round about, as there is off the by-pass at the same point. What the by-pass does not allow is access at that point, to and from Cork. To get to Cork from Clonmel drivers have to come into the town and travel out to the Cahir roundabout.

The National Roads Authority have produced a colorful brochure giving the statistics on the construction of the bypass. It contains some powerful aerial images of the new road. One from the GortMakellis roundabout shows Ballykelly Castle and the elegant contour of the dual carriageway as it sweeps up the incline to the first bridge.

The deepest cut in a hill along the whole route was made on this stretch where a 27 m cut in the hill had to be made. The removal of the cut provided much of the 735,000 cubic meters of excavated material used in the building of the bypass. More material was excavated from the cut in the 2 km link road between the N8 and the N74.

Other interesting statistics on the project include the information that 2.1 km of regional and local roads were realigned. Anyone familiar with this realignment would be aware of the excellent improvement in the approaches to the new bridge on the Furry Hill road to Dualla. One moves from the narrowest of roads to a fine wide tarmacadam slip with full road markings and cats eyes. To a person arriving to it for the first time it appears like a mirage. 

As well as that bridge there are two others, over the Dualla road and at the Clonmel intersection. There is also an under bridge on link road that crosses the Windmill Road. There is also a cattle underpass.

As whether the excavated materials, close to half million cubic meters of deposited materials were used, and 74,000 tons of crushed rock subbase. There are 21 km of road side timber fencing, 6700 meters of concrete median barrier, and 145,200 tons of bituminous macadem surfacing.

The median barrier is a fine piece of construction. Installed by J. and D. Burke Ltd., it follows the contour of the road with precision. It contains two embedded steel robes that are capable of resisting a major impact and ensure that it is highly unlikely that any vehicle with cross into traffic on the other carriageway.

One of the fascinating aspects of such developments is that there are no longer opened until the last piece of the construction is completed. So much so that Grangemore Landscaping Ltd., who had the contract for the landscaping of the development, have the grass growing on the sides, and the trees planted.

The contract was awarded to Roadbridge Ltd., Limerick in April 2003.  It commenced on May 5th, 2003, with an allocated program time of 24 months. It was opened on October 11th, 2004, almost 7 months ahead of schedule.

The project was the first major construction in South Tipperary to be undertaken using the "Design and Build" contract format. The vast number of people in Cashel and surrounding area are delighted with the result.

In common with the procurement of major road projects, South Tipperary County Council and the National Roads Authority commissioned Orla de Bri to produce a public art sculpture symbolic of the area. The artist has developed a feature comprised of five, six meter tall bronze male figures with mirrored faces. These figures are representative of the High Kings of Munster. Each figure is wearing a stylized crown. These crowns are highlighted in gold leaf.

The shields they carry tell the artistic story of the area. One carries a depiction of the Rock of Cashel and another, a cathedral spire. These features of the sculptures are also highlighted in gold leaf in contrast to dark patina. The faces are made of mirror finish stainless steel. Conceptually, this gives the idea of seeing ourselves in the faces of our ancestors. 

The piece is visually strong and dominant as were the High Kings of Munster. Just as they guarded the path to the south in the past, this five piece sculpture symbolically guards the main highway to the South now.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Recent G.A.A. Publications (2003)</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2004, pp 51-53

Recent G.A.A. Publications (2003)

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2004, pp 51-53

 

The number of G.A.A. publications for review in this article is small in comparison with other years, but they make up in quality what they lack in quantity. Pride of place must go to 'Kickhams: Gaelic Games in Knockavilla and Donaskeigh' by J.J. Kennedy, P.R.O. of the West division since 1982 and contributor of a G.A.A. commentary column to the Nationalist, under the penname "Westside" for a good number of years.

The history of Gaelic games in the parish of KnockaviIla and Donaskeigh is a high quality work of over 400 pages. One of the many things in the book that caught my attention is to be found under the heading of 1935. The big story in that year was one of unity at last, as the existing teams of Knockavilla, Donaskeigh and Dundrum coalesced into the one club that would represent the entire parish for the future.

And what was that club called! Yes, you've guessed: Kickhams! Not Knockavilla Kickhams, or Knockavilla-Donaskeigh Kickhams, but Kickhams. I have been preaching this for some time, but newspapers, program makers and a varied assortment of people have been calling the club by other names for many years. So, maybe people will start calling the club by the right name now that the authority on the history of the club has spoken.

According to the author, the famous meeting that heralded the arrival of Kickhams is said to have taken place in the newly built chaplain's house at the Convent Cross, an appropriate place within striking distance of Dundrum, Knockavilla and Donaskeigh.

The event wasn't reported and no minutes of the meeting remain in existence, but, according to the author, anecdotal evidence suggests that the list of those who attended included, Sean O'Dwyer, later West chairman, Jerry O'Dwyer, later West secretary, Willie O'Dwyer, Mick Ryan (B), Gerard O'Dwyer (Managh), Paddy Cleary, Con McCarthy, Paddy Morrissey.  An impressive line-up indeed.

As the three teams that coalesced in 1935 indicates, there was a G.A.A. life in the parish before that date. The book contains two chapters, which cover the history of the games in Knockavilla Donaskeigh, from the foundation of the G.A.A. up to 1930, when the West board was formed. The interesting thing is that the first chapter is called. "The Time of the Football", and it reflects the fact that football was the first game of the parish in the early days of the G.A.A., an era that subsequently became known in the parish as the time of the football. So, as the author points out, when the Kickham club was promoted to senior football for the first time ever in 1997 following the county intermediate win in 1996 it was in fact returning to its roots. The first official championship won by any team from the parish was a Mid junior football title, won
by Dundrum in 1927.

At the launch of the Kickhams Club History, left to right: Tom Hayes (Secretary), Seamus O'Dwyer (Chairman), Peter Quinn (who launched the book), J.J. Kennedy (author), Donal Shanahan (County Chairman), Sean Fogarty (Vice Chairman, Munster Council) …

At the launch of the Kickhams Club History, left to right: Tom Hayes (Secretary), Seamus O'Dwyer (Chairman), Peter Quinn (who launched the book), J.J. Kennedy (author), Donal Shanahan (County Chairman), Sean Fogarty (Vice Chairman, Munster Council) and James O'Donnell (West Board Chairman)

In the course of time Kickhams became a hurling club predominantly and had a most successful period between the midforties and 1960. During this period twelve divisional championships were won and, on the night of the launch – and what a great night it was with the hugely impressive past-president of Cumann Luthchleas Gael, Peter Quinn, doing the honours - the players who brought such honour to the club during that period were honoured. 

Pride of place in the distinguished company went to John Farrell, Co. Chairman; Sean Fogarty, the only player to win all twelve, plus five divisional minor titles in the preceding years.

Following that golden age the club declined and, even though juvenile success started to come in the eighties, it took a long time to be translated into senior success. This happened in 1997, when the club captured their first senior divisional championship in the space of thirty- seven years.

All of this is recorded by J. J. Kennedy in this book. The publication must be a model for all other writers of club histories. It is comprehensive and concise, containing all the information required without long-winded or boring accounts of matches long gone. J.J. has incorporated short excerpts from contemporary newspaper accounts to add flavour to his narrative. The appendices include a list of all divisional winning teams plus the club's roll of honour. If a fault is to be found in this excellent publication it might be the shortage of pictures. There is a good scattering of them through the text but in a visual age more would have been desirable. I can understand that the author was constrained by those at his disposal, especially in the earlier part of the book.

Overall, though, J. J. Kennedy has done his club an enormous service. He has produced a work of quality that is a delight to read, even for one from outside the parish. He has brought to the work a thorough knowledge of Gaelic games in the area plus a wonderful facility with language, which has allowed him to give us a most readable account of the history of the games in the parish of Knockavilla and Donaskeigh.  The book is w rth much more than the €20 asking price.


Celtic Times

The publication of a facsimile edition of Celtic Times, Michael Cusack's Gaelic Games Newspaper, by the Clasp Press, Ennis in conjunction with Comhairle na Mumhan , CLG, is an historical event.

Cusack published the paper during 1887 and it was revolutionary at the period, devoted as it was to sport. It was mostly produced by Cusack himself, with reports of athletic events and G.A.A. matches fed from a wide range of correspondents around the country . Events in County Tipperary are well covered in the paper, and in great detail as well. Cusack also used to paper to pronounce on whatever was bugging him at the time in the sporting area. Remember, he had severed his link s with officialdom in the G.A.A. at this stage, but he used the paper to support
and encourage the playing of Ireland's native pastimes and athletics. At any rate the paper was " lost".  For years it was believed that no copy of the paper existed. In 1969, Clare man, Brendan
MacLua, who founded the " Irish Post", in London in that year, was given a file of Celtic Times, by Tommy Moore, a legendary G.A.A. figure, who ran a pub in Cathedral Street, Dublin. MacLua took the file to London and forgot, about it as he got his new paper off the ground. Years later he told a few people about it and Marcus de Burca used it when writing the biography of Cusack, which appeared in 1989. When the National Library heard of the file they asked MacLua to donate it. So also did the Clare County Library. Eventually MacLua donated it to Cusack's, and his own, native county with a microfilm copy going to the National Library.

How Tommy Moore got the only surviving copy of the paper remains a mystery. It appears it may have been the publisher's own copy, as the file is bound and hard-covered. Whereas it will remain a mystery for some time to come, it is now possible for anyone to have a hard-bound copy of the file. What Clasp Press have done is to produce an extraordinary fine facsimile with the front cover carrying the masthead of the Celtic Times, plus the familiar picture of the bearded Cusack.

The facsimile includes numbers 8-53 of the paper, running from February-December 1887. It is missing the first seven numbers and the final two. The paper disappeared in mid-January 1888, simply because it was no longer able to pay its way. Cusack himself admitted that the circulation had fallen from 20,000 a week in May to 10,000 in December.

The paper sold for 1d for the benefit of the younger there were 240 of them in a pound. If you wish to purchase the 42 issues in this facsimile they will cost you €75. Dear indeed, but for an insight into the mind of Cusack, as welI as information on the progress of the G.A.A. in the year 1887, as well as a wonderful historical curiosity , welI w rth the expenditure.


All About Hurling

On a totally different scale is a 32 page publication from O'Brien Press entitled simply All About Hurling. Written by Irene Barber, and supported by Cumann na mBunscoil, it's a delightful publication for primary school students. The table of contents gives us the flavour: 
1) the history of hurling, 
2) the hurley, 
3) the sliotar,
4) the Gaelic Athletic Association, 
5) the trophies, 
6) Croke Park, 
7) camogie, 
8) Mick Mackey, 
9) Christy Ring, 
10) D. J. Carey, etc. 
in all twenty-three chapters, imaginatively illustrated. 

A lovely contrast may be seen in two chapters entitled: Then, Now, showing the changes that have taken place in the games over the years. For sale: €7.95.

A quick look at three programmes that appeared during the year. The first has to be the county hurling final program, which contained a 12-page insert on the celebrations for the 1958-65 All-Ireland players.  This was a wonderful production which was collated by county P.R.O. Ed Donnelly. Sadly, not enough copies of the program were produced. Four thousand were printed on the expectation of a crowd of 8,000 but over 10,000 turned up. Some people were left short.

Tipperary Institute hosted the Fitzgibbon and Ryan finals this year, and, incidentally, won the Ryan. They produced a bumper program for the event, and some are still available from the college for €3.

Liam Hogan and Ed Don nelly produced an all-colour program for the Kilruane MacDonaghs-Burgess county intermediate final, and the junior hurling A final replay between Burgess and Fennellys on the weekend of November 22/23. A beautiful production, and a credit to the Nenagh Guardian, who did the print work , it will become a trophy for the Kilruane MacDonaghs, as it saw them return to senior ranks, as well as for the Fennellys, who achieved a rare victory at this level.

Too late for review the 'History of Camogie in Tipperary' by Martin Bourke and Seamus J. King was launched by Meadhbh Stokes, the first player to captain a Tipperary senior camogie team to All- Ireland honours, at the Templemore Arms on December 3.

Containing almost 700 pages and over 300 photographs, the book traces the history of camogie in the county from the foundation of An Cumann Camoguideachta in 1904 to the end of 2003. It deals particularly with the history from 1932 onwards, when the first county championship was played.

As well as giving a detailed account of the story of the game, the book also includes an extensive statistical section devoted to results, winning teams etc. There are also chapters on the game in primary and secondary schools, profiles of clubs, poems and ballads, obituaries.

Selling for €25 it should prove excellent value and be a handy present for Christmas. It is the second county history to be produced - Cork published theirs in 2000 - and just in time for the Centenary of the Camogie Association in 2004.

Launch of History of Camogie: Front row (from left): Maeve Stokes, Marion Graham, Miriam O'Callaghan, President Camogie Association, Mairin Ni Chearnaigh, Munster President; Anne Newe, Tipperary Leader. Back row (from left): Sean Fogarty, Vice-Chair…

Launch of History of Camogie: Front row (from left): Maeve Stokes, Marion Graham, Miriam O'Callaghan, President Camogie Association, Mairin Ni Chearnaigh, Munster President; Anne Newe, Tipperary Leader. Back row (from left): Sean Fogarty, Vice-Chairman Munster Council; Donal Shanahan, Co. Chairman, G.A.A. , Seamus King and Martin Bourke, authors, Stephen Fitzgerald, Chairman, Camogie Board.

<span class="postTitle">Senior Hurling Championship 2003</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2004, pp 21-25

Senior Hurling Championship 2003

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2004, pp 21-25

 

There was much speculation leading up to the county senior hurling final on October 12, the earliest date for the final to be played since 1994. Would the worm turn for Thurles Sarsfields and bring them their first victory at this level since 1974, also the last year they defeated Toomevara in the senior hurling championship, or would the Greyhounds, stung by their one point defeat by Mullinahone in the 2002 semi-final, which deprived them of a chance of five-in-a -row, bounce back?

The sides followed impressive paths to the final. The North representatives came through unscathed with an impressive tally of twelve goals and ninety-six points to their credit. They did have two close encounters, surviving by the minimum of margins in their early round clashes against Templederry and Borrisoleigh.  They found their rhythm after that and scored impressive victories, conceding only three goals and seventy five points in their six games.

At first sight Thurles Sarsfields' path was even more impressive. They scored fifteen goals and ninety-three points along the way. It wasn't plain sailing, however. They lost to Loughmore-Castleiney by four points in the Mid final, and they conceded ten goals and eighty-five points in their six games. In fact, after their defeat at the hands of the Mid champions, they weren't expected to be in the finalshake-up, but an impressive victory over Mullinahone in the county quarterfinal silenced their critics.


QUALIFIERS AND RELEGATION

It was the second year of the new championship format, with a series of qualifiers for defeated divisional semifinalists, and relegation for first-round losers. The South were not involved in the latter, having only four teams, the minimum regarded as necessary for divisional viability. In the other divisions, the North supplied five teams, the Mid four, and Clonoulty-Rossmore from the West, for the relegation pot. After two preliminary rounds, four semi-finals and two finals, Silvermines and Moycarkey-Borris lost out to Portroe and Clonoulty-Rossmore respectively, and will play intermediate hurling next year. 

This year's intermediate champions will be promoted to senior ranks, thus reducing the number of senior teams to twenty-five. The final game between Clonoulty Rossmore and Moycarkey-Borris at Holycross was one of the games of the year, attracting a bumper crowd. It provided an outstanding performance from veteran, Declan Ryan, who was mostly responsible for his side's survival in senior ranks. One of his admirers said after the match: 'They should erect a monument to him.'


QUALIFIERS, ROUND 1

In this round the eight divisional semi-final losers played off to provide four teams to play the losers of the divisional finals. The result was even enough with one team from each division,
Killenaule, Cappawhite, Boherlahan- Dualla and Moneygall, coming through.

Meanwhile the divisional finals were played, which didn't impinge too much on the progress of the county championship.

In the Mid an early Loughmore Castleiney blast floored Thurles Sarsfields, giving the winners their ninth title since their first in 1983. Played at Templemore on August 24, the final score was 3-14 to 2-13. In the South Mullinahone defeated Ballingarry by 3-14 to 1-10 in a stormy final, which erupted into ugly scenes early in the second half. Played at Clonmel on August 31, the winners led by 2-6 to 0-7 at the interval and sent out a clear signal that they were on course for a county double.

Toomevara did sufficient to win the North final at Cloughjordan on September 7, defeating a defence-frail Nenagh Eire Og by 3-12 to 0-16 on a day of persistent rain. On the same day at Sean Treacy Park, Tipperary, it took a pointed free by Galtee Rovers' Pa Morrissey, deep into added time, to keep their hopes of a first title alive against Kickhams. The latter made a great revival in the second half. Behind by 0-7 to 0-2 at the interval, and having Vincent Kelly sent off early in the second half, their chances looked slim, but they put together a great performance after that, and almost snatched victory. The replay was held at Golden the following week and the men from Bansha reversed the pattern of the drawn game. Behind by 0-7 to 0-5 at the interval, they produced a second-half display that left Kickhams floundering. In the end they thoroughly deserved their 2-15 to 1-11 victory and their first senior hurling title.


QUALIFIERS - ROUND 2

In this round the first-round winners were pitted against the divisional runners- up. The four winners were Moneygall, Thurles Sarsfields, Kickhams and Nenagh Eire Og. Ballingarry were the only divisional runner-up to be beaten, losing out badly to Moneygall. In the local derby between Kickhams and Boherlahan, the West men came through.


QUARTER FINALS

The field had narrowed to eight teams by this stage, and the results brought two surprises. Moneygall came through against Mid champions, Loughmore Castleiney, having two points to spare on a scoreline of 1-13 to 1-11. Thurles Sarsfields surprised many with their defeat of Mullinahone, who were being set up as likely opponents for Toomevara in the final. The latter sent out a clear signal of their intentions in their defeat of Kickhams.


SEMI-FINALS

Three North teams, plus Thurles Sarsfields, made up the semi-final pairings at Semple Stadium on Saturday, September 27. The Toomevara-Moneygall clash was a close one until the final ten minutes, when an Eoin Brislane goal for Toomevara put some distance between the sides. Toomevara led by 1-8 to 0-9 at the interval, the goal coming from Ken Dunne just before the break, when he raced through from forty yards and sent an unstoppable shot past Sean McCormack in the Moneygall goals. At times during the game it looked as if Toomevara would pull away, but Moneygall kept coming back, and it was only in the final ten minutes that the winners eventually put light between them and their dogged opponents. It was Toomevara's 13th county semi-final since 1989, and their ninth victory.

In the second semi-final Thurles Sarsfields had to survive a late Nenagh Eire Og rally. Sarsfields started off lively and were ahead by 1-4 to 0-1 after eight minutes. Nenagh came into the game, helped by Michael Cleary's accurate free-taking, and the score was 1-11 to 0-9 in favour of Sarsfields at the interval.

Nenagh's best patch was after the resumption and by the fortieth minute they had taken the lead, 0-15 to 1-11, for the first time. The game remained level until the final quarter when Sarsfields gradually pulled ahead with a substantial lead. However, there was a final kick in Nenagh and, in the closing minutes, they scored two goals to leave only two points between the sides on a scoreline of 3-17 to 2-18.

Nenagh Eire Og team - North finalists and County semi-finalists. Back row left to right: John Flannery, Richie Flannery, Noel Moloney, Michael Hackett, Eddie Tucker, Declan O'Meara, Hugh Moloney, John Slattery. Seated: Michael Cleary, Brian Darcy, K…

Nenagh Eire Og team - North finalists and County semi-finalists. Back row left to right: John Flannery, Richie Flannery, Noel Moloney, Michael Hackett, Eddie Tucker, Declan O'Meara, Hugh Moloney, John Slattery. Seated: Michael Cleary, Brian Darcy, Kevin Tucker, Michael McNamara , Robbie Tomlinson, Eoin Fitzgibbon, John Kennedy.


THE FINAL

And so to Semple Stadium two weeks and a day later for the final, played in unprecedented dry conditions.  Toomevara were the bookie's favourites but there was a sneaking hope that Sarsfields wouldn't lose out for the fourth year in a row. There was a parallel with the 1960 final, when Sarsfields, after winning five in a row, were dethroned by Toomevara. Was it possible that Sarsfields might do the dethroning on this occasion?

The story of the game is easily told. Toomevara came on to the field like a team inspired. They showed hunger, pace, combination and determination in contrast to a Sarsfields outfit that was strangely lethargic. Their new look side, which should have exuded the confidence gained at minor and under-21 level, was inexplicably subdued. 

Toomevara commanded the field, led by 2-10 to 0-5 at the interval and, with five minutes of normal time remaining, had nine points to spare, 3-17 to 1-14. Only at this stage did Sarsfields erupt with an effort worthy of a county final. In the final minutes they scored 2-2 to 0-2, and nearly created a huge shock. The final score was 3-19 to 3-16 in favour of Toom.

Action from the County Senior final - Ger "Redser" O'Grady (Thurles Sarsfields), Tony Delaney (Toomevara), Johnny Enright (Thurles Sarsfields), and Eoin Brislane (Toomevara).

Action from the County Senior final - Ger "Redser" O'Grady (Thurles Sarsfields), Tony Delaney (Toomevara), Johnny Enright (Thurles Sarsfields), and Eoin Brislane (Toomevara).

In the aftermath there were many questions to be asked, even if few were answered. Did Toom take their collective foot off the pedal when they enjoyed a nine point lead? Was Sarsfields' last eight minutes their 'true' form , or was it allowed by Toom's relaxation? What would have happened had Redser's 20 metre free not whizzed wide of the post? What had Sarsfields not conceded an easy, early goal? The answers don't really matter because they won't change the result.

Toomevara are champions for the fifth time in six years and they possess a team of enormous talent. Their achievement now has to be an All –Ireland club championship, otherwise they will never be regarded as a great team. The only consolation for Thurles Sarsfields has to be their final ten minutes. In that period they revealed what they are capable of doing, and they have the consolation of knowing that they almost snatched a draw from a team that appeared to have all the answers. However, they will have also to face up to the question of why they played so poorly for so long in their most important encounter of the year.

The Dunnes from Toomevara celebrate the County Final win, from left: Ken (with man of the match award), Benny, Terry, Barry and Tommy.

The Dunnes from Toomevara celebrate the County Final win, from left: Ken (with man of the match award), Benny, Terry, Barry and Tommy.

TEAMS 

Toomevara - Justin Cottrell , Benny Dunne , George Frend, Philip Shanahan, Brian Duff, Tony Delaney , David Young, Terry Dunne (0-3), Ken Dunne (0-6), Paddy O'Brien {1-1 ), Eoin Brislane (0-3), John O'Brien (0-2), Michael Bevans (capt.), Thomas Dunne (1-0), Willie Ryan (0-1). 
Sub: John Boland for Duff. 
Other subs: Tomas O'Meara, Francis Devaney , Padraig Hackett, John Kinnirons, Kevin Cummins, Barry Dunne, Denis Kelly , Andrew Ryan, David Kennedy, Tommy Carroll, Ken Hall, Brian McGrath Ronan Tynan, Ciaran Fitzpatrick, Patrick Tuohy.

Thurles Sarsfields - Patrick McCormack, Brian O'Grady, Tommy Maher (capt.), Tony Connolly, Brendan O'Sullivan , Stephen Mason, Lee Shanahan, Eddie Enright (0-1), Wayne Cully (0-3), Johnny Enright (0-6), Ger O'Grady (0-2), Tony Ruth (0-3), Lar Corbett (2-1), Eoin Costello, Shane Ryan. 
Subs: Brendan Carroll for Mason, Seamus O'Shea for Connolly , Richie Ruth (1-0) for Ryan, Eamon Walshe for Costello.
Other subs: Ciaran Carroll , Tommy Collins, John Connors , Barry Dwyer, Aidan Dundon, John Lillis, Jamie Murphy, David O'Dwyer, Matthew O'Dowd, Gerry Spain, Conor Stapleton, Eamon Tuohy.
Referee : Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan).

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2003 RESULTS AT A GLANCE

CREDIT UNIONS TIPPERARY COUNTY SENIOR HURLING CHAMPIONSHIP

DAN BREEN CUP

Round 1 [Eight defeated Divisional semi-finalists]

Killenaule 0-18 Cashel 0-13  Fethard   31/8/03   Ref. W. Clohessy (Drom-lnch)
Cappawhite  5-16 Carrick Swans 1-8   Clonmel  6/9/03   Ref. J. Ryan (Cashel K.C.)
Boherlahan 4-18 Newport  0-10   Dolla   7/9/03   Ref. W. Barrett (Ardfinnan)
Moneygall  1-15 Upperchurch/D 0-12   Templemore   7/9/03   Ref. R. Barry (Cappawhite)

 

Round 2 [Divisional runners-up v Round 1 winners]

Moneygall 4-12 Ballingarry 0-8   Templemore   13/9/03   Ref. J. Ryan (Cashel)
Th. Sarsfields 3-12 Killenaule 1-14   Boherlahan   14/9/03   Ref. J. McDonnell (Roscrea)
Kickhams 3-9 Boherlahan 2-10   Cashel   14/9/03   Ref. J. Sweeney (Thurles)
Nenagh E. Og 6-15 Cappawhite 0-10   Newport   14/9/03   Ref. W. Clohessy (Drom-lnch )

 

Quarter-finals [Divisional winners v Round 2 winners]

Moneygall 1-13 Loughmore C  1-11   Templemore   20/9/03   Ref. R. Barry (Cappawhite)
Nenagh E. Og  2-15 Galtee Rovers 2-10   Templemore   20/9/03   Ref. J. Ryan [Boherlahan]
Th. Sarsfields 2-19 Mullinahone 2-11   Cashel   20/9/03   Ref. J. McDonnell (Roscrea)
Toomevara  2-21 Kickhams 1-11   Templemore   21/9/03   Ref. S. Roche (Kilsheelan)

 

Semi-finals

Toomevara 2-19 Moneygall 0-16   S. Stadium   27/9/03   Ref. W. Clohessy (Drom-lnch)
Thurles Sarsfields 3-17 Nenagh E.Og 2-18   S. Stadium   27/9/03   Ref. N. Cosgrove (Marlfield )

 

Final 

Toomevara 3-19 Thurles Sarsfields 3-16   S. Stadium   12/10/03   Ref. S Roche (Kilsheelan)

 

SENIOR HURLING RELEGATION

Preliminary Round

Drom/lnch  1-15 Borrisoleigh 2-11   Templemore   25/08/03   Ref. W. Barrett (Ardfinnan)
Roscrea 0-21  Silvermines 0-13   Toomevara   27/08/03   Ref. M Cahill (Kilruane MacD)

Round 1 [Semi-finals]

[1] Borrisoleigh 0-21   Silvermines 0-9  Nenagh   04/09/03   Ref. J. Sweeney (Thurles)
[2] J.K. Brackens 1-14   Portroe 2-7   Dolla   24/08/03   Ref. E. Browne (Kickhams)
[1] Holycross  1-16   Moycarkey 1-14   Boherlahan   25/08/03   Ref. R. Barry (Cappawh ite)
[2] Templederry 2-15   Clonoulty  2-11   Borrisoleigh   30/08/03   Ref. D. Curtis (Thurles)

Finals

[1] Portroe  5-17   Silvermines 6-11   Nenagh   10/09/03   Ref. J. Ryan [Boherlahan]
[2] Clonoulty/R 1-15   Moycarkey/B  1-13   Holycross   21/09/03   Ref. W. Barrett (Ardf innan )

 

SENIOR HURLING LEAGUE FINALS

Premier Division

Toomevara 0-23 Thurles Sarsfields 0-13   Templemore  28/06/03   W.Barrett (Ardfinnan)

Division 1

MoneygalI 2-12  Borrisoleigh 1-14   Templemore  08/06/03   N. Cosgrave (Marfield)

Division 2

Portroe 3-14  Boherlahan/Dualla 1-12   Dolla   15/06/03   R.Barry (Cappawhite)

Division 3

Templederry 1-14 Drom-lnch 1-11   Borrisoleigh   06/09/03   A. Moloney (Cahir)

Intermediate Hurling League

Gortnahoe/Glengoole 3-12 Moyne-Templetuohy 0-17  Morris Park   04/09/03   P. Shelly (Killenaule)

 

<span class="postTitle">Michael 'Dasher' Murphy (1914-2004)</span> Oration at his graveside in Saint Cormac's Cemetery, Cashel, October 13, 2004

Michael 'Dasher' Murphy (1914-2004)

Oration at his graveside in Saint Cormac's Cemetery, Cashel, October 13, 2004

 

Members of the Murphy family, relations, neighbours and friends of the Dasher, we are gathered here today to say farewell to a man, who made his mark on the life of the town and parish of Cashel

It's stated in the Bible that man's span is three score years and ten, but the Dasher went well beyond that, and reached the fine old age of four score years and ten, becoming during that time not only the father of a family, but a grandfather and great-grandfather as well.

So, while it's a time of sadness to experience his passing, particularly for Johnny, Michael, Lissie and Mary, and for his children and grandchildren, it is also a time for celebration, the celebration of a life that was lived to the full, and that left memories for family and friends to cherish in future years.

Mickey Murphy's life was for many years associated with Cashel King Cormac's, a club and a team to which he gave extraordinary service over twenty-five years. That career commenced in success with a West minor hurling medal in 1931, and concluded with a county junior hurling medal in 1954.

Interestingly the minor medal wasn't presented to him until November of last year, when he received it at a function in Bru Boru. The last medal he won, the greatest success experienced by the club until the county senior success in 1991, was recalled in a commemorative event at the same venue, as late as September 14. Unfortunately Mickey was unable to be there in person, as illness had confined him to his bed, but the club chairman, Ger Slattery, and secretary, Mattie Finnerty, called to his house and made the presentation. Those of us who were present that night recall a man, who was in outstanding form, mentally alert, and full of chat and memories.

Since then he went downhill as if he was happy that his achievements had been recognised, and that his place in the history of Gaelic games in this town and parishwas secure.

Between 1931 and 1954 Mickey graced the hurling fields of Tipperary, and further afield, with skill and energy, above all with dash. The sobriquet, 'the Dasher', he earned from the way he used to dash out from his position in the backs to clear the ball.

And, we can see him in our minds eye dashing out with the ball on numerous occasions, to win a divisional junior medal in 1933, and senior medals in 1934, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1945, 1948, during that wonderful period in the club's history.

During that period he played also in three county finals, none, alas, successful.

For a time during the thirties Mickey was also in the sights of the county selectors and played on a number of occasions in league and tournament games. He never commanded a permanent place, according to the late Jim Devitt, because he was unfortunate to be there at a time when there was a lot of talent competing for his position at wingback.

It was left to his son, Johnny, to achieve inter-county distinction, firstly with the Tipperary minors in 1952, 1953 and 1954, and later for many years with New York. Mickey was immensely proud of his son's achievements. Mickey also achieved fame across the water, when he emigrated to England for three years in the forties, winning an All-English championship with Lancashire.
Hurling meant a huge amount to the Dasher. He once said to me: 'Hurling was my whole life. When I came back from work I went to the field before I had my tea. On the Sunday morning of a match you'd be as proud as a peacock getting ready to go off and hurl. You'd cry if you weren't picked to play.'

Because of that love, Mickey gave a great part of his life to the game. The Cashel King Cormac's club recognised his contribution when they made him a Life President in the early nineties. We recognise him as one of our greatest players. His achievements have been overshadowed by the great successes of the club in the nineties, and the many fine players that wore the jersey proudly, but they will never be forgotten.

The fine turnout of the club members for the guard of honour last night, the presence of so many today, is testament to the esteem with which the Dasher was held. In any Team of the Century, in any Team of the Millennium, that this club will ever pick, Mickey Murphy will be an automatic choice. This town was by-­passed on Monday but the Dasher will never be by-passed in the memories of the Cashel King Cormac's Club.

As president of this fine club, I am privileged to have been asked, on behalf of the Cashel King Cormac's, to pay respects to this man of four score years and ten, who brought such honour to the club over a wide span of years. It is fitting that he is laid to rest within view of the famous Rock and of the town he loved so well, and beside the field where the game he loved continues to be played, and the clash of the ash can be heard.

Last year, on a Sunday in November, Mickey Murphy was made a member of Cumann na Sean Ghael. Just a month ago he was honoured on the fiftieth anniversary of his county final victory. Today, he becomes a member of Cumann na Sean-Iomainaithe ar Neamh and my wish is that he will continue to enjoy the game in the green fields of heaven.

Ar dheis De go raibh a ainm.

 

<span class="postTitle">Martin O'Meara</span> On the occasion of the erection of a memorial to Martin O’Meara in the village of Lorrha in May 2nd, 2015

Address by Seamus J. King at Lorrha on Saturday, May, 2, 2015 on the occasion of the Civic Welcome to mark the visit of Cr. Wayne Sanford, President of the Shire of Collie, Western Australia.

Cathaoirleach of Nenagh Municipal District, Councillor Fiona Bonfield, Chairperson of Lorrha Development Association, Rose Mannion, Distinguished Visitor, Councillor Wayne Sanford, President of the Shire of Collie, Western Australia, Ladies and Gentlemen.

It is an honour for me to be asked to address you on the occasion of the visit of our distinguished visitor from Collie, the place where our most famous and honoured emigrant, Martin O'Meara, first went to work as a sleeper-layer on the new railway line from Perth to Collie, following his arrival at Freemantle in 1913.

When I looked up the internet recently to acquaint myself with Collie, I discovered that it was once referred to as a 'dirty mining town' but on April 8, 2006 it won the Australian Tidy Towns Competition from finalists from six States and the Northern Territory. Collie was named the top Tidy Town because of the commitment of the community to recycling, waste management, beautification and community works. I mention this by the way because I know of the efforts of the Lorrha Development Association and other groups in this parish to make their place a tidy and more attractive place to live.

From small beginnings on a small farm of twelve acres in Lissernane, where economic prospects were meagre, Martin O'Meara performed heroic acts in World War 1 and won a Victoria Cross 'for most conspicuous bravery'. One of a family of eleven children, seven of whom lived, Martin was the second-last to be born. He left the bosom of his family, the security of his friends and the comforts of his own place to travel into the unknown, first to Liyerpool and then to Freemantle, Western Australia, where he made his way in an unknown land, 10,000 miles from his own place.

On that journey to Australia he showed some of his steely quality when he worked his passage as a stoker of the ships's furnaces for the three-month passage. 'The hardest task in my life,' he was to say later, 'was shovelling coal to the boilers on that three months' voyage'

It appears he landed in Australia in 1913 and got ajob soon after as a sleeper-layer on a new railway line through the bush at Collie, east of Perth.

We don't have much of a profile of the man. According to an account given in a newspaper after he was proposed for a Victoria Cross, he appeared to have been 'a somewhat lonely Irishman battling his way in a new land. His friends and associates were, seemingly, few and far between, but these with whom he became intimate regarded his as a sterling friend and a man of worth.' The profile further states he was a strict teetotaller and staunch Roman Catholic. 'He is seemingly a man who seeks friends but is most discriminate in their selection. He is a fine stamp physically hardened by work in the open and weighs in the vicinity of 12 or 13 stone.'

Why he decided to enlist in the Australian army and enter training camp in August 1915, we don't know. Was it out of a sense of loyalty to his adopted country or was it the same spirit of adventure that took him to Liverpool initially and finally to Perth? We don't know. We get some inkling from some words he spoke when he rturned to Ireland for a brief visit in October 1916. He said he entered the war with the belief that it was his duty to answer the call to assist the Allies in their great struggle and any distinction he had won, it was won in the discharge of his duty to his country.

What we do know is that he committed himself to the training required to become the best of soldiers. His journey to the battlefield took him to Egypt for training with his unit the 16th Battallion of the Australian Imperial Force (AIL) and then to France. Life in Egypt was fairly pleasant. One soldier wrote to his mother: 'I am a different man now that I have lost all superfluous flesh and am as hard as nails and as brown as a well-done peanut.' We can imagine Martin at a peak of physical fitness as he embarked for France.

Having landed at Marseilles the soldiers went by train to the Front, a journey that lasted nearly sixty hours, broken up by a number of stops along the way. At these stops they were greeted by a very friendly French population who showered them with food and drink. We have no account of how Martin responded to the adulation but the good times would soon cease and he had to face the horrors of war.

As soon as the 16th Battalion arrived at the Front to join the British Expeditionary Force, they began to prepare for combat as preparations were already in hand for the Somme offensive. The intent behind this was to break through German lines and, by involving the Germans, help the French army under strong attack at Verdun. Commander-in-Chief, Haig, believed he had the secret of a successful allied attack. He hoped that by bombarding the German lines for a week beforehand with heavy artillery the Allied force would destroy all the defensive fortifications of the enemy. Then it would be a simple matter of the soldiers coming out of their trenches and crossing 'No Man's Land' to mop up any of the enemy still alive.

In fact the artillery shells had no effect on the German concrete bunkers and the barbed wire just blew up in the air and came down a more entangled mess than before. As the Allied soldiers advanced in straight lines across 'No Man's Land' they were mercilessly raked with machine gun fire. Twenty-thousand men were killed and forty thousand taken prisoner on the first day. Until November, when the suicidal attacks were called off, the allies persisted in trying to achieve the impossible.

The action around Pozieres and Mouquet Farm in which Martin O'Meara was involved, was part of these suicide missions. He was lucky to survive. A suicide mission is the only way to describe the activity in the area during the period of August 9-12, 1916. During these four days of heavy fighting Martin O'Meara, a stretcher bearer, repeatedly went out and brought in wounded from no-man's land despite intense artillery and machine-gun fire. He was busy during the whole series of operations, especially in the critical barrage and counterattack period. Four times he carried water and supplies forward under bursting shells and then returned carrying wounded. On one occasion he volunteered to carry ammunition and bombs to a portion of trench which was receiving heavy shelling.

He was wounded on August 12th, 1916, just after performing the above-mentioned acts. However, he remained on duty and wasn't admitted to the 12th Field Ambulance until the following day. He was diagnosed with a gun shot wound to the abdomen and shipped back to hospital in England.

As a result of his heroic actions he was recommended for the Victoria Cross on August 16. The recommendation stated: 'For most conspicuous bravery. During four days of very heavy fighting he repeatedly went out and brought in wounded officers and men from 'No-Man's Land' under intense artillery and machine gun fire. He also volunteered and carried up ammunition and bombs through a heavy barrage to a portion of the trenches, which was being heavily shelled at the time. He showed throughout an utter contempt of danger and undoubtedly saved many lives.' He was awarded the Victoria Cross the following month.

What inspired Martin O'Meara to such endeavour, to such conspicuous bravery, to absolute disdain for danger? We do know that his fearless courage was fuelled by a deep religious faith. All who knew him testify to the important part religion played in his life. When he left for Australia his mother gave him a rosary beads which he carried at all times during the war. He said afterwards that 'twas the rosary that saved my life.' He had absolute faith in the protective power of faith. At Mouquet Farm, prior to going out to bring in the wounded he said a decade of the Rosary and this imbued him with the belief that he was going to return alive. He didn't see the danger fear the shells or flinch from the gunfire as he went about his business as a stretcher bearer and he always returned to base alive, even if he received the occasional wounds. He was also inspired by the love of his fellow man, the camaraderie of the group. He may not have made many friends but those he did, he was prepared to die for them.

Martin O'Meara was presented with his Victoria Cross by King George in London on July 21, 1917. There are a few seconds of film footage which recorded this momentous event for the humble son ofLorrha. He had scaled the heights through personal effort and unnatural courage.

His achievements were recognised in Australia where his former employer described him as being generous to a fault and that no obstacle caused him to sidetrack and that he possessed an exceptionally powerful physique: 'It is not hard to picture him rushing out into 'No Man's Land' and returning with a man under each arm' the employer added. The West Australian parliament 'moved congratulations' to him on his award. The

people of Collie sent him a congratulatory cable.

He was also honoured in Ireland. The North Tipperary County Committee of Agriculture stated at their monthly meeting that they wished 'to express to Martin O'Meara, V.C. our great admiration of his bravery and to congratulate him on gaining the V.C., the highest honour that can be offered to any soldier. We, as Tipperarymen, are proud of him and hope soon to give him a suitable welcome and show our appreciation of the honour he has won. We hope that he will soon be recovered enough to return to his native country.'

Martin O'Meara eventually got back to Lorrha on a fortnighht's leave in October 1916. One account descibes his return: 'The modesty of the man is to be seen in the mode of his homecoming. His family expected him but did not know the exact date of his arrival. He got off the train at Birr Station and walked home - about five miles - in the darkness, along the disused Birr and Portumna railway line which passes close to his home. No one recognised him at the station or along the way. He opened the door and walked in, surprising his brother and sister inside. At the end of his leave he returned almost as quietly as he had come.'

A formal homecoming was arranged for Lorrha on November 24 to present him with a gold watch. But it was like Hamlet without the prince: O'Meara had already returned to London, where he immediately volunteered again for active service. He rejoined his battalion in December, was injured soon after, He was injured again in April 191 7 and was wounded a third time in August after which he was moved to Bath War Hospital.

He was given furlough in October 1917 and returned to Lorrha for a couple of weeks. His reception was very different to what he had experienced a year previously. The political climate had changed in Ireland during 1917. The prisoners from the Easter Rising, who had been spat upon in the streets of Dublin as they were led off to internment in Wales in 1916, returned as heroes at Christmas. All had changed and people like O'Meara, who had been lauded for their courage and bravery, were now looked at askance in the new nationalism.

There was a second factor. O'Meara was beginning to show some of the signs of insanity which was eventually to rule his life. His behaviour appeared strange to the locals. He insisted on wearing the AIF uniform and the famous slouch hat. Instead of generating admiration for O'Meara and his exploits, the locals came to regard him as an oddity and an outsider. He attended a number of threshings but usually found himself on the outside, without much rapport with his neighbours and a curiosity to his friends. Eventually he got the message that he wasn't part of the community anymore and returned to his battalion earlier than intended. There is anecdotal evidence that on the evening he departed he stood to attention on the sandpits near his house, waved his hat all around for he knew he would never see his native place again.

He rejoined his battalion in France in January 1918. He was promoted Sergeant in August and received a British War Medal and a Victory Medal. He returned to Australia in September and disembarked there in November.

A month later he was diagnosed as 'suffering from Delusional Insanity, with hallucinations of hearing and sight, is extremely homicidal and suicidal and requires to be kept in restraint. He is not hopeful of his recovery in the near future.'

He was admitted to Claremont Mental Hospital as an insane patient on January 3, 1919. He was discharged from the army on November 30 of the same year and died on December 20, 1935. His funeral, which was officiated at by Fr. John Fahey, Clonoulty, received prominence in the Australian newspapers and his name has never been forgotten in that country. There is a photograph in my book from the West Australian newspaper of April 29th, 2010 showing a picture of Martin O'Meara being carried in a parade of other VC winners on ANZAC Day.

Martin O'Meara's extraordinary courage and superhuman exploits were not only forgotten but frowned upon, even derided in the political atmosphere of post-1916 Ireland. It has taken close to a century for his greatness to be recognised in Ireland and for his admirable personal qualities to be given the recognition they deserve. The erection of this memorial to him in the village of Lorrha was the first step to undoing the major failure to recognise that great courage and superhuman endeavour deserve to be applauded and honoured. Today's events, which are graced by the presence of our distinguished visitor, President Wayne Sanford, is a further step along the road to full recognition of the extraordinary narrative of the life of Martin O'Meara, V.C., Lissernane, Lorrha, who has made us all proud to be natives of this place.

Thank you for your attention.

<span class="postTitle">Rockwell College 1917-1918</span> Rockwell College Annual 2003-2004, pp 159-162

Rockwell College 1917-1918

Rockwell College Annual 2003-2004, pp 159-162

 

Probably the most momentous event in the College during the academic year 1917-1918 was the decision to abandon rugby and cricket in favour of Gaelic games. The decision was taken in the aftermath of winning the Munster Senior Cup in 1917 when Rockwell defeated Christian Brothers College, Cork by two tries to nil in Cork on March 10th. One of the final sentences in a report of the match ran as follows: "From the scrum at the '25 mark Mike Ryan, emulating the doughty deeds of the Mike of international fame burst over the line 'festooned with Christians'." Following that game, eight Rockwell players were selected to represent Munster against Leinster. 

The announcement of the decision does not appear in the College Journal until October 24th and then only as a comment on the first part of the entry relating to Rockwell travelling to Fermoy for their first Gaelic match. The entry reads: "A notable change has been introduced this year. Foreign games (Rugby and Cricket) are replaced by Irish Gaelic and Hurling. Gaelic will be played until Christmas, then hurling from Christmas to Summer." Nothing else! No reference to a debate on the decision or how the journalist felt about the matter. The decision is generally credited to the President of the College at that time, Fr. John (Johnny) Byrne, who was nationalist in outlook and who was carried along by the nationalist fervour of the 1916 Rising. He was appointed President of the College and Superior of the Community in August 1916. He may have been respondmg to pressure from outside. E. D. Ryan of Cashel had proposed a motion at the 1917 County Tipperary G. A. A. convention calling "upon colleges and secondary schools within our county to give our national pastimes a foremost place in their games." As a result of this motion there was a Schools and Colleges meeting at Limerick Junction on June 2nd. This meeting was called to discuss the position of Gaelic games in the schools and the organisation of competitions for a football cup put up by the Munster Council. Later, Dr. Harty, the Archbishop of Cashel and Emly, put up a cup for a Provincial hurling competition. It was agreed that the Committee governing the competitions have one member per county and that the chairman have a casting vote. The age limit for the competitors should be 19 years on June 1st each year. 

According to the report, it is not clear if Rockwell had a representative at the meeting, but it is obvious that the College went along with the decision. One of the schools' representatives at the meeting hoped that the foreign games rule would not be implemented too strictly. It would appear that Rockwell fully approved of the decision on foreign games because it seems clear from the decision reported in the Community Journal for October 24th, only Gaelic and hurling were allowed in the school. This may have come about after a further meeting of the Schools and Colleges representatives held in September to organise the competitions for the school year. At that meeting it was also agreed to reduce the age limit from 19 to 18 on January 1st 1918. 


Immediate Success 

Rockwell enjoyed immediate success in the competitions. They put in some preparation through a series of challenge games against St. Colman's Fermoy, University College Cork and St. Brendan's, Killarney. The first round was against St. Brendan's at Kilmallock on November 28th. The Journal reports: "The result, eagerly awaited, was in the nature of a surprise. No one expected Rockwell on its first appearance in Gaelic competitions to do so well. Result: Rockwell 2-5, Killarney 0-3." The final against St. Colman's was played at Kilmallock on December 15th. Rockwell won by 1-7 to 1-0. According to the Journal entry for December 15th: 

"Rockwell thus won the Gaelic Football Cup the first year of their appearance in this competition - a truly great performance." And for December 16th, the entry reads: "After breakfast today Fr. Superior received the Cup from the Captain of the team in the study hall and spoke for some time announcing that he would accord three days to be added to the holidays on account of the victory. The strange anomaly of Gaelic and rugby cups standing side by side on the parlour table today may be remarked. Rockwell need have no regrets now in parting with the rugby cup without entering in for its competition this year - it is more than replaced." 


Harty Cup

In January the draws were made for the Harty Cup competition and Rockwell got a bye into the second round. They beat Roscrea by 3-3 to 3-1 on March 25th at Limerick. The final of the competition was a calendar month later and their opponents were Christian Brothers College Cork, the school they had defeated in the rugby cup the previous year. According to the Journal, "The team left for Thurles at half past eleven o'clock. Nearly all the Fathers travelled together with the prizewinners of last year's Intermediate exams. Appended is an account and result of the match: Rockwell 5-5, Christians 3-1." The "appended" account includes the information that the ball was thrown in by Dr. Harty and that the match was vigorously and energetically fought out. At the conclusion of the game, Dr. Harty presented the cup to the winning captain and distributed the medals to the winning team. He stated that "Hurling was one of the most manly, most ancient and most graceful games that the world knows. It was Irish and helped to foster an Irish and a manly spirit - the spirit that was so essential today. It was a game associated with their country's history and could be traced back to the dawn of Ireland's story. There should be no Irish boy but should be proud of this magnificent and Irish game of hurling." 

The winning team was given: J. Daly, M. Collins, E. o'Donnell, M. Fox, K. Egan, J. Quinn (Captain), M. Quinn, P. Power, W. Heron, W. McCarthy, T Ryan, T. Lynch, T O'Connor, J. Maher, W. Ryan. T Kerwick refereed. 

The Journal continues: "Rockwell thus secured the two cups for Gaelic football and hurling on the first appearance in Gaelic circles, and the first year the cups were put up for competition. The team arrived home at 7.15 p.m. having paraded through Cashel on their way back." 

And the entry for April 26th reads: "After breakfast the boys, according to custom, took the cup around the lake. At the parlour door, the captain presented the cup to Fr. Superior. He spoke for some time in Irish, then in English, and then gave the boys a whole day (i.e., free day)." 

The report for Pentecost Sunday, May19th relates: "During the afternoon Mr. Keogh took photographs of teams etc." The Harty team photograph exists, but the football team does not and neither does the line out of the latter, unfortunately. 


Arrest And Imprisonment

There is an interesting piece of information in the entry for October 15th: "When Mr. O'Neill was about to leave Cashel en route for class, the police arrested him under the D.O.R.A. regulations." 

To understand the significance, one has to go back to the entry in the Journal for May 4th 1916, a week and a half after the Rising on Easter Monday: "Mr. O'Neill-lay master - arrested at 7 a.m." he was released at some later stage because he appears in the list of professors in September and continued teaching in the College. He was known for his nationalistic outlook and was a member of Sinn Fein. His arrest at this time was part of the Dublin Castle authorities' clampdown on Sinn Fein members following the party's victories in the by-elections. One of these arrests was that of Thomas Ashe who died as a result of force-feeding while on hunger strike. His funeral on September 30th 1917 was the occasion of a massive public demonstration. 

Mr. O'Neill also went on hunger strike and the Journal entry for November 16th reads: "Today's paper contained the news that Professor O'Neill of Rockwell had been released after a hunger strike in prison. He was one of a batch of Sinn Fein prisoners." The next entry concerning him occurs on November 16th: "Mr. O'Neill resumed his work today. The boys gave him a hearty ovation on his re-appearance." 

We hear about Mr. O'Neill's political fate again on March 1st when the Journal reports that he was again arrested as he was leaving Cashel for Rockwell. There is no further news of him for the year. 

From other sources we learn that Mr. J. O'Neill, as he is referred to in the Journal was more commonly known later as Seamus O'Neill. Born in Dungarvan in 1892, the family moved to Clonmel in 1899 where Seamus received his schooling. He trained as a teacher at De La Salle Teacher Training College, Waterford, and got his first job at Rockwell College. Later he served time in Frongoch, Durham and other places. After his release, he returned to Rockwell where was greeted with a two by four inch card, which read: "We no longer have a job for you"! After that he got part-time work in the High School, Clonmel and in Ring College. 

He took no part in the Civil War and when the Garda Siochana came into existence in 1923, he joined the first week. He made a rapid rise through the ranks going from Guard to Sergeant to Superintendent in the course of a single week! He remained a Superintendent until he retired in Galway in 1957, apparently having fallen foul of the Garda Commissioner, Eoin O'Duffy. He married three times, had five sons and died in January 1974. He is buried in Deansgrange Cemetery in Dublin. 


More Mundane Matters 

After these two major items of interest, the year's entries are on the short side, covering fewer pages than normal. The College re-opened on September 10th, with about one hundred boys, fifty of them new. The new Dean of Discipline was Fr. (later Bishop) Bartholomew Wilson back from service as chaplain at the Fronts, where he had been for two years, having been decorated with the Military Medal." The following March, Fr. Daniel Leen takes over the position, after Fr. Wilson becomes ill. There are two lay professors, Mr. Ryan and Mr. J. O'Neill. Rev. Messrs Finn, Egan and White were the new Prefects. 

The Intermediate results were notified on September 17th. Rockwell did not do well. There was no exhibition - nine prizes - four in Senior including medal for trigonometry one prize in Middle, four in Junior. The School Retreat commenced on the evening of September 26th and continued until the 30th. The Retreat Master was Fr. M. Ryan (Fr. Francis O.E) a past student of Rockwell. A free day followed the retreat. 

It is interesting to read what the boys did on free days. On the day just mentioned, they went for a walk to Cashel. On the day the Intermediate results were announced, they went to Ballycarron on a walk. There was a soiree in the evening. There was another soiree organised by Fr. Muller on December 8th. 

There was a change in the regulations on October 9th. As there was a danger of Carbide shortage, the change was made. "Class begins at 9.30 instead of 9. From 9.00 to 9.30, there is a half-hour study. Boys go to bed at 9.30 p.m. instead of 10.00 pm. This regulation takes off a half-hour of gas expenditure." 

The Christmas examinations commenced on December 9th and continued until the 19th. The last exam was Arithmetic from 9.00 to 10,30 a.m. During the afternoon, the boys prepared to go home. The results were read out at 5 p.m. "Twelve boys have been kept back for a day on account of unsatisfactory work during the term, and bad results at exams." 


Farming Matters

Farming concerns also make their way into the pages of the Journal. We learn on October 9th that 'the new tractor was used today to do the threshing. It was quite a success." Later, on November 15th, we are informed that "An under-steward came today to take charge of the farmyard (poultry, pigs, milch cows etc.) He replaces Brother Canice who has got charge of the Brothers'Refectory." 

There were a number of deaths during the year. On November 19th, we are told that Nurse Armstrong had fallen seriously ill and a Nurse Kelly came to replace her. Nurse Armstrong died on December 3rd. "Her death was deplored by all. She had been most efficient, kind and good in her role of nurse here for three years." She was buried on December 5th in the Community Cemetery. Her brother and her two sisters were present at the funeral. "Wreaths were given by the lay-professors and the boys." Brother Edmond died on March 6th "after a long suffering illness." Two days later Brother Tobias died. 


End of the Year

The end of the year comes around fast. At the end of April and the beginning of May, we read that Inspectors Ensor and Nicholls came to inspect the Intermediate class. The College exams commenced as early as May 10th and it appears that class resumed when they were over, until the non-Intermediate students departed for the summer on June 13th. The Intermediate exams commenced the day before and continued until June 18th. The students went home on the 19th, with twenty-two remaining behind for the Matriculation exam. The Fathers' Retreat took place from June 23rd to June 30th, followed by the usual dispersal of the Fathers. There are only two entries for August. The first states that only some four Fathers were present during the greater part of the month. The second reads as follows: "Announcement made at Strangers' Mass that there are to be no public Masses henceforth before 8.30 a.m. on Sundays. This had been made necessary by the disorder occasioned through outsiders coming up into the front benches during the Fathers' meditation. Some have been even up in the Organ loft."

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Carl Cregan (1946 - 2003)</span> The Nationalist, January 31, 2003

Carl Cregan (1946 - 2003)

The Nationalist, January 31, 2003

 

Carl Cregan, who died in St, Luke’s Hospital, Kilkenny on January 24, 2003 was secretary of the Cashet King Cormac’s for three years, 1983-85. During these years he proved himself a most efficient officer. A man of great integrity and honesty, the affairs of the club were in excellent hands during his years in office.

Born in Tipperary Town in 1946, where his father was a Dairy Inspector, and from a very distinguished Limerick hurling family, Carl followed the fortunes of the green and white with passion and enthusiasm. He was willing to argue about their merits and defend them against the most fanatical of Tipperary supporters. But it was all done in a nice way, in line with his innate decency and good heart and, when Limerick were beaten, there was no greater supporter of the Blue and Gold.

His family had moved to Kilkenny in 1958 and Carl was educated in St. Kieran’s College. Afterwards he did hotel management at Shannon, where a contemporary was Liam Griffin. His job in the hotel industry took him to Galway, where he played club hurling, and later to Wales, where he spent a number of years. He came to Cashel in 1979 to manage his brother’s pub.

The pub soon became a Mecca for Cashel King Cormac’s supporters, not only because of the talk of hurling and football but also because Carl filled the greatest pint of Guinness it was possible to get. A perfectionist in everything he did, Carl filled the perfect pint! It had to be waited for and Carl was infinitely patient in waiting for it to settle before it was served. And, before he did that, he carved the most perfect shamrock on its head!

Carl was well-informed and was constantly improving his knowledge. Much of his spare time was spent in reading. He was informed on many matters other than sport and this knowledge was revealed in the quizzes he enjoyed so much.

He remained in Cashel until 1988, when the pub was sold. After that he moved back to Kilkenny, where he worked in Brennan’s Bar in Friary Street. He retained his interest in the fortunes of Cashel King Cormac’s

Carl’s passing is deeply regretted by his brothers Richard and Michael, and sisters Mary, Elsie, Noreen, Maeve and Cora. It is also regretted by the members of the Cashel King Cormac’s and especially by those of us who were close to him when a member of the club. A guard of honour was provided by the members on both days of the funeral and the coffin was draped in the club colours. He was buried in St. Kieran’s Cemetery, Kilkenny after midday Mass on Sunday, January 27. May he rest in peace.

 

<span class="postTitle">Patrick Kavanagh and the G.A.A.</span> Munster Intermediate Hurling Final program at Cashel, July 16, 2003

Patrick Kavanagh and the G.A.A.

Munster Intermediate Hurling Final program at Cashel, July 16, 2003

 

'Go on, our Mickey. Gut yer man. Bog him.' 

A football match is in progress in my imagination, and I must admit that I am not a spectator but in there, ploughing all around me, making myself famous in the parish as the man that never 'cowed'. even at the risk of a broken neck. 

'Aw Kavanagh, the dhirty eejet.' 

'Ho could he be an eejet and him a poet?' one of our supporters replied, and my traducer had no comeback. 

The battle raged up and down the raging field. 

The team we were playing were a disgusting class of a team, who used every form of psychological warfare. For instance, when one of them was knocked down he rolled on the ground and bawled like a bull a-gelding. 

Then there was the time I pulled the ball over the goal-line and a most useless non-playing member of the opposing team kicked it back into play. We argued and there was a normal row. The referee came up and interviewed the non-playing member of the opposition and the man replied: 'I never even saw the ball. Do you think I'd tell a lie and me at Holy Communion this morning?' 

What could we say to that? 

Of course we had our own methods. We never finished a game if towards the end we were a-batin. We always found an excuse to rise a row and get the field invaded. 

Ah, them were the times. 

For one year I was virtual dictator of that team, being captain of the team, and secretary and treasurer of the club. There was no means of checking up on my cash, which gave rise to a lot of ill ­founded suspicion. I remember I kept the money in an attache ­case under my bed. It is possible that every so often I visited it for the price of a packet of cigarettes, but nothing serious.· 

I once went as the club representative to the county board. We had to defend ourselves from a protest against us being awarded a certain game, on the grounds that the list of players wasn't on watermarked Irish paper. 

I pointed out that the list was written on the inside of a large Player packet and that Player packets were made in Ireland. This did not impress. Nothing I said impressed, as I hadn't the cliches off. 

It took a good deal of conspiring to depose me from my dictatorial post. Members of the team met in secret groups to know what could be done, but as soon as I got wind of the conspiracy I fired every man of them. 

In the end they got rid of me, but it was a job. 

The man responsible for my deposition was a huge fellow, a blacksmith, a sort of Hindenburg, whose word carried weight. He was a great master of the cliche, but sometimes he broke into originality, as the time we were going for the county final and he wouldn't let us touch a ball for a week previous as he wanted us to be 'ball hungry'. 

Ball hungry as we may have been, we lost the match, and I was blamed, for I was 'in the sticks' and let the ball roll through my legs. 

The crowd roared in anguish. 'Go home and put an apron on you'. And various other unfriendly remarks were made such as 'Me oul mother would make a better goalie.' 

Somebody has said that no man can adequately describe Irish life who ignores the Gaelic Athletic Association, which is true in a way, for football runs women a hard race as a topic of conver­sation. 

The popular newspaper has driven out the football ballad, which at one time gave fairly literal accounts of famous matches: 

At half-past two the whistle blew

And the ball it was thrown in, 

The hare Murphy saved it and 

He kicked it with the wind! 

Then there was a ballad singer who used to sing 'The catching and the kicking was mar-veel-e-us for to see.' 

After the ballad came the local paper where we were all Trojans in defence and wizards in attack. I once got a lot of kudos from a report which described me as 'incisive around goal'. No one knew the meaning of the word, incisive, but it sounded good.

 

<span class="postTitle">Recent Publications (2002)</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 62-64

Recent Publications (2002)

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 62-64

 

There hasn't been a great amount on the club front. Bridget Delaney's The Burgess Story: A GAA History, was mentioned last year but came too late for review. It's a massive tome of over seven hundred pages and is lavishly illustrated, especially in the later period.

Some would say rather too much for a club that isn't far up the ladder of precedence in the county, but that is to forget the role of the GAA in small parishes like Burgess. The GAA is more than a sporting organisation. It is firmly rooted in the life of the parish, giving expression to a people who would otherwise lack it. It touches everyone in the parish.

Seamus O'Riain who launched the GAA history 'The Burgess Story' with author Bridget Delaney at Kilcolman GAA Complex, home of Burgess GAA Club, on November 22nd, 2001

Seamus O'Riain who launched the GAA history 'The Burgess Story' with author Bridget Delaney at Kilcolman GAA Complex, home of Burgess GAA Club, on November 22nd, 2001

Bridget Delaney recognises this in her book. As Gerry Slevin states it in his introduction: "Bridget realises the link there is between the parish and the GAA and the end product of her mammoth work provides us with an in-depth look at the life of her native parish, the GAA's influence on it and, in turn, the response of the parish to the way in which the GAA influence has seeped through it".

As well as a writer, Bridget Delaney is a photographer and this is another strength of the book. In the opening chapter which gives an account of the history of the parish, she includes photographs of views and scenes, holy wells and graveyards, churches and historic remains in the parish. This visual account of what is to be found in the parish of Burgess brings the place to life in a way that the written word could not. The pictures continue all through the book.

The book is a credit to the author, who was a worthy recipient of a McNamee Award earlier in the year for the best club history. She was very lucky with her printers, The Nenagh Guardian, who did an excellent job on the history. The book is a great record of the games that have been the sporting life of the people of Burgess for well over one hundred years.  It's a great tribute to the commitment and workrate of Bridget Delaney, and the club are greatly indebted to her for a monumental achievement. (Available from the club at €20 plus
postage).

If you want to buy the GAA history of the Moyne-Templetuohy club it's going to cost you €130, and the price does not include two tickets for next year's All-Ireland!  The reason for the hefty price is that the history is part of a wider publication, Moyne-Templetuohy -A Life of its Own
- The Story of a Tipperary Parish
, which was launched at the end of October.

Stretching to three volumes, about 1600 A4 size pages, at least one million words and over 2000 illustrations, the work is a mammoth production, the fruits of ten years of persistence and commitment from a dedicated history committee. It's a credit to the people involved and to the parish.

Included in volume three of the work is a chapter entitled The Century of Sport by Willie Butler. The format of the chapter is informed by the sentiments expressed in the opening paragraph:
"Long before the Gaelic revival began in the last two decades of the 19th century, the parish of Mayne and Templetuohy enjoyed a great diversity of sporting activity. Not all the sports that were played would have found favour with the founding fathers of the GM Archbishop Croke had deplored the 'putting on, with England's stuffs and broadcloths, her masher habits and such effeminate follies as she may recommend.'  Such 'effeminate follies' as tennis, hockey and cricket existed side by side with the national pastimes of hurling, football and athletics in the parish and centred largely on the Big House at Longorchard.

Indeed the clash of civilisations that was in progress nationally appears to have been remote from the sporting life of Moyne and Templetuohy. The Power Lalors made no distinction between specifically 'English' pastimes and the native pastimes of hurling and athletics which, according to leaders of the Gaelic revival, were to be part of the process of de-anglicising Ireland".

The chapter is a lengthy one, one hundred and thirty-two pages, and the history of the GAA is interspersed with other sporting activities, particularly athletics and coursing. Athletics flourished in the parish and an advertisement that appeared in the Tipperary Star in the nineteen-twenties includes a verse, which reflects their place in the parish:

Though Matt the Thrasher's with the blest
And Knocknagow is gone,
But with the gallant men of Tipp
His sport lingers on;
The manly games your fathers loved,
The sprint, the lofty bound,
Come live again, its glory past
At Mayne 's Athletic Ground.

 

The tradition continues with Aisling Maher taking a bronze medal in 2001 in the European Games Special Olympics.  Tom Carroll of Moyneard played with Thurles in the first All-Ireland. Jack Quinn and his brother, Michael, were on the Rockwell College team that won the first Harty Cup final in 1918.  Tom Butler captained Thurles CBS to victory in the 1950 Harty Cup final.

The club was occasionally in trouble with the Mid and County boards. In the early 1950s both the footballers and the hurlers got into trouble for actions on the field of play. The author quotes from a Tipperary Star reporter: "As an exhibition of hurling this game was a thing of 'shreds and patches' devoid of any vestige of merit ".

The great county senior hurling final triumph of 1971 gets comprehensive coverage and the account includes the song that was composed in honour of the famous victory: "Then hurrah for Moyne and 'Tuohy/ Our great hurlers one and all".

There were also a number of controversies that tended to drag on. The 'Michael Coen' affair about his eligibility to play with Borrisileigh, and the controversy following the amalgamation
of the hurling and football clubs in 1991, dragged on for years.

Willie Butler deals with them all in an impartial manner. In fact his account is eminently readable with the introduction of appropriate quotations from contemporary accounts, which add to the flavour of the work.

Probably the best book of the year, and the best hurling book for a long time, is Hooked by Justin McCarthy, which was published by Gill and Macmillan and launched at Cork in April. Written in conjunction with Kieran Shannon, it runs to 246 pages and retails for €14.95.

It is an engrossing autobiography of a man, who is steeped in hurling and has a rich tapestry of hurl ng experience to draw on, not only in club and in county, but outside Cork as well. Passionately committed to the game and immensely well informed on hurling in all its aspects, it's a wonderful production.

What gives the book its particular attraction is the personal story that is told through its pages with a directness and a total absence of false modesty or any kind of coyness. The whole story is informed with a passion and self belief that in others might appear a case of hubris but in McCarthy 's case, is substantiated by his record. McCarthy is an original thinker on the game. One commentator has described the book thus: " It is a life of achievement and vaulting ambition, of conflicts and controversies and a relationship with the game which borrows something from passion, something from fanaticism.  In hurling McCarthy has been all things and it has been all things to him".

What gives zest to the pages is the account of McCarthy's fraught relationship with the Cork county board and its most influential figure, Frank Murphy. Over the years McCarthy has been disliked and distrusted by the establishment in Cork. He was an independent thinker, who was not afraid to speak his mind.

The book reads wonderfully well, Shannon 's ghost writing perfectly matching the outpourings of McCarthy's memory, and is divided into thirty chapters, each of which reads as an entity in itself but also contributes to the overall effect of a wonderful book.

A splendid book is Munster Hurling Legends by Eamonn Sweeney. Published by the O' Brien Press for €20, this book has to be a winner. Covering seven decades of the greatest teams, players and games in Munster since the thirties, it have excellent evocative pictures, which capture an era of hurling life in the province that seems a long time past. The book would live for the pictures alone. The very first one of the spectators at the 1934 Munster semi-final at Thurles, a predominantly male body with heads covered in hats, caps, handkerchiefs and newspapers, and not a flag in sight, is totally removed from today's crowd. The book is divided into ten chapters with each chapter highlighted by the greatest player from that period, Mick Mackey, Jack Lynch, John Doyle, Christy Ring, etc. The author writes on the GAA for the Cork Examiner and is a broadcaster also.

A number of other books of national interest have hit the shelves for the Christmas market. Many readers may have listened to the RTE radio series, Hurling's Top 20, by Colm Keane, who is a senior producer with the station.  Inevitably a book to go with the series has been published, in this case by Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh. The book contains profiles of twenty hurlers from Jack Lynch to DJ Carey told through conversations with the players, with linking passages. The highlights of the player's career and an account of his achievements are included. The profiles run to about ten pages each and are written in a lively manner.

Tipperary get a good number of entries, with profiles of Tony Reddin, John Doyle, Jimmy Doyle and Nicky English. Cork also get four in Jack Lynch, Christy Ring, Ray Cummins and Jimmy Barry-Murphy. Kilkenn y have three, Eddie Keher, Noel Skehan and DJ Carey, Wexford two, Billy Rackard and Tony Doran, Waterford two, John Keane and Tom Cheasty, Offaly two, Joe Dooley and Brian Whelahan, and Limerick, Clare and Galway have one each, Mick Mackey, Jimmy Smyth and Joe Cooney, respectively.

The author admits there are no definitive measuring devices for establishing the credentials of legendary hurling stars. He goes on to outline some simple measures for establishing greatness in sport: "exceptional skills, ability to take control and to influence the outcome of events, strength on the playing field, unselfishness, longevity in the game and concern for fellow players all form part of the test". Ultimately, however, he admits that the selection he has made is a subjective one even if it has been informed by hundreds of conversations with former and current players. (The book costs €12.99).

Brendan Fullam has been writing interesting hurling books for quite some time and his current one is called Captains of the Ash, which was launched in the Newpark Hotel, Kilkenny on November 11.  Published by Merlin-Wolfhound Press it retails for €15. 

The book, which covers 320 pages includes profiles of seventy-seven personalities, including six from the field of camogie, every one of whom was the captain of a team, mostly of All Ireland teams. Not every All-Ireland winning captain has been included as some have already been cove red in earlier books by Fullam.

The breakdown by county is as follows: Kilkenny have fourteen, including Andy Comerford; Tipperary have thirteen , going back as far as Jim Stapleton: in fact the back dust cover of the book has a fine photograph of Michael Murphy, the 1964 captain, leading out his men against Clare in the 1964 Munster championship; Cork also have thirteen, Limerick eight, Wexford 7, Dublin 5, Waterford, Galway, Offaly and Clare three each, Antrim two , and London and Kerry one each.  As well as text the book includes over eighty photograph s. Anyone who is familiar with the quality of Fullam's work will put this book in the 'must buy' category.

Tom Morrisson has written widely on GAA matters, particularly relating to Cork, but has now produced a work that will fill a glaring gap on most GAA shelves. He has produced a history of
the National Leagues in hurling and football , 1926-2002, and every Gael will thank him for his research and his effort.  Stretching to 416 pages and published by the Collins Press, Cork in flexi paperback, the book retails at the very reasonable price of €17.95.

In 1926 Cork hurlers and Laois footballers won the first ever national league titles. Since then all thirty-two counties, plus New York, have played in either a league semi-final or final. Starting with the first finals the book gives an account of over 180 games, the line-out of the finalists and, where possible, a photograph of the winning team. This latter point is a tremendous strength of the book and a tribute to the research of the author. Where the photograph of the winning team was not available, the author uses a photograph of the county panel from the year.

The format of the book is good, divided into chapters according to decades. Each final is given two pages which includes an account of the game, the line-outs of the finalists and the photograph of the winning side.

In the early days the league had no final with the top of the table at the end of the series being declared the winner.  Tipperary's first league win was in 1927 - they weren't to win again until 1949 - and the team that drew with Dublin at Thurles in their final game was as follows:
Tom Butler, Stephen Moloney, John Leahy, Mick Ryan, Billy Small, JJ Hayes, Phil Purcell, Mick Darcy, Phil Cahill , Pat O'Dwyer, Martin Kennedy, Tommy Treacy, Pat Leahy, John Joe Callanan,
Mick Cronin.

The book concludes with the roll of honour in both leagues. Kerry lead with sixteen victories in football , followed by Mayo with eleven. Interestingly New York have three finals to their credit, 1950, 1964, 1967. In all sixteen, including New York, counties have won football titles. Tipperary head the table in hurling with eighteen victories, followed by Cork with fourteen. Ten counties have won hurling titles.  Tipperary's John Doyle, with eleven medals, is the holder of the greatest number of individual titles.

An unusual publication is a short memoir by Alf MacLochlainn entitled From Tipperary to Joseph's Prairie: the story of Joseph Ryan, the Seventh Man in Hayes's Hotel. Containing twenty-four pages it is a limited edition of 150 copies and sells at €5. It is available at Eason's in Clonmel and Lar na Pairce.

Not associated much with the GAA after its foundation in 1884, Ryan was a man of two lives: "One of these lives was that of a young professional man, with a practice in Tipperary and vicinity, married and raising a family there; the other is that of a voluble, articulate, life and-
soul of the party in a small town on the Canadian frontier".

His grand-daughter is married to the author of this memoir. Ryan was born at Carrick-on-Suir in 1857 and died at Cranbrook, British Columbia, Canada in 1918.

John Scally, who wrote Raising the Banner, has a new publication. Sporting Foot and Mouth is a book of sporting quotes, many of them from the world of the GAA. Published by Blackwater Press, it sells for €12.99.

It contains some funny quotes from commentaries from Micheal O Muircheartaigh, including the one about Pat Fox and the dog. Some of the quotes are apocryphal but that makes the book all the better.

It's about time somebody wrote about Sean Boylan. The Boylan Years: One Man, One Team, Twenty Years is edited by Liam Hayes and looks at the career of Boylan as Meath football manager. It is based on interviews with over fifty players spanning Boylan's long-running tenure. Boylan won more than any other contemporary manager except Mick O'Dwyer.  His haul includes four All lrelands, three NFL and eight Leinster titles. He was named Manager of the Year in 1999. The book is published by Carr and Hayes, the publishing firm of Liam Hayes and Tommy Carr, and sells for €25.99.

My final book would probably not be used for bedside reading, unless, of course, one were suffering from insomnia. Strategic Review: Enhancing Community Identity, published by Costar Association with no price attached, runs to 264 pages.  It is the result of a detailed analysis of the present stage of the GAA and a series of recommendations on how it should face the future. As this is being written the 'Strategic Review' is being discussed and debated in GAA circles up and down the country, and the debate culminated on the weekend of October 25/26. Unfortunately for the future of the organisation virtually every recommendation of substance was thrown out, referred to the implementation committee or just wearily withdrawn by the advocates, who included three of the last four presidents of the Association, Peter Quinn, Joe McDonagh and in incumbent, Sean McCague.

 

<span class="postTitle">Sounding Off</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 51

Sounding Off

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 51

 

I suppose the year will be remembered for the way Cork GAA officials got away with it. It can be put no other way: Cork senior football management introduced six substitutes in the replayed Munster final and Munster Council let them away with it.

Five months earlier, in a drawn league game against Sligo, Kildare mistakenly introduced a substitute having used their permitted quota of twenty players, including a set of blood substitutes, just as Cork did against Tipperary on July 21.

When Kildare came to defend themselves before the General Activities Committee they claimed that a punishment for using more than the permitted twenty players only applied when a team exceeded the number of ordinary substitutions. GAC disagreed stating it applied to the total number of substitutions, and Kildare were forced to forfeit a league point.

When Cork came to defend themselves at the Munster CounciI meeting on the Wednesday following the replay they used the same defence as Kildare. They admitted they introduced six subs, John Miskella, Michael Cronin , Colin Crowley, Alan Quirke, Diarmuid O'Sullivan and Noel
O'Donovan, but that the first five were ordinary substitution s while the last, Noel O'Donovan, was a blood substitute. The Cork representatives claimed they hadn't broken the rule on substitutions because they hadn't exceeded the number of ordinary substitutions. And, they got away with it and didn't forfeit the game, as the Munster Council said that they found no penalty specified under rule for inadvertently breaching the blood substitute rule.

It was a case of different interpretations of the rule and one would have thought that that of the senior body's, the GAC, ought to have been the definitive one.

Admittedly there was the other matter of Tipperary's stance at the Munster Council hearing: the county was against being awarded the title, having been trounced by nineteen points, and didn't want Cork to forfeit the title which, according to the rule, they should have.

However that may be, the rule had been broken and some punishment should have been imposed. Even if Tipperary hadn't wanted to accept the winners medals or trophy, that didn't mean that Cork should have got them. The title could have been left vacant. Tipperary could have quaIified for the All-Ir eland quarter-finals while Cork could have played Mayo in the fourth round qualifier. Justice would have been done.

Since then the GAC have issued a directive that their interpretation is the correct one and that the Munster Council decision was wrong. Still, until the rule is tightened up it will remain open to the interpretation of Cork CAA officials. In that event, allowing blood substitutions outside the allotted five substitutions, the flood gates could be opened, allowing teams to introduce as many blood substitutions as they wished. It would be very easy to fake such substitutions in order to get fresh legs on the the field at critical moments. Instead of calling on players to
lie down , as was done in the days before the number of substitutions was limited, they wouId be ca led upon to scratch themselves and start bleeding!

Another example of the what the correct interpretation of the rule is was shown in the suspension of Na Fianna, the reigning Dublin football champions, in October.  In their quarter-final clash with Raheny on October 26, they used six substitutes, five regulars and a sixth player, Gerry Gray, as a blood replacement for Stephen McGlinchey.

The GAC of the Dublin County Board, after examining the referee's report, disqualified Na Fianna from this year's championship because the penalty for such an offence is automatic forfeiture of the game.

The whole incident confirms the public perception of the absolutely masterfuI cunning of Cork CAA officials , when it comes to the interpretation of the GAA rule book. One recalls the survival of Diarmuid O'Sullivan in June 2000 after having apparently struck Limerick's Brian Begley off the ball in the Munster hurling semi-final. The other case the same year was in the All-Ireland minor football semi-final against Derry. Kieran Murphy of Cork was yellow carded twice without receiving the mandatory red. Cork won by a point. In their defence, Cork claimed the referee had initially carded Murphy for his first offence, before reassessing it back to a tick. Their version of events prevailed at the subsequent hearing.

I suppose it could be said Cork have a lot of experience. The three only substitution rule was introduced in the mid- fifties but took some time to be effective. In the Munster semi-final against Cork at Limerick on June 22, 1958, Cork introduced five substitutes. They were: J. Twomey for E. Goulding , E. Goulding for P. Fitzgerald, W. Barry for J. Lyons, J. Lyons for W. Barry, W. Barry for J. Lyons. A bit of chopping and changing alright, but five substitutions
nonetheless.

There was much speculation at the time as to what the position would have been if Tipperary had lost (As it was they won by two points). Would an objection have been upheld? Apparently it wouldn 't have been as no penalty had been laid down for the breaking of the new substitution rule.

At the time the Tipperary representatives were encouraged to raise the matter at the Munster CounciI. It was stated that if teams were allowed to do what Cork did in the Munster semi-fina l then the position as regards substitutes would be worse than previously, when players were able to come off for a breather and go back on again.

Things never really change!

 

<span class="postTitle">County Senior Hurling Championship 2002</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 34-36

County Senior Hurling Championship 2002

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, pp 34-36

 

In his commentary in The Nationalist on the county final, 'Westside' referred to John Leahy's 'salmon-leap' over a pair of players for the final ball in the match. It was a wonderfully descriptive and appropriate metaphor to describe the action of the player: Mullinahone had fought long and hard, overcome all kinds of obstacles and difficulties and needed that final leap of defiance to get them to the spawning grounds of success.

And it was equally appropriate that Leahy should be the man to deliver that final act of defiance. He has been the inspiration behind the development and success of hurling in what was a traditional football area. His performances over fifteen years, for club and county, have won more plaudits than any other player.

His very presence on the field evokes a special response. One recalls the ovation when he came on against Clare in 2001 and, of course, the belly-deep roar of appreciation when he made that leap in the final. These are only two in a litany of great occasions he has provided for his supporters and admirers down the years.

The county championship had a new format this year. The number of teams taking part doubled in number as all participants in divisional semi-finals qualified, thus increasing the number of teams from eight to sixteen. It was thought that this development might have the effect of downgrading the divisional finals, but such does not appear to have been the case. In general the new format was well received. It may have added one weekend to the fixture crux but it gave teams greater opportunities and a longer run in the championship.

The Thurles Sarsfields team stand together for the National Anthem prior to the county SHC final at Semple Stadium

The Thurles Sarsfields team stand together for the National Anthem prior to the county SHC final at Semple Stadium

In the case of Thurles Sarsfields it gave them six extra games they wouldn't have had last year, even if the final one wasn't a happy experience. It brought teams into opposition that normally don't get an opportunity to meet. Cashel and Roscrea hadn't played in championship since 1981. It was good for income, not only for the county board, but for clubs who hosted games as well. It was brought in for one year but the likelihood is it will continue .

The format of the county championship was as follows. In round one the eight beaten semi-finalists played off to produce four teams. In round two these four teams played the defeated divisional finalists. The four winners played the four divisional winners in the quarter-finals, from which followed the semis and final.


BEATEN SEMI-FINALISTS

The beaten semi-finalists were drawn against one another on a divisional basis, with the South playing the Mid , and the North playing the West. Each division had a success with Thurles Sarsfields defeating Carrick Swans but Holycross-Ballycahill losing to Ballingarry.

In the North-West confrontation Roscrea defeated Cashel King Cormac's but Portroe lost to Galtee Rovers, after a hotly disputed goal by Larry Quinn minutes from the end grabbed victory for the West side.

Interestingly three of the qualifiers survived the next round, Galtee Rovers being the only team to bow out.

Killenaule, the beaten South finalists, defeated them at Cashel by 3-6 to 2-7. Thurles Sarsfields defeated the West final runners-up, Kickhams, by 1-16 to 0-14, also at Cashel. Roscrea overcame the Mid runners-up, Moycarkey-Borris by 2-13 to 3-8 at Templemore, while Ballingarry defeated the North finalists, Moneygall, by 0-16 to 2-9 at the same venue.


QUARTER-FINALS

Three of the quarter-finals were played at Semple Stadium on October 13. Toomevara had an unimpressive six-point victory, 1-16 to 0-13, in a game that was always interesting, even when the possibility of a Toomevara defeat never seemed likely. For Ballingarry there was the consolation of having held the county champions to such a margin.

The most interesting of the three games was between Thurles Sarsfields and Clonoulty-Rossmore. The West champions will no doubt consider themselves unlucky to have lost by one point on a scoreline of 2-12 to 1-14.  Twice in the second half they opened up a four-point margin and seemed set for victory, but were unable to press home their advantage and were hauled back by a blistering scoring spree from 'Redser O'Grady, who fired over 1-3 in
the final quarter.

Mullinahone swept passed Roscrea in the third game by 3-17 to 0-9. They were in control all the time. Leading by six points at the interval, they had booked their place in the semi-final long before the final whistle sounded.

The last of the quarter-finals was played at Semple Stadium a week later. Two goals up after eight minutes gave Loughmore-Castleiney an advantage they were never to relinquish. Two goals separated the sides at the interval. Ballingarry battled hard to overcome the deficit and were denied a goal on at least three occasions in the second-half. In the end they had to concede to the Mid men on a scoreline of 2-9 to 0-10.


SEMI-FINALS

On a most unpleasant day, with the smallish crowd huddled together in the new stand in Semple Stadium – because of reconstruction work on the old stand - Mullinahone and Toomevara lined out on October 20 for the first of the semifinals.

The North champions, going for five-in-a-row, were favourites to continue their success. With five minutes to go to the interval they led by four points, and should have been further in front had Tommy Dunne not missed three frees he would normally score. But five minutes is a short time in a hurling game and Pat Croke scored 1-1 during that period to send Mullinahone into the dressingroom happy to be level at 1-6 each.

The good run for the South continued after the interval when Eoin Kelly pointed within twenty seconds to give them the lead for the first time. But that score acted as a spur to Toomevara who followed with four unanswered points. Mullinahone came back but Toomevara responded and put three points between the sides once again. The last quarter was a titanic struggle as the game hung in the balance. With five minutes to go Mullinahone were one behind when Paul Kelly levelled. Then in the 29th minute the same player sent a 65 metre free straight over the bar to give the men from Mullinahone the lead at a vital stage. It was the winner and try as they could Toomevara could not get back on terms and had to concede by 1-15 to 1-14.

The second semi-final, between old Mid rivals, Thurles Sarsfields and Loughmore-Castleiney, was played at Templemore on October 27. Supporters of both teams got a feast of goals,
including a hat-trick from Sarsfields full forward, Eamon Walshe. In a great game Loughmore-Castleiney led by 2-5 to 1-5 at the interval. With five minutes remaining the sides were level, 2-10 to 3-7, but in the remaining time Sarsfields scored 1-3 to put them into the driving seat, which they held despite a goal from a free by Pat McGrath with three minutes remaining. The final goal for Sarsfields was hotly disputed by the Loughmore backs, who claimed the ball hadn't crossed the goal-line. In the dispute that followed Loughmore corner-back, John Kennedy, was sent off, leaving his side a man short during the vital closing stages.


FINAL

So the stage was set for the county final at Semple Stadium on November 3, with Mullinahone going for their first championship and Thurles Sarsfields going for their 28th, even though the latter hadn't won for twenty-eight years.

Whereas the South representatives were the popular favourites the smart money was on the traditionalists from the Mid , especially in the light of their having lost the previous two finals.

The first half of this eagerly awaited game was a rugged dour contest. Mullinahone had the breeze in their favour and were ahead by 0-5 to 0-2 at the end of the first quarter. However, it was Thurles Sarsfields who were the happier at half-time, retiring to the dressing-room with only a two-point deficit , 0-9 to 0-7. As well Mullinahone had lost one of their key players, Paul
Kelly, who retired in the opening minutes with a pulled hamstring injury.

Although facing the wind it was Mullinahone who made the bigger impact on the resumption. Thurles were first to score but the South champions then went on a scoring spree and opened a six-point margin between the sides by the start of the final quarter. It was at this stage that Thurles played their best hurling. The introduction of Mattie Dowd and Pat Lawlor did the
trick. They hit four points in a trot to reduce the arrears to 0-12 to 0-10. By injury time the score was 0-14 to 0-12 in favour of Mullinahone but Thurles got two points, a free from Stephen Mason and a last gasp point from Pat Lawlor ensured that they lived to fight another day.


REPLAY

All eyes on the ball - Cathal McIntyre (Thurles Sarsfields) and Niall Curran (Mullinahone) photographed during the county senior hurling championship final replay at Semple Stadium.

All eyes on the ball - Cathal McIntyre
(Thurles Sarsfields) and Niall Curran
(Mullinahone) photographed during the county senior hurling championship final replay at Semple Stadium.

In the replay a week later, Mullinahone's win was carved out in a great third quarter, inspired by Eoin Kelly. During this time they scored 1-5 without reply from Sarsfields, turning an interval deficit of three points into a five point lead. They also grasped the initiative, threatened briefly by a 'Redser' O'Grady goal for Sarsfields in the fifteenth minutes, and held on to it to the end.

It was mostly Sarsfields in the opening half and they led by 0-9 to 0-2 after twenty-three minutes, with great work by Johnny Enright. Two minutes later, however, Eoin Kelly was in like a flash to pounce on a poor Sarsfield's clearance, from a long Leahy delivery, and bury the ball in the net. This score ignited the Mullinahone challenge, they got another point before the interval, and went into the break three points behind, 0-9 to 1-3.

The score poorly reflected Sarsfields dominance in the first half. Worse was to follow for Sarsfields as they failed to score during the third quarter which saw Mullinahone take a five point lead. O'Grady's score in the fifteenth minute game them some hope reducing their deficit to two points. In an exciting last quarter there were four scores, two points from frees by Eoin
Kelly and Mattie O'Dowd and Johnny Enright replying for Sarsfields.

Mullinahone deserved their victory. They showed wonderful focus and concentration after an inauspicious start. They had a star performer in Eoin Kelly who contributed 2-7 of his side's 2-10. They had a number of other fine displays, from Brian O' Meara, Edward O' Brien and Niall Curran in particular.  John Leahy showed flashes of brilliance and his final catch reflected the determination and the do or die spirit of the side. 

For Thurles Sarsfields it was another huge disappointment. Their display in the first twenty minutes was scintillating and then, as so often happens with this team, numerous players just went out of the game. Consistency appeared totally lacking.


TEAMS

MULLINAHONE
Vincent Doheny, Dermot Hackett, Paul Curran, Tony Dalton, Ky Vaughan (capt), Edward O'Brien, Philip O'Shea, Eddie Carey, Niall Curran, Conor Arrigan, John Leahy, Brian O'Meara , Pat Croke, Noel Leahy, Eoin Kelly.
Subs : Joey Maher for N. Leahy, Paul Kelly for C. Arrigan, Edwin O'Meara for E. Carey.
Others: Alan Curran, Martin Costello, Stephen O'Brien , James Connolly, Bill Tobin, James Comerford, Danny Morrissey, Mark O' Brien, Niall Doheny, Dan Croke, Aidan Hall, Damien Maher.

Selectors: John Leahy (manager), Sean O'Regan (trainer), Michael Scott, Sean O'Meara , Sean Brett.
Physio: Jill Snell. Doctor: John Gilman.

THURLES SARSFIELDS
Ciaran Carroll , Seamus O'Shea, Tommy Maher, Gary Mernagh, (capt) John Lawlor, Brendan Carroll, John Lillis, Catha! McIntyre, Eddie Enright, Matty O'Dowd, Lar Corbett, Ger O'Grady, Tony Ruth, Pat Lawlor, Johnny Enright.
Subs: Eamonn Walshe for T. Ruth, Eoin Costelloe for J. Lawlor, Stephen Mason for C. Mc Intyre.
Others: Barry O'Dwyer, Tommy Collins, Brian O'Grady, Tony Connolly, Tom Ryan, Lee Shanahan, Wayne Cully, Willie Collin s, David O'Dwyer, Colm O'Rourke, Eamon Tuohy, Brendan O'Sullivan, John Connors.
Selectors: Paddy Doyle (manager), Paddy McCormack (trainer), Tom Barry, Denis Maher, Br Daithi Fitzgerald.


MAN OF THE MATCH
Eoin Kelly (Mulli nahone).

 


RESULTS AT A GLANCE

COUNTY FINAL (REPLAY)

Nov 10, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 2-10, Thurles Sarsfields 1-11
Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea)


COUNTY FINAL

Nov 3, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 0-14, Thurles Sarsfields 0-14
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly)


SEMI-FINALS

Oct 27, Templemore
Thurles Sarsfields 3-13,
Loughmore-Castleiney 4-7
Referee: Seamus Roche (Kilsheelan)

Oct 20, Semple Stadium
Mullinahone 1-15, Toomevara 1-14
Referee: John Ryan (Boherlahan-Dualla)


QUARTER-FINALS

October 20, Semple Stadium
Loughmore-Castleiney 2-9, Killenaule 0-10
Referee: Michael Cahill (Kilruane-MacDonagh)

October 13, Semple Stadium
Toomevara 1-16, Ballingarry 0-13
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)
Thurles Sarsfields 2-12,
Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-14
Referee: Johnny McDonnell (Roscrea)
Mullinahone 3-17, Roscrea 0-9
Referee: Johnny Ryan (Boherlahan-Dualla)


ROUND 2 QUALIFIERS

October 13, Cashel
Killenaule 3-6, Galtee Rovers 2-7
Referee: Denis Curtis (Thurles)

October 6, Cashel
Thurles Sarsfields 1-16, Kickhams 0-14
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

October 6, Templemore
Roscrea 2-13, Moycarkey-Borris 3-8
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly)

October 6, Templemore
Ballingarry 0-16, Moneygall 2-9
Referee: Willie Clohessy (Drom-lnch)


ROUND 1 QUALIFIERS

Sept. 29, Cashel
Ballingarry 1-17 Holycross-Ballycahill 2-11
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)

Sept. 28, The Ragg
Galtee Rovers 2-14 Portroe 2-12
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

Sept. 14, Templemore
Roscrea 1-15 Cashel King Cormacs 2-8
Referee: Willie Barrett (Ardfinnan)

Sept. 14, Clonmel
Thurles Sarsfields 2-20 Carrick Swans 2-9
Referee: John Ryan (Cashel King Cormacs)

 

RELEGATION SENIOR HURLING 2002

There was a relegation part in the new county championship system. Any team that didn't reach the semi-final stage in the divisions played for relegation. The following are the results.


PRELIMINARY ROUNDS

Upperchurch 2-8, Silvermines 1- 11 in Templederry on 3/8.

Upperchurch 1-21, Silvermines 2-9 in The Ragg on 17/8.

Borrisoleigh 5-15, Golden 0-7 in Holycross on 3/8.

JK Brackens Boherlahan in Littleton on 31/8.


SECTION 1

Silvermines 3-12, Templederry 0-17 in Toomevara on 24/8.

Boherlahan 2-19, Golden 3- 14 in Cashel on 14/9 [aet].


FINAL

Templederry 2- 17, Golden 1-13 in The Ragg on 21 /9 (aet).


SECTION 2

Nenagh Eire Og 4-12, Cappawhite 4-7 in Newport on 3/8.

Drom- lnch 2-19, St. Marys 2-17 in Cashel on 24/8.


FINAL

Cappawhite 3-15, St. Marys 0-14 in Cashel on 31/8.

Relegated were Golden and St Marys

 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Entries on D. J. Carey, Joe Cooney, Eamon Cregan, Philly Grimes, Brian Lohan</span> The Encyclopaedia of Ireland, Gill & Macmillan, 2003

Entries on D. J. Carey, Joe Cooney, Eamon Cregan, Philly Grimes, Brian Lohan

The Encyclopaedia of Ireland, Gill & Macmillan, 2003.

 

Carey, D. J. (1970-), hurler. 

Born in Gowran, Co. Kilkenny. He is a technically brilliant player, a classical performer with flair, perception, pace, and creativity, and an outstanding artist of the modem game. He revealed his hurling brilliance early in life, winning two all-Ireland colleges titles with St Kieran's College. At inter-county level he won all-Ireland minor hurling and under-21 hurling medals and four senior hurling, in 1992, 1993, 2000 and 2002. He also has two National Hurling League medals, one Oireachtas and two Railway Cup medals. A versatile forward, he can play in any position and is a prolific scorer from play or placed balls. He won nine All-Star Awards, 1991 to 1995, 1997, 1999, 2000 and 2002. He won the Texaco Hurler of the Year in 1993 and 2000. At club level he captained Young Irelands-Gowran to their first county senior title in 1996 and won a second with them in 2002. A master handballer, he achieved twenty-two major national successes in e game, as well as two world championships. He is also an accomplished golfer.  Seamus J. King, Gerry O'Neill (ed.), The Kilkenny GAA Bible. 
 

Cooney, Joe (1965-), hurler. 

Born in Co. Galway. He made his inter-county debut in 1983, winning an all-Ireland minor hurling medal with Galway. Since then his achievements have been impressive: under-21 in 1986 and senior medals in 1987 and 1988. He has four National League medals (1987, 1989, 1996,2000), and five Oireachtas medals. At centre-forward, his displays of skill, positional sense and sportsmanship have delighted followers of the game over twenty years. His honours include five All-Stars, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, Texaco Hurler of the Year, 1987, and selection at centreforward on the GAA. Supreme All-Star team, 1971-2000. With his club, Sarsfie1ds, he won under-16, under-21 and four county senior hurling titles, as well as two all-Ireland club titles in 1993 and 1994. Seamus J. King, A History of Hurling, 1996. 
 

Cregan, Eamon (1945-), hurler. 

Born in Limerick. His county career with Limerick spanned the period 1964-83. Noted for his skill level, ball control, and scoring ability, he had great mental strength and was an outstanding forward, winning two All-Star Awards in the full-forward line, 1971, 1972. He was also a distinguished centre-back. His achievements include one all-Ireland senior hurling medal (1973), four Munster senior hurling medals, one National League (1971), one Oireachtas, and one Harty Cup medal. With his club, Claughaun, he won three county senior hurling medals and eight county senior football medals. Since retiring he has become a noted manager, coaching Limerick, Clare, and Offaly. His father, Ned Cregan, featured on the Limerick team during the Mackey era. Seamus J. King Seamus J. King, A History of Hurling, 1996. 
 

Grimes, Philly (1929-1989), hurler. 

Born in Waterford. His county hurling career spanned the period 1947-65. A fine athlete and a hurler with all the skills, he moved 'like poetry in motion' around centrefield. Playing first as a county minor in 1947, he made his senior county debut in the 1948 Munster championship but was not available for the all-Ireland, as he had emigrated to the United States. After his return he won many honours with his club, Mount Sion, and county. He was the holder of Munster senior hurling titles of 1948, 1957 (when he was captain), 1959, and 1963. He won an all-Ireland in 1959, an Oireachtas title in 1962, a National League in 1963, and Railway Cup medals in 1958 and 1960. He won thirteen senior hurling and four senior football medals with Mount Sion. Seamus J. King Brendan Fullam, Giants of the Ash, 1991.
 

Lohan, Brian (1971-) hurler. 

Born at Shannon, Co. Clare. He made his inter-county debut in 1992 with Clare in the Munster under-21 championship, losing to Waterford in the final. He graduated to senior rank the following year and has been a permanent member of the team since then. A player of great skill, he is a majestic performer at fullback and has brought a new dimension to full-back play. His achievements include two senior hurling all- Irelands (1995 and 1997), three Munster senior hurling medals, and five Railway Cups with Munster. He has three All-Star Awards and won the Players' and Sports Writers' Player of the Year Award in 1995. At club level he won county senior hurling and Munster Club senior hurling medals in 1996. He won a Fitzgibbon Medal with University of Limerick in 1994. His father, Gus Lohan, who played with Galway and Clare, won a variety of county hurling titles over a period of four decades. Seamus J. King Ollie Byrnes, Memories of Clare Hurling.

<span class="postTitle">The Na-Bock-Lish Trophy</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 60

The Na-Bock-Lish Trophy 

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2003, p 60

 

This trophy with the most unusual name used to be presented to the winners of the New York senior football championship. When the championship was organised for the first time in the early 1900s, a trophy was sought. At the time there was a popular cigar on sale in the city known as 'Na-Bock-Lish'. One of the directors of the firm was Peter Quinn, a blunt Irishman with a heart of gold. He was approached by New York G.A.A.


'What do you want,' he asked,

'We came to see you about a trophy for an organisation which is just established.'

'How much would it cost?'

'About three hundred.'

'What did you say?'

'Five hundred.'

'I'll take the matter up with the other members.

But I'll guarantee you a real trophy.'
 

And a real trophy it turned out to be with the name of the cigar inscribed on it The arrangements were that a team had to win it three years in succession before it became the permanent property of the club. Tipperary won successive championships in 1926,1927,1928 and 1929 (also in 1931) and claimed the cup. One of the outstanding players on the team, and captain on a couple of occasions, was Tommy Armitage of Templemore. Before coming to New York in 1926 he had played football with Tipperary. He was on the five successful teams mentioned above and he captained the New York football team that travelled to Ireland for the Tailteann Games in 1932. He was given the cup. On his retirement from work in New York he returned to Templemore, where he lived until his death. His son, Tom, who was born in New York but who lived most of his life in Ireland, recently presented the famous trophy to Lar na Pairce, as well as a framed picture of the great Tipperary team which won it.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Marcus Bourke - His G.A.A. Writing</span> Tipperary Historical Journal 2002, pp 13-32

Marcus Bourke - His G.A.A. Writing

Tipperary Historical Journal 2002, pp 13-32

 

Although it is the greatest sporting organisation in the country the Gaelic Athletic Association has a very slim library of publications to its credit. For a body over one hundred years in existence the list of books is anything but impressive. If one goes back to the period prior to the centenary of the association in 1984 the number of histories produced at national, provincial, county or club level was very small indeed. Since then clubs and counties have done much to have their histories written down. In the province of Munster approximately one hundred and forty club histories were written between centenary year and 2001 This may appear impressive and indicate a good effort at catching up until it is realised that seven hundred and thirty clubs affiliated in the province in millennium year! The number of these that had recorded their histories before 1984 was infinitesimal.

At the county level the picture isn't much different. Cork. Limerick and Tipperary are well served with county histories. The Mercier Press published a snapshot history of Clare in 1996. The Kerry story over the past thirty years has been well covered but the earlier history of the G.A.A. in the county has been neglected. Pat O'Shea, in his 1998 publication on the history of the Kerry county championships, has gone some way to rectifying the situation. The picture in other provinces is not greatly different. Six of the Ulster counties have county histories. The picture is poorest in Leinster where the Dublin county history is in the process of being written.

At the provincial level Munster produced a comprehensive history in 1984. It was updated in 2000 and it remains the only province with such a detailed account of its activities. Leinster produced a slim account of its history in 1984. The Connacht history is being written by a committee at the moment and I am not aware of anything being done in Ulster.

At the national level there are four publications that aspire to be histories of the association. The first was written by Thomas F. O'Sullivan in 1916 and published in Dublin. O'Sullivan was a former trustee and vice-president of the association, a former president of the Munster Council and a past secretary of the Kerry county board. The book was called the 'Story of the G.A.A.' and sub-titled 'First History of the Association'. It contained two hundred and forty pages and included one hundred and twenty illustrations. It sold for one shilling. It was promoted as a detailed, well-arranged and copiously illustrated history of the Gaelic Athletic Association.

The book is very rare today and seldom turns up in second-hand catalogues. However, it is possible to access it in a different way. The book is made up of a series of articles that first appeared as such in the Evening Telegraph, Dublin in October 1914 and, after twelve months, was continued by the Sunday Freeman and the Weekly Freeman. In the preface to the book the writer states that 'the articles were written without fee or reward, and their reproduction now is not a sound commercial speculation.' The reason why he still went ahead with the publication was to give 'the public an opportunity of appreciating the patriotic work which has been done during the past three decades to promote and develop Irish pastimes on self-respecting Irish lines’.

O'Sullivan goes on to inform his readers of the considerable labour and research he put into the preparation of the articles. His information was procured from official and unofficial sources. Files of newspapers were carefully read. Hundreds of Gaels in all parts of the country were consulted 'in order to clear up obscure points, correct errors, or procure some necessary information which could not be obtained from the existing official records.' He was proud of the illustrations carried in the work and regretted being unable to procure the photographs of a number of prominent contemporary Gaels.

He concludes by stating that he spared no effort in achieving accuracy in his work, and also that he made every effort to be scrupulously fair in the treatment of all contentious subjects. Apart from a few suggestions at the conclusion of the book on how the association could be improved, he states that otherwise 'I have contented myself with presenting the facts in their proper perspective, leaving my readers to draw their own conclusions.'

Without a doubt the book is a labour of love. The spirit and feelings of the writer are given expression in the introductory chapter. The G.A.A. 'has helped not only to develop Irish bone and muscle, but to foster a spirit of earnest nationality in the hearts of the rising generation, and it has been the means of saving thousands of young Irishmen from becoming mere West Britons.' In spite of all the turbulence the association suffered, in spite of the waves of vicissitudes it had to endure, in spite of the conflicts between the advanced Nationalists and the Constitutional party which almost rent it asunder, it survived because 'the basic principle on which it was established was sound and patriotic, and at no stage of its career was it entirely bereft of the services of earnest men who appreciated the tremendous potentialities of the organisation as an athletic body and a great national asset.'

The book starts off with a sketch of the founder of the G.A.A. in chapter 1 and O'Sullivan is unstinting in his appreciation of the founder: 'Only a great man could found such an organisation, and unquestionably Michael Cusack was great - great in earnest, self-sacrificing patriotism, and in all those qualities of head and heart that stamp the leader out from multitudinous mediocrity and give him a place apart.' The early chapters deal with the foundation of the association and the difficulties of the early years. He quotes extensively from contemporary documents and is good at listing the delegates present at the early conventions. In chapter XVIII he gives a detailed account of the first All-Ireland football and hurling championships and after that he devotes mostly a chapter to each year. The format of the chapters follows the same lines. For instance in chapter XXV he opens with the state of the association in 1890: 'The Association showed traces of decline in 1890.' He gives some reasons for same and outlines some important happenings in the association' not only in Ireland but abroad as well. He gives an account of Central Council meetings and resolutions proposed, and mentions prominent men in the workings of the association. Most of the chapter is then devoted to the hurling and football championships. He takes the history of the association up to 1908 in chapter XLVI. The following chapter is devoted to 'Games and Nationality' by Douglas Hyde in which he pleads with the latter for a closer union between the G.A.A. and the language movement.

The final chapter is devoted to a number of suggestions to Gaels by O'Sullivan. He would like to see players use the Gaelic language on Gaelic fields: 'Until they do they are failing in their duty towards our ancient tongue.' According to him every Gaelic club should be an Irish class, or form an important section of the local branch of the Gaelic League. A second suggestion is that medals should be abolished and books given to winners of hurling and football matches and athletic contests instead. He gives a list of patriotic and historical books to fill the bill. 'Books, not medals, will make our Gaels more earnest, intelligent and patriotic Irishmen, and on that ground should be more suitable as presentations in connection with Gaelic victories.' He also calls for the development of camogie and handball. Prior to the annual congress there should be a ceili or some other form of Irish-Ireland entertainment held in the Mansion House. As well as publishing the letters of Drs. Croke and Fennelly in the Rule Book of the association, he should also like to see the letters of Parnell, Davitt and John O'Leary. 'Why not also have the photos of the first four patrons in the book?' he adds. According to O'Sullivan there should be a Publication Committee appointed, who would be entrusted with a certain sum of money for the purpose of defending the association from attack or misrepresentation, and would provide interesting reading for its members. He was very concerned with the small amount of literature relating to the association. He exhorted county committees seriously to consider the publication of county histories. As well 'in districts such as many of those in Donegal which at present is not affiliated to the Ulster Council, money should be spent to establish clubs, and if necessary an Irish-speaking organiser appointed for the purpose.'

Thomas F. O'Sullivan's history is a very important work. It is a comprehensive account of the first quarter century of the Gaelic Athletic Association. It is an invaluable source for information on the early decades. It has the great quality of accuracy. An important authority on the period gives it an accuracy rating of ninety-eight percent and believes the remaining two percent is concerned mainly with omissions. It gathers within its covers much information that is accessible only through a tedious trawl of contemporary newspapers and other publications. Without it we would be in an impossible position for the early years of the association. In so far as any publication can be, the book is a model of impartiality. If you didn't know that O'Sullivan was a staunch IRB man you would find it difficult to glean the fact from its pages. We owe a great debt of gratitude to Thomas F. O'Sullivan.

The next book to be mentioned is a more modest effort. It takes up the story two years after O'Sullivan left off. Entitled 'Twenty Years of the G.A.A. 1910-1930', it was compiled by Phil O'Neill, who wrote under the pen name 'Sliabh Ruadh'. It is subtitled 'A History and Book of Reference for Gaels' and is undated.

In a short introduction O'Neill tells us that the work is not intended as a detailed history of the association. Rather the pages 'are a summary of the chief events in the history of our National Athletic Association both in the field and in the council chambers for the years 1910-1930, as well as being a record of its growth numerically and financially during the period.' He hoped his book would prove an arbiter in disputes between fellow-Gaels about players and match scores. Also that it 'will be appreciated by the Gaels of the countryside, as well as by those in the city clubs and colleges, and I further hope that its perusal will be an incentive to our younger generation to add by their actions, perhaps, another bright chapter or two to the future annals of our great organisation.'

Although stretching to over three hundred and sixty pages the work contains one-third fewer words than O'Sullivan's. Written in larger print with a lot of headlines in bold print, it reads more like a newspaper account of events. And that, essentially, is what the book is, a compendium of newspaper accounts from the Kilkenny Journal. It lacks the continuity and flow of O'Sullivan. To open a page at random gives the flavour of the work. On page 60 there are three headings: Leinster Football Final is a short account of six lines. It is followed by A Great Munster Final, which account extends to over thirty lines and includes the lineouts as well as some match details. The final heading is a short piece of five lines under Cardinal Agliardi Medals. Essentially a cut and paste job of newspaper accounts, it is, nonetheless, an important source of information on the period. O'Neill has collected much material together which, otherwise, one would need to go to the newspapers for. As well the work is much better on local events than O'Sullivan's. We get information on Cork county conventions, matches in Waterford, Thurles Gaelic Grounds, Ring Irish College, to quote at random. In most cases dates are given which are important references to have when one is looking for greater detail.

The book devotes a chapter to each year and uses an introductory chapter to give infonnation on 1909 and so link up with where O'Sullivan left off. There are a number of photographs, predominantly of Kilkenny and Tipperary G.AA personalities, and a number of contemporary ballads. Not as authoritative or comprehensive as O'Sullivan's, O'Neill's book is, nonetheless, a handy reference work on the first decades of the twentieth century.

The third book to be mentioned is Our Native Games by P. J. Devlin. It is a small work of a little over one hundred pages, is undated and was published by M. H. Gill and Son, Ltd., apparently in the mid-thirties. According to the author it is not an attempt to write a history of the association or to produce a chronicle of its past activities. 'My purpose is simply to envisage the conditions in Ireland when the Association was established fifty years ago; to examine the motives of its founders; to explain the void it filled in the lives of the people, and to make clear the aims which have become the essence of its existence and the secret of its popularity.'

Much of the material in the book had appeared from time to time in the pages of The Catholic Bulletin. The content is really concerned with the philosophy behind the Gaelic Athletic Association and the effect it has had on the improvement in the national spirit. According to him the influence of the revival of our games cannot be better illustrated than by the interest it aroused in a part of Ireland where distinctive games and pastimes had long been suppressed. 'In that corner of Ulster where I then had my being, life was drear and aimless during leisure hours, especially for the young. The older generations, if so disposed, as most of them were, had card-playing and, despite law and humanity, cock-fighting, for distractions; and, strange to relate, it was from devotees of the latter 'sport', who had penetrated to central counties, that I first heard of wayside jumping and weight-casting and rural team games.' The writing is hortatory. Devlin saw the history of the country in terms of a conflict between native and alien ideals and interests. He believed that peaceful penetration had become more destructive of nationality than open aggression. Sinister influences enticed men from the ranks of national endeavour so that 'a barrier had to be raised to protect the leal from the indifferent and secure the organisation against part-time use by those who can only have had a half-hearted attachment to its basic aims.'

According to Devlin the G.AA has no room for gladiatorial shows or subsidised competitions. 'If victory and trophies become the predominant pursuit, the chivalry that it is part of its purpose to foster, and the popular benefits it exists to provide, must disappear.'

Many of his ideas would appear dated today. He is fascinated by the glamour and greatness of the game of hurling. It stirs a chord in native hearts that no other pastime can awaken. It is as distinctive as the National Emblem itself. He would like to see its history written down. Even though it has spread to distant parts of the world, he cannot see it becoming internationally organised. He gives two reasons for this conclusion: 'It must remain essentially national, and the adept hurler, like the ideal poet, is born not made. The true art of wielding the caman flourishes only where it has been traditional.' He would probably cast a cold eye on the many schemes currently in existence for the spread of the game in weaker counties.

Today the book is not much more than an interesting curiosity. It reflects the thinking in the mid-thirties when the country was in a stage of siege, physical and mental. There was the economic war with Britain as a result of the Land Annuities issue. There was the mental siege as Fianna Fail pursued an Irish-Ireland policy, a dream of self-sufficiency and sought to emphasise all things Irish to the detriment of all things English. This siege mentality also found expression in the censorship laws, which sought to protect the soul of Ireland from alien ideas and images that would tarnish it in any way. P. J. Devlin is fighting these battles in Our Native Games. He is brandishing our games as an instrument in the battle for the soul of Ireland. We find 'English domination' balanced against 'Irish sycophancy'. For him the leaning towards imported pastimes is due to the desire 'born of serfdom and all its venalities, to ape and pose as a superior caste.' 'The small soul cowers in the presence of a dominant personality.' And there's much more of the rousing stuff of the political and cultural battles of the thirties but very little of value to the student of the G.A.A. today.

In 1958 the G.A.A. set up a History Committee (An Coiste Staire) with a brief to write the history of the association. The first man chosen to write the history was P;draig Puirseal. A Mooncoin, Co. Kilkenny man, he turned to journalism with the Irish Independent after completing an M.A. in English literature at UC.D in 1937. He wrote the first of four novels in 1942 and seemed destined for a literary career. However, he forsook novel-writing for sports journalism and founded The Gaelic Sportsman in 1950. Three years later he joined the Irish Press and was still on the staff of that paper when he died, after a brief illness, in 1979.

After some time disagreements arose between An Coiste Stair and Puirseal about the type of history he intended to write. The committee were looking for a work, which would be as factual as could be ascertained from reliable sources and be mostly free from anecdotes and hearsay. The writer, with his background in imaginative literature, was inclined to a more colourful and readable account of the history of the association. There was a conflict of intention and this led to a parting of the ways.

I understand the Purcell family were disappointed with the termination of his brief. His death came rather prematurely in 1979 and his sister, Mary, the novelist, collected his writings and had them published under the title The G.A.A. in its Time in 1982. The book contained a Foreward by Sean 0’Siochain, who retired as Director General of the G.A.A. in 1979. In the course of it, 0’Siochain gives us an idea of the kind of history of the G.A.A. Puirseal might have written had he been retained to do so by An Coiste Stair. 'It is an unusual book in that it is the product of three aspects of the author's ability: the capacity to relate the Athletic and Games Movement, as it developed, to the historical background of the time; the journalistic training which makes a milestone of every final; and the impressionable mind - filled to overflowing with anecdotes, incidents and colourful heroes - of the man who, from boyhood, was steeped in the G.A.A. tradition.

The next choice of An Coiste Stair was Thomas P. O'Neill, Professor of English at University College, Dublin. He had completed the biography of Eamon de Valera with the Earl of Longford and was keen on the task. But, he was a very busy man and in spite of many meetings with the committee, no work was forthcoming. Eventually he was given an ultimatum to deliver or be replaced. He pleaded for time, as he was anxious to do it, but was, in the end, replaced.

The third man to be chosen was Marcus de Búrca from Dublin. His qualifications were impeccable. Educated at Belvedere College, he graduated in economics and law from U.C.D. and King's Inn. During the 1950s he was a journalist and a practising barrister, and from 1960 he was on the staff of the Attorney General's Office as a parliamentary draftsman. As the author of two historical biographies, The O'Rahilly and John O'Leary he had become interested in the early history of the G.A.A. He had a methodical and business-like approach to his work.

In the Preface to the book de Búrca tells us he didn't come to the book as a total stranger to the G.A.A.: 'Like many hundreds of thousands of Irish men and women in the past century, I grew up in a home where Gaelic games were enthusiastically supported. However, apart from a brief period as an obscure player in my late teens, I have never been actively involved in G.A.A. and am not blind to its weaknesses and faults.'

Also his antecedents were perfect. His father, Pádraig de Búrca was a distinguished presence at Central Council meetings, an ex-officio member by virtue of being legal advisor to the association. His grandfather, John J. Bourke from Tipperary Town, better known all over Munster as 'Bourke the Handicapper', was an official handicapper and judge at athletic meetings in the early days of the association. The title of the completed work, The G.A.A.: A History, is probably indicative of the nature of the work. It wasn't the official history of the association but rather a commissioned work in which the author was allowed freedom of opinion.

De Búrca informs us on this opinion in the Preface: 'At the highest level in the Association I was assured that, while its records would be freely available to me, what was being looked for was my story of the G.A.A. and particularly of its role in the national movement of the pre-1922 era. All that was expected of me until my manuscript was completed was that I report progress periodically to the Committee. I was promised complete freedom both to use the records of the Association and to express my opinion of it: this promise has been scrupulously kept. For everything in this History, whether of a factual nature or otherwise, I alone am responsible.'

Journalists, who were present at the launch of the book at the Gresham Hotel in Dublin, on November 10, 1980, honed in on the question of the nature of the history. Paddy Downey of the Irish Times was critical of the way G.A.A. officialdom distanced itself from the history. According to him 'Successive speakers, all of them officials, past and present, of the G.A.A., seemed to distance themselves from the work. This, they implied, was not the official history of the association: it was one man's view and interpretation, that of Marcus de Búrca.'

Downey contended that the launching of the History deserved a glittering occasion: 'the G.A.A. is almost one hundred years old and up until now there has been no definitive account, no history, of an organisation which controls not only the activities of hurling and Gaelic football but represents one of the greatest, probably the greatest, social movements that this country has known.'

The attitude of G.A.A. officials to the launch of a history may have been due to a slight nervousness at the exposure of the association to the first full-length account of its activities. According to Liam Kelly, in a review of the book, xxviii the G.A.A. 'has nothing to be ashamed of here. Mr. De Búrca has given a realistic and honest account of the G.A.A. to the best of his ability. It's well-written and well-researched and documented. Some of the G.A.A.' s mistakes and embarrassments are included. That may not suit some people who would wish to read a glowing eulogy without any hint of fault or mistake. But it's all the more realistic and truthful for that. '

Kelly continues: 'Hardly a ball is kicked or a sliotar struck and few of the greats of Gaelic games get a mention in Marcus de Búrca's 'The G.A.A.: A History'. The excitement of the big day, the experience of Croke Park, the excitement of the crowds that throng Munster finals, the glamour of the great personalities that people the games, are only hinted at in the pages. Mick Mackey and Christy Ring get one mention each. The other giants of hurling and their counterparts in football must be read about in other publications. Kelly goes on to suggest that the work might have been entitled 'The G.A.A.: A Political History.'

There is much truth in the statement. In the introduction de Búrca attempts to sketch the historical and social background against which the rise of the G.A.A. must be seen. He sees the foundation of the G.A.A. as the continuation of an historical process, which began in the mists of history and stretched up through millennia to that historical date in Thurles in November 1884, when Irishmen began locating their sporting identity within the new association. Hurling, and at a much later date, Gaelic football, were part of the national expression for Irish people through the centuries. Hurling had an important place in the social life of pre-Christian Ireland as evidenced by the Brehon Laws. The game was part of what being Irish was and remained so until the coming of the Normans.

De Búrca shows how attitudes began to change then. Attempts were made to persuade or force the Irish to shed their racial distinctiveness. The Statute of Kilkenny legislated against hurling in 1367. Some time later 'Archbishop Colton of Armagh threatened excommunication for Catholics who played the 'reprehensible' game of hurling, since it led to 'mortal sins, beatings and ... homicides.' In 1527 the Statute of Galway also banned the game.

None of these attempts to kill hurling succeeded. There were further prohibitions of the game in the seventeenth century as in the Sunday Observance Act of 1695. But, as de Búrca reveals, many contemporary accounts and references establish that hurling was played all through the eighteenth century in many places. However, with the Great Famine in the middle of the nineteenth century, the games of hurling and football, which, de Burca shows, developed and flourished during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, began to decline.

According to de Búrca The Famine was not the only obstacle native games had to contend with in the last century. All over the country hurling and football were either discreetly discouraged or openly prohibited by government officials such as policemen and magistrates, as well as by some of the Catholic clergy and many landlords. The reasons given for such action varied from fear of violence and insobriety to suspicion of games being used as cover for meetings of various nationalist bodies.'

In the chapter dealing with the foundation of the G.A.A., de Burca expresses unqualified support for Michael Cusack and his role in the foundation of the G.A.A. 'To Cusack must go all the credit for starting the G.A.A.: without him there would have been no G.A.A., certainly not in the 1880s. He it was who supplied the inspiration and the driving force that led to its foundation.' He expresses the opinion that all his life Cusack's first allegiance was to Gaelic culture, rather than to political ideals. He found amateur athletics in Ireland in the hands of anglicised influences and was determined to wrench them into Irish control. There were other problems also. The standards in Dublin athletics had fallen and abuses had crept in. Money prizes were being commonly given to amateurs. Betting was widely tolerated. Handicaps were being framed to favour popular athletes. Much of the adult male population, including manual workers policemen and soldiers, was debarred from competing simply because its members were not gentlemen amateurs. Traditional events involving weights and jumping were often omitted from programmes in favour of ordinary races, which urban athletes had a better chance of winning.

In correspondence and discussions he argued for the restoration to athletic programmes of weight and jumping events, the lifting of the class barrier preventing the man-in-the-street from taking part in sports and the achievement of unity in the management of Irish athletics. From Pat Nally, the Fenian from Balla, Co. Mayo, de Búrca writes, Cusack took up the idea of wresting athletics from landlord control and bringing them under the control of nationalists. As a result he organised a National Athletic Meeting in Dublin to which artisans were invited. In a series of articles in the Irish Sportsman in 1881, Cusack argued the need for a controlling body for athletics in the country but insisted on the inclusion of nationalists in any such body, if it was to be genuinely representative of all Irish athletes.

De Búrca reveals how suddenly in 1882 Cusack switched his efforts from athletics to hurling with the foundation of the Dublin Hurling Club. Perhaps the reason was the existence in the city since 1870 of the University Hurley Club, which evolved into the Irish Hurley Union in 1882. Hurley was a debased form of hurling, a far cry from the robust form of the game Cusack had known in East Clare thirty years previously, and quite close to hockey. In these challenging circumstances Cusack decided to take steps to re-establish the national game of hurling, lest hurley should be passed off as the genuine article. Cusack started Saturday afternoon hurling practice sessions in the Phoenix Park.

In the summer of 1883 Cusack decided in effect to combine his two campaigns for the re-organisation of athletics on a democratic basis and for the revival of hurling. To this end he attended many rural sports meetings, especially in Munster, where he argued the case for Home Rule in athletics and for the inclusion of hurling in any new scheme. Later in the year he replaced the Dublin Hurling Club with the Metropolitan Hurling Club and resumed practice in Phoenix Park. Experienced hurlers from hurling areas began to attend the practice sessions. The club became Cusack's biggest sporting achievement 'til then. Founded to 'test the pulse of the nation', it satisfied him that, given encouragement and direction, public support for his ideas did exist.

The rest is history. The foundation meeting of the Gaelic Athletic Association was held in Hayes's Hotel, Thurles on November 1, 1884. A few weeks previously, in a letter to both United Ireland and the Irishman, Cusack succinctly put the case for a body such as that formed in Thurles subsequently. No movement aiming at the social and political development of a nation was complete unless it also provided for the cultivation and preservation of the nation's games. 'Because the recent athletic revival (a reference to the revival of amateur athletics in Ireland in the mid-1860s in Dublin) was sponsored by people of anti-Irish outlook, the ordinary citizen-was largely excluded from sport. Yet, although the management of sport was in non-national hands, most of the best athletes were nationalists; they should now take control of their own affairs.'

The foundation of the G.A.A. could, therefore, be described as a revolutionary movement. There were two elements involved. On the one hand athletics were being wrested from landlord and Unionist control and handed over to the plain people of Ireland, who were coming into their own for the first time. On the other hand the ancient game of hurling, and the less ancient game of Gaelic football, were being restored to their rightful place in the cultural life of the plain people of Ireland. The whole development was part of Cusack's desire to restore Irish culture to its rightful place in the lives of Irish people. Cusack had also been a pioneer of the Irish language movement and a founder member of the Gaelic League.

De Burca is at pains to show from his writings that Cusack envisaged that in sporting activities the G.A.A. would cross political and sectarian boundaries, as the Gaelic Union had already done in its work for the Irish language. Cusack invited no politicians to the foundation meeting. He asserted often that his dual object in starting the G.A.A. was to open athletics to the ordinary citizen and to halt and reverse the decline in Irish games.

Cusack's non-partisan policy and his desire to cross political and religious divides in his new organisation, had only limited success. During 1885 the growing conflict between the G.A.A. and the Irish Amateur Athletic Association (IAAA) on which body should represent Irish athletics gathered momentum. It was very difficult for the G.A.A., becoming identified with the Home Rule movement and the nationalist cause. Later the conflict developed within nationalism for the soul of the G.A.A. itself, between the Home Rule movement and the physical force camp, led by the secret oath-bound Irish Republican Brotherhood. The latter got control of the association in 1887 after Maurice Davin resigned from the presidency. According to de Búrca 'To at least some leaders of the LR.B. the G.A.A. must have seemed an ideal means of gaining by stealth the power they could not hope to win through the ballot box. The author describes the whole sorry mess in the middle of 1887: 'By mid-summer the G.A.A. presented a picture of growing disunity, with the two leading counties of Dublin and Tipperary in open revolt against what was regarded as the dictatorial regime of the Hoctor-dominated central executive, and with athletes in several areas considering transferring their allegiance to the rival IAAA. '

But, as this history clearly demonstrates, the G.A.A. survived these vicissitudes and those, which visited it during the Parnell split. The G.A.A sided with Parnell and became the target of strong opposition by the bulk of the clergy. It was infiltrated at all times by the current political ideas, was sometimes rent by deep divisions but at all times it came through.

De Búrca shows how the association reflected majority opinion in the immediate aftermath of the 1916 Rising. Accused by the Under-Secretary at Dublin Castle, Sir Matthew Nathan, of being anti-British, the G.A.A. issued a statement to the press in reply. According to the author, the main impact of this statement on the reader 'and undeniably the one intended by the central council of 1916, is of the Association's obvious desire to dissociate itself from the events in Dublin in Easter Week.' De Búrca goes on to say that the statement should be seen as a reflection of the climate of nationalist opinion generally in the period just after the Rising, the long-term effects of which nobody could then be expected to see.

The writer shows how the G.A.A. quickly changed its attitude towards the Rising as if reflecting the change in attitude among the general population. The association came under the dominant influence of the Sinn Fein members. Croke Park was the venue for the third annual convention of the Volunteers. A large body of G.A.A. men carrying hurleys, occupied a prominent position in the huge public funeral of Thomas Ashe. The G.A.A. added its voice in opposition to the British Government's decision in April 1918 to extend military conscription to Ireland. In fact, at the annual congress that year, held in private in the Mansion House, after an acrimonious debate the central council was censured for some contacts they made with the Castle authorities in 1916. (One of these contacts was a G.A.A. deputation to General Maxwell in November 1916 requesting him to put back the trains so that the attendance at G.A.A. finals would not suffer.) The debate ref1ected the dominant influence in the G.A.A. of the Sinn Fein members.

The change in G.A.A. attitudes is reflected in the part played by the G.A.A. in the War of Independence. The members were to the fore in the armed struggle and the foundation of the flying columns in the countryside came from fit, athletic members of the organisation. When the Civil War came along, with its obvious disruption of G.A.A. activities, it failed to split or unduly damage the association. In fact there is a strong case for arguing that G.A.A. members, who found themselves on opposing sides, did much to heal the divisions in Irish society caused by the fratricidal war.

According to Liam Kelly, in his review of the book already mentioned, 'The key point in the G.A.A.' s survival in the years 1884-1924 was loyalty. It engendered such loyalty among its membership that no matter how bitter the political or at times armed conflict, allegiance to the association was of prime importance.'

As already stated, the political side of the history of the G.A.A. is extensively treated. Another strength of the book is the treatment of the many personalities who contributed to the development of the association and to the making of the games of hurling and football the most popular in Ireland. Cusack has already been mentioned. De Búrca shows how Dick Blake, on his election as secretary, campaigned for a nonpolitical G.A.A. He lost no time in reforming the association. Within a month of his election the central council announced a revision of the constitution and rules. 'The old rule permitting political discussions at the annual convention was replaced; in its place came an explicit declaration that the G.A.A. was non-political and nonsectarian, a prohibition on the raising of political issues at G.A.A. meetings at any level, a ban on the participation by clubs in any political. movement and a recommendation for the avoidance of party names for clubs.' The author shows how such radical changes produced enemies and Blake's term of office came to a sudden end in 1898.

Another stalwart of the association who is well treated is James Nowlan. He came into power in September 1901 and with him, as secretary, Luke O'Toole. The former was to be president for twenty years, and the latter was to remain secretary for thirty years. According to de Búrca, they 'found the Association at the lowest point of its fortunes, were .to be instrumental in reviving it and guiding it to its first period of real expansion'.

O'Toole's successor, Pádraig O’Caoimh, who was to hold the office for thirty-five years, has his contribution put in order and perspective, as have all the men who helped shape and build the G.A.A. The purchase of Croke Park gets detailed treatment, as does the abolition of the 'Ban' in 1971

The author has compressed an immense amount of historical research into a relatively short book. It is well-written and well researched and documented. It a scholarly work and a very readable account even though the author shies away from the emotional and popular approach. It has a great clarity and precision of expression. Because it concerned itself with the weighty matters in the history of the association, it is open to criticism for its omissions. Mention has already been made of the sparcity of space devoted to players and games. Apart from the development of Croke Park there is little treatment of the development of other stadia in the country. It is surprisingly short on statistics; not even a list of the presidents and secretaries is made The cultural side of the association is passed over with little treatment of its work for the Irish language and latterly the place of Scór.

'The G.A.A.; A History' is ultimately a statement that events and decisions off the playing fields have been more lasting in their effects and more important to the association than the games of football and hurling that took place on the field of play. The book broke new ground and presented the first comprehensive history of the association as an organisation surviving the vicissitudes of many political takeover bids and growing from strength to strength.

A paperback edition of The G.A.A.: A History appeared in 1981. A shorter version of the book in Irish was published in 1984. An updated edition of the work, entitled The Story of the G.A.A. to 1990, was published by Wolfhound Press in 1990 for Irish Life Assurance plc. This work included a new cover and photographs not included in the original edition. In 1999 a second edition of the original work appeared. Published by Gill and Macmillan, it included a new cover and two additional chapters, one covering Games 1980-1999, the second Administration 1980-1999. It also included a one page bibliography and a professional index by Helen Litton.

 

Gaelic Games in Leinster (Comhairle Laighean C.L.G., 1984), 96 pp. Paperback.

This work on the history of the Leinster Council from the time it was set up in 1900, was a collaborative effort. Marcus de Búrca was the editor and he had the active cooperation of a special five-member history committee, which was set up in 1981. The members of the committee were Aodh O’Broin, Wicklow, Martin O'Neill, Wexford, Paddy Flanagan, Westmeath, Tom Ryall, Kilkenny, John Clarke, Offaly

The book can be divided into two halves with the first half devoted to a broad sweep of the province's history, and the second half to a statistical and photographic account. In the second section are to be found pen pictures of council chairmen and secretaries and the lists of winners of the many hurling and football competitions run by the council.

The first half of the book is the work of de Búrca. ln the course of five chapters he describes the beginnings of the council, taking the story to 1916 in chapter 1. He shows how the G.AA was strong in Dublin long before the formation of the council. Although Munster was the power-house of the early association, with six of the founders coming from that province, de Búrca states that 'geography alone dictated an important role for Leinster in the first 15 years or so of the G.A.A. In area and in population it was by far the biggest of the four provinces.

The author shows that by late summer 1900 unmistakable signs of pressure for reform of the G.AA had appeared. Leinster took a major part through the concerted action of prominent members in Wexford, Dublin and Kilkenny. Easily the most energetic advocate of reform was Walter ('Watt' ) Hanrahan of Wexford. In early August the Kilkenny and Wexford boards both threatened to leave the G.AA unless the central council took steps at once to ensure that it was run in a businesslike way. One of the reform ideas to come from Wexford chairman, Nick Cosgrave, was the idea of setting up provincial councils or committees to run their own championships. The motion to establish councils was passed at the 1900 congress, which was held in Thurles on September 9.

A meeting of representatives of Leinster counties on October 13 formed the Leinster Council. The first meeting adjourned to November 4 when a meeting of the Council elected James Nowlan, Kilkenny as chairman and WaIter Hanrahan as secretary. Since the Munster Council was not validly constituted until June 30, 1901. Leinster's was the first of the G.AA' s provincial councils. Those of Connacht and Ulster came in 1902 and 1903.

The author points out that in 1901 Nowlan was unanimously elected president of the G,A,A in succession to Deering, and another Leinster man, Wicklow's Luke O'Toole replaced Dineen as secretary. 'These two changes,' according to de Búrca, , marked the beginning of a new G.AA, determined to repair its badly run-down administrative machine and to put its finances on a sound basis.'

For de Búrca the provincial councils were to play an important party in the expansion of the G.AA in the years before 1916. 'They were to strengthen the administrative machinery of the Association and, through the provincial competitions which they would run, would generate new sources of income which would provide new funds for provincial development. By providing some degree of decentralisation they would also balance the growing trend in the early years of the century towards a Dublin-based G.A.A. In short they would act as the engine which would draw the Association into the second quarter of the century, when one of its most important periods of growth would take place.

The growth of the G.A.A. in Leinster is vividly illustrated in an income and expenditure table on page 25. For the year 1902-03 income was £640 and expenditure £410 leaving a surplus of £230. With the exception of 1916-17 the council had a surplus every year until 1922-23. For instance in the previous year the surplus was £1891. In the year 1925-26 the income was £3290. De Búrca states that the council finances were sound enough 'to permit another loan of £300 in January 1925 to allow the Central Council in install 20 modem turnstiles at Croke Park.

Officials played an important role in the development of the G.A.A. in the province. Walter Hamahan was a powerful figure in the early years and held the position of secretary until 1917. He was followed by John F. Shouldice, who was ten years in the office. A very influential figure, Martin O'Neill, succeeded in 1927 and was to remain in office until 1970. Three years earlier Bob O'Keeffe was elected chairman and was to remain in the chair until 1935. O'Neill and O'Keeffe formed a good partnership, which was to be largely responsible for the successes of the following decade.

The author shows that Leinster came through the Second World War unscathed. By the end of the 1940, all the main indicators of progress by the Leinster Council had improved beyond recognition on those at the start of the decade. 'Income in 1949 had more than quadrupled compared to 1940 and expenditure had more than trebled. The council's annual surplus had increased ten-fold and the number of affiliated clubs had risen by more than a third.'

The final chapter, entitled '25 Prosperous Years' covers the period 1960-1984. According to de Búrca 'the provincial administration managed to forge steadily ahead at a time when the Association as a whole was encountering major obstacles to progress. Largely through the introduction of the intermediate inter-county championships, the number of championship games played annually rose to new record levels. In football the province produced two new major contenders for national honours, Longford and Offaly. In addition, with Wexford's hurling resurgence continuing well into the late 1960s, the challenge of Leinster hurling to Munster's hitherto dominant position of the national game was further strengthened. De Búrca spends some time revealing the council's response to the Report of the G.A.A. Commission in 1971, which recommended the overhaul of the Association's structure. The council, through its secretary Ciaran O'Neill, expressed dismay at the move to centralise what he felt should remain a decentralised body. As evidence of the council's belief in the decentralised nature of the G.A.A., a decision was taken in 1965 to hold the annual provincial convention in future at a different venue in each of the twelve counties. The council also re-acted negatively to another initiative of the central council in 1968, to appoint a regional officer in each province. The duties of such an officer would include the promotion of the interests of the association in the province and ensuring that G.A.A. policy was vigorously pursued at all levels there. The proposal met with sharp criticism when it came before the council and was unanimously rejected.

Within its short span the book is a thorough presentation of the important features of the history of the Leinster Council. The author is diligent in the pursuit of facts and figures and gives a good account of the finances of the council. There is a balanced and rational approach to the story.

 

De Búrca, Marcus: One Hundred Years of Faughs Hurling- Fag-a-Bealagh (Faughs Hurling Club, 1985).

This is the story of one of the oldest hurling clubs in the country. Fag-a-Bealagh club, more popularly known all over Ireland as Faughs, came into existence in November 1885 in the academy of Michael Cusack himself and at his instigation, to provide competition for his own club, the Metropolitans. Apparently the decision to set up the club was taken as early as the Spring of 1885, at a meeting held in the Phoenix Park. Traditionally, Faughs was regarded as the second club to be established in Dublin. It came in ahead of the Michael Davitts Football Club, also formed in the month of November. In his secretary's report to the adjourned first annual congress of the G.AA, held in Thurles in February 1886, Cusack lists Faughs as the second of seven Dublin clubs affiliated. The name Faugh-a-Ballagh is an anglicised version of the old Irish battle-cry, 'Fag-a-Bealach', which may be translated as 'Clear the Way'.

The story of the Faughs is told largely through selected and edited contemporary press reports. In the Foreword to the book de Búrca acknowledges the help of members of the centenary committee of the club in collecting the raw material on which the book is based.

The book is divided into eight chapters with the first seven dealing the progress of the club in the Dublin hurling and football championships. The final chapter is devoted to miscellaneous activities in the club, such as handball, Scór, etc. It also includes a list of club officers and club captains. There is a selection of over sixty photographs, mostly of Faughs teams, the earliest being of the successful senior team that won four Dublin championships between 1900 and 1904.

The club was traditionally a haven for Tipperary hurlers based in Dublin and one of the fascinating features of the book are pen pictures of the giants of the Faughs club, especially in the early days. These make the most interesting reading and illustrate the strong Tipperary connection. Pat Cullen (1867-1939) from Loughmore was a member of the Dublin county board from 1887 and its treasurer from 1902. He won senior hurling titles with the Faughs between 1902-1904 and chaired the club between 1895 and 1907. Another Tipperary man was Danny McCormack (1876-1938) from Borrisileigh, who was on the Faughs 'four-in-a-row' team from 1900-1904, played for Dublin between 1905 and 1912, and was captain in 1907.

Other Tipperary players of note mentioned include Jack Cleary (1876-1948) Kilruane, Paddy Hogan of Horse and Jockey, who played for Dublin for many years, including the Dublin team against Tipperary in the 1906 All-Ireland senior hurling final, Jack Quane of the famous family of Tipperary footballers was a member of the Faughs football team that won the Dublin senior football championship in 1889, later emigrated to the U.S. and for many years a delegate from New York to the Central Council of the G.AA. Tim Gleeson (1877-1949) from Lisboney, Nenagh, Jack Connolly, from Ballypatrick, Thurles, who died suddenly in 1928 while refereeing a game in Parnell Park, Andy Harty (1880-1926), who held more posts at different levels in the G.AA. from 1903 to 1924 than any other official, Bob Mockler (1886-1966) a native of Horse and Jockey, who captained the Dublin team that won the senior hurling All-Ireland in 1920, Ned Wade of Boherlahan, who won minor and junior All-Irelands with Tipperary in 1930, joined Faughs in 1932, and played inter-county hurling for Dublin and Tipperary for the following fourteen years. Was unlucky in that he played for Dublin in 1937, when Tipperary won the All-Ireland, and played with Tipperary in 1938, when Dublin were successful, Jim Prior (1923-1980) of Borrisfleigh, who played on the Dublin senior hurling team from 1944 to 1957, losing two All-Irelands, to Waterford in 1948, and as captain to Cork in 1952, Charlie Downes of Roscrea, who was on the Dublin selection that won the 1938 AlIIreland, Mickey Williams of Cloughjordan and the famous Seamus Bannon.

I have referred only to the Tipperary players with the club. Faughs also attracted stars from other counties, like Jim 'Builder' Walsh and Terry Leahy from Kilkenny, Mick Gill from Galway, Harry Gray of Laois, and more. They were a very successful club and lead the Dublin hurling roll of honour with thirty senior titles, the last in 1992. Marcus de Búrca puts their achievement in perspective: 'This wholesale eclipse of the older hurling clubs serves only to emphasise the achievement of Faughs in the past quarter-century or more. Alone of the clubs founded back in the early days of the G.A.A, they have remained in the top rank in Dublin hurling. The Rapparees and Davis have long since vanished; Kickhams have not been in senior hurling for over half-a-century; Commercials after 90 years have yet to win a senior hurling title.

 

Michael Cusack and the G.A.A.

It was only logical that Marcus de Búrca should write a biography of Michael Cusack. In The G.A.A.: A History he had expressed his high admiration of the man from Carron, Co. Clare, who was solely responsible for the events leading up to the foundation of the G.A.A. in Thurles in November 1884. Of his dismissal twenty months after the foundation, de Búrca had this to say: 'No comparable case exists in modem Irish history of a national movement dismissing its founder within such a short time.'

When de Burca wrote The G.A.A.: A History, no biography of Cusack existed. In 1982 L. P. 0 Caithnia published Mícheál Cíosóg, a life of Cusack in the Irish language. The emphasis in the work was on Cusack as an Irish language enthusiast. No translation followed to make the book available to a wider audience. So there was a need for a biography that would give greater emphasis to Cusack's role in the foundation of the G.A.A. and the many other aspects of an extremely complex personality.

Marcus de Búrca was approached by Liam O’Maolmhichíl to do such a biography and this publication, which appeared in 1989, was the result. Less than two hundred pages long, the book is divided into eight chapters with about ten photographs. It also includes an index, and a list of Clare G.A.A. clubs, who subscribed to the publication. The main part of the work, as the title would suggest, is devoted to Cusack's G.A.A. life. In the first two chapters we learn of his boyhood in County Clare, his education and his life as a teacher. Starting as a primary teacher, he later moved into secondary and spent three years teaching at St. Colman's College, Newry. Until he started his own academy in Dublin in 1877, he led a peripatetic teaching existence that took him to the four provinces. In 1876 he married Margaret J. Woods in a Catholic service at Dromore.

According to de Búrca 'The ten years starting with the opening of his own school were the most important in Cusack's life. It was then that he made the decisions and took the actions for which he deserves to be remembered in modem Irish history. To be specific, between October 1877 and November 1887 he made his mark on Irish education, played a decisive role in Irish athletics, revived the national game of hurling, took part in a seminal move to revive the Irish language, edited a new Irish weekly news, and founded what has been for over a hundred years the biggest and most successful of Irish sports bodies.

The first major questions de Búrca addresses are how and why Cusack founded the G.A.A. He identifies three important events, which happened in 1882 that helped to shape the impact Cusack was to make on the Ireland of his time. The first of these was to force the newly founded Dublin Athletic Union to 'permit peelers, soldiers, labourers, tradesmen and artisans (excluded under the gentleman amateur rule) to compete at athletic sports. The second event was the opening of the National Industrial Exhibition in Dublin in August 1882. This exhibition was unique. It was entirely nationalist-controlled, its organisers refusing all official support or patronage. It made a deep and lasting impact on Cusack and five years later, in his own paper, The Celtic Times, he put the encouragement of native industry first among the four aims of the paper. The third event was his increased involvement in the Gaelic Union for the preservation and cultivation of the Irish Language. He became the most active committee member of the Union, which frequently met in his Academy. At his suggestion it commenced to hold Irish classes in a room provided in his Academy and under arrangements drawn up by him. The similarity between the title of the Union and the earliest title of the G.A.A. is obvious.

It was only a logical progression to the revival of Gaelic games. De Burca traces the developments that led to the revival of hurling. On the second last day of 1882 a small group of men, including Cusack, met in the College of Surgeons 'for the purpose of taking steps to re-establish the national game of hurling. ,xlix Five days later the same group with some others met to establish the Dublin Hurling Club. The setting up of this club was in response to the existence in Dublin for some years before 1882 of a game called hurley, an emasculated form of the traditional game of hurling. 'A glance at the twelve simple playing-rules of the DHC strongly suggests that Cusack had a major input into their drafting. While in some respects containing features one associates with hockey, in others they anticipate the rules of the game controlled by the G.A.A. from November 1884.

The Dublin Hurling Club didn't last very long and Cusack's interest in it waned quickly. Conflict developed between the supporters of hurling and hurley, as each side tried to poach players from the other. By October 1883 the affairs of the Dublin Hurling Club appear to have been wound up. De Búrca gives two reasons for the collapse. From the start the DHC failed to attract more than a handful of players. The failure to supply hurleys and balls may have been a reason. Initially there was an invitation from the DHC to join 'in the national movement'. Spectators to the sessions in the Phoenix Park began to join in the training sessions. However, this fraternisation was abruptly ended by a decision of the committee on 22 February to confine future matches to 'members, intending members and members of recognised clubs.'

The author concludes his chapter on the Dublin Hurling Club by stating that for nearly all those involved in the club, this was a once-only effort to revive hurling. 'The sole known exception was, of course, Michael Cusack, who only a few short months later, after the failure of the DHC, made yet another effort - this time almost single-handed, but this time too with much greater success. This was the foundation of the Gaelic Athletic Association in Hayes's Hotel, Thurles in November 1884.

The second major question examined by de Búrca is why, after only twenty months following the foundation meeting, the G.A.A. removed Cusack from his post as secretary. In a short review such as this it is not possible to trace the tangled web of plot and intrigue that led to the secretary's dismissal. De Búrca shows that two powerful men played a key role, Edmund Dwyer Gray, the proprietor of the Freeman's Journal and Archbishop Croke himself. Cusack himself contributed to his own demise. The bitterness of the war of words between the G.A.A. and the I.A.A.A. during 1885 had left its mark on the principal antagonists, not least on Cusask himself. 'Obliged to face his opponents alone in Dublin because his executive was largely scattered throughout the provinces, he became more dictatorial in his style of management and resentful of criticism from any quarter. In particular, he could not tolerate what he felt was lack of support from his own colleagues, some of whom now began to question his capacity to pilot the G.A.A. into calmer seas, or the wisdom of allowing him to do so.’

Unfortunately for Cusack his attack on the Freeman's Journal brought him into conflict with Archbishop Croke. Matters came to a head when Cusack concluded a letter to Croke with the blunt statement: 'As you faced the Pope, so I will, with God's help, face you and Gray. Croke's reply warned the G.A.A. of his intention to discontinue his patronage if Cusack was to be allowed to play the dictator in its councils, to abuse all who disagreed with him and to keep the Irish athletic world in perpetual feud.

The author shows how the forces against Cusack began to gather for the kill. An editorial in the Freeman's Journal put the case for Cusack's removal. 'He was always treading on someone's toes, suggesting ignoble motives, and only happy when quarrelling. If the G.A.A. did not quickly find a new secretary Cusack would wreck it. This was followed very quickly by a repudiation of Cusack's letter to Croke from McKay, one of Cusack's co-secretaries. Letters and statements from many clubs demanded Cusack's retraction. Cusack's manner was described as aggressive, insolent, dictatorial and an obstacle to the spread of the association.

The road to his dismissal was now clearly marked and de Búrca gives a vivid account of the three meetings, beginning on April 6, which brought about this result. Cuasck was willing to retract and apologise but the matter which brought things to a head was a proposal that all future communications made on behalf of the association should carry the names of the president and of two of the secretaries. It was Cusack's irrational response to this obvious attempt to silence him that was to cost him his post as secretary three months later.

When the meeting to consider Cusack's future as secretary began in Hayes's Hotel on July 4, some sixty-five delegates representing almost forty clubs were present. Not surprisingly, twenty-four of the clubs and almost half of the delegates were from Tipperary. Detailed allegations of incompetency against Cusack were presented. He was negligent in dealing with correspondence, failed to acknowledge affiliation fees received from clubs and hadn't issued medals for the previous season. One of the most damning allegations was that Cusack had pocketed some of the association's money.

According to de Búrca 'Cusack's defence ran on predictable lines. Regarding the unanswered correspondence, he argued that he had a complete answer in the restrictions imposed on him by the April meeting. Then, going on the offensive, he explained the conflicting views of Clancy (a member of the executive, who suggested the misappropriation of money) and himself on the purchase of trophies in such a way as to imply clearly that Clancy was guilty of improper behaviour. Finally, in a dramatic gesture of defiance, he answered the veiled accusations of embezzlement by producing a bundle of unanswered letters and uncashed cheques and throwing them all on the table in front of him.

The debate lasted four hours, becoming disorderly at times and being also punctuated by at least two walk-outs by Cusack. In the end, the case against him for neglect of his duties was almost unanswerable and Cusack was asked to resign because he had not discharged his duties as secretary. The voting was forty-seven to thirteen, an inglorious exit for a mall who had set up the organisation only twenty months previously. While de Búrca admits the adequacy of the case against Cusack, he firmly believes the manner of his dismissal was indefensible.

One of the great strengths of this book is the access the writer had to the Celtic Times, which appeared for the first time on January 1, 1887 and lasted for fifty-four weeks. It was the only paper of which Michael Cusack was in sole control. Not a single issue of this paper, the first of many periodicals which have been devoted to Gaelic games, had been seen by the public for at least fifty years from 1934 to 1984. Marcus de Búrca had access to an incomplete file of the paper (all but nine issues) while researching this book.

The paper reveals a new side of Cusack for long unknown, or at least only vaguely suspected from his other writings. 'The hidden Cusack was a man not only with a broad liberal approach to the economic and cultural development of his country, but also with a lively interest in social and labour problems both at home and abroad. It enables one to give a portrait of the founder of the G.A.A. largely unseen before, not available elsewhere, and not at all as unbalanced as one might have expected in the circumstances giving rise to the launching of the paper. It provides a new account of what was the most eventful year in the history of the G.A.A., from the pen of probably the most articulate and most observant side-line spectator. Finally, but by no means of least interest, it shows the Association's dismissed chief officer fighting back - making what was to prove his last bid to regain power in the body he himself had set up.'

Marcus de Burca has done a great service to the public with this biography of Michael Cusack. He has brought balance to the perception of a man, which was hung up on all the disagreeable aspects of his character, and he presents his subject as a multi-faceted character who always had the G.A.A. and Ireland as his primary concerns. He does not fail to show how Cusack himself was his own worst enemy and how he contributed significantly to his own downfall. At the beginning of this review of the G.A.A. writings of Marcus de Burca I stated that the library of books relating to the association at national level was a very small shelf De Burca's contribution to that shelf is significant and important. He has done a major service to the G.A.A. but also to the public at large.

<span class="postTitle">Rockwell College 1918-1919</span> Rockwell College Annual 2002-2003, pp 156-159

Rockwell College 1918-1919

Rockwell College Annual 2002-2003, pp 156-159

 

The entries in the College Journal for September 1918 concentrate on returning staff and returning students. 143 boys returned on September 12th. A Solemn Votive Mass of the Holy Ghost was offered the following day and class began under a new Dean of Studies, Fr. McGrath, who replaced Fr. Kingston. The latter became the new Bursar, replacing Fr. Cotter, who had resigned after eighteen years in the job. "He had been through 'four reigns', beginning with Fr. Nicholas Brennan in 1900." Fr. McAllister became the new Prefect of Worship in succession to Fr. Charles Meyer who resigned. 

Poor weather was a major topic for the year. The first reference is on September 27th when it is stated that in spite of the bad weather, "the College succeeded in saving the crops because of their own machinery." The College Journal continues "The tractor and threshing-mill bid fair to pay for themselves by their work this year alone." Later, on October 8th, we read that it is very wet, "the wettest six weeks in the memory of men." A week later, the entry reads, "Very heavy rain all this evening, up to 10 p.m." 

By September 28th, most of the students have returned and they number 224. The number is divided into 182 boarders, 27 Junior Scholastics and 15 dayboys. Later, after the students return following the Christmas vacation, we learn that there are 15 new students, and that the fee is £40 per year. 

The boys' Retreat begins on Octo 2nd. It is given by a Redemptorist priest, Fr. Cagney, who spoke a good deal of Irish during his lectures and taught the boys several prayers and aspirations in Irish. Later, at the end of the month, the writer of the Journal begins to make his entries in the Irish language and continues in this vein until the beginning of March. 

In October, we get the first mention of the Spanish Influenza. This epidemic, which hit the world in 1918-1919, is estimated to have accounted for the loss of about 20 million lives. The entry for October 22nd reads: "Spanish Influenza is reported in Bansha and Golden and seems  to be spreading." The Community Council met immediately and decided to make inquiries and then act according to information gathered. As a result of these  inquiries, it was learned that there were seven mild cases in Golden. It was decided to send the day-pupils home the following morning and that they remain at home for fourteen days. 

Three days later, the Journal entry reads: 'We have so far been spared from Influenza, which is raging in many districts and has appeared, they say, as near to us as Camas." As a result of the threat the College is isolated, On October 27"" there is an announcement that nobody is to go in or out of the College, even parents, for a month. Public Mass for the following Sunday was cancelled. It was hoped that this isolation would protect the College from the 'flu. 

However, all is not blue. As early as September, we read that Fr. Daniel Leen, the Dean of Discipline, took two teams of boys to Dublin for the G.A.A. Schools Sports at Jones' Road, Croke Park. They performed well, winning the Challenge Cup and seven medals. Later, we learn that Fr. Leen "buys and sets up a billiard table in the boys' Library". A Debating Society is also formed. 

The 'flu continues to dominate the entries in the Journal. One student, Michael Lucey, fainted on November 3th. In this case, it was not the 'flu but suspected meningitis. We learn that there is only one doctor on his feet in Cashel. On the following day, young Lucey's condition is reported to be much worse and his mother is summoned to take him home. 

On November 7th, it is reported that the disease has hit Templenoe, within a mile of the College. Apparently, someone went to Dublin and became infected with it there and in turn infected others on his return. The Journalist refers to this individual as "Amadfm fear búiodheadh e." A few days later, we read that the anti-'flu vaccine has been obtained but nobody had much faith in it. The College authorities requested permission from the parents before it was administered to any student. 

Other matters impinoge, but not as much as one would expect. The end of World War I (November 11th) does not receive a mention until four days later. When it does come up for mention, the emphasis is on the continued unrest in Europe. The earliest mention is on October 7th when the entry in the Journal reads ; "The first serious rumours of peace." On October 17th, the Journal says "Conscription seems dead. It was still-born, in truth, never had more than a mechanical life or movement." 

There are brief references to the General Election in December and to the rise of Sinn Fein. Everything seems well for the new political party. On the day of the election, all the priests went to New Inn to cast their votes" ar son soirse agus Poblachta na h-Eireann." The writer of the Journal regretted to say that two of the Brothers did not go to cast their votes. 

Christmas arrives and the boys sit their end-of-term examinations. Five boys are kept back for a day because the had not worked during the term and had consequently performed badly in their exams. Because of the restrictions on access to the College because of the 'flu, there is no Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve. 

The disease, which was kept at bay since November, breached the barriers in January, understandable in the light of students returning to school from many different parts of the country. A novena of Masses, to preserve the College from the disease, was begun on January 16th. Ironically, a day later the disease struck. Quite a number of staff members, both religious and lay, went down with the 'flu. Two days later, it is reported that forty are confined to bed, but that they are all out of danger. A day later, a decision is made to send home the healthy children. Then, as the sick ones recovered, they too were sent home in order that the College could be fumigated properly. The school did not open until February 25th, after which the students returned in dribs and drabs. Not until March 9th was there reading at meals. This had been discontinued during the threat of the Spanish 'flu. The readings from J. M. Stone's "Reformation and Renaissance." 

The danger of the Spanish Influenza occupied the minds of the College authorities to a major degree during the months of its existence. Great efforts were made to prevent it but, once it struck, all the effort was transferred to containing it. Tucked away in the Journal for the period is a page taken from a contemporary issue of the British Medical Journal, containing an article entitled "Prevention and Treatment of Influenza". Two sentences that are underlined are worth quoting. The first states : 

"From what we know as to the lack of enduring protection after an attack, it might in any case be assumed that no vaccine could protect for more than a short period." And, "In the uncertainty of our present knowledge considerable hesitation must be felt in advising vaccine treatment as a curative measure." No wonder then the scepticism expressed above about the vaccine provided! 

The boys had to "pay" for their extended time at home. On April 7th, the President announced that there would be class all through Holy Week. A holiday at Easter was put out of the question by the enforced closure of the College earlier in the term from January 22nd to February 25th. 

The funeral of Pierse McCann is mentioned on March 9th. "Father Superior and Fathers Kingston and Egan drove to Thurles to take part in the funeral of Pierse McCann, M.P. Fathers English and O'Neill joined the funeral cortege near Dualla, the place of burial. Last May on the eve of his wedding, Pierse McCann was arrested for alleged complicity in the bogus "German Plot" and, without trial, was confined since in Gloucester Prison. While there, in December 1918, he was returned by an overwhelming majority as the Sinn Fein member for our division, East Tipp. Contracting influenza a fortnight ago, he developed pneumonia and, enfeebled by his unjust incarceration, he speedily succumbed. Another martyr in Ireland's cause. God rest his soul" When a Requiem Mass was offered for the repose of his soul at New Inn on March 26th, eleven members of the Rockwell Community. attended. 

Fr. Muller, from Germany, was Mr. Music in the College at the time. On the same day as Pierse McCann's funeral, Dr Dowling came out from Tipperary and held a consultation with Dr. Cusack about Fr. Muller, who was very ill. Their verdict was that the case was one of hopeless lung trouble. As the knowledge of his imminent demise sank in among the community, the question was raised as to how they would manage for music without him. The possible doomsday scenario did not come to pass, however, and we learn a week later that Fr. Muller was up and managed to play the Chapel organ. To have the strength to do so, he had made a Novena to the Venerable (later Saint) Oliver Plunkett. About a month later, on April 13th, we learn that he grows stronger. 

There is also news of the boys. There was hurling practice on March 12th to pick a team to play Thurles CB.S. in the Harty Cup. The match was played a week later and Rockwell, the defending champions were beaten by 6-0 to 4-1. According the Journal, "the interruption due to 'fIu had of course shortened our time training for the contest." A couple of weeks later, the College has a half-day on account of a visit by the UCC Hurling team. Rockwell won by 6-1 to 3-1. Also we read that Fr. McAllister went to Thurles to see the hurling match between Toomevara andTubberadora. 

Hurling activity continued. On April 13th, a team from Boherlahan was expected to come to Rockwell but Dr. Cusack had the match cancelled because the flu' was prevalent in Boherlahan. Early in May there was hurling competition for the Ryan Cup between the Scholastics, Seniors and Juniors. On June 1st, the Scholastics defeated the Seniors to win the Cup. 

There was also a place for Gaelic football There is a reference to football training on May 15th in connection with the Munster Football Cup Final against Fermoy. There were only two teams in the competition and the Final took place two weeks later. No result is given but, it would appear Rockwell won. Swimming for the boys began on May 22nd. One of them, James Flynn, got into difficulties. Jack Reidy and Matt Walker "pluckily went to his rescue and kept him afloat until the arrival of the boat." Handball was also played. On June 4th, the boys "began a handball tourr:ment for medals." 

"New Time" came in on March 30th "Rockwell did not adopt it, but adhered to "Old Time", that is, true English Greenwich Time, which it had been keeping, since uniform United Kingdom time was introduced. Accordingly, we have three different times in Ireland: 12  Noon Standard Irish Time is 12.25 p.m. Standard Greenwich Time and is 1.25 p.m. Standaard New Time or Standard Summer Time. Rockwell goes by the second of these." 

There was also a student death during the year. It was reported on April 10th, that a young aspirant for the Congregation, Pat O'Connor, from Kerry, was very ill, probably meningitis, possibly typhoid. A week later, we read he has recovered somewhat and had received the Religious Habit as a Scholastic. However, he died on the 21st of the month and was buried in Tarbert. 

The school had a number of inspections. On April 4th, a Mr. Nicholls, an inspector with the Intermediate Board, arrived and examined some of the Irish and Mathematical classes. He returned three days later to finish the inspection. On April 9th, Science exams were conducted by Messrs. Dixon, Twinbull and Ingram, inspectors under the D.A.T.I. Mr. Ensor, Intermediate Inspector of Classics, English and French arrived on May 23rd to inspect the classes. 

Tension within the Community is suggested in this entry for October 8th. "Superior said Community Mass and preached. It's getting monotonous now listening to same preacher, Sunday after Sunday." 

The June entries record the end of the year. We get the only mention of the lay teachers: "Messrs. Friel and Curran, lay professors, said goodbye to Rockwell today. Mr. Ryan went to Limerick to act as an Intermediate superintendent. Mr. Harte left for holidays." 

The exams began on June 10th. The boys rose at 6.40 a.m. and the exams began at 10.00 a.m. Summer Time. The Intermediate exams began with Greek and Trigonometry. There were three exam centres - two in the Refectory and one in the new library. The glass hall served as a refectory pro tern for the boys, the Prefects taking their meals in the Senior Reading Room. 

Class continued for non-Intermediate students. By June 14th, most of the boys had finished their exams. About twenty boys from the neighbourhood went home. According to the Journal, "in general the papers this year were reasonable. They were set by the Inspectors who understand what a boy may fairly be expected to know." 

On June 16th, most of"the boys left for home. A few remained for Science and Commercial subjects. The Matriculation exams were held from June 19th to 23rd. Three boarders were still left on June 26th. There is a mention of the Peace being signed on June 28th. After that there was the usual summer dispersal of the Community, with the exception of Fathers Muller and Schmidt, who as German nationals, "had to remain, as the wartime restriction of their movements had not been removed."

 

<span class="postTitle">St. Patrick’s Camogie Club Come Together 35 Years Later</span> The Nationalist, The Tipperary Star, October 17, 2002

St. Patrick’s Camogie Club Come Together 35 Years Later

The Nationalist, The Tipperary Star, October 17, 2002

 

St. Patrick's camogie club, from the Littleton-Glengoole-Ballingarry area, came together on Friday. September 27, 2002 at Cloneen Community Hall to catch up on the lost years. Twenty-four mature women, out of twenty-four, collected to recall the days they were girls and achieved glory on the camogie fields of Tipperary and Ireland.

The notion of a get-together started simply enough. Ann Carroll, one of the star forwards in her day, who is now living in Donegal visited Tipperary during the summer. She called on Annie Langton, one of the stalwarts of St. Patrick's and, over a cup of tea the idea of a reunion was born. No time was lost. The girls were tracked down. The date was fixed and everyone turned up.
And, they had an awful lot to remember and celebrate. The club was founded at the end of 1963. Fr. Cross (R.I.P.) was elected president, Alice Graham, chairman, Statia Dunne, vice-chairman, Annie Langton, secretary, and Ann Carroll, treasurer. (There was no such thing as chairperson in those days!) The club recruited experienced players like the four Graham girls from Littleton, Alice, Peggy. Mary and Ann, Joyce Kiely, Statia Dunne, Margaret Gleeson and Ann Carroll. All had played for Cahir during the preceding seasons and the idea of having a local club for the girls was attractive.

Ann Carroll was a kind of child prodigy. Born in London to Bill Carroll from Tipperary and Agnes Kernan from Donegal, the family came to live in Ballingarry in the early sixties. Ann went to Callan Convent to school and excelled at camogie, helping her school to a number of Leinster titles - there were no All-Irelands in these days. In the meantime her father had set up a successful joinery business.

Among the reminiscences in Cloneen the most important one to come across was the role of Bill Carroll in the success of the club. He was a scouter of talent and although the finances were good he made sure there was never a money problem. For instance, Maura Maher from Clonoulty had shown her talent on the Tipperary team. When the Clonoulty camogie club went out of existence in 1963 she was approached by Bill Carroll to play for St. Patrick's. And, the players were treated very well. The girls recalled how buses or cars were sent to collect them in their widely scattered homes for training sessions and matches, and how they were returned there afterwards. Thomas Gleeson, who used to drive the team bus, was present on the night.

One trip that was recalled was one to Belfast in 1966 to play Deirdre in the All-Ireland club final. The team were brought up to Belfast by coach, put up in a hotel on the Malone Road, fed and found for the weekend and brought to the Las Vegas ballroom at Templemore for a dance on the way home.

The achievements of the club over the three years were outstanding. They won county finals in 1964, 1965, 1966, and two All-Ireland club championships - the first two to be played - in 1965 and 1966. Many of them played with distinction for Tipperary before, during and after that period. No club in Tipperary has succeeded in winning a club championship since.

And then, just as quickly as the club came into existence, it disappeared from the firmament. The girls couldn't remember rightly how that happened. A deciding factor was the move of the Carroll family to live in Kilkenny in October 1966. Ann went on to win three All-Ireland club championships with St. Paul's in 1968, 1969 and 1974 bringing her total to five. She also won an All-Ireland championship with Kilkenny in 1974.

There was no sign of St. Patrick's in the affiliations in 1967. Three senior teams affiliated, St. Dominic's (a new Roscrea/Littleton combination), Fethard and Elmville. Every one of the teams included some former St. Patrick's players.

Anyhow, it was a great reunion and the talk was why it hadn't happened earlier. The event was hosted by the Slievenamon camogie club, with Annie Langton's nephew, John, mainly responsible for the organisation. Presentations of engraved crystal were presented to each player by one of the young Slievenamon players. There were a few short speeches and tea and sandwiches for all present.

Meeting after such a long period of absence, chat and reminiscence were the order of the night. Unfortunately this was no longer possible once the band started up, filled the place with amplified sound and blasted conversation out the door.

The members of St. Patrick's who attended were as follows: Alice, Mary, Ann and Peggy Graham, Littleton, Alice and Sally Long, Gortnahoe, Statia Dunne, Glengoole, Annie Langton, Glengoole, Margaret Gleeson, Earlshill, Ann Carroll, Ballintaggert, Lucy and Rita Scott, Ballintaggart, Judy Fitzpatrick, Ballintaggart, Joyce Kiely, Glengoole, Margaret McBride, Ballysloe, Monica and Joan Ryan, Drom-lnch, Maura Maher, Clonoulty, Eileen Cronin, Thurles, May and Catherine Brennan, Ballingarry, Catherine Heaphy, Coolbrook, Mairead Heffernan, Littleton, Chris Burke, Ballintaggart. Margaret Cashin, who was also on the panel, could not be tracked down. She is thought to be in England.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Cashel Cinema Fire</span> The Nationalist 2002

Cashel Cinema Fire

The Nationalist 2002

 

West Cashel cinema burned down on the night of December 29, 1929. The headlines in The Tipperary Star of January 4, 1930 read: CINEMA BURNED OUT Disastrous Fire in Cashel Damage Estimated at £4,000. The cinema, situated in Wesley Square, was completely destroyed by a fire in the early hours of Monday morning. As it was the middle of the night, the building was completely unoccupied at the time.

The Sunday night performance concluded about 10.30 and the operator, Mr. Godfrey, had left about 11 o'clock, after making his usual inspection of the building. On leaving he was satisfied that everything was in order. He took the films out of the projecting box and placed them in the office by the side of the front door, where they were easily removed shortly after the alarm was raised.
It was a coincidence that the picture, Doomsday, was the last to be shown. A few hours later the whole structure was irretrievably doomed to perish in the all-devouring flames.

The building used as the cinema was originally a Wesleyan Chapel. It was erected in 1832 as an inscription, chiselled on a slab overlooking the main entrance, proclaimed. By the side of the cinema was a store, the lower portion of which was utilised for housing the oil engine and electrical generating plant as well as storage batteries. (Cashel had just been switched on the national electrical grid from Ardnacrusha the day before the fire. The switch-on was a cause of great excitement.) A couple of motor cars were also stored with the generating plant and two, the property of Mr. Thomas Hogan, merchant, Main Street and of Mr. Richard Price, U.C., secretary of the local Legion of British Ex-Servicemen, were completely destroyed.

The cinema proper occupied the second storey of the former place of worship. It was extensive with the overhead portions of stables in the yard of Corcoran's Hotel and also the upper storey of the store where the electrical equipment and motor cars were kept. One car owner. Mr. Mark Wynne, proprietor of a well-known theatrical company, which was playing at the Town Hall that night, had his car parked in a shed adjoining the stables and underneath the cinema. The car was dragged to safety just in time for, no sooner was it clear, than part of the burning floor of the cinema crashed into the shed.

By the time the fire was first noticed the building was well ablaze and this fact was going to cause certain questions to be asked at a later U.C. meeting. The owners of the cinema were Mr. M. H. Hannigan and his sister, Miss E. Hannigan, who also had a garage and petrol pumps fronting Main Street. They lived in a private house directly opposite the burned building. They were awakened about three o'clock in the morning by loud knocking. By the time they got to the fire the chances of saving the cinema were remote. The Civic Guards, under Sergeant Hastings, and a good many citizens of the town, responded to the call for help and did all in their power but in vain. By the time the town fire-fighting appliances were requisitioned all hope of saving any portion of the burning mass of buildings was abandoned.

The cause of the fire was never properly established. It was suspected that a lighted cigarette-end may have been the cause. The interior of the building was largely composed of wood and the walls and ceilings were covered with wainscotting and beaver-boarding. The cinema was partly covered by insurance.

The premises were the property of Mr. George Griffin, Friar Street, Cashel, who rented them to Mr. Hannigan. The latter had converted the place into a well-appointed cinema and it was a popular and attractive amusement hall, where first-class pictures were screened.

There was a discussion on the fire at the Urban Council meeting on January 9, 1930. The Town Sergeant, Matthew Kirwin, who was also the fire engine caretaker, stated he received notice of the fire at 4-10 in the morning. He went at once to the Town Hall for the hose, which he found had already been taken to the scene of the fire by David Corcoran. He called up Mr. Connolly, the Town Surveyor, to lock up all the valves to enable a full water pressure on the pipe line between John Street corner and the Fountain. Seeing that all chance of saving the building was out of the question, efforts were directed at saving the adjoining property. He stayed in charge of the hose until 10 am and was assisted at the fire by a number of voluntary workers.

There was a discussion about the state of the hose which, apparently, had two small holes in it. A new hose had been ordered by the Council but there had been a delay in procuring it. Councillor Cahill stated the fire was going a long time before any attempt was made to check it. Councillor English said it looked bad to see civilians and Civic Guards on the scene while the night-watchman, Corcoran, was not there at all. Councillor Davern claimed he had urged the formation of a voluntary fire brigade but his suggestion wasn't acted on. Councillor English added that it was very strange that after a serious fire in the town there was no report from the night watchman. Councillor McCluskey said that the night watchman was supposed to be on duty until three in the morning and the Council was entitled to know where he was on the night of the fire. Councillor English said it was no use discussing the matter until they had a report from the night watchman. He should be required to supply a report about the fire. 'There was such a thing as putting round pegs in square holes and that was done at that Council.'

Subsequently Corcoran was called before the meeting and in reply to the chairman said he did not send in any report of the fire because he thought the Town Sergeant's report was sufficient. The Chairman said: 'We want a separate report from you and we want to know what time you went on the town that night, what time you went home and when you last saw the cinema before the fire.' Councillor Cahill remarked it was a shame to have the water cut off at the time, when the country was flooded and there was so much water in the reservoir. Corcoran replied he was acting under instructions. It was then decided to adjourn the meeting and the discussion on the fire until the report of the night watchman was delivered.

The adjourned meeting produced a lively discussion. Corcoran's report stated that he was on duty all night with the exception of half-an-hour while he was having supper and mentioned several people he was speaking to. He saw the fire about 3.30 am and did all he could to help put it out. As in all matters there was a conflict of evidence. At the previous meeting Councillor John O'Connor had stated he was on the scene of the fire about 2-25 that morning and the roof was already gone in. Councillor Doherty stated that O'Connor's brother, Michael, was there long before him. Councillor English: 'That makes it all the worse for Corcoran. There are a lot of rumours going around. Some say Corcoran was got outside the town that morning.' Councillor C. O' Connor: 'It is to Corcoran's own interest that these people come here and tell us what they know about his movements that morning. We have a member of the Council stating plainly that the fire was raging when he got there.'

At this stage Councillor Cahill intervened: 'If that member was here to-night he might make a different statement.'

Councillor C. O'Connor: 'I don't think Councillor John O'Connor is as big a twister as you. I don't think we should tolerate a big bastard like you ridiculing any member of the Council and insulting him as you did.'

Councillor Cahill: 'I didn't mean to insult or ridicule him. You are like a bull-dog watching every word that comes out of a man's mouth.'

Councillor C. O'Connor: 'I am watching that nothing but the truth will be said about anyone, especially when that person isn't here to defend himself. You big rotten bastard, you are only now what you always were, a twister.'

Councillor English proposed that the Council ask the Local Government Department to hold a sworn inquiry into the whole matter. Councillor Cahill proposed an amendment that the Council deal with the matter by asking the people referred to by Corcoran in his report to verify his statements. On a poll 11 voted for the amendment and 4 for the original proposition. With the passing of the amendment it was agreed to invite the persons named to attend the next meeting of the Council.

The fire was discussed again at a Council meeting on February 4. The people mentioned in the night watchman's report, who had been summoned to the Council meeting to corroborate Corcoran's account of events, did not attend. In the course of the subsequent discussion, Councillor J. O'Connor repeated that he had seen the fire at 2.40 am. Councillor Davern proposed and Councillor Cahill seconded that the Council take no further action in the matter. Councillor English proposed and Councillor C. O'Connor seconded that the Council hold a sworn inquiry. As the amendment received only six votes to the substantive motion's 10, the matter was left to the Council and it appears there was no further investigation into whether night watchman, Corcoran, was doing or not doing his job on the night.