<span class="postTitle">Historic Croke Cup Remembered</span> The Nationalist, May 16th, 2009

Historic Croke Cup Remembered

The Nationalist, May 16th, 2009

 

The members of Cashel C.B.S. team, who won the Croke Cup for the first time in 1959, came together last weekend to celebrate the historic win against Thurles C.B.S. on May 6, 1959.

The Croke Cup competition was the first Tipperary post primary hurling competition for Christian Brothers Schools. It started in 1933 and catered for under-16 players.

The competition was dominated by Thurles C.B.S. and to a lesser extent by Nenagh C.B.S. during the early years. The Abbey School in Tipperary made a breakthrough in 1952 and won it again in 1955 and 1957. Cashel tasted their first success in 1959 and have won it eight times in all.

There have been a few changes in the competition down the years. It catered for players up to sixteen and a half years for a short period of time. In 1980 it was opened up to all post-primary schools in the county and about ten years ago the age qualification was reduced to under-15.


Prestigious Competition

The Croke Cup was the most prestigious schools' hurling competition in the county, after the Harty Cup, until the inauguration of the Fitzgerald Cup in 1971. The winning teams received a very fine trophy, which was a replica of the Ardagh Chalice.

Cashel lost out to Thurles C.B.S. in the 1958 final on a scoreline, 5-5 to 2-6, very similar, only in reverse order, to that when they won in 1959. The defeated side was as follows: Michael Fogarty, Jimmy Hickey. John Joe Moloney, Donal O'Dwyer, John O'Brien, Tommy Kelly, Billy Eakins, Albert McGovern, Jerry Purcell, Philip Maher, Tom Breen, Davy Ryan, Liam Hyland, Jimmy Davin, John Darmody. Before the final the Cashel C.B.S. Flageolet Band rendered the National Anthem and impressed all with their fine playing of Irish airs during the interval.

The report of the 1959 final that appeared in the 'Nationalist' was very brief, and even briefer in the 'Tipperary Star'. Maybe it was because Thurles were beaten!

According to the report Cashel led up to the fortieth minute, when Thurles drew level 'and looked as if they were going to add another trophy to their already imposing list.'


McGovern Outstanding

That was not to be for, at that vital stage, the Cashel boys rallied under their inspiring captain, Albert McGovern, who played a great game from start to finish.

'Picking up neatly within range of the Thurles goal, he judged accurately and sent the ball soaring gracefully over the bar to return the lead to his side.'

This was the turning point of the game. Soon after Albert was again to the fore, finishing off a great movement to the Thurles net. In the closing stages Cashel added two more points for a comprehensive win of 5-3 to 2-4.

The winning panel was as follows: Jimmy O'Sullivan (R.I.P.), Paddy Purtill, Jimmy Hickey, Paddy O'Leary, Philip Maher, Davy Ryan, John McGrath, Liam Hyland (1-0), Michael Fogarty, John Murphy (R.I.P.), Albert McGovern (capt.), 3-2, John Scott (0-1), John Darmody, Michael Purtill (1-0), Brian Sheridan, Tom Breen, Jimmy Wardick, Mickey O'Sullivan, Denis Ryan, Liam Fennell.

For the official photograph of the team, taken on the steps of the entrance to the C.B.S., the team wore the jerseys of the Cashel King Cormac's. Apparently there weren't enough jerseys in the C.B.S. set for the full panel. In the photograph of the seventeen taken the day of the match, the players are wearing the C.B.S. jerseys of green and gold. The trainer was Rev. Brother Boland, who didn't appear in the picture either.

The celebrations on the occasion were of a modest nature, a few bottles of Cidona and some biscuits supplied by team supporters Michael Davitt and John Joe Grogan.

The celebrations last weekend were of a more substantial kind with a dinner in the Cashel Palace Hotel, some stronger refreshments and a photograph on the steps of the old C.B.S., where they all posed proudly fifty years ago.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Kilruane MacDonagh's Championship Sucess 1975</span> County Football Final program, October 25, 2009

Kilruane MacDonagh's Championship Sucess 1975

County Football Final program, October 25, 2009

 

As Kilruane MacDonaghs footballers began their 1975 football campaign few if any players harboured ambitions of ultimate success. The county senior football championship was played on an open draw and twenty teams participated.

The first round pitted Kilruane against southern kingpins Clonmel Commercials in Holycross. Scores were level four times in the first half but a John Quinlan goal gave MacDonaghs a two-point interval lead. Jim O Meara added a second goal in the 41st minute and four minutes later Kilruane moved the ball swiftly the full length of the field where full forward Sean O'Meara raised a third green flag. This crucial score spurred MacDonaghs on to record victory on a 3-7 to 1-9 scoreline, which was an upset for the books to say the least.

Seven times champions Fethard were to provide the opposition in the second round in Thurles. A brace of goals from Jim Williams and Sean O'Meara saw MacDonaghs take a three-point lead into the dressingroom at the break. On the resumption Fethard piled on the pressure but goalkeeper Tony Sheppard made some inspirational saves and Kilruane held out for a two-point win with the score 2-6 to 1-7 in their favour. 

In the quarter final they faced Fr. Sheehys of Clogheen at Holycross. The North team was always in control of this game and ran out comfortable winners on a 1-11 to 0-6 scoreline. 

County Semi-Final

The 1972 champions Kilsheelan-Kilcash blocked MacDonaghs path to the final. This was a tense low-scoring game, played at Cashel on August 10, with Kilruane leading I-4 to 1-2 at half time. Scores were even scarcer on the turnover but as time was running Kilsheelan edged a point ahead. Then Paddy Williams lofted a long range free into the Kilsheelan square where his brother Gilbert flicked the ball to the net. The score stood despite Kilsheelan protestations that it was a square ball. MacDonaghs added an insurance point to book a final spot on 2-5 to 1-5 scoreline. 

Against all the odds Kilruane MacDonaghs had reached the decider. The hurlers were also cutting a path to the final. All training was focused on the hurling but the week of the football final the small ball took a temporary backseat. 1973 champions and football specialists Loughmore Castleiney stood between the team and a fairytale ending. 

The newspaper pundits didn't give Kilruane much chance. One of them screamed: 'Loughmore-Castleiney set for County Football Title'. However, they were also covering their backs and one of them stated that 'the North Tipp side were outsiders in most of their games in the competition and didn't let that trouble them.' Another spoke of Kilruane's 'peak condition' and that they would have an advantage in their 'home ground' of Nenagh.

County Final

Few in the 4,000 attendance in MacDonagh Park, Nenagh ˆ the crowd was swelled by the county senior hurling semi-final between Moneygall and Moycarkey-Borris which preceded it - would have given Kilruane a chance at halftime. They had squandered innumerable opportunities in the first half and trailed by five points at the break with the score 1-7 to 1-2. 

The second half was a different story, however, as McDonaghs shed their inhibitions and thundered into the game. Just two minutes had elapsed when full-forward Sean O'Meara flicked the ball to the net and Kilruane were on their merry way. They had drawn level by the 58th minute and hit the front when Sean O'Meara passed the ball to substitute Noel (Sonny) Killackey who tucked it in the corner for the golden goal. Loughmore laid siege to the Kilruane goal in search of the equailser but had to be content with a point. MacDonaghs were not to be denied and were crowned champions on a scoreline of 3-6 to 1-10. Selectors Paddy Quinlan, Hughie McDonnell and Frank Brady had worked the oracle. 

The winning team was as follows: Tony Sheppard, Donnchadha Minogue, Denis O'Meara (capt.), Brian O'Reilly, John Kelly, Paddy William, Dinny Cahill, Tom Killackey (1-0), Phil Reddan, Seamus Hennessy (0-1), Jim Williams, Jim O'Meara, Gilbert Williams (0-1), Sean O'Meara (1-4), John Quinlan. Sub: Noel Killackey (1-0) for John Quinlan.

Referee: George Ryan (Lattin-Cullen)

It was the first time Kilruane had played in the senior football final and it was the first time in sixty years that a club team from the North division had been victorious.

Munster Club

Kilruane must have exhausted their effort in the county final. They had a bye to the semi-final of the Munster club football championship and played the Cork champions, Nemo Rangers, at Ballinlough on November 1st. The result was a massacre, 7-15 for Nemo and 0-3 for the Tipperary champions.

The North senior football championship was a separate competition to the county championship. Five teams affiliated., Kilruane played Silvermines in the semi-final on February 15, 1976 and were defeated.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Borrisoleigh's Three County Senior Titles in the Eighties</span> County Hurling Final program, October 18, 2009

Borrisoleigh's Three County Senior Titles in the Eighties

County Hurling Final program, October 18, 2009

 

On this day we honour the Borrisoleigh teams who became county senior hurling champions in 1981, 1983 and 1986. The eighties were a great time for the club and when they won the county final in 1981 they were returing to the winners enclosure in senior hurling for the first time in twenty-eight years.

There were seven teams in the North senior hurling championship in 1981 and it was run on a league basis with six games for each team and the top four qualifying for the semi-finals. Borrisoleigh defeated Kilruane-MacDonaghs by 2-12 to 2-7 at Nenagh on August 8, and Roscrea defeated Lorrha by 3-10 to 2-10 at Borrisokane on the day after. In the final at Nenagh on September 27, Borrisoleigh toppled the champions, Roscrea, on a day when the ball was thrown in by the famous Tipperary full-forward, Martin Kennedy. 

Already the quarter-finals had been played at Thurles on August 30. Borrisoleigh defeated West champions, Eire Óg by 2-19 to 1-7, and went on to overcome Moycarkey-Borris by 1-15 to 3-8 in the semi-final at Templemore on October 4. Roscrea came through on the other side of the draw so that the two sides met in the final at Thurles on October 25. Borrisoleigh repeated the North result, on a scoreline of 1-14 to 0-12, to take their first county final since 1953.

The victorious side was: Owen Walsh, Michael Ryan, T. F. Stapleton, Timmy Stapleton (capt.), Timmy Delaney, Gerry Stapleton, Francis Spillane, Timmy Ryan, Pat Ryan, Brendan Kenny, Bobby Ryan, Noel O'Dwyer, Michael Coen, Tommy O'Dwyer, Pat Kavanagh.

Great Euphoria

There was tremendous euphoria in the parish as a result of the victory and one of the biggest ever receptions was afforded to the team on their return to the town. However, the jubilation of the victory came to an abrupt end at Waterford six days later when they were beaten by Mount Sion, 2-12 to 0-12, in the first round of the Munster club championship.

Borrisoleigh appeared to be returning to their old ways in 1982 when they were defeated in the first round of the North championship by Silvermines. However, they returned to the kind of form, that had brought success in 1981, the following year. Seven teams affiliated in the 1983 North championship with the semi-finals played at Nenagh on July 24. Lorrha defeated Kilruane-MacDonaghs by 2-9 to 2-8, and Borrisoleigh defeated Eire Óg by 2-15 to 1-10. In the North final at Nenagh on August 14, Borrisoleigh defeated Lorrha by 1-11 to 2-6.

In the county quarter-final at Holycross on August 28, Borrisoleigh were convincing winners over Eire Óg, Ballingarry on a scoreline of 1-14 to 0-6. Because of the re-development of Semple Stadium, it wasn't possible to play the semi-finals or finals there, and Borrisoleigh were severely tested before defeating Moycarkey-Borris by 1-13 to 1-12 at Cashel on September 25. The final was played at the same venue on October 30. Their opponents were Loughmore-Castleiney and nine members of the respective panels were members of Templemore C.B.S. All-Ireland Colleges champions team in 1978. The former school colleagues were rivals at Cashel and Borrisoleigh triumphed by three points, on a scoreline of 1-14 to 1-11.

The winning side was as follows: Owen Walsh, Mick Ryan, T. F. Stapleton, Timmy Delaney, Richard Stakelum. Gerry Stapleton, Noelie Maher, Timmy Ryan, John McGrath, Philip Kenny, Bobby Ryan, Aidan Ryan, Mick Coen, Timmy Stapleton, Noel O'Dwyer (capt.)*.

*Frank Spillane was team captain but didn't play on the day because of injury. Vice-captain, Noel O'Dwyer, substituted on the field but Frank came in to receive the trophy from county chairman, Mick Frawley, after the game.

Beaten in Replay

The winners were better prepared for the Munster club championship on this occasion. They had a bye in the first round and defeated Patrickswell by 2-6 to 0-11 at Kilmallock in the semi-final. In the final against Midleton at the same venue two weeks later, the Cork champions grabbed a draw with a 65 in the last minute of the game on a scoreline of 1-12 to 3-6. Borrisoleigh lost the replay by 1-14 to 1-11 on December 4, although leading by four points with a number of minutes to go.

Local poet Gerard Ryan celebrated Borrisoleigh's county final victory:

Once more the premier trophy returns to Borris town.

The vanguished have retreated, the victors won renown,

But all combined in sportsmanship a heritage to uphold,

A Gaelic pastime to renew, its pleasures to unfold

On wards, onwards men of Borrisoleigh, to the year of '84

Help restore Tipp to its rightful place, standard-bearers as before.


There was little joy for Borrisoleigh in 1984. Eight teams affiliated in the North senior championship and were divided into two groups with the top two in each qualifying for the semi-finals. Borrisoleigh failed to qualify. Nine teams affiliated in 1985 and were divided into two groups. Borrisoleigh qualified for the semi-final but were badly beaten by Kilruane-MacDonaghs.

Backdoor Entry

Borrisoleigh came back with a bang in 1986. Matters didn't look so good earlier in the year when they were defeated by Kilruane, 1-15 to 0-7, in the semi-final of the North championship, played at Nenagh on July 26. It looked as this was the end of the road for them once again. Kilruane went on to defeat Toomevara in the championship final.

However, Borrisoleigh had been runners-up in the Hogan Cup, which had been given a new status that year of allowing the winners to play the runners-up in the championship for the right to represent the division as the second team in the county championship. As Kilruane were championship and league winners, Borrisoleigh gained the right to play-off with the runners-up in the championship, Toomevara. The game was played at Roscrea on August 24 and resulted in a comprehensive win for Borrisoleigh of 3-19 to 2-9.

Borrisoleigh went on to defeat Carrick Swan by 3-17 to 5-3 in the county quarter-final at Boherlahan on August 31. They beat Holycross-Ballycahill by 3-10 to 1-7 at Templemore on September 14. Their opponents in the final at Semple Stadium on September 28 were Kilruane, who had defeated them twice already and were definite favourites to do so again, On one of the warmest days ever for a county final, the game was gripping all through but Borrisoleigh were the faster, hungrier and more determined team and won by 0-14 to 0-7, a big reverse on the results in the earlier matches, 0-14 to 2-6 in the North league, and 1-15 to 0-7 in the championship. Philip Kenny was the star of the success, scoring six points in all, and many gave great credit to trainer, Paddy Doyle, for Borrisoleigh's improved performances during the year. The mascot of the Borrisoleigh team, a cock, was in attendance, under the charge of Shane Tierney.

The team was: Noel Maher, Francis Spillane, Timmy Stapleton, Mick Ryan (capt.), Richard Stakelum, Gerry Stapleton, Bobby Ryan, Timmy Ryan, Francis Collins, Aidan Ryan, Noel O'Dwyer, Conor Stakelum, Michael Coen, Philip Kenny, John McGrath.

All-Ireland Glory

Borrisoleigh had a bye to the semi-final of the Munster club championship. They played Claughaun at Limerick on November 16 and won by 2-10 to 1-9. Their opponents in the final, played at Limerick on November 30, were Clarecastle. In a very disciplined performance they defeated the Clare champions by 1-13 to 1-9, to take their first Munster club title. The champions continued their good work into the new year with a 3-16 to 3-8 victory over Ballycastle-McQuillans at Thurles on February 8. The final was played at Croke Park on March 17 with Borrisoleigh gaining victory by 2-9 to 0-9 over Rathnure. 

The winning side was as follows: Noel Maher, Francis Spillane, Timmy Stapleton, Mick Ryan (capt.), Richard Stakelum, Gerry Stapleton, Bobby Ryan, Timmy Ryan, Francis Collins, Conor Stakelum, Noel O'Dwyer, John McGrath, Mick Coen, Philip Kenny, Aidan Ryan. Sub: Brian Kenny for Timmy Ryan. The other members of the panel were John Glasheen, Philip Delaney, Pat Ryan, Seamus Devaney, John Joe Maher, John Ryan, Joe Loughnane, Timmy Delaney.

Longest-Serving Member

Noel, or Noelie, Maher, who was a member of the three victorious county teams, is the longest serving senior hurler in the club. He came on the senior panel at the age of seventeen years and finished at forty-two years, a total of twenty-five years, two more than Noel O'Dwyer. During his career he played in goals for six years and outfield for eighteen years until his retirement in 1994.

He captained Borrisoleigh in 1987 when they won the Yoplait All-Ireland Hurling Sevens. Currently he is in his tenth year as secretary of the club.

The Borrioleigh Cock

The cock is synonymous with the Borrisoleigh club and occupies a prominent place on the club crest. There are a number of stories as to its origin. One is that on achieving unity in 1948 the Borris and Ileigh players were so proud that they would strut confidently, regardless of the opposition, on to the playing field like bantam cocks. Others point to a much older origin to the days of the faction fights. In the glory days of the early fifties Paddy D'Arcy of Ileigh used to sell the team colours on match days and he used to have as his 'assistant' the cock, resplendently dressed up in the club colours. With his business for the day complete, Paddy would attend the match parading around the field with the proud and colourful cock by his side.

 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The Influence of the G.A.A. in Irish Society</span> Munster Hurling Final program, Semple Stadium, Thurles, July 12, 2009

The Influence of the G.A.A. in Irish Society

Munster Hurling Final program, Semple Stadium, Thurles, July 12, 2009

 

In a collection of essays published in connection with the 125 anniversary of the foundation of the G.A.A. (The Gaelic Athletic Association 1884-2009 (Dublin, 2009), NUIG Professor Gearóid Ó Tuathaigh, believes that significant progress has been made in recognising the importance of the G.A.A. in Irish society. However, he goes on to state that whereas the issue has been addressed in histories of the association, club histories and other specialist studies of the G.A.A.'s history, the social importance fo the G.A.A. 'remains curiously understated' in general histories of modern Ireland.

Ó Tuathaigh adds: 'This continuing under-valuing of the G.A.A.'s social influence may well be due to a general neglect until recent years in professional historical scholarship of the role of sport in Irish social and cultural history. But it is strange, nevertheless, that a more substantial body of work has not been published on an organisation that stands second only to the Churches, and perhaps the trade unions, as a force in the associational culture of Ireland for a century and a quarter. This may seem a large claim, but it can be supported.'

The G.A.A. has some 2,600 affiliated clubs dispersed across the island of Ireland with a further 242 clubs among the Irish diaspora overseas. Its active adult membership was estimated in 2004 at circa 300,000, with more than twice that number estimated as membership and active supporters combined. It has a larger membership than any other Irish sporting organisation, and its spread of membership across age groups and social classes is broader than any other sporting body. Over 40 per cent of all sports volunteers in Ireland are G.A.A. volunteers, with a relatively high percentage of active women volunteers, not only in the separate organisations concerned with camogie and ladies football, but in the core organisation dealing with male sports. The G.A.A. owns and has developed an impressive network of grounds and club facilities, and its national stadium – Croke Park, rebuilt at a cost of some €260 million between 1992 and 2005 – is among the finest in Europe. Over 60 per cent of the total attendance at sports fixtures in Ireland are accounted for by G.A.A. games.

The main Gaelic games – football and hurling and, increasingly, camogie and ladies football – enjoy extensive media coverage, print and broadcasting, at national and local level. The quality of its leadership and its general level of organisational competance is highly regarded by informed commentators on sports culture internationally. The leading senior players of the main games enjoy high public recognition and, in certain occupation categories with a prominent public relations dimension, enhanced employment and career prospects, while their G.A.A. background, as players or as high-profile officials, regularly serves as a promising launching pad for a career in politics, at local or national level.

Ó Tuathaigh goes on to discuss the question, is the G.A.A. an organisation or a movement?

'In truth, it is both,' he replies. 'It is clearly an organisation – and a highly efficient one – for the running of games, at all levels, combining a cohort of full-time, salaried professional administrators with an army of volunteers, giving their services freely (or with no more than modest expenses) out of commitment to the games and a love of the camaraderie of the social life that involvement in the association brings. But this latter socialising function is also part of what makes the G.A.A. a movement, in the sense that it seeks to embody a cultivate a sense of community loyalty and pride – at parish, county and national level – and deploy that 'community' sentiment in the creation of significant social capital, a network of community facilities and amenities, and a sense of discipline and civic responsibility as something to be valued by players and the wider membership. These virtues are, of course, espoused by most sporting organisations driven by idealistic volunteers; but the identity of the G.A.A.'s network of clubs throughout the island, at parish and local community level, gives it a particularly influential presences in Irish social life.'

Ó Tuathaigh concludes on a very optimistic note: 'In short, at the beginning of the twenty-first century the G.A.A. finds itself more broadly representative of all sections of Irish society and more highly regarded, for its organisational capacity, progressive leadership and dedication to community development, than in any previous era in its history. It has also substantially shed the rhetoric (and rules and regulations) of ethnic exclusivism which critics regularly emphasised in their explanations of their antipathy towards the association or their inability to participate (or to feel at home) in its activities. A more open attitude towards the complexity of cultural traditions and identities in Ireland, and a move towards engaging with versions of a more inclusive civic nationalism (without abandoning its own special commitment to distinctive forms of Irish cultural expression) together with a commitment to contributing to cross-community tolerance, respect and, in time, shared cultural activities, including cross-community participation in Gaelic games, leaves the G.A.A. well-positioned to prosper in the more pluralist Ireland that is emerging. At a time of unprecedented change in virtual every aspect of Irish social and cultural development, no other organisation has been as impressive as the G.A.A. in terms of its capacity to adapt and manage these changes in a manner that strengthens its own influence in Irish society.'

 

<span class="postTitle">Phil Shanahan - Toomevara</span> Munster Hurling Final program, Semple Stadium, Thurles, July 12, 2009

Phil Shanahan - Toomevara

Munster Hurling Final program. Semple Stadium, Thurles, July 12, 2009

 

When one mentions Phil Shanahan one is talking about one of the greatest centrefield players that the county has produced down the years. He was a commanding figure, a real Toomevara Greyhound, who could stay going all day, a man with a tremendous workrate. A powerful man, he could hold his own with the best and he was always in tip-top shape. He played at a time when centrefield play was much more vital in the scheme of hurling things than it is today.

He was centrefield on the three-in-a-row teams of 1949, 1950 and 1951, alongside different partners in each year, Sean Kenny, Seamus Bannon and fellow-Toomevara player, John Hough. He was one of eight players who played in the same position for the three championships.

Born in the parish of Toomevara in January 1928, Phil showed early promise making his debut at senior level with his club in the 1945 championship, while still only seventeen years of age. Toomevara were back in senior ranks for the first time since 1938, when they failed to field a team in the first round of the senior championship. In 1946 Phil won his first divisional medal when they defeated Roscrea in the North final, their first victory since 1931.

He made his county debut with the minors in 1946, losing the All-Ireland to Dublin as the result of a disputed goal. Phil’s first entry into senior ranks was to be selected on the 1948/49 National League team at centrefield and won the first of four league medals, the others coming in 1952, 1953 and 1957. 

It was the start of three glorious years with Tipperary during which Phil played a pivotal role at centrefield, winning three Munster finals and three All-Irelands. Other achievements from this period include an Oireachtas medal in 1949 and successive Monaghan Cup medals between 1949-1953. Thomond Feis medals were won in 1949 and 1951. He was on the successful Ireland teams in the Representative Games series in 1952 and 1953, winning the Sports Star of the Week award in 1952 for his display on Joe Salmon of Galway. Four Railway Cup medals were won in 1950, 1951, 1952 and 1953. He was long puck champion of Ireland in 1951.

Early in 1950 Phil left his father’s farm to work in Johnson Mooney and O’Brien bakery in Dublin and play hurling with the Young Irelands club. He continued playing for Tipperary until 1953, moving to centreforward in the latter year. He played for Dublin in 1954 and 1955, partnering Norman Allen in the former and Con Murphy in the latter year at centrefield. Dublin were beaten by Wexford in the 1954 Leinster final and by Kilkenny in the 1955 Leinster semi-final. 

In 1956 he returned to the county when he started working with Esso. He retired from inter-county hurling after returning from the league trip to the U.S. In 1957. Then began a very fruitful period of his career with Toomevara. He played in seven consecutive North finals from 1957-63, winning four and losing in 1957, 1959 and 1963. He captained the team in 1958. There were three county final appearances, with defeats in 1958 and 1961, and a great victory over Thurles Sarsfields in 1960, a victory that prevented the Thurles club winning six in a row.

Phil eventually retired from club hurling in 1966 after a career of over twenty years. He turned his attention to training and coaching. His training career began with Portlaoise, where he helped the club to five senior football titles between 1966 and 1971. He attained a coaching certificate in hurling in 1977. When he retired from Esso in 1982 he trained and coached Killenaule to win three South Tipperary intermediate championships in hurling, in 1983, 1985 and 1986.

During the past number of years Phil has been awarded a number of sporting honours, which are testament to his standing in the field of sport. He was selected on the North Tipperary Centenary Hurling Team in 2001. Early in 2004 he received the Hall of Fame award in the Roscrea Awards and was elected a member of Cumann na Sean Gael at the end of the same year. In March of this year he was given a Special Recognition Award in the Roscrea Awards for his part in the winning All-Ireland team of 1949.

Phil believes that Tipperary should beat Waterford today. They have a young team that's improving. However, he thinks they need more physical presence in the forward line. In fact he would see this lack of physical presence all over the field as the main failing of the team. He wishes every success to the team. He recognises the range of talents in the Waterford side, especially the danger posed by John Mullane.

 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The First Clare Tipp Match</span> Munster Senior Hurling Semi-Final program, June 21, 2009

The First Clare Tipp Match

Munster Senior Hurling Semi-Final program, June 21, 2009

 

The first time Clare and Tipperary met in an intercounty game was at Nenagh on September 25, 1887. Clare were represented by Smith O'Briens, a team drawn from Garranboy, Killaloe and Bridgetown, and Tipperary by Thurles, who had a few imports from two neighbouring clubs.

Smith O'Briens, who wore green and gold, had beaten Ogonelloe by 0-3 to 0-1 in the county final, which was played in John McDonnell's place in Broadford, a kind of amphitheatre field, which was a famous venue at the time.

The game was played on July 17, 1887 and the captain of the Smith O'Briens was William Gunning of Kilbane. Gunning was, in fact, one of an estimated four Clare men who played on the Limerick Commercials team that won the first football All-Ireland. Incidentally, the captain of the Ogonelloe team was Dominick Stuart, the father of a later President of the G.A.A., Dr. J. J. Stuart. A grandson of Dominick, of the same name, continues to live in the area.

No Munster Championship

There was no Munster championship at the time but an open draw All-Ireland and Smith O'Briens, now representing Clare, were drawn against Wicklow in the first round, which was fixed for Athlone on July 19, only two days after the county final. Wicklow objected to the venue as unreasonable and were prepared 'at any time to meet Clare or any other county on reasonable terms.' The counties, accordingly, didn't meet and Clare advanced to the next round against Tipperary.

Tipperary also got a walkover. Drawn against Dublin in the first round, they were fixed to play at Mountrath on Saturday, July 30. Dublin looked for a postponement on the ground that a number of players were on holidays but the application was refused. Tipperary came up against Clare in the second round at Nenagh on September 25. They were fixed to play at the Markets Field, Limerick on September 4 but Clare wired that they couldn't field a team and the game was re-fixed for three weeks later.

Green Pantaloons

Earlier Thurles had become county champions of Tipperary when they beat North Tipperary by 3 points and 2 forfeit points to nil at Borrisoleigh. Only eight teams had participated in this first county championship, as against twenty-seven in Clare. Thurles had a definite advantage in the final since North Tipperary had to play their semi-final game against Holycross on the same day as the final. No wonder they began to weaken in the second half!

The Tipp-Clare game at Nenagh was played in a large field on Church Road, given for the purpose by local solicitor Mr. A. Nolan. Thurles wore green pantaloons on the occasion and admission was 6d. There isn't much information about the game except that Tipperary won by 1 goal and 8 points to 4 points.

We don't know the names of the Tipperary team other than the fact they they had fourteen players from Thurles, six from Two-Mile-Borris and one from the Ragg.

The Clare team was as follows: Matthew Crowe (capt.), Ned Scanlan (goal), Michael Crowe, Corney Hayes, Tim Crowe, Thomas Hayes, Paddy Smyth, John Hayes, Martin Crowe, Paddy Vaughan, James Nihill, Little Mike Ryan, Michael Pee-OL Ryan, Paddy O'Brien, Martin Dwyer, Michael Dwyer, Paddy Scanlan, James McKeogh, Michael McKeogh, Jack Molloy, William Scanlan, Jack Sheehy, Edmond Scanlan.

 

<span class="postTitle">Waving the Tipp Flag 60 Years Ago</span> Munster Senior Hurling Championship Program, Cork v Tipperary, at Semple Stadium, May 31, 2009

Waving the Tipp Flag 60 Years Ago

Munster Senior Hurling Championship Program, Cork v Tipperary, at Semple Stadium, May 31, 2009

 

Memories play as important a part in the lives of players and supporters as the immediate impact of games and one memory that is as fresh and vital as the day itself in the mind of Austin Crowe, the well-known proprietor of Dundrum House Hotel, is May 29 sixty years ago, when Cork and Tipperary drew in the first round of the 1949 Munster senior hurling championship.

Austin was a young sixteen year old, going on seventeen, in the Agricultural College, run by the Salesians at Pallaskenry, Co. Limerick.

He has fond memories of the year spent there, remembering it as a place where gaelic games were strongly promoted and where the boys were extremely well looked after by the religious order founded by St. John Bosco.

Hurling and football provided the boys with relief from class and study. In fact the Fathers gave the boys plenty of free time to listen to matches broadcast on Radio Eireann by Micheal O Hehir or to attend the games themselves. On these occasions the boys gave vent to their county loyalties


Tipp v Cork

One such game was the first round of the Munster championship between Cork and Tipperary in May 1949. As the game approached the rivalry and excitement between the supporters on both sides got keener. Unfortunately for Austin there were only fifteen Tipperary boys in the college as against about forty from Cork The rivalry found particular expression during practice sessions in the hurling field.

Austin's greatest support, verbally and physically, came from his best friend, Sean O'Brien, who hailed from Grawn, Toomevara. Neither he nor Sean were big men physically and had to take a lot of stick. Another supporter was Jim Lanigan, son of the famous Dick of Bloody Sunday fame, from Grangemockler.

One of the finest supporters of the games in the college was an Antrim man, Fr. Campbell, who tried to steer an impartial path between the Cork and Tipp rivalries coming up to the game. He must have concluded that support had skewed too far in favour of Cork.

On the morning of the match the boys had their usual two-hour study between breakfast and lunch and Austin was sitting in his desk dreaming of the match when next there was a peremptory call from Fr. Campbell, who was supervising.

'Mr. Crowe: Up to the desk!'

He answered the command and was ordered outside the door. Not knowing what he had done he slumped outside like the poor scholar.

Soon Fr. Campbell joined him. 

'You're going to get some doing today,' he said, 'the Cork boys are very well prepared. They have an effigy of Ring and all kinds of rattles and banners.'

'What can I do?' asked the bewildered Austin.

'Up to my room,' replied the priest.

Arriving in the room Fr. Campbell handed him two large curtains, one blue and the other yellow. 

'Here's a needle and thread, Stitch them together,' he said.

Austin set about the task and stitched them into the semblance of a flag. When Fr. Campbell returned he had a sweeping brush with him, from which he took the handle. They tacked the flag to it and rolled it up, leaving it behind the door.

After study the Cork boys started parading round the quadrangle. Austin had drafted in Sean O'Brien and told him of his 'secret weapon' and they bided their time.

The buses came in and as they did Austin and Sean collected the flag and unfurled it. They marched up the quad behind the flag and the other Tipp fellows fell in behind them. Some of the neutrals joined in also, particularly the Kerry fellows.


A Colour Party

They got on the bus and as it moved off they put the flag out the window and it created a great splash of colour along the side of the vehicle. They had another secret weapon, the college bell, which Sean had taken with him.

They arrived at their parking area in Limerick on the Docks and all alighted. They fell into two lines and marched side by side out to the Gaelic Grounds. As they crossed Sarsfields Bridge they made a very colourful sight, one group following the effigy of Ring and the second the large flag of Tipperary. The addition of the college bell gave the latter the edge in the noise stakes..

Austin remembers the excitement still, the beautiful day, the arrival at the pitch. Tipp's victory in the minor game, his pride in the senior team, particularly the four West men, Tony Brennan, Paddy Furlong, Willie Carroll and Jim Devitt. Even though the game ended in a draw he believed that Tipp shaded it on the day because of the victory of the minors.

And, of course, they did win the replay, which set up one of the glorious periods in Tipp's hurling history!

 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Johnny Murphy (Cashel and New York)</span> Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, September, 2009

Johnny Murphy (Cashel and New York)

Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, September, 2009

 

Johnny Murphy has spent most of his life in New York but his love of Cashel and his continued interest in his family and friends there remains undimmed. He is a regular visitor to the town coming to his former home in Moore Lane in the shadow of the famous Rock two or three times a year.

Before his family moved to Moore Lane, they lived at 11 Cathal Brugha Street, where Johnny, the oldest of a family of six, three boys and three girls, was born to Michael Murphy and Elizabeth O'Brien on April 20, 1936. In fact, on the night that he was born his grandfather, O'Brien, was being waked in his home on the boreen under the Rock.

Johnny went to the National School on the Green, where his teachers were Frank Egan and Mr. O'Sullivan. The school went to third class and when he was finished there he moved down to the CBS on the Golden Road where Brothers Ryan, Ford and Nolan, 'a tough man', were in control. The latter was in charge of the hurling team and the game was promoted with missionary zeal in the school. Some years later, in 1963 in fact, Johnny recognised his hurling debt to the Brothers by presenting the Murphy Cup, a Challenge Cup for the Cashel King Cormac's juvenile league competition, to Brother Noonan.

First Job

Johnny spent one year in the secondary school before leaving in 1951 and going to work in Arthur Wards at the Back of the Pipes, where his uncle, Paddy O'Brien had a job. Wards was a drapery shop but also carried on a pawn business and issued fishing and gun licences. His hours were 9.30 am to 7 pm, with a half-day on Wednesdays and a longer day on Saturdays, when the shop stayed open until 11 pm!. His starting pay was 2/6, (approximately 16c) and he stayed until 1958, when he was taking home 5/- a week (32c)!

Of his early hurling career, Johnny has this to say: 'I started my hurling career with Cashel CBS at twelve years and won Rice Cup medals in 1948 and 1949. I played minor and senior hurling with Cashel King Cormacs in 1951. We trained a lot in these days and money was scarce. At least three times a week we were in the field training. There were no dressingrooms. We togged out by the ditch, rain or shine, or in the car that brought us to the game.'

Johnny soon came to the notice of the county selectors and was selected on the county minor team in 1952. They beat Waterford in the first round. The selectors weren't happy with the team and held a trial at Thurles the following Sunday. Johnny takes up the story: 'Cashel played Solohead at Tipperary Town earlier that day and beat them in overtime. Michael Davern and I were on the team and rushed back to Cashel to catch the South car going to Thurles. We missed it and Jim Devitt drove us over. We togged out came on the field and were put marking one another. We walked off in protest and were both dropped from the panel. Tipperary went on to win the All-Ireland with Tony Wall as captain.'

Still angry at the way he was treated Johnny failed to go for a trial in 1953, even though he was notified. When the team was picked he was selected at centre-forward. They beat Waterford, Cork, Limerick, Antrim and Dublin to win the All-Ireland. The team was a star-studded one with Ray Reidy, Liam Devaney, Billy Quinn, Liam Connolly and Sean McLoughlin included. He was on the team again in 1954 when they were beaten by Dublin in the All-Ireland. Jimmy Doyle was on goals, Ray Reidy was still there as was Liam Connolly, and the team included Mick Burns of Nenagh and Tommy Gouldsboro, who were to make their names at senior level later.

County Championship

There was some consolation for Johnny in the same year when Cashel won the 1953 county junior championship, in a replay against Gortnahoe at Thurles on October 3, 1954. Johnny was wing-forward and he and Michael Gayson were the stars of a strong Cashel attack, which ran up a spate of scores in the second-half, when Gortnahoe could manage only a point. Johnny takes up the story: 'It was the first county championship win for Cashel. What a thrill! My uncle, Paddy O'Brien in goal, may father, full-back, Dickie Ivers, Dinny Hickey and Billy Hickey and I, three nephews and a father-in-law ˆ it was a family affair. I believe we were the first father and son in Ireland to have won a championship together.'

Johnny progressed to senior ranks in the county. 'I played some National Hurling League games with Tipperary in 1956 and 1957. In 1958 I was picked for the championship and played right-half forward against Limerick at Cork. With ten minutes to go I was replaced by Liam Devaney and later dropped from the panel. Tipperary went on to win the All-Ireland, beating Galway in the final. Tony Wall was captain, as he had been on the minors in 1952. I lost another All-Ireland medal. I guess I was from the wrong division in the county.'

While still in Cashel he used to play senior football with Rockwell Rovers, together with John Knightly, as there was no senior team in the King Cormacs. He was on the New Inn team beaten by Galtee Rovers, 0-2 to 0-1, in the 1954 West final.

Faughs

In that year he went to Dublin to play with Faughs, enticed to the club by Tommy Moore, their famous chairman for forty years, who had a pub in Cathedral Street, now the Goalpost, which was the club's headquarters. He played in the semi-final replay against Young Irelands and scored 1-3 in their victory. However, defeat was their lot in the final, played at Croke Park on May 23, when they were well-beaten, 4-11 to 0-8, by New Ireland, who raced away in the last quarter. The Irish Independent reporter calculated that fifteen hurleys were broken during the course of a hard-hitting game.

Johnny got a job at McBirney's on the Quays, after failing to get into Clery's, and continued working in the drapery trade. His new job was much better paid than at Wards. He got a weekly wage of £10 and, when commission for sales was added, it went up to £15 or £16 per week.

This was very good money at the time and Johnny threw it all up when he decided to emigrate to New York a year later.

New York

In May 1959 Johnny, who declared for Dublin that year and was on the panel, met Paddy Fleming, who was home from New York, and he told him that they were looking for a few players and would be be interested. Johnny was and soon after met the famous Mike Flannery at the Gresham Hotel in Dublin. Flannery made the arrangements, which included having an x-ray taken that one was free from TB, and Johnny headed for New York.

He flew from Rineanna with KLM. Eight carloads of family and friends travelled from Cashel to the airport to see him off. There weren't many going to the U.S. at the time and he recalls that the cars were like a funeral procession. The flight stopped at Gandar for refuelling and Flannery, his sponsor, was to hand to greet him on landing in New York. He was taken to the apartment of Oliver Spillane from Thurles, who lived in the Bronx and he stayed there for some time.

He landed on Sunday, June 28, too late to play in a match in which he was scheduled to make his debut, got his Social Security number the following day and started working in a warehouse on Tuesday. He stayed at that job until 1966, changed to bartending for sixteen years, did deliveries to building sites for a number of years before taking up his present position as a concierge/doorman in the famous San Remo Co-Operative apartment block on 74th and Central Park in 1988.

He played with the Tipperary Hurling Club from 1959-77, winning New York championships in 1962, 1974 and 1976. He started playing football with the Cork team and, when they disbanded, he played with Kilkenny and won a New York championship with them in 1961.

National League

It was obvious that a player of his ability would be picked on the New York team and he played with them from 1959-69. Being a member of the team involved a number of trips to Ireland to play in the National League final. Their best result came in 1963, when they drew with Waterford at Croke Park on a day that the referee added on about seven minutes, during which Waterford got the equaliser. New York lost the replay at Kilkenny the following Sunday. Johnny played against Tipperary at New York in 1964 and lost by only four points, an indication of the strength of their squad at the time. In 1965 the aggregate score for the two games between the sides in New York was 6-19 to 5-20, only a two point difference. In 1966 New York did badly against Kilkenny at Croke Park but in 1968 they were beaten by a point by Tipperary in the first leg at New York, but lost the aggregate by 6-27 to 4-22.

Johnny recalls playing on Jimmy Doyle in the two-leg 1964 National League final. He scored two points. Later they played on each other in an exhibition game at Chicago and Doyle got 1-2. 'Not bad,' Johnny adds: three hours of hurling on Jimmy Doyle and conceding only 1-4.'

Probably the highlight of Johnny's playing career with New York was a trip to Australia and New Zealand in 1968. They played four games in hurling and football in Auckland and Sydney and won all four.

Johnny comments: 'With hurling, I have met so many friends. The G.A.A. brought a lot of people together down through the years. I retrired in 1977 but I am still active in the Tipperary Hurling Club. I was their President in 1962 and I became the Tipperary N. & B. Association President in 2006-2007. I was President of the Crown City Golf Club for seventeen years ˆ I took up the game in the early seventies ˆ and at the present time I am in my second term as financial secretary of the Tipperary N. & B. Association of New York.'

In 1962 Johnny married Eileen Forde of Kinvara and the couple have two sons, Denis and Stephen, and six grandchildren. Johnny appears to have passed on the G.A.A. tradition to his offspring. Denis made a good fist of Gaelic football and came to Ireland twice with the New York minor football team, as captain on the second occasion.

Of course Johnny has never forgotten his roots and still gets the greatest enjoyment attending G.A.A. matches. He is always home for the All-Ireland hurling final and uses the occasion to keep in touch with Tipperary hurling as well as with any new talent showing itself in Cashel. Every visit is a kind of re-union as he likes to meet players old and new at sporting events. His memory stretches back a long way and he can vividly recall incidences and events from his playing days that have long faded from most memories.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Jackie Corcoran</span> Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, August 2009

Jackie Corcoran

Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, August 2009

 

Jackie Corcoran was a member of the Cashel King Cormac's team that won the West senior hurling final in 1948. They beat Eire Óg and Golden-Kilfeacle in the earlier rounds and came up against Kickhams in the final at Golden on September 5. Kickhams got off to a flying start and netted two goals. They were ahead by four points at half-time and looked good, but Cashel fought back to win by 3-6 to 3-4. It was the greater fitness and stamina of the King Cormacs, coupled with their greater speed that weighed the scales in their favour.

It's not the West final that stands out strongest in Jackie's memories of that year but rather the loss to Lorrha in the county semi-final played at Thurles two weeks later. Cashel seemed to be coasting to victory into the second half when they were caught by a Lorrha rally that yielded two goals and a point within a three-minute period. They lost by the minimum of margins on a 2-4 to 2-3 scoreline 'on a day that anything that might go wrong did go wrong'. Jackie played full-back in the game, as he had done during the championship, and was grievously disappointed with the result.

Corcoran's Hotel

Jackie Corcoran was born on February 15, 1923, the middle of three siblings. Maureen, who married O'Driscoll, was older and Anne, who became the wife of John Osborne, was younger. His father, Sylvie, and mother Kitty, ran Corcoran's Hotel, where Morrissey's Super Valu is today and the hotel had been in the family for generations. It was an important commercial hotel with nine bedrooms and did a busy trade with travellers on the road between Cork and Dublin. It had a large yard at the back which had eight stables, an indication of its significance in an earlier age. Jackie's father was good friends with Michael Ryan Wall and Mikey Ryan, who ran the licensed premises, Mikey's, on the other side of Main Street. He was partial to a drink and died in 1932 when Jackie was only nine years old. His mother died on January 25, 1988.

Jackie went to the national school on the Green, where John F. Rodgers, Frank Egan, Davy Dee and Mr. O'Sullivan were teachers. Afterwards he went to secondary school in the Christian Brothers School, then located on the Dublin Road. He hadn't much interest in school, mitched as often as he could and took no examinations. At some stage his mother decided something had to be done and sent him to St. Kieran's in Kilkenny, where he spent an hour!

According to Jackie he had no desire to be there and no sooner had his mother left than he 'escaped' from the school. He found a bus heading for Urlingford, hid under the seat, and got a connection to Cashel. He was home in Cashel almost as soon as his mother!

Hurling

There appears to have been little in the way of organised games at the time, either in the town or the school. According to Jackie the only boys at secondary school who played hurling were country fellows from Clonoulty and such places. Jackie didn't play but must have been pucking around because we read that he played minor with the Cashel team that won the divisional title in 1940. He must have impressed because he was picked on the county team the same year at right corner-back. The team were beaten by Cork in the first round at Thurles on a day that Jackie marked Sean Condon, who later had an impressive record with his native county, captaining the senior team in 1944 to the famous four-in-a-row. For some reason Jackie wasn't on the team the following year, in spite of being young enough.

At this stage of his life Jackie was helping around the hotel. His mother employed a girl, who worked in the bar but Mrs Coccoran ran the rest of the place and did the cooking as well. Usually Monday night was a busy one with commercial travellers on the first stage of their journey from Cork.

When he was seventeen or eighteen Jackie bought his first horse for £7 at Thurles. His grandfather used to have horses. The horse was called Idle Hour and its colours were white with lemon band and a brown cap. He won two races at Limerick Junction, ridden by Paddy Breen from the town and Johnny Rafferty from Tipperary. In all it ran four races but then got leg trouble and had to be put down. Later he had two more horses but they were no good.

Abbey Rangers

Jackie was one of the founder members of the Abbey Rangers in 1941, the club that was formed by dissatisfied memmbers of the Cashel King Cormacs, who disagreed with the way the club was run and the teams picked. Jackie joined the new club because there were a lot of cousins involved, the Coady's, the Morrisseys and the O'Neills. It might be added that many of the players who joined were technically illegal, as they were in the parish of Boherlahan.

At any rate they had their first outing in the West junior hurling championship against Clonoulty on April 6, 1941. The players had a photograph taken on the occasion and Jackie can be seen in the back row. He was cornerback and captain and, having beaten Clonoulty, they created headlines when they overcame Solohead in the semi-final before going down to Donaskeigh in the final. Jackie stayed with the Abbey Rangers until the end of 1944, when he transferred back to Cashel. In doing so he missed out on Abbey Rangers only success, in the number 1 junior hurling championship of 1945, when they defeated Glengar in the final. 

However, he won higher honours by declaring for Cashel when he was picked at right cornerback on the team that won the West senior hurling championship the same year. Having beaten Clonoulty-Rossmore and Donaskeigh in the earlier rounds, Cashel met Eire Óg in the final, which was played at Cashel on October 7. The lateness of the game was due to a dispute about the venue. Originally fixed for Dundrum, Cashel objected because the field was situated too close to the parish of Eire Óg. After numerous discussions the sides agreed to toss for venue and Cashel won. The King Cormac's proved themselves the superior outfit, with great performances from Michael Burke, Jim and Pat Devitt, who captained the team. They led by 4-5 to 1-3 at the interval and were in front by 4-5 to 1-3 at the final whistle. Cashel were beaten 5-7 to 3-3 by Roscrea in the county semi-final two weeks later when Roscrea's control of centrefield proved decisive.

There wasn't to be any further success until 1948. In 1946 Cashel defeated Golden-Kilfeacle in the first round, and this game saw Jackie in a new position, full-forward, but they were beaten by Kickhams in the semi-final. They also lost to Kickhams in the semi-final in 1947, before going on to win the 1948 final. Jackie continued to play for a few years after the 1948 final but without success.

Greyhounds

At some stage Jackie changed from training horses to training greyhounds. One of his first and most successful was Miss Mushwash, who won a couple of races at Thurles and was eventaully killed by another dog on the track.

He trained for others as well and one of the most famous was Lafonda, which he trained for Matt Slator of Clonmel. It won a trial stake in Ballyraggett.

The dogs became an important part of his life. He went to the track four nights a week and he became a very fit man from walking them.
Jackie eventually gave up the dogs and retired. Coccoran's Hotel was sold soon after the death of Mrs. Corcoran and purchased by Garvey's Supervalu for the supermarket that stands there today. The building was demolished in July 1989 on a beautiful sunny day and spectators remember the cloud of dust that rose into the blue sky during the demolition. Garvey's opened their supermarket the following November.

Jackie, who continued to reside in the hotel until it was sold moved into a flat on the Green, where he remained until he took up residence in Acorn Lodge Nursing home at Ballysheehan in 2003. The move gave him a new lease of life.

 

<span class="postTitle">The Reformation at Birr</span> Given as a talk to Cashel Historical Society in the 1980s and revised in 2009

The Reformation at Birr

Given as a talk to Cashel Historical Society in the 1980s and revised in 2009

 

The so-called 'Reformation' at Birr refers to the consequences of a dispute between Catholic clergy at Birr, Co. Offaly during the second quarter of the nineteenth century. The main characters in the dispute were two cousin priests, Frs. Michael and William Crotty, on the one side and Very Rev. Patrick Kennedy, P.P. and the church committee on the other.

In order to understand the dispute it is important to sketch in the historical background. The events commenced during the depression that followed the end of the Napoleonic Wars. The Catholic Church had just emerged from the period of the Penal Laws and was going through a phase of reconstruction. It was badly in need of reorganisation. Episcopal control of priests and people had suffered greatly during the Penal Laws and it was to take a long time to reassert.

As well as the need for reform in the relationship between bishop and priest, there was also a need for reform in the lives of the clergy. There were many charges against the clergy. They were sensual, arrogant or churlish, fond of the pleasures of the palate, preferred the company of the wealthy and influential people and were too fond of money.

It was the latter failing in their clergy that the people were least willing to forgive. Avarice and greed for money was most resented. Poets and people were quick to seize on the paradox of a clergy, whose business it was to denounce the vanity of earthly wealth but who sometimes appeared to be unduly concerned with pecuniary matters. There were two areas of financial support for the clergy, the payment of the priests and religious and the building of churches. The payment of the clergy was by the voluntary system and this created friction when priests approached the collection in a commercial spirit. There was a big church building program going on during this period and this created an additional financial burden on an impoverished people who, up until 1838, had to pay tithes to the Established Church as well.

When it is realised that at least a quarter of the population in pre-Famine Ireland were subsistence farmers, who did not use money, the grievances of many at the financial demands of the clergy can be well understood. Parish Priests were estimated to earn £150 per annum in 1825. Curates were badly paid. They got board and lodging, a horse and a cash allowance from their P.P.


Appointed To Birr

In April 1821 Rev. Michael Crotty was transferred to Birr as junior curate after a short stay at Toomevara. His stay there from August 1820 hadn't been a happy one. He had a personality clash with the P.P., Rev. John Meagher, who had been ordained at Maynooth in 1817, and he later wrote this about his experience: 'In Toomevara I felt degraded by having to associate with the popish incumbent of the parish, a creature of the Maynooth School, who had just talent enough to say Mass, collect money, and generally mimic the peculiarities of his diocesan.'

Michael Crotty, the son of farmer, James Crotty, and Catherine Drew, was born in O'Briensbridge, Co. Clare in 1795. His uncle was Rev. Michael Crotty, P.P., Castleconnell, and another uncle, Patrick Crotty, was married to Sarah Vaughan, a sister of Rev. Daniel Vaughan, P.P., Scariff, afterwards P.P. of Killaloe, and later bishop of the diocese. They had a son, William, who also became a priest and was later closely involved in the reformation at Birr.

Michael Crotty entered Maynooth College in April 1814 and matriculated in the class of Logic for the diocese of Killaloe. He was expelled from the college in 1817 because of a libellous article on Maynooth 'as a hotbed of sedition' published in the public press. One of the arguments made by Crotty in his book Narrative of the Reformation at Birr, published in London in 1847, was that the students were disloyal. According to the book forty students fought against the King's army in the rebellion of 1798. This may have been the charge against the College in the above mentioned, libellous article. The expulsion coloured his opinion of Maynooth and of the priests who were ordained there.

Returning home Michael Crotty took sides when Bishop O'Shaughnessy of Killaloe charged Fr. Corbett, P.P., Kilrush for having carnal relations with his housekeeper, who happened to be the bishop's niece-in-law . The trial was held in Castleconnell Church and Corbett was found guilty. The case divided the clergy and the people. On the one side were the bishop, Crotty and his uncle the P.P. of Castleconnell while the leading cleric on the other side was Very Rev. Patrick McMahon, P.P., Quin, who made a speech in which he promised that all who supported Corbett would be rewarded, and that Michael Crotty would never be ordained.. He was as good as his word. When he became co-adjutor bishop in 1819, Fr. Corbett became P.P. of Kilrush.


Ordained in Paris

However, he was unable to prevent Michael Crotty getting ordained. Bishop O'Shaughnessy repaid the assistance of young Michael Crotty by recommending him to St. Sulpice in Paris for the Diocese of Killaloe. He did this despite warnings from the Maynooth authorities of the unsuitability of Crotty for ordination because of his rash and disputative nature. Michael Crotty was ordained at St. Sulpice in June 1820 and appointed to Toomevara in August, where he remained until sent to Birr the following April.

Fr. Michael Crotty's appointment as second curate to Birr was because of the poor health of Fr. Philip Meagher, P.P., who had been ordained in 1790 with the future Bishop Patrick McMahon, mentioned above. Fr. Meagher lived in Connacht Street and his curates, Frs. Curtain and Crotty, in Main Street.

The old chapel in Birr was a wretchedly poor building and, as far back as 1808, a committee had been formed to collect funds for a larger and more suitable replacement. The foundation stone of the new chapel was laid by Lord Oxmanstown, son and heir of the Earl of Rosse, on August 1, 1817. He had provided a site and £100 towards the project. A Chapel Committee with Fr. Peter Curtain as chairman held weekly collections to help meet the building costs. Progress was slow and the building work continued at a snail's pace. Delays were caused by alterations to the plans.

Following Crotty's arrival at Birr he soon found fault with the committee and roundly and publicly accused them because of 'their riotous and drunken assemblies' and the 'abandoned profligacy of their morals.' Somewhat of a loner he was further isolated from his fellow-clergy by his stand on the Catholic rent, which was collected by the clergy in support of Daniel O'Connell's campaign. In this he had sided with his uncle and namesake, the Parish Priest of Castleconnell, who refused to collect it. He soon gained support from a section of the people. He had already made an impression on them by his attention to the wants of the poor, by his efforts for the suppression of immorality and by his zeal against Protestantism.


State of Birr

Birr was a garrison town which catered for many religious groups among its population of about five and a half thousand. The main churches were Catholic and Church of Ireland but there were also three independent chapels, two Wesleyan chapels and a Quaker Meeting House.

In 1825 Fr. Francis Kennedy, P.P., Shinrone died. Pending the appointment of Fr. Nicholas Hourigan as Parish Priest, Crotty was sent to Shinrone to take charge of the parish, probably in the hope that matters might calm down in Birr in his absence. Here he changed his attitude to the Catholic rent became 'an agitating and political priest' and collected the rent.

In his zeal he assaulted a company-keeping pair on July 14, 1825. The man was a Protestant, named Kennedy, and he prosecuted Crotty for assault. The trial came on but the jury disagreed and Crotty was bound over to meet the charge under a new jury at the next Quarter Sessions. Having come to the belief in the interval that the prosecution was dropped, he failed to appear at the next Sessions and was consequently fined the sum of £20. 

In the meantime Crotty returned to Birr after his temporary sojourn at Shinrone and at mass on his first Sunday back demounced Mr. Cruise, who had presided at his trial, as 'the intransigent organ of an Orange Bench.' (Incidentally, Cruise was a Catholic.) Shortly afterwards Bishop O'Shaughnessy decided that Crotty should return to Toomevara. He never forgave the bishop for this especially as Fr. Thomas Blake, who was ordained in 1825, was appointed to the 'lucrative living' in Birr. As well Blake's father was a member of the Chapel Committee at Birr. Crotty brooded on his disappointment 'in the wretched and paltry village of Toomevara' and soon applied to Bishop O'Shaughnessy for a transfer. Early in 1826 he was sent as curate to Killaloe.

Soon after arriving in Killaloe, as he hadn't paid the court fine of £20, he was arrested, brought to Birr and had to give bail, himself £50 and two sureties of £20, to stand trial at the April Quarter Sessions 1826 for the original charge of assault. He was sentenced to two weeks in jail but, after he requested that the sentence be changed to a fine, he was fined £10, which was duly paid by his friends. On the Sunday following his trial Crotty denounced the magistrates and the two Catholic members of the jury, one of whom was Fr. Blake's father and returned to Killaloe.


Investigation of Accounts

Crotty's persistent attacks on the Chapel Committee had begun to take effect and on April 17, 1826 a public meeting was held with Thomas Lalor Cooke, a Protestant solicitor, in the chair. Resolutions were passed demanding an enquiry and the election of a new committee. The accounts were handed over to two laymen, John Cassin and John Smyth, for examination. They reported back that the books had not been kept 'in a regular, explicit and correct manner.' However, they couldn't discover any appearance of fraud.

Bishop O'Shaughnessy send his co-adjutor, Dr. McMahon, to Birr to examine the finances of the committee with Dr. Ambrose` O'Connor, P.P., Nenagh. They examined the books and found that 'No charge of peculiarities or fraud of any description' could be found. 

This was not the kind of result the people expected. They had expected that the old committee would be found guilty of fraud. The practice had been that tollgates were erected near the chapel and each Sunday collectors refused to allow 'any person to pass who did not pay one halfpenny at least.' When these tollgates were thrown into the river, they symbolised the end of the old regime.

During his investigations Bishop McMahon was insulted by the anti-committee faction, who shouted: 'We want Mr. Crotty.' Lord Rosse in his account of the events, described matters as follows: 'Thus was their Bishop, who had always before been received with the greatest reverence, that the people fell on their knees to him when he appeared, now met with murmurs, without even a hat taken off to him; and at last hooted and opposed with clamour when he was addressing them in their place of worship. It is this very extraordinary irreverence towards their priests and Bishop, like nothing that has ever occurred except in revolutionary France, in the days of her greatest wickedness, that has induced me to write the account of these proceedings.'

The bishop had been given plenary powers to deal with the Birr situation and he laid the parish under interdict. The parish priest, Fr. Meagher, was relieved of his duties at an annual pension of £130 per year. The bishop appointed Fr. Kennedy, P.P., Lorrha as administrator of Birr. He was given authority by Bishop MacMahon to remove the interdict, which he did in August.

On the first Sunday after his arrival, Fr. Kennedy, who was of a confrontational nature, told the people he would personally supervise the completion of the church. Lalor Cooke then drew up two resolutions 1) that any money collected be placed in the hands of a treasurer acceptable to the people and that the parish priest draw on him for any money required and 2) that each Sunday's collection, plus the treasurer's statement, be read from the pulpit. Fr. Kennedy would not agree with these constraints.

The legality of Fr. Kennedy's appointment was hotly contested by the Crottyites. The anti-committee faction sent another long remonstrance to Bishop O'Shaughnessy in mid-May. On May 17, 1826 Bishop McMahon wrote Fr. Kennedy that, if he so wished, he could have Fr. Tynan as curate in place of Fr. Blake, whom the Crottyites detested and that, if he deemed it prudent, he could remove the ban on the Crottyites. Fr. Kennedy took over the parish finances and retained Fr. Blake.

Crotty's popularity did not wain. Some of the parishioners wrote inviting him to come to Birr and make a collection for the £20 fine, which was still unpaid. Crotty requested permission of Bishop O'Shaughnessy. It was granted but later withdrawn on the objection of Fr. Kennedy.


Crotty Defiant

Crotty returned to Birr in defiance of Fr. Kennedy. When he arrived in the town he was greeted by the Chapel Band playing See the Conquering Hero Comes. On the morning of June 29, 1826 he was handed an order from Bishop O'Shaughnessy by the parish priest at Lalor Cooke's house commanding him 'under pain of suspension ipso facto not to put a foot inside the Roman Catholic Chapel of Birr.'

Crotty ignored the order, went to 12.00 o'clock Mass, where there was uproar and Fr. Kennedy was forced to abandon Mass. Crotty took over and announced a collection for the following Sunday, which realised £40. 

(If one compares this with the normal Sunday collection of £6, or £1 for the Church Fund, one gets some indication of Crotty's popularity. The figure is still more impressive when it is realised that his support is supposed to have come from the poorer section of the people.)

Meanwhile Fr. Kennedy retreated to 'the Shambles', the public abbatoir, and said Mass for several weeks for the Chapel Committee. 

That night Crotty wrote to Bishop O'Shaughnesssy vindicating his position. He reminded the bishop of his support during the Corbett affair, complained about being removed from the curacy of Birr and referred to Fr. Kennedy as 'that little ingenious gentleman who had taken a most decided part against the vast majority of the parishioners with a corrupt and profligate faction, and inflamed the public discontent by indulging in abuse from the altar instead of preaching Christ and him crucified.'

Fr. Kennedy asked lord Rosse about the legal position and was informed that an action could be brought under the 31st Act, George III for disturbance of public worship. He then reported the matter to Bishop O'Shaughnessy. The latter replied on July 2nd saying that Crotty was what the Maynooth superiors represented 'a fool and a madman.' He appointed Fr. Kennedy as Vicar General and authorised him to use canonical sanctions against Crotty.

On July 21, 1826 Bishop O'Shaughnessy deprived Crotty of his priestly faculties. Crotty ignored the decision and continued to celebrate Mass in the old Church.

On July 24 Lord Rosse suggested to Kennedy that proceedings be brought against Crotty on the grounds that the lease of the church belonged to Fr. Kennedy.

The following Sunday Crotty held a special meeting in the Church and drew up a number of resolutions to be presented to Bishop O'Shaughnessy. The resolutions complained of insults from Fr. Kennedy, the confused state of the parish finances and requested Fr. Kennedy's removal. Lalor Cooke wrote a letter to O'Shaughnessy in which he expressed no confidence in Kennedy.

Lord Rosse wrote to O'Shaughnessy on August 17 suggesting a compromise: Crotty should be offered the vacant parish of Doonas, if he would leave Birr. Nothing seems to have come of this proposal. 

The divisions in the town of Birr are described in the Clare Journal on August 21, 1826: 'It is not easy to describe what a scene of animosity that town has become. It is completely divided between Crottyites and Kennedyites, but the former far exceed the number of the latter. On Tuesday the people assailed the Roman Catholic Bishop with hisses and groans and was it not for the timely arrival of the police they would have proceeded to violence. Nothing can exceed the present triumph of the Crottyites. In fact the Bishop's authority is set entirely at defiance both of Fr. Crotty and the people. How all this will terminate, it is difficult at present to ascertain, but now hostility reigns between shepherd, pastor and flock ˆ and the last have thrown off all spiritual control.'


Crottyites Ejected from Chapel

On Saturday, August 26 a meeting was held in the Shambles, in which the fate of Crotty was decided. On September 8 Lord Rosse ordered the 66th Regiment to march to the church and formally evict Crotty. This they did 'with screwed bayonets and loaded muskets . . . brutally and forcibly' expelling Crotty and his congregation. Several of Crotty's followers ended up in Birr Bridewell.

On September 10 Fr. Kennedy had Crotty charged with riot, conspiracy and disturbing public worship. The case was heard at the October Quarter Sessions. Crotty was defended by Sir George Bennett, Q.C. The trial lasted two days after which the jury acquitted Crotty.

He was now prevented by law from using the old chapel so his followers rented a large house for use as a temporary chapel. Crotty claims that Kennedy's congregation was now so small that supporters had to be brought from Roscrea.

On December 2 Rev. Phillip Meagher, P.P. died and Fr. Kennedy was officially appointed Parish Priest the following week. Crotty was enraged. During the night of December 16, the roof of the old chapel caved in. Fr. Kennedy blamed Crotty, while the latter blamed Kennedy.

Next day Crotty and his followers took possession a the new chapel, which at this stage was almost completed. It was roofed but unfurnished. Crotty celebrated the first Mass within the walls to the great annoyance of Kennedy and his followers. He was evicted the following week.

Lord Rosse was unsure of the legal position and wrote to the bishop, Dr. O'Shaughnessy, asking whether Kennedy was officially Parish Priest. The bishop replied: 'I beg leave to inform you that the death of Dr. Meagher makes no change whatsoever in the situation of Mr. Kennedy whom I hereby constitute and appoint Parish Priest of Birr.' Strong pressure was being put on Dr. O'Shaughnessy to have Fr. Kennedy removed. Two letters exist in the diocesan archives from a Birr layman, Patrick Carroll, requesting his removal. They are dated February 25 and March 7, 1827 requesting that Fr. Kennedy be removed and asking the bishop how he will 'account for all the souls that departed this life since 29th June last in the hands of Mr. Crotty.' Carroll later became a violent opponent of Michael Crotty and an ardent supporter of his cousin, William.


Legal Opinion

Meantime Sr. George Bennett had been asked for his legal opinion regarding the new chapel, and he stated on February 28: 'I have already said the the Roman Catholics of Birr have a right to go to the chapel, and I conceive that Mr. Crotty has a right to be there if he pleases, but that right should be exercised with caution, not in a violent manner, or with any circumstance that could induce a jury to believe it was done with the intention of disturbing public worship or of breaking the peace.'

Acting on this Crotty went to the new chapel on March 4 and Fr. Kennedy made no attempt to oppose him. Some of Fr. Kennedy's supporters went to see Daniel O'Connell the following week and he advised them to barricade the building. Any attempt by Crotty or his supporeters to force a way in would leave them open to prosecution. When Crotty came next he found the chapel bolted and barricaded. He went to see John Wetheralt the magistrate to see about getting in. Unfortunately for Crotty some of his supporters were hasty and pulled down the barricade. Immediately Fr. Kennedy had Crotty prosecuted for disturbing public worship, riot and trespass. He was arrested, charged, found guilty and sentemced to three months in jail and bound to the peace for seven years. 

He was jailed in Phillipstown.Two of his leading supporters were sentenced to two months.

While in jail he was visited by J.F.K., Bishop of Kildare and Loughlin, who offered to negotiate his release if he would only submit to the Killaloe authority. Crotty replied that he would 'sooner die of beggary and starvation than be a splendid example of successful servility to popish domination.'

Crotty's followers represented the judgment as a malicious and unjust persecution and refused to return to the pastoral care of the parish priest. They continued to meet every Sunday in their rented rooms in Castle Street. Numbering an estimated two thousand they were content, while deprived of the Mass, with having the rosary said, prayers offered and a collection made for their leader. Every week a parcel of money and provisions was sent to Crotty in jail. Infants were carried the twenty-seven miles distance to be baptised by him and some even died without the last rites rather than have them administerd by Fr. Kennedy.

On the day of his release from jail Crotty was met by a large number of people and escorted to his house. He then resumed his ministerial functions in Castle Street and the hostility between his followers and those of Fr. Kennedy continued as bitter and vehement as before. Crotty concentrated on building up his congregation. He also started what was to become the 'Reformation at Birr' by abolishing clay money, the practice of giving money to a priest at a funeral, when a handful of blessed clay was put on the coffin.

From 1828 until early 1832 there were no more major upheavals at Birr although the tensions between the rival factions occasionally spilled over into violence. During this period also there was a steady decline in the support for the Crottyites. By 1834 it was estimated that there was an overall attendance of 3,750 at the three masses in the Roman Catholic chapel but only 1,550 at the three masses in the Crottyite chapel. As the latter introduced more Reformation ideas many of the members began to drift away. However, the Crotty movement was to receive a major boost with the arrival of William Crotty.


William Crotty

William Crotty, a cousin of Michael's, who was born in 1806, was a student in the Irish College in Paris when Michael started his reforming campaign at Birr. Representations were made to Bishop O'Shaughnessy (who died in August 1829) and to his successor, Bishop Patrick MacMahon, to have William withdrawn from the Irish College, where he began his studies in 1825.

While studying in Paris, William later claimed, he began to entertain doubts of the religious system in which he was brought up. When he saw Roman Catholics burning incense, bending the knee and offering prayers before the statue of the Virgin Mary in the garden of St. Sulpice, he could not help declaring that it was not without reason that the charge of idolatry was brought by Protestants against the Church of Rome.

In 1828, he was summoned to Ireland by Bishop O'Shaughnessy. Having arrived he learned he was summoned for the purpose of using his influence on his cousin, Michael, to induce him to relinguish his attitude of rebellion against the bishop and to submit to ecclesiastical authority. There was also a veiled threat that failure would mean he might never be ordained.

William travelled to Birr but instead of changing his cousin's mind, joined him for a short time. Then he changed his mind and denounced the Birr reformation in a newspaper: 'The day of deception and delusion, with regard to me, is no more and I now resemble the prodigal child returning to his father's house, which he so shamefully deserted.'. The Bishop was none too pleased and it was his successor, Bishop MacMahon, who eventually gave permission for his ordination. William was eventually ordained in January 1832 and appointed curate at Killaloe, where his uncle, Daniel Vaughan, was parish Priest.

Soon after William had a quarrel with Fr. Vaughan. He wrote to Michael at Birr asking the latter to receive him as he was 'sick of Popery and saw the errors and corruptions of the Church of Rome.' Michael received him as a colleague in May 1832 and the two worked together for a while. All the efforts made by his uncle and Parish Priest to get him to change his mind were in vain.

After some time William had a change of mind due to doubts about the direction of his life or, more likely, because a curacy in Castleconnell had become vacant. Whatever the reason he recanted and denounced Michael and the Birr reformation with 'satanic malignity' in a letter to the Limerick Chronicle. He may have expected to get the curacy as a result of his recantation.

He failed to get the position and went to France for a while. He had another change of mind. He wrote to Michael again saying he was sorry for what he had done, that he could find no rest from the accusations of a guilty conscience and promised, that if he were forgiven and sent £20 to bring him back to Birr, he would never again abandon Michael and his flock.

'Notwithstanding the remonstrances of my friends, my easy good nature got the better of my prudence; I sent him a bank order for £20 to bring him home from France and again received him into favour', Michael wrote later.


Development of Reformation

William Crotty was now regarded by Michael as a young, zealous co-adjutor in his crusade of reform as plans were made to establish another chapel in the parish of Lackeen. The foundations of this building are still to be seen not far from Carrig Church for the building seems never to have got further than the foundation stage.

The Reformation now developed under the guidance of the two cousins with the emergence of new practices and observances. New prayers were formulated, the Mass was translated into English, communion in two kinds was offered, the use of holy water and altar candles was abandoned, clerical vestments were discarded and the levying of clerical fees was curtailed. A school was set up where the children would read 'the Protestant bible in its integrity and purity, without note or comment, without mutilation or curtailment and unpolluted by the withering and contamination touch of the adulterous Board of Irish Education.' It was reported that nine hundred people attended Crotty's services each Sunday.

The cousins next tried to spread the word in Castleconnell, where their uncle, Michael Crotty, P.P., was old and infirm. Bishop McMahon wrote a letter to the parish priest denouncing nephew Michael as 'the archschismatic of Birr, going about like a spirit of darkness, seeking those whom he may devour.' Michael threatened a libel action against the bishop, which came to nothing, and wrote three open letters to the bishop in the Limerick Chronicle. The first, which appeared on March 10, 1832, outlined the causes of the Birr troubles. The second developed the theme and stated that peace could be restored if Fr. Kennedy, P.P. was removed. The third was a long tract which ranged over the nature of schisms to the authority of the Church.

Another attempt at reconciliation was made in 1833 through the mediation of a Maynooth contemporary of Michael Crotty's, Fr. O'Loughlin. He found the Crottys ready to co-operate, even to the extent of moving away from Birr, but not prepared to sign a document, which the bench of bishops in Dublin looked upon as the sine qua non of the restoration of normal relations. This document called for their 'unconditional acknowledgement of submission' to episcopal authority and their declaration that all the marriages which they had solemnised for the previous eight or ten years were 'absolutely invalid' and their absolutions during that period 'null and void'.


Final Breach

The Crottys were unable to accept these conditions and this marked the final breach between them and their denominational allegiance. William Crotty publicly declared: 'I am totally unconnected with either Pope or Bishop, and not very partial to Romanism from what I have been made to know of that cruel and degraded superstition.'

Michael Crotty had been bound to the peace for seven years in 1827 and when the time expired on April 13, 1834 he and William 'in a quiet and peaceable manner went to the Catholic chapel at Birr, then in the illegal possession of Priest Kennedy to perform divine service.' It was Sunday and Fr. Kennedy was saying Mass. The Crottys forced their way into the Church and a violent struggle followed before they were finally ejected. The Crottys were arrested and released on bail. Crown Counsel offered that if they left Birr the charges would be withdrawn. They refused and Michael was sentenced to seven weeks imprisonment and fined £10. The cousins never again attempted to take possession of the Church.

In June 1835 Fr. Kennedy, P.P. was appointed coadjutor bishop. The bull of appointment was a long time coming from Rome but eventually arrived and Kennedy was consecrated bishop at Birr on January 17, 1836. He was co-adjutor for only five months as Bishop Patrick MacMahon died in the following June.

Having failed to secure the possession of the New Chapel the Crottys decided to build a new one for their congregation, which had declined in numbers since 1827, and published an appeal in the Dublin papers on November 1st, 1835.

'Having been deprived of all right and title to officiate for our flock in the new Roman Catholic Chapel of Birr by a recorded decision of the laws of our country against us, the only recourse now left us was to make an appeal to the sympathy and generosity of the Christian Protestants of Ireland on behalf of our persecuted congregation.'

The appeal was headed: 'To the liberal, high-minded and Christian Protestants of Ireland. Brought by the grace of God and the illumination of the Holy Spirit to see the errors and corruptions of the Church of Rome and to embrace the truth of the Protestant religion, we have been enabled during the period of ten years to resist and withstand the encroachments of prerogative, to struggle against the inroads of arbitrary power and oppose the exercise of opulent oppression . . . .'

'We have discarded the novelties of superstition and reduced Christianity to first principles. . . We consume in the fire of God's Word the hay and the stubble of superstition, such as penances, purgatory, saint invocation and image worship. We have reduced the Sacramants to two ˆ Baptism and the Lord's Supper. We have exploded the damnable doctrine of exclusive salvation. We appeal to the generous and high-minded Prostestants for pecuniary means to build our chapel and rescue 2,000 souls from the snares of Antichrist.'

The appeal met with immediate response and over £400 was subscribed. Trustees were appointed, most of whom were members of the Established Church. A site in Castle Street was leased from the Earl of Rosse and the foundation stone of the new church was laid on July 15, 1836 by Michael Crotty.

Already on June 5, 1836 the Crottys celebrated mass in English for the first time. This new version was radically different from the Latin version. The substance of the mass was changed and 'we have expunged the ceremony of the Elevation, together with all the other nonsensical mummery and cris-crosses of the Romish Mass.' This development maked a clear break in doctrine with the Catholic Church.


Growing Divisions Between Cousins

In the meantime the bishop, Dr. McMahon, passed away and was succeeded by Fr. Kennedy. He was consecrated at Birr on January 17, 1836 before a very small congregation. This fact was gleefully referred to by Michael Crotty the following Sunday. He 'congratulated the people on the stand made against priestly domination the previous Sabbath. No surprise should be felt at the high elevation of a priest who so lately gave them opposition ˆ wicked men have often been raised to the highest station, and a devil was among the deciples of the Lord.' Soon after his consecration Bishop Kennedy wrote to Rome claiming that Crotty was no longer a problem.

In order to continue the fund-raising Michael left Birr on a tour through Ireland and Great Britain, leving the congregation and the building of the chapel to be supervised by his cousin, William. In Belfast the sum of £325 was pledged. From there he went to Scotland and spent a good deal of time there, eventually returning to Birr in February 1837.

While he was busy fund-raising in Scotland William was not idle. As a result of his study of Presbyterian forms and doctrine, he shortly conceived the idea of connecting himself and his people with the Synod of Ulster. He also recruited an ex-student of the Irish College at Paris, Michael O'Keeffe, who wrote a letter to the Evening Packet bitterly assailing the Established Church and also attacking the Presbyterians for accepting the Regnum Donum. William went further when he preached a sermon in Limerick criticising tithes.

The result of these developments was that many Protestants became hostile to the Birr reformation.

Dr. Cooke, the great Belfast preacher, had raised over £300 at a meeting for Michael Crotty but refused to forward the money until Michael repudiated William's views. In response Michael wrote a letter to the Scottish Guardian defending the clergy of the Episcopal Church of England and Ireland, supporting the collection of tithes which William had attacked and saying that William was misquoted and misrepresented in the Limerick Chronicle. Later he wrote of the episode: 'The conduct of my cousin on several occasions has been to me a source of much sorrow and regret but for the good of the cause on which we were embarked, I continued with a kind of desperate fidelity to adhere to him in the hope that time and experience would have produced a reformation.'

In spite of these protestations it was clear by now that a real division had emerged between the Anglican-inclined Michael and the Calvinist William.


Affiliation with Church of England

A meeting of the trustees on May 15, 1838 decided that Michael should go to England to raise badly-needed funds. He did not get on very well as there was suspicion about William's direction. After five months only £270 was raised. One Minister, Rev. Hugh McNeil, wrote to Michael saying 'I cannot support or recommend your cause unless you come in connection with the church, or under ecclesiastical superintendence.' Michael saw the only hope of success lay in affiliating with the Church of England. 

Accordingly, when he returned to Birr in April 1839, he persuaded William to join the Church of England with him. They received testimonials of character from Rev. Marcus McCausland, Rector of Birr and from Rt. Rev. Ludlow Tonson, Bishop of Killaloe. Armed with these testimonials Michael returned to England to raise funds. While there he got married to Martha Holland, the daughter of John Holland, umbrella and furniture maker, of Darwen Street, Birmingham in St. Philip's Church of England, Bermingham, signing himself 'a clergyman of the Established Church.'

Michael's long absences in England had given William the opportunity to take control of matters in Birr. In his book Michael described the developments: 'During my absence in England, the Revd William Crotty violated his compact with me, abolished the English liturgy, changed the mode of celebrating the sacrament of the Lord's Supper, introduced the Presbyterian form of public worship, and thereby banished many of the congregation, who went back to popery.'

When William heard of the marriage he persuaded the congregation to apply to join the Presbyterian Church, declaring its considered opinion that Presbyterianism 'in its doctrine, discipline and government, comes nearest to primitive Christianity and to the original constitution of the Christian Church.'

For some time William had thought of the idea of connecting himself and his congregation with the Synod of Ulster. He was convinced that the constitution of the Presbyterian Church supplied it with peculiar advantages for the propagation of the Gospel in Ireland. He also believed that many of his congregation had a preference for the Synod of Ulster. In the summer of 1838 he wrote two letters to the members of that body explaining his views, but had received no reply. He complained of the lack of response to a Presbyterian acquaintance and was advised to make application to the nearest Presbytery, the Presbytery of Dublin. The Presbytery sent a deputation to Birr in February 1839 to ascertain the moral character and doctrinal views of the two Crottys and how their congregation's views coincided.

By the time the deputation arrived at Birr news of Michael's marriage had become known. It caused such excitement that the deputation decided it was not an opportune time to raise the issue of attachment to the Presbytery of Dublin. So, the Presbytery took no further notice of William's proposal at this time.

Soon after, however, they received a communication from the members of the congregation in Birr containing a copy of resolutions unanimously adopted by them at a meeting previously held in their church. In these resolutions the people declared that the pastoral connection between them and the Rev. Michael Crotty was dissolved, he having publicly declared himself a Minister of the Established Church, and that they thenceforth recognised the Rev. William Crotty as their sole pastor. They also expressed their strong desire to be united to the Presbyterian Church and requested the Presbytery to lose no time in sending a deputation to confer with them on the subject.


Connection with Synod of Ulster

The Presbytery acted with promptitude and sent two members to Birr. A meeting of the congregation was immediately summoned, resolutions were adopted and the following adopted at a formal meeting of the people: 'We, the undersigned, members of the Reformed Church at Birr, beg to state, that we are desirous of forming a union with the Presbyterian Church. We do not at present deem it necessary to mention our motives for preferring your Church to any other section of the Reformed Church in these countries, save that, from the period of our coming out of the Church of Rome, we have been led to think that Presbyterianism, in its doctrine, discipline and government comes nearest to primitive Christianity and to the original constitution of the Christian Church. We, therefore, pray that you will receive this, our aplication, into your immediate consideration, and that you will take such measures as may carry our wishes into effect.'

The application bore one hundred and nine signatures and on the 30th May, 1839, at a specially convened meeting at Birr, before a congregation of about five hundred, Rev. William Crotty and his flock were publicly received into connection with the Synod of Ulster. The following month the Synod decided to afford William an income of £100 per annum.

The Presbyterians were determined to exploit the opportunity of launching a missionary operation in the locality of the new congregation, directly initially at those who had lapsed their connection with the Crotty Church and hadn't yet returned to the Roman Catholic chapel. Rev. James Carlyle, a Scotsman who arrived in Dublin in 1813 and was Commissioner of the Board of National Education, expressed an interest in the Birr Mission and came to the town in August 1839. He superintended the repair of the Church, the formation of schools, the activities of the scripture reader, the publication of tracts and the adoption of any other means he thought might be used to advance the Reformation just begun. He was to stay initially for three, months, then six, then a year and remained until his death in 1853. He is buried at Birr in the Crotty graveyard.

The mission had no easy passage. It was beset by financial problems but more troublesome was a succession of rows in which the Crotty cousins, jointly or separately, were involved. Thus they quarrelled with each other, exchanging mutual accusations of bad faith, lying, intimidation and intention to disturb the peace of the congregation and neighbourhood ˆ and, for good measure, Michael threw in the charge of adultery against William.


William's Removal from Birr

The latter, moreover, was constantly at adds with his congregation, other neighbour clergy, most of the mission's agents and, particularly, with Carlyle, whose presence in the town William increasingly resented. Eventually in 1843, the General Assembly decided that the best interests of the mission would be served by William's removal from Birr and he was sent as a home mission agent to Roundstone in Galway. Here he was employed until his resignation in 1856 as an itinerant preacher and became the author of several polemical tracts denouncing Roman Catholicism.

Before he left Birr William married Kate Dempsey in December 1841 and they had three sons, Albert (1849-1936), a Minister at Mullingar, Richard (1850-1924) a Resident Magistrate in Clare, and Leslie (1852-1903), an opera singer. He was received back into the Roman Catholic Church in 1856 and died the following year.

Meanwhile Michael had not heard of the events of 1839 for a fortnight. He was at Bristol when he received the news and returned to Birr immediately. He had to stay at Dooly's Hotel because William had taken over his house and sold his furniture. He instituted legal proceedings but the matter was settled out of court through the intervention of another cousin, and there was a settlement of £12 on Michael.


Michael Publishes his Memoirs

Abandoned by his friends and unable to get a living in Ireland, Michael crosed to England. His original following was reduced to little over one hundred, following the departure of a large number to William's congregation, the drift away that followed the introduction of Reformed ideas, and the return of some to the Roman Catholic Church. He found it difficult to get a parish until in September 1843 he arrived as curate in Kirkheaton, near Huddesfield, in the diocese of Ripon. 

Here he wrote his memoirs, entitled Narrative of the Reformation at Birr, which was published in 1847 by Hatchard of London and reprinted in 1850. The book has 461 pages and is only partly a narrative of the events in Birr as it descends into a polemic against the Roman Catholic Church and all its works and pomps. Crotty sets out his intention in the Preface: 'The object of the following Narrative is to glorify God and to edify the Christian world by showing how the Almighty was pleased to call me by his grace out of the darkness and bondage of popery into the marvellous light and liberty of the glorious gospel of his Son, while thousands of my clerical brethern are still left in the Church of Rome to perpetuate the errors, superstitions and, it is much to be feared, the soul-destroying delusions of the new, unscriptural and anti-Catholic Tridentine Creed on the credulity and simplicity of their too confiding and unsuspecting countrymen, and to die, in all human probability, in the communion of that great apostasy.'

Towards the end of his Narrative he expresses his intention 'to return to Birr, to recover my Church and congregation from the usurped and illegal possession of the present intruder, Mr. James Carlyle, Presbyterian Minister, and put them as I originally intended to have done under the episcopal jurisdiction of the Protestant Bishop of Killaloe. He remained as curate in Kirkheaton until 1850.

In 1852 he instituted legal; proceedings to recover the church building for the conduct of Anglican services. In this he gained a bloodless victory for, on the advice of Carlyle, the General Assembly did not contest the issue and the building was surrendered to him.

His appeal to the people of Birr, however, wasn't successful and after five years he agreed to return the church to the General Assembly on payment of £100. He found it difficult to accept that his followers at Birr had all deserted him and that he was no longer welcome there.


Misfortunate End

His latter years are shrouded in mystery. On December 15, 1855 the Nation published an account of his arrest in Preston on a charge of obtaining money under false pretences. He stated he had been collecting the money for enlarging and endowing his church at Birr. When his claim was checked out with the Rector at Birr, he stated that Crotty's wife and children were residing there and were receiving money from him on a regular basis.

The next reference to him is in April 1856 when he wrote to Daniel Vaughan, Bishop of Killaloe from Dublin. The letter contained a strong expression of repentance and a plea for reconciliation. The letter appeared in a local newspaper the following month with the comment: 'It is said that the Revd Michael Crotty is at present in Birr, giving the best example in reparation of the scandals of his former life.'

The matter of reconciliation with the Catholic Church wasn't as straighforward as might seem as Crotty had a wife and two children and was torn between his commitment to them and his desire for reconciliation. These difficulties are given expression in a letter in the archives of the Irish College, Rome from Dr. Vaughan, Bishop of Killaloe, dated September 24, 1857, which has reference to Michael Crotty: 'The unfortunate Crotty, who caused such scandal at Birr, now shows signs of repentance. I was thinking of sending him to Rome, as the wicked woman with whom he has lived will seduce him again if he is left in Ireland. He says he has two children nearly grown and cannot get away from her. He is in dire poverty.'

Somehow, he made his way to the continent. In June of 1858 the Prefect of Police at Bruges in Belgium had him committed to a lunatic asylum in Couttrai. It was stated on his certificate of admission that 'the Rev. Michael Crotty is affected since a few months with a mental illness ˆ Lypemania ˆ which necessitates his internment in a specialised house.'

An extract from the Medical Register states: 'This man had a most agitated life following disputes which he had with his superiors. There does not seem to exist any disturbance in the intellectual functions. Michael approaches us only to tell us about his misfortunes and the treasons to which he was a victim, gives gigantic proportions to his sufferings, complains about everyone, asks for death by all his wishes.

Here he died on May 4, 1862 aged sixty-seven years. His death certificate describes him as unmarried. There is no indication whether he was reconciled with the Church

There is no record of the death of his wife or the fates of his two sons. However, a grandson, Richard, who was born in 1910, was received into the Catholic Church in 1954 and was later a Benedictine priest in Broome, Western Australia.


Postscript

There are various estimates of the number of people who belonged to Crotty's congregation. One source tells us that 900 people were present at Crotty's services each Sunday in 1832. Michael Crotty himself records: 'The women cast away Agnus Deis, scapulars, Friar-blessed habits of the Virgin Mary and committed this superstitious trumpery to the flames, and came to the fountain of the Saviour's blood to be cleansed of their sins.' Another report tells us 1550 people attended the three masses in Crotty's church on a Sunday. A description of his congregation in 1827 mentions the figute of 2,000

What happened to the Crottyites? The changeover to Presbyterianosm alienated many. In 1840 the Sisters of Mercy came to Birr and were responsible for restoring many Crottyites to the Catholic Church. The famine and emigration reduced their numbers. A famous Passionate Mission to Birr in 1853 did much to end the schism. There is a story that after the burial of a man in Birr in 1940 the officiating priest said: 'There goes the last of the Crottyites!.


What were the causes of the schism?

They were numerous and it's difficult to pinpoint the main ones. The general state of things in the Catholic Church at the time contributed. The personality conflict between Michael Crotty and 'Priest Kennedy' played an important part. The desire of Michael Crotty to marry doesn't appear to have been a cause. Michael Crotty disliked spiritual despotism and regarded the attempts by authorities to impose their will as just that. A closeness to the people was a factor. Michael Crotty came to protect them against those better off, as well as the Chapel Committee. This closeness to the people led him to demand the vernacular for them and greater lay participation in the running of church affairs. Michael Crotty's political views came into conflict with those of a growing number of Catholic clergy. Edmund Burke was his hero and he hated O'Connell. In 1824 Crotty's uncle was threatened with suspension by his bishop if he did not collect the O'Connell rent. The uncle, who was Parish Priest of Castleconnell, gave as his reason that he did not wish to mix politics with religion. Later he was charged at a dinner in Nenagh as an enemy of the freedom of Ireland. Crotty, who was at the dinner, defended his uncle and his defence gives some insight into his political views. According to him, attacking his uncle implied supporting those who preached rebellion from the altar, denounced Protestants and their religion, stimulated resistance to the laws of the country and to the constituted authorities, filled the jails and the transports and fed the gibbits, and would end good relationships with Protestants by which the lot of the poor was alleviated. Michael Crotty was probably an ecumenist before his time. Finally, one cannot forget the Evangelical Movement and its influence of 'Back to the Bible' in the first half of the nineteenth century. The chief object was to preach the Gospel to the Irish people. It was strong and produced enthusiastic preachers and probably contributed to the reformation at Birr.


Why was it so sucessful?

Obviously the personality of Michael Crotty played a part. Although the Maynooth authorities regarded him as 'a fool and a madman', he had good leadership qualities and could command a strong following. This following was willing to stand by him in the face of intense opposition from the Church authorities. His following came from the less well-off and he appeared to be their defender against the demands of the Chapel Committee. The idea of tollgates to extract money from the people appears harch and unfeeling and was obviously resented by the poor and underprivileged. When there was a suspicion that some of the money was being alienated it raised their hackles. According to Lord Rosse Michael Crotty was of violent temper but 'he attached the lower orders of the people to him by praising them from the altar and censuring and reviling the upper orders.' Understandably the people came to regard him as their hero and champion.

On the other side the response of the Church authorities was essentially hardline. Fr. Kennedy, who was referred to as the 'fighting cock' of the diocese of Killaloe, was not the kind of person capable of bringing peace to the parish. He was of prickly disposition and seemed to welcome confrontation rather than compromise. He lacked diplomacy and the ability to cope with dissent. It did not help matters that Rody Kennedy, his brother, who had a grocery store on Main Street, was a member of the old chapel committee. As well as Kennedy there were a number of unfortunate coincidences together with misjudgments on the part of the authorities in the early stages of the dispute, which seemed to justify Crotty in his belief that there was a conspiracy against him. The two Catholics on the jury that convicted him at the quarter sessions in April 1826 were members of the Chapel Committee. Also, one of these was the father of Fr. Blake, who replaced him at Birr after he was transferred to Killaloe. The appointment of Patrick Kennedy, brother of one of the chapel committee, as administrator and later Parish Priest of Birr, appeared to Crotty as part of the same conspiracy.

 

<span class="postTitle">John Grogan</span> Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, June 3, 2009

John Grogan

Posted on Cashel King Cormac's Website, June 3, 2009

 

John Grogan was captain of the King Cormac's under-13 hurling and football teams that hit the headlines in 1969, winning west finals in both and going on to win the county football final but losing the hurling final to Ballina. The fact that John was captain of both teams is an indication of how highly he was regarded as a hurler and a footballer at the time. The previous year he was captain of the league winning teams in the C.B.S. As well as his playing skills his height gave him a major advantage over other players.

But victories are normally not gained by one person on the team. The other fourteen have an important part to play also and Cashel King Cormac's were fortunate at this time to have a great concentration of young talent, probably the greatest to date in the history of the club. The strength of this talent was seen two years later when this bunch of players won the 1971 under-15, west and county championships, both urban and rural, in hurling and football. Such success was unprecendented in the club. John was captain of both teams.

In the same year Cashel C.B.S. won the Rice Cup when they beat Roscrea C.B.S., by 8-5 to 4-1 in the final. John was also captain of this victorious side.

In 1972 the competition were changed from under-13, under-15 and under-17 to under-12, under-14 and under-16. Cashel had their success at under-16 level that year. They won the west and county in hurling, defeating Rahealty by 7-6 to 2-3 in the county final. They won the west but were beaten by Commercials in the county football final. John was also on the minor team that won the west final, the first of five finals in a row. He was on the county minor team that lost to Cork in the Munster semi-final. He was also on the C.B.S.team that won the Fitzgerald Cup.

The following year was a very busy one for John. He was on the minor team that won the west but lost the county final to Thurles Sarsfields. He won the west minor football final. He won a Munster minor hurling medal with Tipperary but were beaten by Galway in the All-Ireland semi-final. He was on the county minor hurling team that won the special four-county league, and on the county minor football team that won the special minor league. He was on the county minor football team beaten by Kerry in the Munster semi-final replay at Listowal, marking Ogie Moran on the day. He made his first appearance on the club senior hurling panel. He had great success at schools' level, wining Croke Cup, Fitzgerald Cup. Kinane Cup, Corn Phadraig and beaten by Farrenferris in the Harty Cup final.

There was another successful year in 1974. The first county minor double was won. Having won the west finals, Cashel won the county hurling final by beating Loughmore-Castleiney, 5-7 to 3-4, in the final, and the county football final by beating Roscrea 0-6 to 0-2 in the final. John was on the county minor hurling and football teams. The hurling team, of which he was captain, was beaten by Cork 2-11 to 2-7 in a Munster final replay at Dungarvan. The footballers were beaten by Cork in the Munster semi-final at Mitchelstown. Earlier he was captain of the county minor team that won the special football league, and of the hurling team that won the special hurling league. He also made his debut with the Cashel senior team

In 1975 he won a west senior hurling medal when Cashel defeated Sean Treacy's by 0-18 to 0-13 in the final. He also won a Crosco Cup medal. At county level he was full-forward on the under-21 team beaten by Kerry in the Munster semi-final.

In 1976 he won his second west senior hurling medal, when Cashel defeated Cappawhite 2-9 to 2-5 in the final. He also won his second Crosco Cup. He was on the Cashel team that won the west under-21 hurling title and lost the final by 3-4 to 1-5 in a replay to Kilruane-MacDonaghs at Holycross on January 9, 1977. John had his leg broken on the day. Other victories included west intermediate and county junior football medals. At county level he was full-forward on the county under-21 team, beaten by Clare in the Munster semi-final. He was also full-forward on the senior team beaten 4-10 to 2-15 in the Munster semi-final at Limerick. John scored 1-8 in the match and was nominated at full-forward for an All-Star. Cork went on the win three All-Irelands and it is arguable that had Tipperary won on the day, they would have gone on to a similar achievement. John represented Ireland in a shinty game with Scotland that year.

He had a quieter year in 1977. There was a west under-21 football title and defeat by Commercials in a county final replay. He played centrefield on the county under-21 side beaten by Cork in the Munster semi-final. He didn't make the senior side as he was out of the game in the first half of the year as a result of his leg injury.

There are no achievements for 1978 at the end of which he transferred to Dunhill, Co. Waterford.

In 1979 he won a county senior hurling medal with his new club. Between 1979 and 1982 he contested five county finals with Dunhill, four hurling and one football. He won just one hurling final and was unable to contest two hurling finals because of injury. Had he been playing the results might have been different.

In 1980 he was on the county senior hurling team defeated by Limerick in the National League semi-final. In 1981 he was back on the county senior championship side at corner-forward when beaten by Limerick in the semi-final replay by 3-17 to 2-12 at Limerick. He wasn't on the team in 1982 but was back at full-forward in 1983 when Tipperary were beaten by Waterford by 4-13 to 2-15 at Cork. He also featured on the team that won division 2 of the 1983/84 league, being the leading scorer. In the same same year he was back with Cashel and won a Crosco Cup medal.

In 1984 he played with Eire Óg, Nenagh which won the special North Tipperary Bliain an Chéid Corn an Cheid Sinsear.

In 1985 he won a junior football title with Eíre Óg and a senior hurling league medal..

In 1986 he transferred to Ballyhea in Co. Cork and played senior hurling. The club was beaten by Blackrock in the county senior hurling semi-final, after winning the O'Leary Cup. In 1987 he won a second O'Leary Cup medal.

In 1988 and 1989 he played for Clonmore in senior hurling and Templemore in senior football.

In 1990 he was back with Cashel King Cormacs and won a west senior hurling medal, before going down to Holycross-Ballycahill in the county final.. There was also a Crosco Cup win and a west senior football medal, the first time the club won the title.

The year 1991 was a spectacular year for John, when he was a member of the Cashel senior hurling team to win the west and first county senior hurling final. There was also victory in the Munster club championship before eventual defeat by Kiltormer in the second replay of the All-Ireland semi-final.

John's final year to play with Cashel was 1992 when they were beaten 2-15 to 1-11 by a rampant Clonoulty-Rossmore in the west final at Bansha. He was thus deprived of a fifth divisional senior title. His last game was against Loughmore-Castleiney when Cashel were defeated in the county quarter-final at Boherlahan. John played at full-forward and scored two points.

John had numerous successes at Inter-Firms level also. In 1976 and 1978 he won a Munster senior title with Commercials, an amalgamation of shops and offices in Waterford City, when they defeated Avonmore in the final. In 1986 he won Cork and Munster senior interfirms titles with Charleville, and a Cork senior title in 1987.

He played in the Inter-Banks competition with Bank of Ireland, winning hurling titles in hurling in 1976, 1978 and 1985, and in football in 1981, 1983 and 1989. He also played for the Bank of Ireland in Bank Representative matches against the defence Forces in 1989, 1990, 1991 and 1992.

John played senior hurling for nineteen years, commencing with Cashel in 1974 and finishing with the same club in 1992. In between he played for Dunhill, Eire Óg, Nenagh, Ballyhea, and Clonmore, as well as the county senior team, indicating his love of hurling and his willingness to play it wherever his job took him.

Perhaps this very mobility, this moving around a lot, prevented him establishing a permanent place on the county team. He was at his prime when he moved to Waterford in 1979 and he was away for four years. But his hurling ability should not be judged by the length of time he spent on the Tipperary panel. The breaking of his leg in January 1977, following his nominating for an All-Star the previous year, was also a serious blow to his county prospects.

John was a most skillful player with wonderful striking ability and a powerful shot. He had a good eye, moved with grace on the field and had a good stature. He was a versatile player, capable of playing any of the six positions in the forward line and he played centrefield on the county under-21 team. He was dependable and cool, a very honest hurler, perhaps lacked a bit of devilment. He stood out on the field because of his height.

For one who had such a full life as a player, which stretched from 1968 to 1992, a total of twenty-five seasons playing at all levels of hurling and football, it was a surprise that he never involved himself as a selector or at the administrative level in the club. Perhaps he had enough of it after so many years. He did become involved in camogie for a number of years and was supportive of his daughters, who starred at Cashel and county level.

So, when one looks back over a great period in the history of Cashel King Cormacs, John stands tall, not only literally but also metaphorically, as one of the most skillful players to ever don the club jersey, and he also made a name for himself in many grades in hurling and football at the county level.

 

<span class="postTitle">Jack Gleeson (1923-2009)</span> Oration by Seamus J. King at his graveside in Moyaliffe Cemetery, Sunday, April 5, 2009.

Jack Gleeson (1923-2009)

Oration by Seamus J. King at his graveside in Moyaliffe Cemetery, Sunday, April 5, 2009.

 

It is a privilege for me to be asked to pay a tribute to Jack Gleeson on the occasion of his funeral. I don't claim to know him a long time, only became acquainted with him in 2007, and many of you have known him much longer over the years of his very long life. But, I got to know a lot of him over the few short years and he was an extraordinary man.

Perhaps it was the place where he was born made him special. Moyaliffe is a border area, between Clonoulty-Rossmore and Holycross-Ballycahill, between the West and Mid G.A.A. divisions in the county and between the North and South Ridings of Tipperary. His place of birth made him look beyond his immediate neighbourhood to a wider world and gave him a greater perspective on things.

His view of the world embraced his hurling heroes like John Doyle from the Mid and Tony Brennan from the West but took in Tony Reddin in the North and stretched beyond to a wider world that included the great Limerick team of the thirties and the Waterford team of the late fifties, as well as many more. His view of the world was broad, embracing and ecumenical.

Hurling was his great love and his great conversation. He brought to the subject a knowledge that came from having played it, first with Holycross and later with Clonoulty. It was ironic that it was his former team, Holycross, that deprived Clonoulty of a county final in 1951. Jack also featured on a Thurles Sugar Factory team, that included Mickey Byrne and Tommy Doyle, Larry and Connie Keane and Tommy Barrett, that won a Munster title in the same year.

His knowledge of hurling was also increased by his attendance at so many games and, I might add, his continued attendance up to the time of his death. He followed the fortunes of Tipperary and other inter-county sides long before the end of his playing days arrived. He cycled to Cork in 1942 and 1946 to see Tipperary defeated by Cork and Limerick respectively. He also cycled to Dublin in 1942 - it took him ten hours - to see Cork win one of their four-in-a-row. From these journeys he got to know a lot of players and teams. He first saw Phil Cahill play against Cork at Thurles in 1931 and regards him as one of Ireland's greatest hurlers. He reckoned the best game he ever saw was the 1947 All-Ireland final in which Kilkenny defeated Cork by 0-14 to 2-7: 'It was a show to the world!', he said. The best club game he saw was between Ahane and Sarsfields at Newport sometime in the early forties. He believed that John Doyle was the best player he saw in a long life.

All the memories of those years were firmly etched in a photographic memory. He never really forgot anything and the names of players and teams tripped lightly from his tongue. He knew a large number of top intercounty players, including the famous Christy Ring, and revelled in talking to them about games and incidences in their playing careers.

Almost as impressive was a giant scrapbook compiled by his brother, Matthew, and himself with information on G.A.A. personalities and teams going back to the late forties. It could be called the Book of Moyaliffe and will take on similar historical significance to the Annals of the Four Masters in the course of time, containing as it does so much information on hurlers and footballers from all the counties of Ireland for over half-a-century. Both Matthew and Jack deserve our thanks for the collection.

If I spend some time on Jack's knowledge and memories of hurling I do so because it was extraordinary. For someone who depends so much on the written word, on the book of facts, on the preserved records, Jack's ability to mentally recall so much and in such vivid detail made a lasting impression on me. The fact that his mind remained so fresh as he arrived at the end of his eighties made him unique.

But Jack Gleeson was much more than an extraordinary memory of hurling facts and lore. His mind remained open to the world and to new happenings and events. He didn't only dwell in the past and what happened when he was young. He was open to what was happening in the world about him and to the lives of the young who crossed his path, comfortable as he was with people of all ages..

He remained curious about the world in a way that older people seldom are. He could get enjoyment out of a conversation with the very young and appreciate their reactions to the world around them. He was also willing to focus in on a young player and recognise his merits and give him encouragement. He had a generous heart and wasn't one to run down or denigrate a person. He had a wide range of interests in sport and while I have concentrated on his love of hurling, his interest embraced other sports as well such as dogs and horses.

Most of his neighbours will remember Jack as a tidy farmer. His place was recognised as one of the tidiest around, with the hedges always trimmed, the graden always set and the timber always cut and stacked. It is fanciful to imagine Jack in heaven now looking after the place, sharpening the bill hook and clippers, and going out to look after not only his own hedge but the neighbour's as well, opening the drills and priding himself in having them as straight as an arrow, setting the seed and having the potatoes ready for digging before anybody else.

Most of you will remember Jack Gleeson as a witty man, whose stories lightened a conversation and whose good humour made him such enjoyable company. Most of his stories were funny but never hurtful. One day he was praising Tommy Butler on his goalkeeping skills and how they made him the best goalkeeper in the country. And Tommy replied: 'Yes, when I was good I could stop turnip seeds but when I was bad I wouldn't stop Hogan's bus in Liberty Square.'

He was a great man to introduce the quotation from the poem or the match account which was another reflection of his extraordinary memory. These quotes were introduced to give a contemporary flavour to the story he was relating and he quoted them with a vividness and freshness as if they were being given for the first time: 'And we collected Martin Kennedy at Currabaha Cross.'

Jack Gleeson never looked for any recognition in life. He was happy to talk about the things he loved, to share opinions on a wide variety of topics, to hold his own in conversation. In 2007 he was honoured when elected to Laochra Sean Gael. This honours people who have given a lifetime of service to the G.A.A. and in many cases were never honoured before. Jack's life of service was slightly different to the normal. Yes, he did play the game of hurling but for most of his life he has been a supporter of others who have done so, by going to see them play, by forming intelligent opinions of the ability of players and regaling others of these opinions over many years.

Today, as we lay him to rest in this graveyard with the lovely name of Moyaliffe, it is partly a sad occasion, as anyone's passing is, and in Jack's case, although he was eighty-eight years old, we all thought there was still a lot of life in him because he was so agile, mentally and physically. But it is also the celebration of a man and a life that was extraordinary. Jack may have appeared ordinary but he was extraordinary in his qualities, in the nature of his mind, in the brilliance of his memories, in his capacity to converse and to entertain, in the generosity of his heart and in his openess to the world. To all who knew him his passing is a great loss. To Molly, and to his nephews and nieces, as well as his wider family and relations, I want to extend my sincerest sympathies. Nothing that one can say about such a man can pay sufficient tribute to a very special person. I am so proud to have known him.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The Burning of Portland House, May 1938</span> Tipperary Historical Journal 2009, pp 145-152

The Burning of Portland House, May 1938

Tipperary Historical Journal 2009, pp 145-152

 

Portland Park House, Lorrha was burned to the the ground in the early hours of Tuesday, May 10, 1938 by a body of twenty-four armed men, who entered the house about 2.30 am.

Major Charles Kemble Butler-Stoney, who owned Portland Park, hadn't lived in the house for ten years and had recently handed it over to the trustees of Emmanuel Home, Rathgar, Dublin as a home for Protestant children. Seventeen orphans from Emmanuel House were due to arrive and take up residence there on May 10.

The armed men ordered out the inmates, Mr. John W. Densmore, superintendent, his wife and two children, and a maid, Miss Meredith.

Major Butler-Stoney lived in a house about a mile from Portland House and on the Friday following the burning 710 acres belonging to him were allocated to tenants, as the final part of the distribution of the land of the estate by the Land Commission.

Mr. Densmore answered a loud knocking at the door soon after 2 am and found eight men on the doorstep. They told him they had come to burn the house and that he would have to leave and take anybody else in the house with him. When the family left, the men, some masked and carrying revolvers and cans of petrol, filed into the house and shortly afterwards it was on fire. The men, whom Mrs. Densmore described as courteous to her and one of whom said to her that they didn't like burning the house but that they had their orders, then marched away.

Emmanuel House

Major Butler-Stoney had given the house to the trustees of Emmanuel House because the latter was full. It was to provide a home for Protestant children and assurances had been given that it would not be a proselytising institution. These assurances had been given as a result of bad feeling locally against the project. There was no question of land trouble because the land had already been divided up between tenants sometime previously.

The mansion, a late Georgian two-storey structure over basement, was built in the first quarter of the 19th century and had twenty-five rooms. Some furniture and carpets belonging to Major Butler-Stoney, as well as some belonging to the Densmores and some installed for the reception of the children were destroyed by the fire.

Man Arrested

Intense police activity followed the burning but it took some time for arrests to be madeiv. On July 1 Thomas Hough, Carrigahorig, Lorrha was charged at Birr District Court with having 'with others not in custody, wilfully and maliciously set fire to a dwelling house, known as Portland House, value £1,500 . . .'v

The first prosecution witness was John William Densmore, who stated he was nominally superintendent of the orphanage at Portland House. He resided with his wife and family at the house. According to him 'We were going to carry on the custody and care of illegitimate Protestant children. These children were to come to us from Emmanuel Home, Orwell Road, Dublin. We were going to work without remuneration.'

He was awakened at about 2.30 am on the morning of May 10 by knocking at the hall door. He went to the window and was told to come down. When he asked for what he was told it was about business. When he commented on such an extraordinary hour for doing business, the reply was: 'Come down if you don't want to go up in smoke.'

He decided to go down, dressed and was followed by his wife. When he opened the door he was confronted by eight or ten men, the leader of whom presented a revolver and said: 'Hands up!'. Mr. Densmore put up his hands and said he was unarmed. The leader said: 'We'll give you time to clear out; we have come to burn the place.'

Several men then invaded the house and disappeared into various parts. The spokesman asked him how many occupants were in the house and he told him of his wife, maid and two chldren. He began to reason with the leader as to why they were burning them out. He replied he had no time to argue: 'I don't want to hear any of this talk – we know what you are.'

Mr. Densmore continued that he then went upstairs to his wife and children, who were crying. Soon the children were pacified and one of the men helped his wife to dress them. They collected some of their personal belongings and carried them down to the lawn. He was exhorted by one of the men to hurry up and he tried to reason with him also. 'Sure you are proselytisers,' the man said. When Mr. Densmore denied that he ever proselytised a human being in his life, the man replied: 'Don't you pick up Roman Catholic children off the streets of Dublin to make Protsetants of them?' When this was denied the man said: 'We have no time to argue; hurry up and get out.'

Mr. Densmore related how he continued to remove his private papers and other personal belongings to the lawn and how, after some time, the man who appeared to be leader said to him: 'I think you have enough out now.' They were allowed to take nothing but their personal belongings.

House on Fire

As they went on to the lawn the fire was alight. This was ten to fifteen minutes after the men arrived. Soon the place was completely ablaze and by six o'clock in the morning it was completely burnt out.

The men left immediately the fire had started and didn't seem to have bicycles or motorsvi. According to Mr. Densmore the leader 'was wearing large horn-rimmed spectacles and what appeared to be a muffler round the lower part of his face and a soft hat. He believed that there were at most about twenty men there that morning.

At 6.20 am he reported the burning to the Civic Guards in Lorrha. On May 21 he attended an identification parade at Templemore Garda Station with his wife and maid. He was unable to identify any of the men paraded before him. Under cross-examination he did admit he was in the bedroom with his wife and children and had met two men face to face for two or three minutes on two or three occasions.

Man Recognised

Mrs. Densmore corroborated her husband's evidence but added that she recognised one of the men in the Templemore parade 'as the man who was in my bedroom on the morning of May 10. I had not the slightest hesitation or difficulty in recognising him. I pointed him out to the Superintendent at the time. I first saw this man on the 10th May standing on my left hand side in the hall. He walked almost alongside me up the stairs and into my bedroom. He remained there until he came down with me also. He was in the bedroom with me for about ten minutes. He was the man who dressed the child, rolled up the bedclothes and was very courteous. I saw him again in the hall when we got downstairs. The electric light was on in all these places. I now see him in court – he is the accused.' Earlier she had informed the court that the man wasn't masked. He wore a scarf round his neck and a soft hat. He wore a dark brown overcoat.In order to give time for cross-examination Justice W. J. Meagher, D.J. adjourned the further hearing to Birr District Court on July 29.

When the case resumed Mrs. Densmore was examined by Mr. Sean McCurtain for the accused. He asked her why she had recognised the accused in the identification parade at the barracks at Templemore and her husband hadn't. She claimed that her husband hadn't the same opportunity as she had for recognising him as she spoke directly to the man in her room on the morning of the burning whereas her husband had only passed in and out of her bedroom. Another reason she stated was that he hadn't his glasses on that morning. Mr. McCurtain's defence was to cast doubt on Mrs. Densmore's identification and he kept pressing her that she could not be positive. At one point the prosecuting counsel, Mr. Haugh, objected to the persistence of the questioning stating that 'the matter had gone far enough, and there was a limit to everything.'

Another witness was the maid of Mrs. Densmore, who saw the men on the morning but failed to identify the accused at the identification parade.

In the course of his evidence Charles Kemble Butler-Stoney told the court that his family lived at Portland House until about ten years previously. The previous December he gave the house over to Emmanuel Home, Orwell Road, Rathgar and had nothing to say as regards the running or management of the intended home. He had made a claim for malicious damage to the house and for the furniture destroyed. Under cross-examination he stated: 'I was aware there was some feeling from one source about the handling over of the house.'vii

Superintendent O'Boyle of Nenagh told the court about the identification parade. It consisted of nineteen men, fourteen from the Templemore area, the accused, and four other suspects from Lorrha and Borrisokane. The accused and the other suspects were given the choice of their own places in the line. He related how Mr. Desnmore failed to recognise anyone but that Mrs. Densmore, having walked along the line and examined each man, she returned to the middle of the line and said to the Superintendent: 'I have seen this man before,' pointing to Thomas Hough. Superintendent O'Boyle continued: 'I asked her to place her hand on the man to whom she was referring. She then placed her hand upon Thomas Hough. I asked Mrs. Densmore where she saw him and she replied, 'in Portland Park.'

I asked her when and she said 'on the morning of the 10th' I asked her what month and she said 'May'. I asked her what year and she said 'nineteen thirty-eight'. She then said: 'That is all I can conscientiously swear to.'

Sergeant Patrick Vaughan of Tipperary gave evidence that he took the accused and the other suspects to Templemore. Under cross-examination he stated that none of them asked for a solicitor before they arrived at Templemore. Mr. McCurtain suggested to Sergeant Vaughan that it was an unfair identification parade because the accused and the other suspects were engaged in agricultural work and had the marks of it on their clothes while the others were from Templemore and their dress wasn't like that of men who were immediately after coming off a farm like the accused, who was taken off his farm where he had been ploughing and was covered in clay.

Inspector Thomas O'Reilly read a statement that the accused made to him on May 20th. In it he told how he had spent the day before the burning and how he retired at 10.15 pm to bed on the night of the burning. He got up shortly after 6 am and didn't hear about the burning until 6-30 pm on Tuesday evening. 'When I heard this news I said 'Powerful work' and said no more about it.'
The statement continued: 'Prior to last Monday week, for about six weeks, it was talked of in the parish for miles around that a 'bird's nest'viii was being established at Portland House and for some time before last Monday week it was thought that the orphans were already there. All the people were cursing and saying that the damn thing should not be allowed, that it would be alright in the cities. I could not give the names of the persons who were so cursing, because the whole countryside was against the 'bird's nest' without exception.'

'I never heard that Portland House was going to be burned, nor never dreamed that it would be burned. I had no hand, act or part whatsoever in the burning of Portland House. I would not like to see any place burned. I was not a bit sorry to hear of Portland House been burned – if anything I was glad.'

When the judge asked the accused if he had anything to add to the statement, he replied: 'Not guilty.'

Returned for Trial

The prosecutor, Mr. Haugh, applied to have the accused returned for trial to Nenagh Circuit Court on October 4. Defence counsel, McCurtain, disagreed. According to him the prosecution case rested on the evidence of Mrs. Densmore's identification of the accused, which was not corroborated by her husband or maid. Also, no jury would agree with the manner of the identification parade, which was unfair to Hough, who had the distinguishing marks of of the farm on him. He continued that Mrs. Densmore's evidence was not reliable because her recollection wasn't good. 'She hadn't been properly cross-examined, not was there any really close investigation into her evidence. She had plenty of time to consider her answers.'

For instance, according to McCurtain, Mrs Densmore had stated that there was a man in her room that night from the time the men arrived until they left. That evidence was contradicted by the maid who said that when she first went into Mrs. Densmore's room, there was no man there. Another example of her faulty recollection was Mrs. Densmore's statement that she arrived at Templemore for the identification parade at 1 o'clock, whereas the evidence of the Inspector said it was 2.50. For these reasons the accused should not be returned for trial.

The Justice said that he had no jurisdiction to say if the accused was guilty or not guilty. His position was to decide if there were a prima facie case for a jury and he had come to the conclusion there was. He accordingly returned the accused for trial to Nenagh.

Trial Moved to Dublin

When Thomas Hough, described as a farmer and shopkeeper of Carrigahorig, Lorrha, appeared at Nenagh Circuit Court on October 4, the State Solicitor, Mr. James O'Brien, applied under Section 54 of the Courts of Justice Act to have the trial transferred to the Central Criminal Court, Dublin. Justice Sealy consented.

The trial took place on December 6 at the Central Criminal Court, Green Street, Dublin before Mr. Justice O'Byrne and a jury. Mr. Kevin Haugh conducted the prosecution on behalf of the State and Mr. A. E. Wood, S.C. instructed by Mr. Sean McCurtain defended the accused.

Most of the evidence was a rehash of what had been given at the District Court sitting. Mr. Wood's main defence was to throw doubt on the evidence of Mrs. Densmore, especially on the question of who was in the room while she was dressing her children and completing her own. He also threw doubt on the accuracy of her account regarding the dressing of the children and on the amount of time that the men stayed in the room. When the accused was cross-examined by Mr. Haugh, he didn't add anything new to his original statement.

When Mr. Wood closed the case for the defence, he said there were two matters for the jury's consideration: 'They would have to first find that it was while those persons {Mr. and Mrs. Densmore} were in the house that it was actually set on fire, and they had secondly to find that the accused was in the house participating in the dastardly act that took place.' 

To sustain the indictment it would be necessary to find that the parties should be in the house at the very time the fire was communicated to it. He thought they could not be satisfied on the evidence that that was so. He thought there was one thing that was undisputed that the dastards who burned the house that night, the one thing they were anxious about was that the persons who were in the house and their personal belongings should be removed out of the house before it was set on fire. He took it that the evidence would also satisfy them that before any fire was seen all the occupants were out on the lawn. On the second point he told the jury that many judges thought that visual identification was not as strong or imposing as circumstantial evidence.

Mr. Wood, proceeding, said he did not suggest Mrs. Densmore was doing anything but trying to tell the truth but the question was could a person be anxious and trying to tell the truth and yet be completely mistaken. 'Mrs. Densmore's mind', said Mr. Wood, 'was aflame with religious zeal, her children were crying in the room, she was confronted by armed and desperate men, and her mind was set aglow with the prospect that the house, which was the citadel of her soul's desire, was about to be burned.'

Defence counsel, in conclusion, appealed to the jury that having heard the accused's statement on oath to say that they could not be convinced that the fire was communicated to the buildings before the occupants left it or that the accused was the man who was in the room with Mrs. Densmore that night. Mr. Haugh did not address the jury for the State.

Address by Judge

Mr. Justice Byrne, in charging the jury, said they would have to consider the evidence with very great care: 'We, in this country,' he proceeded, 'are supposed to be living under a rule of law and order. We are living in a country where freedom of religion is guaranteed and where people are supposed to be able to carry on their ordinary avocations unless they offend against the law. Whatever the result of this case may be, you will have no doubt that on this morning of 10th May last a shocking outrage was committed. This house, known as Portland House, had been presented by the owner to an institution in Dublin, having as its object the upbringing of Protestant illegitimate children, children who have nobody to look after them. The care and maintenance and education of such children is a very laudable object.'

He added that it was obvious from some of the evidence that there was strong local feeling against this institution. There were suggestions that the people in charge were proselytising Catholic children. But the jury should not be concerned with that aspect of the case. They should know that strong private feeling was no entitlement to anyone to go in and burn down property. Therefore they should consider the evidence with care because if, in their opinion, the case against the accused was satisfactory, then they must vindicate the law of this country and find the accused guilty.

As regards the charge against the accused, it was necessary that he should refer the jury to Section 2 of the Malicious Damage Acts of 1961, which provided that whoever should set fire unlawfully and maliciously to any dwellinghouse, a person being within, shall be guilty of a felony. It was alleged in the indictment that Mr. and Mrs. Densmore and family were in the house at the time it was set on fire, but the State had to prove that. If the State failed to prove this, and also that the accused was one of the persons that set fire to it, then the accused should be acquitted.

He continued: 'It was obviously no part of the intentions of these men to set fire to the house and burn the inmates of it. That was clearly not their contemplation. Consistently with their object it may be that before the parties had actually gone out, they had set fire to the back portion of the house – a fire that would not inpede their progress to the outside.' It would seem to his lordship that Mrs. Densmore had much greater opportunities of taking notice of the man and being able to recognise him than her husband or the maid, and they might take into account that she was a more observant person that her husband.

Dealing with the case for the defence, the Justice referred to the statement made by the accused on May 19, and particularly to the part in which he said that a man named Paddy Hogan got a gallon of oil in his shop in a large petrol tin: 'Hogan, of course, may have required that oil for a particularly innocent purpose and it might be that it was portion of the oil used for the burning of Portland House. They should remember there were two tins seen at Portland House.'

Another point made by the Justice was the strangeness of the accused's brother, who was actually in court but didn't appear in the witness box: 'It may be of course that he could only tell them that he had gone to sleep before his brother went to bed.' 
If the jury accepted the accused's evidence they should acquit him. If they rejected it they weren't entitled to convict him until they considered the evidence for the prosecution and decided whether it satisfied them that the accused was one of the guilty parties.'

Not Guilty Verdict

The jury retired at 3.50 pm and returned at 5 pm, when the foreman announced that they disagreed. The question they wanted to know, according to the foreman, was when the fire was first seen. The judge went over the evidence and a juror asked if it were possible to see the drawingroom, where the fire started, from the hall. The judge was unable to give an answer as they had no plan of the house. The jury retired a second time but was recalled again to be referred to some of Mr. Densmore's evidence. At 5.10 it retired a third time and returned after ten minutes with a verdict of not guiltyix. A man began clapping in the public gallery and the County Registrar said: 'Stop that.' The Justice discharged the accused. He left the dock and, as he went out into Green Street, a crowd gathered to greet him. A police superintendent warned a small group of men to have no demonstration. A shout of 'Up the I.R.A.' was heard and the crowd dispersed.

Sequel

At Nenagh Circuit Court on October 5, Judge Sealy heard a claim by Major C.K. Butler-Stoney of Portland Hill, Lorrha for £7,000 for the malicious burning of the house and £863 for the destruction of the furniture. In the course of the hearing counsel for North Tipperary, Galway and Offaly County Councils accepted the malice of the burning but sought to reduce the amount of the award by illustrating that Portland House, at the time of the burning on May 10, was a 'white elephant' and an unsaleable asset.

In the course of the hearing it was revealed how the owner, Major Charles Butler-Stoney, who inherited the house from his brother, Thomas, in 1917, did not take up residence in it until 1928, because he had been occupied with army work in England. Major Stoney was a bachelor and soon found the house too big, built another nearby for £1,500 to £2,000 and let Portland House to a relative, Mrs. Colwyn Smith, on a five-year lease at a rent of £275. From 1933-1936 the house was occupied for six weeks every year by Richard Butler-Stoney. He was the only one of the Stoneys to be married. Up to 1936 the house was insured for £8,000 and the furniture for £1,000. In that year the insurance was reduced to £2,000 and £600 respectively.

It was also revealed that the estate attached to the house contained 3,000 acres up to 1930, when it was sold to the Land Commission with the exception of 100 acres for Major Butler-Stoney and six acres to remain with the house. The land was parcelled out among twenty-five tenants including the park land through which the avenue of the house went. This avenue of 1,100 yards was now bisected by four tenants' plots and access to the house was through four gates across an avenue, which was now in a bad state of repairx.
This development, according to the defence, made the house much less attractive and in fact made it suitable to nobody but 'a shopkeeper in Portumna might utilise the house as a weekend residence at a rent of £35 per year.'

Before the house was handed over to the Densmores in 1937 an auction of some of the effects was held in Birr. The prices paid for items were low and defence claimed this as an argument against the size of the compensation sought for the furniture. The claimant stated that the best furniture was kept and was to be left at Portland House until suitable alternative accommodation should be found for it. The effects included 1,500 books, which included 'some extraordinary old bibles'. There were also some paintings of value.

Another argument against the size of the claim was that the house was no longer in use by the owner. It had been on the books of the auctioneers for a number of years and no buyers had come forward. There were many such mansions around the country and they were more attractive to religious communities because there was a sizable amount of land with them. The owner had given the house to the Densmores because they could find nobody to buy it. It was the only way he could get it off his hands. There was no evidence that it was an attractive proposition for someone interested in hunting. Neither would it be a success as a hotelxi and there was no reason to believe there would be an onrush of wealthy people from England in the wake of the rise of Hitler.

In his summing up Judge Sealy discussed the merits of the evidence before him and came to the conclusion that the house which, from the photographs he had seen, appeared to be beautiful and well kept-up, had depreciated in value as a result of selling off the estate. Also the presence of farmers on the avenue would deteriorate it to the state of a country boreen. However, the house did have a saleable value as evidenced by the fact that Emmanuel House, having been burned out of Portland House, had purchased a similar mansion in Wicklow for £1,800. His lordship said he would allow £1,200 for the mansion, which he considered a fair sum for the loss sustained, and £600 for the furniture.

The area of charge would be confined to North Tipperary because, even though the bounds of County Galway were only 450 yards from the house, there was no evidence to show that any of the malefactors came from County Galway.

 

<span class="postTitle">County Senior Hurling B Championship 2008 - The Seamus O'Riain Cup</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 49-50

County Senior Hurling B Championship 2008 - The Seamus O'Riain Cup

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 49-50

 

The second major element in the Fr. Sheehy Club's proposal was the creation of a new championship, which was the equivalent of a B championship. In order to give it an element of prestige and prevent it becoming a debased alternative, the county board was requested, in the course of the proposals, to arrange a prestigious trophy for the winners to be named after some former inspirational person in the association in the county. Former board president, Seamus Ó Riain fitted the profile and the trophy and the competition became the Ó Riain Cup.

In an earlier proposal for a B competition clubs were assigned on the basis of their results the previous year. Under the Fr. Sheehy proposals the results of matches in the current year decided which competition a club played in. It was agreed that all clubs who qualified for divisional semi-finals went into the Dan Breen Cup, while all who didn't qualified for the Ó Riain Cup. Every team as a result got to play in some county championship and there was no relegation. Under the new structures junior and intermediate clubs had the option of combining and affiliating in the championship. Any club had the option of applying the the county gradings committee to be graded as senior with the approval of their divisional board. Conversely any club had the option of being regraded from senior to intermediate. Later in the year the county board decided that players of junior and intermediate status could play in the Ó Riain Cup without losing their status. The winners of the intermediate championship would continue to be promoted senior.

Preliminary Round

Thirteen clubs qualified for the Ó Riain Cup, six from the North, four from the Mid, two from the West and one from the South. A preliminary round of five matches was used to reduce the numbers to eight. The draw protected the teams from the North and the Mid.

The first game in the preliminary round was between Carrick Swans and Lorrha at Boherlahan on August 1, with the South team winning easily by 3-17 to 3-8. Boherlahan-Dualla drew with Kickhams, 2-22 to 3-19 at Cashel on August 2, with Boherlahan winning the replay by 1-13 to 0-15 on August 14. Kilruane MacDonaghs had a facile win, by 5-18 to 0-9, over Cashel King Cormac's at Templemore on August 2. Holycross-Ballcahill defeated Portore by 2-22 to 1-12 at Toomevara on August 6. The final game, between J. K. Brackens and Upperchurch-Drombane was played at Borrisoleigh on August 19 with victory going to the 'Church by 2-22 to 0-18.

The first two quarter-finals were played on August 24. At Boherlahan Upperchurch-Drombane came from behind to defeat Holycross-Drombane by 0-20 to 0-16. Holycross led by 0-10 to 0-8 at the interval, increased their lead early in the second half, but Upperchurch came with a late surge to win by four points.

Moneygall proved too good for Boherlahan-Dualla at the Ragg, winning by 0-16 to 1-8. The game was fairly tight in the first half with the North side leading by 0-7 to 0-6 at the interval but Moneygall dominated the second half and thoroughly deserved their five-point victory.

The two remaining quarter-finals were played the following week. Carrick Swans were much too slick and eager for Borrisoleigh at New Inn on August 28, winning by 2-20 to 0-15. Borrisoleigh, who had been many people's favourites to win the North title, went into this game as favourites but proved lethargic on the occasion. They were behind by 1-12 to 0-7 at the interval and eleven points behind at the final whistle.

Kilruane MacDonaghs got the better of a depleted Nenagh, Éire Óg side at Cloughjordan on August 28, winning by 3-12 to 1-16. The winners led by 1-9 to 1-7 at the interval and always seemed to have the edge on their opponents during the second half.

Semi-finals

It took extra time for Carrick Swans to put away Moneygall in the first of the semi-finals, played at Littleton on September 20. It was the third North club Carrick met in the competition and while victory wasn't as easy as in the earlier two rounds, they yet deserved their two-point victory on a scoreline of 2-15 to 1-16. Carrick got off to a flying start with a goal in the opening seconds, led by 2-7 to 0-8 at the interval but had to endure a great fight-back by Moneygall, who were level at the end of ordinary time at 2-12 to 1-15. There was little scoring in extra time with Carrick getting three points to Moneygall's one to claim victory and qualify for the first Seamus Ó Riain Cup final. It was tough luck on Moneygall, who fought tenaciously to claim a place in the final of a championship named after one of their most distinguished members.

There were plenty of goals in the second semi-final between Kilruane-MacDonaghs and Upperchurch-Drombane at Templemore on September 27. Though the scoreboard would suggest a very comfortable win of eleven points for Kilruane, on a scoreline of 4-18 to 4-7, it wouldn't be the complete truth. Throughout the hour both sides enjoyed periods of supremacy and it was only over the final five minutes that the tide eventually turned in Kilruane's favour when they scored 1-4. The winners were in front by 2-8 to 2-6 at the interval.

The Final

The hurlers of Carrick Swans recalled the glory days of 1947 when they lifted the inaugural Seamus Ó Riain cup after serving up a stirring second-half performance to overcome Kilruane MacDonaghs by 1-14 to 1-11 at Semple Stadium on October 19. It was a great ending for Carrick, the sole South representative in the compatition and their fourth conquest of North teams in the course of the competition. The victory has to put a spring in their step for the 2009 championship.

Carrick Swans were way off the pace in the first half and were five points behind at the interval. The movement of Danny O'Hanlon, who was scoreless in the first half, to full-forward had a transforming effect on the team. O'Hanlon became the target man to aim for, brought the best out of corner-forwards Paul Diffily and Dwane Fogarty, and scored five points in his own right. As the second-half progressed the Swans reduced the lead, Fogarty's goal after five minutes a key element, and went ahead. Kilruane got their last score eleven minutes from time but there remained the threat that they might get the goal that would salvage the occasion for them. However, whether it was a greater hunger on the part of the Swans they held on for an historic victory and there were scenes of jubilation when referee, Denis Curtis, blew the final whistle.

The Seamus Ó Riain Cup was presented to the Carrick Swan captain, Gerry Walsh, by Eugene Ryan, representing the family, in the presence of county board chairman, John Costigan. The Man of the Match Award was presented to Carrick Swan corner-forward, Dwayne Fogarty, who scored 1-3.

Carrick Swan: Colm O'Sullivan, John Walsh, Jamie Sweetman, Gerry Walsh (capt.), Martin Russell, Kevin Lanigan, John Grace, Stephen Hahessy (0-1), Darren Fahey, Alan O'Sullivan (0-1), Danny O'Hanlon (0-5), Kieran Reade (0-1), Paul Difily (0-1), Alan P. Ryan (0-2), Dwane Fogarty (1-3). Subs: Bobby Ryan for Alan P. Ryan, Raymond Dunne for Alan O'Sullivan. Also: Mark O'Halloran, Anthony O'Donnell, Brian Grace, Jamie Power, Shane Hogan, Aaron Walsh, William Lonergan, Darren Waters, Jamie Kennedy, Keith Walsh, Johnny Cahill.

Manager: M. J. Collins. Selectors: John Grace, Willie Hahessy, Sean O'Shea, Derek Hogan. Coach: Shane Ahearne.

Kilruane MacDonaghs: Ger Corcoran, Diarmuid Cahill, Martin Walsh, Liam Gibson, Eoin Hogan, Stephen Murphy, Gavin McAvinchey, Seamus Hennessy, Kevin Quinlan (0-1), Mark O'Leary (0-1), Pat Williams, Shane Quinlan (0-1), Thomas Williams (1-0), Ray McLoughney (0-6), Mikey Costello (0-2). Subs: Brian O'Meara for Thomas Williams. Also: Liam Gibson, Kevin Ryan, Alan Ryan, Denis Cahill, Declan Barrett, Freddie Williams, James Williams, Timmy Walsh.

Selectors: Len Gaynor, Paddy Williams, Gilbert Williams.

Referee: Denis Curtis (Thurles Sarsfields)

 

Results of the Seamus Ó Riain Cup at a Glance

 

Preliminary Round

Aug. 1 at Boherlahan: Carrick Swan 3-17 Lorrha 3-8 (Ref: Richie Barry)

Aug. 2 at Cashel: Boherlahan-Dualla 2-22 Kickhams 3-19 AET (Ref: Keith Delahunty)

Aug. 14 at Holycross: Boherlahan-Dualla 1-13 Kickhams 0-15 (Replay) (Ref: Noel Cosgrove)

Aug. 2 at Templemore: Kilruane MacDonaghs 5-18 Cashel K.C. 0-9 (Ref: Denis Curtis)

Aug. 6 at Toomevara: Holycross-Ballycahill 2-22 Portroe 1-12 (Ref: Phil Ryan)

Aug. 19 at Borrisoleigh: Upperchurch-Drombane 2-22 J. K. Brackens 0-18 (Ref: John Cleary)

 

Quarter-Finals

Aug. 24 at Boherlahan: Upperchurch-Drombane 0-20 Holycross-Ballcahill 0-16 (Ref: N. Cosgrove)

Aug. 24 at Ragg: Moneygall 0-16 Boherlahan-Dualla 1-8 (Ref: Richie Barry)

Aug. 28 at New Inn: Carrick Swan 2-20 Borrisoleigh 0-15 (Ref: Johnny Ryan)

Aug. 28 at Cloughjordan: Kilruane MacDonaghs 3-12 Nenagh Eire Óg 1-16 (Ref: Tommy Ryan)

 

Semi-Finals:

Sept. 20 at Littleton: Carrick Swan 2-15 Moneygall 1-16 AET (Ref: Denis Curtis)

Sept. 27 at Templemore: Kilruane MacDonaghs 4-18 Upperchurch-Drombane 4-7 (Ref: J. Ryan B)

 

Final 

Oct. 19 at Semple Stadium: Carrick Swan 1-14 Kilruane MacDonaghs 1-11 (Ref: Denis Curtis) 

 

 

<span class="postTitle">The County Senior Hurling Championship 2008</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 45-49

The County Senior Hurling Championship 2008

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 45-49

 

The following was the opening paragraph in the article on the senior hurling championship in the 1993 Yearbook: 'Toomevara bridged a thrity-two year gap when they captured the Dan Breen Cup for the first time since 1960 in a thrilling county final replay at Semple Stadium on November 8. In doing so they beat their opponents of over three decades ago, Thurles Sarsfields.' 

The 1992 victory was their eleventh senior title and since then they have won ten more, their latest on October 19, when their victims were Thurles Sarsfields once again by 2-14 to 0-17. In fact in their eleven victories in the seventeen finals between 1992 and 2008 inclusive, Sarsfields have been the victims on five occasions, in 1992 as mentioned, 2000, 2001, 2003 and 2008. Two players, Terry Dunne, who played at centrefield, and Tony Delaney, who came on as a sub, were there for all the victories and won all 11 medals, still a little way back from Mickey Byrne's 14 during his lifetime.

The county senior hurling championship had a much different look in 2008 as a result of an important change in direction following a special county convention on structures held in the Anner Hotel, Thurles on January 22.

For some time there was mounting criticism of the existing structures, which allowed for relegation. Many clubs believed that the fear of relegation was inhibiting their performances so that they lined out in the senior hurling championship with nothing but negative thoughts on how to avoid losing their senior status. Hurling at this level was no longer a joy.

There was a second criticism. For a number of years the intent of the structures was to reduce the number of senior teams in the county, believing that the fewer clubs we had the better for senior hurling, with Kilkenny's success the model with twelve teams. This had resulted in the reduction of the number of teams in the South and West to four senior teams. Albeit both divisions were protected from further reductions in numbers it was difficult to organise meaningful championships with so few clubs.

These developments led to a desire for change which was reflected in the number of proposals which were put forward for the special convention on January 22. The proposal that found favour with the delegates was the Fr. Sheehy proposal, which envisaged a new championship, divided into two competitions, the Dan Breen Cup proper with sixteen teams and a secondary competition, later to be named the Seamus Ó Riain Cup, after the former president of the county board, for teams that didn't qualify for the primary competition. There was no relegation.

The backing of the new proposals by a two-thirds majority, 55 to 26, was greater than expected but it reflected an 'alternative point of view' prevailing in the county on the matter of relegation, which was pointed out by West chairman, Mattie Finnerty, at the convention. In fact so discredited was the status quo that it received only 12 votes at the meeting.

The essence of the new proposals was permission to as many clubs as wished to enter teams in the senior hurling championship. There was a return of power to the divisions who were given the right to run their championships as they thought fit, so long as they produced teams for the Dan Breen Cup by a certain date. The number of teams was four per division which equated to the semi-finalists in the divisional championships

The new structures released a new energy in the divisions as clubs felt they had been given back their freedom to express themselves and run their own affairs. Affiliations increased in the North to 10, as Lorrha were promoted by virtue of winning the intermediate championship, in the Mid to 8, as Moycarkey-Borris, who had been trying for a number of years to win the intermediate, decided to go senior, in the South to 5, as Ballybacon-Grange went senior, and in the West to 6, as Eire Og and Golden-Kilfeacle entered the senior championship. Given the freedom to run their championships as they thought fit the North and the Mid opted for two groups, while the South and the West went for single leagues. While the top four teams in the South and the West qualified for the semi-finals, there was a different system in the North and Mid. There the top teams in the goups went straight to the semi-finals, while the second a third teams played off in quarter finals, with the winners qualifying for the semi-finals.

Divisional Finals

The North final had an unusual pairing as Kildangan returned from sixty-five years in the wilderness to take the North title at Nenagh on August 24, defeating Burgess in the process. The result did not appear likely as the winners trailed by ten points with fifteen minutes to go but they manufactured an amazing turnaround to win by two points on a scoreline of 1-17 to 2-12.

Three finals were played on August 31. In the Mid, Drom Inch recorded their second success at this level in three years and their third in all when they defeated Thurles Sarsfields by 2-19 to 0-21 at Templemore. The winners had much more urgency and determination about their play and they got a major display from Seamus Callanan, who recorded a personal tally of 1-6.

In the South Killenaule retained their title and won their eighteenth championship in all, when they defeated Ballingarry by 3-15 to 1-10 at Monroe. Although the losers led by four points at the interval, Killenaule took complete control in the second half and had the game wrapped up long before the final whistle.

The West title was also retained when Clonoulty-Rossmore defeated Éire Óg by 1-13 to 0-9 at Dundrum on Sunday evening to take their twelfth championship. Clonoulty led by 0-7 to 0-2 at the interval and had control for most of the game even though Eire Óg, who were going for their ninth title, never gave up trying.

Dan Breen Cup First Round

All the teams that played for the divisional semi-finals qualified for the Dan Breen Cup. The eight teams that made the divisional finals were protected by being put in one side of the draw while the defeated semi-finalists were put in the other. The matches were played on September 13th, 20th and 21st.

Cappawhite defeated Éire Óg by 1-17 to 0-16 at Dundrum, and Loughmore-Castleiney defeated Killenaule by 2-13 to 2-10 at Cashel on September 13.

Four games were played on September 20. Clonoulty-Rossmore defeated Roscrea by 1-14 to 0-12 and Kildangan defeated Moycarkey-Borris by 2-14 to 0-19 at the Ragg. In the other two games at Dundrum Thurles Sarsfields trounced Golden-Kilfeacle by 6-16 to 2-12 and Drom Inch overcame Ballybacon-Grange by 1-15 to 1-10. The final two games were played o September 21. Toomevara defeated Burgess by 1-14 to 1-12 at Nenagh, and Mullinahone got the better of Ballingarry by 3-15 to 2-14 at Fethard.

Quarter-Finals

The quarter-finals were played at Semple Stadium on the weekend of September 27/28, with two of the games played on Saturday and the remaining two on Sunday.

Tom Butler was the hero in Clonoulty-Rossmore's single point victory over Mullinahone on Saturday. It looked as if the game were going Mullinahone's way when Eoin Kelly pointed them in front in the final minute, but Butler came with his two late long-rangers, not only to bring his side level but to send them on to victory on a scoreline of 1-15 to 0-17. Mullinahone had seemed likely winners when they came from 1-8 to 0-5 down at the interval to take the lead near the end. The winners were helped by a resolute backline who conceded only eight points from play.

Although Loughmore-Castleiney won comfortably in the end they had to work hard for victory over Cappawhite in the second game. They led by by 1-8 to 0-6 at the interval and went further ahead soon after resuming. But Cappawhite came back with a goal from Paul Fitzgerald and got to within a point of Loughmore before levelling at 1-12 each in the forty-second minute. There was stalemate for a while until Loughmore gradually inched ahead after the fiftieth minute and Cappawhite's resistence was finally broken with a killer goal six minutes from time, when a McGrath delivery was touched to the net by Michael Webster, The final socre was 2-19 to 2-14 and it put Loughmore into the semi-final.

The games on Sunday were less close and less interesting. Toomevara proved much too good for North champions Kildangan, winning at ease on a score line of 1-22 to 1-13. The winners clocked up a six points to two lead in the first ten minutes. Kildangan came back into the game during the second-quarter and had a momentum going when the interval came and found them only a point behind on a scorline of ten points to nine. However the break did them no good and they weren't to score again until the seventeenth minute after resuming by which time Toomevara were nine points in front. They eventually won by this margin and revealed themselves as a very slick outfit with definite aspirations for another county title.

In the second game Thurles Sarsfields proved themselves much too good for Mid champions, Drom Inch, winning in a canter on a scoreline of 3-15 to 2-9 and reversing the result of the Mid final. The only time they looked threatened was in the seventh mionute when Seamus Callanan struck home a penalty and in the fifteenth minute when Michael Cantwell scored Drom Inch's second goal. By the break the Sarsfields were back in front by 1-9 to 2-5. In fact but for some horrific shooting they would have been much more in front. They scored 2-6 in the second half, while confining Drom Inch to four points and thoroughly deserved their nine-point victory. On the day's display they looked to be serious contenders for the Dan Breen Cup.

Semi-Finals

The Examiner described the first of the semi-finals, played at Semple Stadium on October 5, as 'passionless, lifeless, bloodless.' Another spectator described it as 'sleep-inducing'. It was incredible that two such talented teams, as Thurles Sarsfields and Clonoulty-Rossmore, could produce such a dreadful display. Clonoulty, at least, weren't fazed by the criticism. They went into the game as outsiders, at 10-1 at the bookies against winning the county final, while Sarsfields were even money, following their impressive display against Drom Inch the previous Sunday. Most of the scores came from frees with Pa Bourke getting 1-5 of his side's total of 1-9 and Timmy Hammersley getting 0-8 of Clonoulty's 0-11 during the first forty-eight minutes. Sarsfields led by 1-5 to 0-6 at the interval, kept in front until Clonoulty levelled with about six minutes to go, 1-10 to 0-13. Sarsfields raced ahead again with three points and it seemed curtains for Clonoulty but they came back with an answering three. In the sixtieth minute Sarsfield again hit the front when Lar Corbett pointed but Thomas Butler came back with a levelling point to send the sides to a replay on a scoreline of 1-14 to 0-17. The last twelve minutes redeemed somewhat a most forgettable game.

Many people looked forward to the second semi-final, between defending and Munster Club champions, Loughmore-Castleiney, and Toomevara, as the match of the year, but it turned out to be a damp squib and brought little entertainment to the crowd of less that five-thousand spectators. Loughmore stated brightly and had three points before Toomevara replied with three of their own. Loughmore went ahead again with three points but then Toomevara, having found their range after some bad misses, had a string of five points without reply. Each side then exchanged points to leave Toomevara in front by 0-9 to 0-7 at the interval. It had been disappointing fare and it continued so in the second half. The third quarter was a balanced affair with each side adding four points, but Toomevara came into their own in the final quarter as Loughmore wilted and became guilty of extraordinary bad wides. They scored only two points in this final period while Toomevara added a number of points to win by 0-17 to 0-13. It was poor scoring on a good hurling day, with goals never really threatened and a huge tally of wides on each side, Loughmore chalking up fifteen and Toomevara going two better at seventeen.

The replay of the Thurles Sarsfields-Clonoulty-Rossmore game took place at Semple Stadium a week later. A goal from Lar Corbett in the second minute of extra time helped Sarsfields to a hard-fought win. Clonoulty looked set to win as they led by five points with eight minutes to play. But Sarsfields, inspired by substitutes Johnny Enright and Richie Ruth, rallied to draw level in the third minute of injury time. Earlier Clonoulty had a goal on the stroke of half-time to take the lead on a scoreline of 1-7 to 1-6. They continued to have the upper hand in the second half and twice went five points clear but Sarsfields clawed themselves back and shot five unanswered points in the last eight minutes to bring the game to extra time on a score of 1-16 each. Clonoulty had the first point in extra time but then came Corbett's goal and Sarsfields led by 2-17 to 1-19 at the break. They finished the stronger side as the greater depth of talent in their panel began to make an impact and Clonoulty ran out of steam. In the second half of added time they added five points to Clonoulty's one to win comfortably by 2-22 to 1-20.


The Final

The final took place at Semple Stadium on October 19 on a blustery, overcast day that reduced the crowd to one of the smallest for years. The bookies couldn't make up their minds about the prospects of the contestants, with Celtic Bookmakers making Thurles Sarsfields favourites and Paddy Power fancying Toomevara. The majority opinion among the punters was a fancy for Toomevara, especially in the light of their recent history against the Sarsfields. There was also the belief that the replayed semi-final and the extra time against Clonoulty-Rossmore the previous Sunday would have taken a toll.

The game will be remembered for a wonderful individual display by Toomevara's number 12, Eoin Brislane, who scored 1-5 from play. He was effortless in everything he did, showed speed and efficiency in his striking and eluded his markers with grace and skill. He was lucky to have been left on for the hour after a reckless pull in the opening quarter of the game. His yellow card was one of seven dished out in the course of the hour in a game that had numerous indiscretions but provided some great passages of play as well.

Thurles Sarsfields had the better start with a five point to one lead after fifteen minutes, although playing against a strong breeze. Two minutes later Toomevara got an important break when a shot from Brislane saved superbly by the Sarsfields goalkeeper, was scrambled to the net by Willie Ryan. Toomevara had the better of the second quarter, were denied a goal from John O'Brien coming up to the break and had a number of points to lead by two at the interval, 1-6 to 0-5.

Thurles resumed the second-half with Lar Corbett on the forty but he got little space from Benny Dunne and the game developed around Eoin Brislane's performance at full-forward. He moved with ease around his marker and got some exquisite scores, his goal in the twenty-seventh minute the defining score in the game. Everything he tried came off and he was definitely deserving of the Man of the Match Award.

At the other end only Johnny Enright made inroads into the Toomevara backs, scoring thirteen points in all, six from play, most of them from well out the field. Sarsfields inside forward line had no answer to the teak tough, efficient Toom inside back line, who seemed to be able to clear the ball unchallenged whenever it came near their goals. In the end Enright's points kept Thurles at the races and they did come within three points of the winners by the final whistle but it served only to put a respectable look of the scoreboard and the final score was 2-14 to 0-17 in favour of Toomevara.

Toomevara: James McGrath, Patrick Tuohy, David Young, Paul McGrath, Padraig Hackett, Benny Dunne, Joseph McLoughney (0-1), Terry Dunne (0-1), Francis Devaney (0-2), Paddy O'Brien (0-1), Ken Dunne (0-4), Eoin Brislane (1-5), Michael Bevans (capt.), John O'Brien, Willie Ryan (1-0). Subs: John Delaney for Bevans, David Kennedy for O'Brien, Tony Delaney for Ryan. Also: Justin Cottrell, John Boland, Kieran Brislane, Darren Cuddihy, Barry Dunne, Paddy Grace, Denis Kelly, Thomas McCarthy, Kieran McGrath, Andrew Ryan, Ronan Ryan, Conor O'Meara, David Nolan.

Manager: Vincent McKenna. Selectors: Frank Devaney, Michael O'Meara, Owen Cuddihy. Trainer: Joe Quinn

Thurles Sarsfields: Patrick McCormack, Michael Coillins,Padraig Maher, Kevin O'Gorman, Michael Cahill, Liam Cahill, Tom King, Stephen Lillis, Shane Ryan, Wayne Cully, Lar Corbett (0-1), Johnny Enright (0-13), Pa Bourke, Ger O'Grady (0-1), Richie Ruth. Subs: Garry Mernagh for Shane Ryan, Jim Corbett for Richie Ruth (0-2), John Lawlor for Tom King, Tony Ruth for Ger O'Grady. Also: Bill McCormack, Barry O'Dwyer, Stephen Mason, David O'Dwyer, John Lillis, Tommy Collins, John Maher, Colm Rourke, Eoin Russell, Patrick Leahy, Tony Connolly, Michael Gleeson, Kevin O'Halloran,

Man of the Match: Eoin Brislane.

Referee: Noel Cosgrove (Marlfield)

 


Results of 2008 Dan Breen Cup at a Glance

 

First Round

Sept. 13 at Dundrum: Cappawhite 1-17 Eire Óg 0-16 (Ref: Noel Cosgrove)

Sept. 13 at Cashel: Loughmore-Castleiney 2-13 Killenaule 2-10 (Ref: Sean Bradshaw)

Sept. 20 at Ragg: Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-14 Roscrea 0-12 (Ref: Noel Cosgrove)

Sept. 20 at Ragg: Kildangan 2-14 Moycarkey-Borris 0-19 (Ref: Seamus Roche)

Sept. 20 at Dundrum: Thurles Sarsfields 6-16 Golden-Kilfeacle 2-12 (Ref: John Cleary)

Sept, 20 at Dundrum: Drom Inch 1-15 Ballybacon-Grange 1-10 (Ref: Phil Ryan)

Sept. 21 at Nenagh: Toomevara 1-14 Burgess 1-12 (Ref: Richie Barry)

Sept. 21 at Fethard: Mullinahone 3-15 Ballingarry 2-14 (Ref: Johnny Ryan)

 

Quarter-Finals

Sept. 27 at Semple Stadium: Loughmore-Castleiney 2-19 Cappawhite 2-14 (Ref: Seamus Roche)

Sept. 27 at Semple Stadium: Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-15 Mullinahone 0-17 (Ref: Tommy Ryan)

Sept. 28 at Semple Stadium: Toomevara 1-22 Kildangan 1-13 (Ref: Johnny Ryan)

Sept. 28 at Semple Stadium: Thurles Sarsfields 3-15 Drom Inch 2-9 (Ref: Richie Barry)

 

Semi-Finals

Oct. 5 at Semple Stadium: Clonoulty-Rossmore 0-17 Thurles Sarsfields 1-14 (Ref: J. McDonnell)

Oct. 5 at Semple Stadium: Toomevara 0-17 Loughmore-Castleiney 0-13 (Ref: Seamus Roche)

Replay

Oct. 12 at Semple Stadium: Thurles Sarsfields 2-22 Clonoulty-Rossmore 1-20 (AET) (Ref: J. Cleary)

 

Final

Oct. 19 at Semple Stadium: Toomevara 2-14 Thurles Sarsfields 0-17 (Ref: Noel Cosgrove)

 

 

<span class="postTitle">Celebrating the 125th Anniversary of the G.A.A.</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 33

Celebrating the 125th Anniversary of the G.A.A.

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 33

 

 

It was announced at Congress 2008 that the 125th Anniversary of Cumann Lúthchleas Gael would be celebrated at all levels of the association during 2009. A national co-ordination group under the chairmanship of Jarlath Burns was set up to prepare a calendar of events and their job is to ensure that all units of the association are focused on this milestone and are making plans to celebrate it in appropriate ways.

The expectation is that all provincial councils and county boards will set up special 125 committees to coordinate the body's anniversary plans. The national coordination group would like to hear of these plans, will also offer advice and discuss appropriate ways for celebrating the anniversary.

Before discussing the plans of the Tipperary G.A.A. 125 Committee, which was announced by county chairman, John Costigan, in July, it is interesting to recall the celebrations in the association on previous anniversary milestone.

The silver jubilee in 1909 wasn't celebrated at all! In fact it passed unnoticed both by supporters and critics of the association. According to G.A.A. historian, Marcus de Búrca 'Perhaps the omission on the central council's part is an indication of its forward-looking approach in 1909; in its work to expand the association it was now more concerned with the future than with the past.' Significantly by June 1909 all 32 counties had a board affiliated to the central council for the first time. In the same year the permanent transfer to Dublin of the annual congress marked a significant step towards the extablishment of a genuine 32-county G.A.A.

Golden Jubilee

The golden jubilee celebrations in 1934 were elaborate. The celebrations were inaugurated on Easter Sunday at the annual congress, held specially in Thurles. Before the start of congress there was a reception by the central council both for its own delegates and distinguished visitors, the presentation of congratulatory messages from the Government, the Catholic hierarchy, local bodies and cultural associations, a religous service conducted by the association's patron, Archbishop Harty and the unveiling of a plaque at Hayes's Hotel. Among the guests were three members of the victorious Tipperary team in the first hurling All-Ireland, Michael Cusack's son, John, and from the United States, John Quane of the notable Tipperary G.A.A. family of the 1885-1895 period.

Five months later the jubilee celebrations were held in Dublin. There was a parade through the city ot Croke Park, where a crowd of 35,000, which included a number of dignatories, watched a series of games played by school teams. The two Dublin daily newspapers published special supplements to mark the occasion and the Minister for Posts and Telegraphs issued a special commemorative postage stanp portraying a hurler in action.

The 75th anniversary celebrations in 1959 were less elaborate. The main event was the opening of the new Hogan Stand at Croke Park, a magnificent double-decker affair running along the entire west side of the stadium and free of all obstructive pillars, which had cost well over a quarter of a million pounds. It was formally opened on June 11 of that year in the presence of President Sean T. O'Kelly. After an historical pageant devised by the Kerry writer, Bryan MacMahon, in which units of the Army participated, the attendance was entertained by an interprovincial hurling match, the postponed 1959 Railway Cup final. Probably no more appropriate event than the opening of this stand, symbolising the growth and confidence of the G.A.A. and strengthening Croke Park's position as the finest sports stadium in Ireland, could have marked the 75th anniversary.

It is unnecessary to recall the many events that commemorated the centenary of the association in 1984, the most imporatnt of which was the staging of the All-Ireland senior hurling final between Cork and Offaly at Thurles. Tipperary people will remember other events such as the march of clubs before the county convention and the presentation of club histories in an exhibition. Also the numerous club histories that were written. There was also a national presentation of the history of different units of the G.A.A. in the RDS. And, there was the Centenary Cup, an open draw hurling and football intercounty competition.

125 Anniversary

The 125 celebrations will be on a smaller scale but they will be used to highlight the achievements of the association as well as to make the members more aware of its significance and its place in the history of the country.

Among the proposals of the county 125 Committee is the official opening of the newly refurbished Semple Stadium and the turning on of the floodlights by an t-Uachtarán, Nicky Brennan, in February. It is hoped to have this done in conjunction with a major National Hurling League fixture on a Saturday evening with a major promotion to maximise attendance. There will be half-time entertainment. 

From very early on a Michael Hogan Weekend in the middle of May at Grangemockler has been planned. This will include two inter-county games, between Tipperary and Dublin in football, and between Tipperary and Kilkenny in hurling. Other events would include Mass and a wreath-laying ceremony, the unveiling of a memorial honouring Michael Hogan and a public lecture on some aspect of G.A.A. history.

One of the highlights of the year will be the Munster hurling final. The county board has applied to the Munster Council for the provincial final to be played at Thurles, regardless of the teams that are in it. A major hurling festival at Thurles would coincide with the ocasion. There would be an RTE program such as Up for the Match, from Thurles.

Another intention would be the updating of the Tipperary G.A.A. Website, which would be enlarged to include all the records of all aspects of the G.A.A. in the county, such as all hurling and football records, including the teams that represented the county in all grades every year, handball, Scór, camogie, ladies football and rounders.

Related to this would be the encouragement of every club to have its own website. At the moment only 29 Tipperary clubs have their websites up to date. Also, only 27 clubs from the county are on the Croke Park Museum, Club Database. Many clubs have published histories up to 1884 but now need to be updated. Clubs without a history will be encouraged to get get them written.

It is envisaged that there will be a Club Day on April 26. This day will be free from official fixtures so that clubs can organise their own events to celebrate 125. What the events might be will be left to the imagination of individual clubs. There was a similar day in 1984.

Schools will also be involved in the celebration of the 125 anniversary. Various suggestions are being explored at the moment.

The year's events will be concluded with a major event on November 1. A meeting of the central council might be held in Thurles. There could be a lecture followed by a wreath-laying ceremony at Archbishop Croke Memorial in Liberty Square. Cumann na Sean Ghaeil might consider holding their presentation night to coincide with this date. Other ideas on how to celebrate the occasion will be welcome.

To date the committee has met three times and are still in the process of finalising a program of events. The committee is as follows: chairman, Seamus J. King, secretary, Liam Ó Donnchú, John Costigan, Ed Donnelly, Sean Nugent, Denis Floyd, Seamus O'Doherty.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">G.A.A. Publications - 2008</span> Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 93-94

G.A.A. Publications - 2008

Tipperary G.A.A. Yearbook 2009, pp 93-94

 

The major publication event in the county has to be the pictorial history of the Mid board. Promised in 2007 it grew so big that it took much longer to produce than compiler, Martin Bourke, anticipated but is now scheduled for publication at the end of November or early December. It's a monster production in two volumes and will contain about six thousand pictures. Martin has scoured the highways and byways of Mid Tipperary and beyond to make the book as comprehensive and complete as possible. It is divided into sections and as well as including a large number of club team photographs, it also includes a large number of intercounty teams featuring Mid players. I understand it will retail for €50, which is cheap for about one thousand pages. It's the first part of the official history of the G.A,A, in Mid Tipperary. Already work is in progress on the volume containing the written history.

The Final Whistle

This is the story of referee, Paddy Russell of Emly, written in association with sports journalist, Jackie Cahill, and it has received more publicity than any sports book on the Christmas market. About 300 people turned up for the launch by President Elect of the G.A.A. Christy Cooney at the Thatch, Emly on October 16. Not only was the crowd huge but it was a great night as well. There were some very funny speeches, starting off with club chairman, Tom Joe O'Brien, who regaled us with stories of Paddy's prowess in football and revealed that Paddy might never have been a referee had his attempts with a band 'Radiation' been more successful. Another very funny speech was made by Pat McEneaney, a good friend of Paddy, who travelled all the way from Carrickmacross for the occasion. Having listened to all the compliments paid to Paddy he stated he was going to retire to Emly because he was regarded only as a b-----xs where he came from!

The occasion was as much a celebration of Paddy as the launch of his book, Particularly moving tributes were paid to him as a great family and club man as well as a referee by Munster chairman, Jimmy O'Gorman, and President Elect Christy Cooney. And, the book itself reveals this very ordinary man who became an extraordinary referee. Part of his strength as a referee comes from the kind of man he is who 'wouldn't do a wrong to anybody.' What also comes across is how hurtful the abuse of referees can be

The book is a wonderful read, a great tribute to the writing skills of Jackie Cahill, who got Paddy to reveal more than he did to anybody, and it gets us right into the controversy of the Paul Galvin affair in the Prologue, the last paragraph of which is: 'After the Galvin sending off, Kerry midfielder Darragh Ó Sé trotted past and remarked, 'You're having a stinker. You're evening is up.' That was the final straw as far as I was concerned. I rarely, if ever, engage in chat with players, and my quick reply surprised even me: 'You're having a stinker yourself.' Sometimes there's only so much that one can put up with. I had reached the end of my tether. Gaelic football was no fun any more.'.

The book is published by Mainstream Publishing, has 287 pages, an inset of 8 pages of pictures and retails for the incredibly low price of €13.99. A must buy!

A recent conversation with Seamus McCarthy gives the impression that the long-awaited, Galtee Rovers history is still on the way. 2009 is the 125th anniversary of the founding the the Gaelic Athletic Association and it might be a good year to publish the book. If Galtee were to win the county senior football championship there would be an even greater reason.

Next year is the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of Clonmel Commercials. Well, it partly started as a 'flag of convenience' in 1932 but didn't enter championships until two years later. The club have spoken about doing something but no work as such has yet been done.

In fact clubs are encouraged to do something on their history for the 125th anniversary, just as many clubs did in 1984. It would be true to say that histories produced in the latter year now need to be updated. One of the initiatives suggested by the County 125 Committee is that clubs, who have websites update them, and those that haven't set one up. The committee are sending a template outlining the required information and if any club completes it and returns to Croke Park, it will get a website set up.

More Than a Sporting Experience

This is the title of a recently published book on thirty years of Gaelic Games in Luxembourg. The book tells the story of a most unusual G.A.A. club, which came into being through the goodwill of a growing Irish community and its friends in the city of Luxembourg 'who wished to have a sporting organisation that reflected ancient and deep-rooted traditions of the homeland.'

This is what makes it unique because the Gaelic Sports Club Luxembourg (GSCL) is much more than a sports organisation, catering for the games of hurling and football. The club has introduced European audiences to a much broader Irish cultural context bringing them Irish music and dancing as well as historical associations and links that resonate in places such as Fontenoy, Wurtzburg, Auxerre, Tournai, etc.

The authors, Eoghan Ó hAnnracháin and Cathal Davey, reveal a succession of Irish links with the Grand Duchy since the time of Willibrod. The parish priest of Saint Michel Church in 1712 was a Reverend Michael Corcoran. In the 19th century there were Irishmen in Luxembourg whose activities brought recognition to some of them. One of these was Thomas Byrne (1822-1884), an engineer who built bridges and tunnels of the northern Luxembourg railway line and was a co-founder of the Rodange smelting works. He is commemorated as a public benefactor by a street bearing his name in Hamm in the northern suburbs of the city of Luxembourg.

However, it was in the years immediately following Irish accession to the EEC in 1973 that substantial numbers of Irish men and women arrived in the Grand Duchy. Many of these worked in the services of the various EEC institutions. Ó hAnnracháin was a financial comptroller in the European Parliament. Others were employed in the wide range of banking, financial and related establishments. Still others set up their own enterprises.

Soon, small groups of Irish, as well as friends from other nationalities, assembled for céilis, for music sessions and for some hurling and gaelic football practice. Camaraderie and relaxation were the keynotes of the get-togethers which took place in fields near the airport and on land to the west of the city. As numbers grew and as a sizable Irish presence took root in Luxembourg, the need for a formal association became evident. Thus GSCL came into existence. The club's first competitive outing was played in Rome against the Irish Colleges on May 12, 1978.

The visit to Rome set the pattern for future visits by the club to other parts of Europe. While playing a game of hurling or gaelic football was the ostensible reason for a visit, the occasion was extended by visits to places with links to Irish saints and travellers. In the course of time, in association with the Luxembourg branch of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Eireann, these visits were expanded to ensure a comprehensive cultural presentation in many European towns.

The book is peppered with accounts of these links to Ireland. For a small country the Irish connections are many and diverse. As part of the official celebrations GSCL played a hurling match at Fontenoy in 1995 on the occasion of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the battle. Irish army pipers also attended. The book recounts the many other places visited, old historical links renewed, occasions when Irish culture was exhibited on a broader stage and, above all, the story of our expatriate brothers and sisters, proud of their heritage, of the Irish contribution to the nations of Europe and confident of what they can contribute in the future.

On a local note the first winner of Poc Fada na hEorpa was Cathal Reddan, son of the famous Tony, who played with the Paris Gaels, and the second winner was Patrick Ryan, also from Tipperary, what part I don't know. The book is lavishly illustrated, many of the pictures taken in the brilliant sunshine one associates with the continent. For a copy contact Michael McLynskey michael.mclynskey@europarl.europa.eu

Hurling World

This is a new magazine that has made its appearance. A monthly, two editions have appeared to date. The man behind it is Frank Burke of Galway, who has been very involved in the production of video histories of many of the hurling counties, including Tipperary. He is also the author of 'All-Ireland Glory' pictorial histories of the senior hurling and senior football championships. These are beautifully illustrated magnificent achievements.

Through his work on these projects he has travelled the country, listening to a lot of people and learning much on the state of hurling. He believes there is a place for such a magazine in spite of the knowledge that the fate of magazines relating to Gaelic Games is not a happy one.

In the editorial to the first issue he states: 'We hope that this magazine will help in some small way to promote the game in all those parishes where it is played and also help it expand and grow in every parish where Celt and non-Celt appreciate the skill, courage and dedication required to play our national game.'

The magazine is a top quality production, professionally done and distributed by Eason's. It is illustrated with photographs from Sportsfile. In the first edition it had Ollie Canning reflesting on Galway's year, Paul Flynn reviewing his career, John Power warning Kilkenny against complacency, Brendan Cummins on the Poc Fada, a look back to the Quigley family in Wexford, and much more. In the second edition P. M. O'Sullivan has an excellent analysis of Kilkenny's hurling strengths, an interview with Johnny Dooley, who is the Westmeath hurling coach, a profile of Liz Howard by Gerry Slevin, John Mullane looking back aghast at Waterford's performance in the All-Ireland, two articles on Antrim hurling, what Mackey said to Ring in the famous Justin Nelson photograph, and more.

There is plenty in it to appeal to hurling followers everywhere. But, to survive it will have to be purchased. It's a monthly retailing at •5 an issue. There's a special introductory offer of •50 for the eleven issues that will appear in the year and it will be delivered post free through your letter box. Send your subscription to Hurling World, Knockdoebeg East, Claregalway, Co. Galway. It might be a handy present for the Christmas.

Through the Thatch

It's a long time ago since we made a subscription for 'Through the Thatch', the history of the famed Thurles Sarsfields club. Well, it appears there is white smoke at last and years of work are coming to fruition. Liam Ó Donnchú informs me that the first of two volumes will be ready during 2009 and will cover the history of the club up to the 1930s. The history of this club is much more than a mere club history as it impinges on the history of the county in a major way as well. It is a book that will be received with great interest.

Another book to look forward to is a history of the first All-Ireland hurling final by Paul Rouse. Paul, an Offaly man and a researcher with RTE, is passionate about the game of hurling and has spent a lot of time researching this topic. I understand the book contains thirteen chapters so it will probably leave very little to learn about the first All-Ireland after its appearance. I don't have the expected date of its publication.

I should like to mention two match programs. The first was produced by the Thurles Sarsfields club under the editorship of Ger Corbett, for the county senior hurling final. A top class production in full colour, not only was the content outstanding but the layout was superb. A definite candidate for a McNamee Award.

The second is the program produced for the Ladies Football All-Irelands. Again a very well produced program with all the necessary information on the six teams involved. It has great local interest because Tipperary were involved and won the intermediate final. The only crib I have is that it includes pictures of not only the Tipperary intermediate team, but of the under-14 and under-16 teams teams also that qualified for the All-Ireland B finals, and in no case does it name the players in the pictures. No team picture should ever be produced without names the players. The program was published by the Ladies Gaelic Football Association, Cusack Stand, Croke Park, Dublin 1 and may be purchased for €6.35 inclusive of postage.

Finally, two further publications, one from Shannon Rovers and a second from Roscrea. They are annual publications, mainly devoted to juvenile matters and they are due in time for the Christmas market.

 

 

<span class="postTitle">South Tipperary G.A.A. 1907-2007 - A History of the South Board</span> The Nationalist, January 26th, 2008

South Tipperary G.A.A. 1907-2007 - A History of the South Board

The Nationalist, January 26th, 2008

 

The South Board of the G.A.A. celebrated its centenary during 2007. The Commemorative Committee organised numerous  activities during the year recognising the achievements of the board in many  areas as well a honouring a huge number of individuals who had contributed to  the board's success since its foundation. Probably the most permanent  achievement of the committee was the decision to have a history of the board  written and to have chosen for the task, Micheal O'Meara, a man associated  with the board over many decades, and currently its President. When many of  the centenary events of 2007 have passed into memory, South Tipperary  G.A.A. 1907-2007 will remain a permanent  record and a masterful achievement.
 
The history is dedicated to  the memory of all players, administrators, officials and supporters, who have  contributed to one hundred years of Gaelic Games under the auspices of South  Tipperary Board G.A.A. since its foundation on June 8, 2007. It stretches to  almost eight hundred pages, divided into thirty-one chapters.
 
The first chapter covers the  period before the setting-up of the board and has the catchy title 'From  Hayes's Hotel to Ryan's Hotel' What was to be the South Division was well  represented at Hayes's Hotel with Maurice Davin and Joseph P. Ryan from  Carrick-on-Suir numbered among the founding seven. One of the most  distinguished G.A.A. officials from this period was Dick Cummins, of Fethard,  the first chairman of the Munster Council in 1901 who, together with his son  of the same name, straddle the whole period from the foundation of the G.A.A.  until the death of the latter in the South Centenary Year. Some longevity and some service!
 
There was one major  controversy during this period, the row between the All-Ireland champions of  1900, Clonmel Shamrocks, and the Central Council over the non-payment of  expenses to the club for the All-Ireland. The club got a court decree against  G.A.A. secretary, Luke O'Toole for £7.0s.10d and had his personal property  seized in lieu of that amount. Central Council gave the club the option of apologising for their action and paying half the legal costs or being  suspended. The club chose the latter and were suspended for life, but the  Central Council relented later and the suspension was lifted in 1905 to end a  conflict of almost two years' duration.
 

Ryan's Hotel

The County  Tipperary annual convention of 1907 decided to divide the county into three  division and set up sub-committees in each division to run the championships.  Each division would send one delegate to the county board and the officers of  the latter were: chairman, Frank Moloney, Nenagh, secretary, Martin Brennan,  Ballingarry and treasurer, Mikey Maher, Tubberadora. Brennan had been  secretary of the county board since 1899 and a former member of the Munster  and Central Councils. He was one of those who attended the foundation meeting  of the South Board at Ryan's Hotel, College Street, Clonmel on June 8, 2007  and he was to be first secretary of the newly-formed board.
 
Ryan's Hotel  (today McCarthy's) had a strong G.A.A. connection. Its proprietor, Martin  Ryan, came from a well-known G.A.A. family. He was uncle of Sean Ryan, who  became president of the Association in 1928, and was for many years legal  adviser and confidant of many of its leading figures. Another nephew was Tommy  Ryan, who was secretary of the South Board from 1918 to 1930. Martin Ryan himself was a native of Kilshane, who came to Clonmel at an early age, was a  member of Clonmel Corporation from 1902-1914. He died in September 1930 and is  buried at Bansha.
 
The historic date  attracted an impressive aray of G.A.A officials, representative of the clubs within the new division, to the foundation meeting. The officers elected were  chairman/president, James Meehan, a Labour Councillor on Clonmel Corporation,  Robert Quane, one of the greats of gaelic football from Tipperary Town, and  the above-mentioned Martin Brennan.
 
All of this  matter is dealt with in chapter 2, which the author calls 'The Grangemockler  Era'. Over the course of the next twenty chapters, each dealing with four-five year segments, he writes about the happenings in the division up to Centenary Year. As in all such accounts the earlier years, with their personalities, conflicts and, from this distance, quaint happenings, are far more interesting  than the happenings of later chapters with their proliferation of competitions  and games. Chapter three makes interesting reading with matters not going well  for the board, poor attendance at meetings, many disputes and eventually  suspension by the county board for irregularities in the running of its  affairs.
 
The chapters  divide the 100 years into interesting segments, sometime with evocative  titles. 'Croke Park Heartbreak & Killarney Joy' neatly encapsules the 1935  football All-Ireland semi-final defeat and victory in the All-Ireland at  Killarney hurling final in 1937. 'Of Swans and Walls' covers the great period  in Swan history and the mighty Walls in the second half of the forties. 'Na  Piarsaigh and Cahir Slashers' made their mark in the second half of the  fifties. 'Of Babs and Theo' captures the glory that was Marlfields and  Ardfinnan's in the early sixties. Chapter 14 deals with one of the greatest  periods in South football and hurling when Commercials and Davins were kings  in the division and beyond. We jump forward to the arrival of John Leahy and  Mullinahone in the latter half of the eighties, and of Moyle Rovers in the  beginning of the ninties. The only quibbles I have with the content of the  chapters is the use of too many and too extensive quotations from newpapers  and other publications, as well a failure to give enough specific dates for matches, particularly finals. The provision of dates is a great service to future researchers, who are able to find the relevant match report much more  easily as a result.
 
Chapters 23 and  30 are directly related to the content of the first twenty-two chapters. The  former of these covers 'Club Profiles' and this is a very valuable chapter giving vital information about the clubs in succinct form. Starting with  Ardfinnan, founded in 1910, it progresses alphabetically to Skeheenarinha,  founded in 1952. The Club Colours, Other Clubs in the Parish, Roll of Honour, Club Players Who Won All-Irelands, Club Members Elected to Divisional Office,  Club Members Elected to County Office, Club Grounds, Other Special Achievements are given for each club. This chapter will prove a godsend to program makers of the future.
 
Chapter 30 has  profiles of Players and Administrators and is the longest in the book. It is equally important, even more so, than the chapter on club profiles but, unfortunately, it leaves a lot to be desired because of the uneveness of the  contributions. It is understandable that the author had to make do with what he received from contributors and, while some contributions were excellent, others contained not even the basic information. I believe that such profiles  should contain some basic information such as the subject's years, if he is  dead, his year of birth if he is still living, where he was born, the name of  his club or clubs, his achievements, offices held, reasons for inclusion,  etc.
 

Ancillary Activities

While the opening  twenty-two chapters give a detailed acount of the workings of the board and  the organisation of games over the hundred years, and the latter two contain important additional information, the remaining seven chapters deal with other  sporting activities not all of them under the aegis of the board. Handball,  Athletics in South Tipperary, Camogie, Ladies Football Bord na nÓg and Scór are covered in this section. Ken Conway's chapter on handball includes the  All-Ireland Roll of Honour of South Tipperary handballers. Seamus Leahy's  account of athletics rightly gives prominence to the two world-famous families  from the South, the Davins and the Kielys. Sean O'Donnell mentions the  exploits of two St. Mary's players, Johanna Meaney and Nora O'Connell, both not too long dead, in the Tailteann Games at Croke Park in 1932, is his article on camogie. Ladies Football gets detailed treatment from Biddy Ryan while Ricky Sheehan gives comprehensive coverage to Bord na nÓg, which includes a good statistical section. Sean O'Donnell also covers Scór but unfortunately does not include the Scór na nÓg and Scór na bPaistí champions.
 
The final chapter  is entitled 'A Miscellany' and covers anything that should be covered but hasn't already been covered. All the board officers down the years are included, but also club secretaries since 1962. All the referees that have  performed for the board since the thirties are mentioned. Awards winners since 1970 are included. The finances of the board since 1929, when total gate receipts amounted to £271, to 2006, when they amounted to €102,960, are given.  There's a tribute to the reporters and journalists in 'The Nationalist' who covered the games so well over the period. The significant role of sponsorship  in recent years is highlighted. The improvement and devlopment of club grounds is recorded. The role of the Tipperary G.A.A. Draw in the finances of clubs is  mentioned. There's a section on South Tipperary Schools and finally the  results of all finals in the South hurling and football championships are included.
 
A massive tome  containing an immense amount of information on gaelic games in the South  Division! Micheal O'Meara has done a huge service to the board and to all those involved in the games in all the clubs in the division. As well as text  the book has over four hundred pictures, most of them black and white, but with a special colour section devoted to recent players and personalities. As is usual in such books there is a scarcity of photographs in the early section which is more than made up for by their proliferation from 1970 onwards. Curiously the advent of digital photography has reduced the preservation of pictures. Admittedly pictures can be stored more easily but many are now destroyed after use in the local paper, whereas in the past the photograph was framed and hung or put into a drawer for safe keeping.
 

There are a few  unexpected omissions from the photographs that appear in the book. While  chapter 4 deals with the rise of Fethard there is no club picture. This may  have been due to any being available. Also there is no picture of the Swans in  1947, who made the great breakthrough in winning the county senior hurling  title. As well there is no picture of Marlfield or Ardfinnan in chapter 13,  which is devoted to the exploits of the two clubs.
 
However, these  are small matters in the context of a mighty work and do not take in any way from the huge achievement which is South Tipperary History  1907-2007. The book will live as a monument to the achievements of the South Division and to the dedication, commitment and ability of Micheal O'Meara in recording these achievements. It gives us a comprehensive picture of the contribution of the division to the story of the G.A.A. in County Tipperary and will join the histories of the  North and West Divisions, and the soon-to-be-completed History of Mid Tipperary, in informing us in greater detail of the role of the Gaelic  Athletic Association in the lives of the people of Tipperary.

 

<span class="postTitle">Memories of '48 - Cashel Win 7th West Senior Hurling Title</span> The Nationalist & Tipperary Star, January 17, 2008

Memories of '48 - Cashel Win 7th West Senior Hurling Title

The Nationalist & Tipperary Star, January 17, 2008

 

This year is the sixtieth anniversary of Cashel King Cormac's success in winning their seventh West senior hurling title. The year 1948 also marked the end of a very successful period in the history of the club. During the course of fifteen championships, commencing in 1934, Cashel had won seven titles and led the divisional roll of honour, with Clonoulty-Rossmore, Kickhams and Eire Óg following with four each. In contrast it was to be seventeen years before Cashel were successful again.

When the adjourned convention of the West Board was held at Dundrum on February 15, 1948, seven teams affiliated in the senior hurling championship. An unusual affiliation was Geraldines, a team drawn from Holyford, Kilcommon and Rearcross, who were joined by Glengar players. Cashel were drawn against Eire Óg in the first round. The latter had a very strong team at the period and had played in the previous seven finals, winning four and losing three. Cashel got the better of them and defeated Golden-Kilfeacle in the semi-final at Clonoulty on August 22. Golden looked good at the interval, leading by six points, and increased their lead shortly after the resumption, but ably led by Jim Devitt, Cashel fought back with determination, wiped out the lead and finished seven points in front.

In the other half of the draw Geraldines defeated Galtee Rovers St. Peacaun's, while Kickhams overcame Clonoulty-Rossmore. Kickhams went on to defeat Geraldines in the semi-final at Cappawhite on August 29.

The West final, between Cashel and Kickhams,was played at Golden on September 5. Kickhams had already defeated Cashel in the senior league but the King Cormacs were to reverse the decision on this occasion. Cashel had three players with county experience, Jim Devitt, who had won a senior All-Ireland medal with Tipperary in 1945, and Paddy O'Brien and Billy Hickey, who were on the unsuccessful county junior teams in 1946, 1947 and 1948.

Kickhams got of to a flying start and netted two goals. They were ahead by four points at half-time and looked good, but Cashel fought back and won by 3-6 to 3-4.

The West Board gave Cashel a training grant of £10 and they played Lorrha in the county semi-final at Thurles on September19. There were 6,500 spectators present. Cashel's fortunes were the reverse of those in the West final. They were the better side in the first half, having played against the breeze, but were only level, 1-0 to 0-3 at the interval, the Cashel goal coming from a melee. They went ahead with two points after half-time but were caught by a Lorrha rally midway in the second half, which produced two goals and a point within three minutes. As a result Cashel's two-point advantage was turned into a five-point deficit.. Try as they would they couldn't reduce it until the final minutes. In this period Jim Devitt, who was doing trojan work at centrefield, pointed a free and sent another to the net to reduce the deficit to the minimum of margins in a final score of 2-4 to 2-3. The general consensus among neutrals after the game was that Cashel had lost rather than Lorrha had won.

Michael Burke, who was one of the finest hurlers in the club in the late thirties and early forties had retired after the 1945 West final success, but was recalled to corner-forward for the game against Lorrha. The lineout on the day was as follows: Paddy O'Brien, Mickey Devitt, Jackie Corcoran, Eddie Marnane, Mickey Murphy, Jim Devitt, Donal Ryan, Sean Dunne Billy Hickey. Richie Ryan, Bill O'Keeffe, Pat Devitt, Michael Burke, Patrick Darcy. Johnny Hickey.

The team showed a number of changes from the lineout in the West final. According to the only picture of the team, which was probably taken at the final at Golden, there were other changes than Burke. The picture includes fifteen players and three of them, John Fitzell, Martin Hackett and Mick Cody, are not included in the county semi-final lineout. As well as Michael Burke, Donal Ryan and Bill O'Keeffe, who hailed from Moycarkey and lived at Mocklershill, are included. Ryan and O'Keeffe had come on as subs in the West final.

Others in the back row of the photograph are Mick Fogarty, who had played and was a good forward, but on this occasion provided hackney service, Willie English, a farmer from Freighduff, who was a team mentor, Jock Murphy, who was a brother of the Dasher's, Stedie Morrissey, who was trainer of the team, Tommy Prendergast, secretary of the club, and a very yong Peter Looby. In the middle row are Tom O'Sullivan, a brother of Jim's, whose father had a blacksmith's shop beside E. D. Ryan's in Friar Street, and Michael Meehan, who worked as a boots in Ryan's Hotel.

There are only two survivors, Jackie Corcoran and Patrick Darcy. Both are still very much alive. Jackie is hale and hearty at eighty-five years and has been residing in Acorn Lodge for five years. He remembers the team as a good one 'but we had nobody over us.' The training they did was fairly elementary. The field was on the Ardmayle Road and they pucked the ball around, did a few runs around the field and then went home. There wasn't much celebration after the West final either, no meal or banquet to celebrate the occasion, just back to town for a few pints at Davern's. The abiding belief in Cashel is that had Cashel beaten Lorrha in the county semi-final, Paddy O'Brien, rather than Tony Reddin, his opposite on that day at Thurles, would have gone on to be the Tipperary goalkeeper.

Patrick Darcy is also in good fettle after all these years and can still be seen striding tall and straight down Dominick's Street and other places in the town despite his eighty-eight years. He says he doesn't feel it's sixty years ago and his chief memory is not so much the victory at Golden as the loss at Thurles: 'We owned the ball and should have won easily', he keeps repeating.

It was a very different world sixty years ago. The chairman of the West Board was the very colourful Sean O'Dwyer, better known as Jack Sonny, from Knockavilla. Elected in 1935 he was to hold the position for thirty-five years and was known for some memorable speeches. In his speech to the 1948 convention he said: 'It is a sad commentary on our vaunted emancipation to hear Holywood jargon taking the place of our powerful Gaelic salutations, while the soul-debasing foreign film takes the place of our Irish play and the immodest jungle dance supplants and is immeasurably more popular than the ceilidhe.'

At the same convention the Eire Óg club, through their delegate, Bill O'Donnell, had a motion passed calling for the abolition of the parish rule. He argued that standards in the championship had dropped because rural clubs were unable to field fifteen players of senior quality.

The same club proposed that umpires, as well as referees, be empowered to submit reports of games, and also sought that there be a closed date in the county for all games from November 15 until the first Sunday in February. 

More Information on the Winners of '48 (Nationalist & Tipperary Star, January 24, 2008)

In the article last week on the Cashel King Cormac's team that won the 1948 West senior hurling final, the actual lineout for the final wasn't given. Contrary to the opinion given in the article, Paddy O'Brien did not play in goals but at corner-forward. The lineout was as follows: Martin Hackett, Mick Cody, Jackie Corcoran, Ned Murnane, Mickey Murphy (capt.), Jim Devitt, Mickey Devitt, Billy Hickey and Sean Dunne, Richie Ryan, Johnny Hickey, John Fitzelle, Paddy O'Brien, Patrick Darcy, Pat Devitt.

Kickhams led by 2-3 to 1-2 at the interval but Cashel improved well after the interval. According to the match report in the local papers 'With the turover came a big change and Cashel's centrefield pair, Sean Dunne and Billy Hickey, emerged as heroes. They mastered Ryan and S. McCormack and taking command at the vital midfield sector, provided opportunities which P. Devitt and O'Brien utilised to the full and crashed in the crucial scores that ensured the King Cormac's victory.'

The game was refereed by Timmy Hammersley of Clonoulty. Entrance to the game at Golden was one shilling, with sixpence extra for the sideline. When he presented the cup to the Cashel captain, West chairman, Sean O'Dwyer, paid a special tribute to Mickey Murphy for 'his trojan work for his club over a number of years,' and exhorted the King Cormac's to train hard to win the county title for the West.

But it was not to be as Cashel lost to Lorrha by 2-4 to 2-3 in the county semi-final at Thurles. According to the match report 'Cashel came to Thurles on Sunday in force. The special train brought a great crowd of enthusiastic supporters wearing the green and red favours of the King Cormac's, and led by the Cashel Brass and Reed Band playing lively airs. By car, bus and bicycle they came also, and there was a real Munster final atmosphere in the town during the morning.'

The ball was thrown in by his Grace, the Archbishop of Cashel, Dr. Kinane, after the Sean McDermott Pipe Band, Thurles had played 'Faith of Our Fathers', and the National Anthem was played by Cashel Brass and Reed Band. Paddy 'Sweeper' Ryan of Moycarkey was the referee.

Although Cashel won the toss, they opted to play against the wind and were odds-on favourites at the interval as the sides were level: Cashel 1-0 Lorrha 0-3. When the King Cormac's got two points early in the second half from Sean Dunne and Pat Devitt, it cofirmed the favouritism, but Lorrha had a purple patch in the middle of the second half to go five points in front and, although Cashel got it down to a point, they couldn't get the scores to give them victory.

Cashel lined out as follows: Paddy O'Brien, Mickey Devitt, Jackie Corcoran, Ned Murnane, Mickey Murphy (capt.), Jim Devitt, Donal Ryan, Sean Dunne, Billy Hickey, Richie Ryan, Bill O'Keeffe, Pat Devitt, Michael Burke, Patrick Darcy, Johnny Hickey. Also on the panel were the following: Tom Devitt, J. B. Hickey, Martin Hackett, Paddy O'Keeffe, Willie English, John Fitzelle, Eddie O'Grady, Charlie Power. 

 

<span class="postTitle">Honouring the 1973, 77, 79 & 83 County Champions of Loughmore-Castleiney</span> County Tipperary Senior Football Final Program, October 26th 2008

Honouring the 1973, 77, 79 & 83 County Champions of Loughmore-Castleiney

County Tipperary Senior Football Final Program, October 26th 2008

 

In keeping with the practice of the past number of years, the Tipperary county board, in conjunction with the Nationalist and the Templemore Arms, honour the county senior football champions of 1971, 1977, 1979 and 1983, Loughmore-Castleiney, at the county senior football final at Leahy Park, Cashel today. The members of the victorious panel will be given a reception at the Cashel King Cormac's clubrooms at 12:30 pm and will be guests of the county board at the final. At about 3 pm they will be led on to the field by their captains, and introduced to the crowd. After the games they will be taken to Templemore Arms for dinner. Following the meal they will be made a presentation by the Nationalist. The occasion will be a special opportunity for the members of the teams to reminisce about their great exploits on the field of play so many years ago.


The Seventies Were Mighty for Loughmore-Castleiney
 

When the seventies dawned in Loughmore-Castleiney the record of the club in senior football was anything but impressive. Defeats had been their lot more than victories. Clubs from the parish had qualified for twelve county finals since the foundation of the G.A.A. but victory was recorded on only four occasions in 1913, 1940, 1946 and 1955. In fact following the victory over Arravale Rovers in the 1955 final, Loughmore-Castleiney lost four finals in a row. This record was to change dramatically in the seventies.

There wasn't much anticipation of this change in fortunes in the early part of the decade. In 1971 Loughmore-Castleiney were compeltely outclassed by Commercials in the county semi-final. There was the consolation of winning the Mid against Moneygall. They didn't qualify for the semi-finals the following year and it took them a replay to beat Templemore in the separate Mid final. There was a major change in their performances in 1973.

They qualified for the county semi-finals, in which they defeated Moyle Rovers by 2-13 to 1-4. Their opponents in the county final, played at Cashel on October 21, were Ardfinnan. and they won their first final since 1955 by 2-10 to 0-7. Ardfinnan led by 0-5 to 0-3 at the interval. Halfway through the second half the sides were level at 0-7 each but in a dramatic finish Loughmore scored 2-3 to win easily. One of the stars of the winning side was Eddie Webster.

The team was Michael Maher, Eddie Stapleton, Eddie Webster (0-1), Tom Maher, Tom Hayes (capt.), Pat Stapleton, Martin Kiely, Sean Kearney (1-4), Tom Maher (L) (0-3), Tom Treacy, Gerry Stapleton, Martin Hynes, Jack Walsh, John Burke (1-1), Jim Healy (0-1). Subs: Johnny Brennan for Tom Treacy, John Treacy for Jack Walsh, Walsh for Martin Hynes
Referee: George Ryan (Lattin-Cullen).

Loughmore-Castleiney failed to make it to the county semi-final in 1974 and won the Mid final by virtue of a walkover from Templemore. In 1975 Loughmore qualified for the county semi-finals and defeated Ardfinnan by 3-11 to 1-5 at Cashel on August 10. Their opponents in the final were Kilruane MacDonaghs, who had caused an upset when they defeated Kilsheelan in the other semi-final. The game was played at Nenagh and the North representatives showed fitness, dedication, enthusiasm and an unparalleled win to win. Loughmore dominated the first half but Kilruane were tenacious after the interval and had two points to spare on a scoreline of 3-6 to 1-10 at the final whistle. It was the first time that Kilruane had played in a final and the first time in sixty years for a North club team to be victorious. Loughmore defeated Templemore by 0-8 to 2-1 in the Mid final.

 

Surprised in 1976
 

Loughmore-Castleiney were surprised again in 1976 when beaten by Arravale Rovers in the county semi-final by 0-8 to 1-3 at Cashel on August 8. They had the consolation of winning their twelfth Mid title when they defeated Templemore by 1-11 to 2-5.

Matters were to improve in 1977. Loughmore defeated Golden-Rockwell by 0-11 to 1-7 in the county semi-final at Cashel on September 11 and qualified for the final against Galtee Rovers. This game was played at Thurles on October 23 and resulted in a draw at 2-2 each. Heavy drizzle and a fresh breeze combined to make conditions extremely difficult. Galtee Rovers led by 2-2 to 2-1 at the interval but the sides could manage only one point in the second half.

Loughmore-Castleiney: Michael Maher, Eddie Stapleton, Pat Stapleton, Martin Kiely, Michael Maher, Eddie Webster, Mick Webster, Sean Kearney, Tom Kiely, Jim Maher (1-1), Gerry Stapleton, Jim Sweeney, Jim Healy, Tom McGrath (0-1), Michael Walsh (1-0). Subs: John Bourke for Gerry Stapleton.
Referee: Billy Carroll (Clonmel)

The replay was at Cashel on November 19 and Loughmore won by 2-6 to 0-5. Leading by 0-4 to 0-3 at the interval, they weren't flatterd by their seven-points winning margin. They were very well prepared and were going as well at the finish as they were in the opening minutes.

The team was as follows: Michael Maher, Eddie Stapleton, Pat Stapleton, Martin Kiely, Tom Treacy, Eddie Webster, Michael Webster, Michael Maher, Gerry Stapleton, Tom McGrath, Jim Sweeney, Tom Kiely, Jim Maher, Sean Kearney, Michael Walsh. Subs: Michael McGrath for Tom Treacy, Michael Maher for Tom Treacy, Michael Maher for Tom Kiely, Martin Hynes for Michael Walsh.
Referee: Billy Carroll (St. Mary's).

Loughmore-Castleiney lost the semi-final by 2-13 to 1-10 to Fethard at Cashel on September 10, In the Mid championship Loughmore made it fourteen titles in a row when they defeated Templemore by 1-9 to 2-4 at Thurles on November 12.
 

Another Victory

Loughmore were back with a bang on 1979. They beat Kilruane-MacDonaghs by 3-14 to 2-8 in the county semi-final at Thurles on July 29. Their opponents in the final at Clonmel on August 26 were Galtee Rovers and they won by 2-11 to 1-9. They led by 1-8 to 0-4 at the interval but Galtee put on the pressure in the second half and came within two points of the winners. However, Loughmore got the decisive second goal which put the verdict beyond doubt.

Loughmore-Castleiney: Michael Maher, Sean Fogarty, Eddie Webster, Martin Kiely, Tom Ryan, Pat McGrath, Eamonn Brennan, Gerry Stapleton, Jim Sweeney, Tom McGrath, Sean Kearney, Tom Kiely, Jim Maher, John Treacy, Michael McGrath.
Referee: Billy Carroll (Clonmel).

Loughmore-Castleiney qualified for the 1981 final when they defeated Commercials by 1-10 to 0-8, after leading by 0-5 to 0-3 at the interval, in the semi-final at Cashel on August 3. The final was played at Fethard on August 31 and Galtee Rovers were making their fifth successive appearance in the final, having won their first in 1977. Though the game was close the crowd got little to enthuse about. Loughmore had most of the possession in the first half but wasted much of it and were in front by only a point at the interval. About midway in the second half, Galtee took the initiative and went ahead. They resisted strong Loughmore pressure in the final minutes to win by 0-11 to 0-10. Loughmore had an easy victory in the Mid final when they trounced Moycarkey-Borris by 4-12 to 0-4 in the final on December 6.

In 1982 Loughmore qualified for the semi-final and played Commercials at Thurles on August 29 and the match ended in a draw at Loughmore 0-6 Commercials 1-3. Loughmore lost the replay at the same venue a week later by 0-8 to 0-6. Loughmore took the Mid title when they defeated Moycarkey-Borris by 1-8 to 3-0 at Templemore on November 28.

As a result of the decision of county convention the system of running the county senior football championship reverted to the old one of two teams from each division playing quarter-finals. Loughmore defeated Arravale Rovers by 1-10 to 0-4 at Cashel on August 7 and qualified to play Kilsheelan in the semi-final. This game was played at Cashel on September 11 with victory going to Loughmore by 1-10 to 1-7. They led by 1-6 to 1-3 at the interval.
 

Sensational End to Final

There was a sensational ending to the final played at Cashel on October 8. Loughmore-Castleiney were trailing Fethard by seven points with four minutes to go and had all the looks of a beaten team. However, like Lazarus from the grave, they resurrected their act to score two goals and a point during the final period and grab a draw.

Loughmore-Castleiney: Jim Kiely, Sean Fogarty, Martin Kiely, Richard Stapleton, Tom Ryan, Michael Maher, eamonn Brennan, pat McGrath, Gerry Stapleton, Tom McGrath, Michael McGrath, Pat Treacy, Peter Brennan, John Treacy, Michael walsh; Subs: Jim Gorman for sean Fogarty.
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly).

Two weeks late the replay was at the same venue and Loughmore won by virtue of a Pat McGrath point from a free three minutes from time. Playing against the wind they were behind by the manageable margin of 0-5 to 1-1 at the interval. A couple of switches, that brought Martin Maher to centrefield and Pat McGrath to centreback, revitalised their challenge and never allowed Fethard to get a grip on the game. In the end they won by 0-8 to 1-4.

Loughmore-Castleiney: Jim Kiely, Tom Ryan, Martin Kiely, Sean Fogarty, Pat Treacy, Michael Maher, Eamonn Brennan, Gerry Stapleton, Tom McGrath, Michael McGrath, Pat McGrath, Jim Cormack, Peter Brennan, John Treacy. Michael Walsh. Subs: Frank McGrath for Jim Cormack, Tom Connolly for Pat Treacy, Jim Cormack for Gerry Stapleton.
Referee: Paddy Russell (Emly).

Loughmore's busy year continued with the Munster Club championship. They beat Croom by 0-9 to 1-4 in the first round at Croom on November 6. Three weeks later they played the Clare champions, Doonbeg, at Holycross and the sides drew at 0-8 each. In the replay at Ennis on December 11 Loughmore were beaten by 1-7 to 1-3 in a game that went to extra time.