Tuesday, 17 June 2014

Early Movies, Drama and more in Ballyshannon




The Oldest Community Hall in Ballyshannon

The Rock Hall has a long and continuous history in providing a venue for parish and community activities. It is the longest surviving hall in Ballyshannon which predates The ’98 Hall, The Masonic Hall, The Abbey Centre and The Marian Hall. Situated on land once owned by the Dickson estate, it was purchased in 1865 for the parish by Canon Kelaghan P.P. who was the first parish priest of Inismacsaint to reside in Bundoran. Prior to that time the parish priest lived in the Ballyshannon end of the parish. Local tradition suggests that the area purchased contained three small houses and a ruin which in the early years of purchase were used as a stabling ground for the priest and parishoners’ horses. Around twenty five years after the purchase of the property, Canon McKenna P.P. was approached by local people to build a hall and he instigated the construction of the Rock Hall. The vicinity around the hall was much different in 1892 than it is today. Across the road was the Fever hospital, a few doors away was the workhouse where inmates were still being admitted and visible from the front of the Rock Hall was the military barracks occupied by the Dorsetshire Regiment where the East Rock houses were later built in 1936. The Rock Hall was constructed before Finner Camp became the new military barracks in 1896, before the foundation of the local G.A.A. club in 1909 and before the arrival of the De La Salle Brothers in 1912.

The Opening of the Rock Hall 1892

On Monday 25th May 1892, known as Lady’s Day in honour of Our Lady, the Rock Hall was officially opened. The cost of building the hall was shared by voluntary contributions from the people of the parish and also included subscriptions from the Kilbarron parish across the Erne on ‘the far side’ of Ballyshannon. James Monaghan, a well known contractor from West Port, built the hall at a most reasonable cost and also subscribed generously to the building fund. His name can be clearly seen on the tower of St. Joseph’s Church which he constructed in 1886. He also built the Courthouse on the Mall now the Tyrhugh Centre. He was the grandfather of Mary and Paddy Monaghan well known to older residents in Ballyshannon.

The official opening was marked by a concert and the local newspaper “The Donegal Vindicator” printed on East Port described the opening concert as follows:

The fine new Hall, Rock, Ballyshannon, was opened on Monday, Lady Day, with a very successful concert. Every inch of room was occupied by a most respectable audience. Mr. Starling Philson who organised the concert had advertised a grand Diorama of Irish views but unfortunately the hydrogen gas escaped from the cylinder in transit and he was unable to gratify his audience with a sight of the splendid views.

The concert went ahead despite the leaking gas and was the beginning of a wonderful era of local entertainment in the Rock Hall in the days before cinema and television. The hall has echoed to the sound of laughter and community endeavour as actors, singers, dancers and athletes developed a parish and community spirit which was a feature of events in the Rock Hall. Fundraising concerts for the Ballyshannon Lace Class, St. Vincent De Paul, Ballyshannon Lawn Tennis Club, The Gaelic League, The G.AA., Ballyshannon Brass and Reed Band and many other organisations helped to raise funds for charitable causes. In the 1890s the Market House located  on Market street ,beside O’Reilly’s fish shop, was the other centre for social events in Ballyshannon.

Drama on the Rock

The drama movement in Ballyshannon can be clearly traced back to the 19th century when Bernard Kelly of the Port, the first nationalist Member of Parliament for South Donegal, was a member of The Ballyshannon Amateur Dramatic Club. Kelly is buried at St. Joseph’s on the Rock, just beside the Rock Hall which was the popular local venue for plays and concerts. John (Pa) McAdam, editor of “The Donegal Vindicator,” produced countless plays in the Rock Hall. He was responsible for the old Dramatic Club who staged “The Colleen Bawn” and “Ara-na-Pogue” in the Rock Hall around 1904. He was an all round producer who taught  the local actors how to talk, walk and more importantly stand still. In the 1930s The Ballyshannon Players regularly performed plays by George Sheils including a three act comedy called “The New Gossoon”.  Audiences got great value for their money in those pre-television days as there were also singers and dancers accompanied by a small orchestra on the programme. The night concluded with The National Anthem.


Promotion of Gaelic Culture

In the early 20th century the Gaelic League was active in promoting the Irish language and culture in Ballyshannon. Classes for junior and senior students were provided by Aodh Ó Diver in the Rock Hall to encourage people to speak Irish. Dr. Mulhern P.P. gave the Rock Hall free to the Gaelic League for these classes which ran during the school year. Fr. Tierney who was a curate on the Rock from 1911-1917 was actively involved in the promotion of Irish classes; Irish history lectures and in Gaelic games. Following his tragic death on the Chinese Missions it was fitting that he was remembered in the name of the local football field and in a memorial beside St. Joseph’s Church. In October 1909 the Aodh Ruadh Hurling and Football Club was founded at a meeting in the Rock Hall. Officers elected were Rev. J O’Daly (President), James Rogan (Vice-President), John Downey (Treasurer) and Cecil Stephens (Secretary).

The First Cinemas

The Rock Hall as well as being a concert venue in the town was also the location of the town’s first permanent cinema. Films were shown earlier in venues like the shed in the Market Yard by travelling film companies but the first cinema in town with projection equipment installed was the Rock Hall. John Sweeny of the Commercial Hotel, Major Myles, Paddy Crose and a few interested business people formed the Ballyshannon Cinema Company. They brought in an operator from Glasgow and the cinema played to packed houses, for some years, as people came to the Rock Hall from far and near. During the War of Independence the  Bracey Daniel’s Picture Company booked the Rock Hall annually at Easter and showed silent movies nightly. Bracey Daniels (1884-1956) is buried in St. Joseph’s cemetery close to the Rock Hall and is described on his gravestone as an “Irish Cinema Pioneer”. By the 1930s the four penny matinee on a Sunday was the highlight of the week for young people in Ballyshannon . Mass in the morning and the ‘flicks’ in the afternoon with the Cisco Kid, Tom Mix, Buck Rogers, Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers and  Dale Evans. The patrons crammed into the hall, sitting on wooden benches, no backs, no arms and noisily greeted their heroes on screen in the ‘talkies’ which had replaced the silent movies. The arrival of the Erne Hydro-Electric Scheme brought great changes to cinema viewing in the town. By 1946 two new cinemas opened in the town, The Erne Cinema and the Abbey Cinema which nowadays is called The Abbey Centre. Nevertheless the Rock continued for a while as a cinema but its heyday was in establishing cinema in Ballyshannon from the early 20th century. Fortunately the Rock Hall was able to move with the times and meet other needs of the community.

Memories

The Rock Hall was a mecca for variety shows and it would take a book to name all the artistes who provided entertainment for the community. Everyone has their own special memories. Charlie McGettigan who won the Eurovision Song Contest with Paul Harrington in 1994  rates the Rock Hall as a major influence on his early career. He was influenced by hearing Cyril Curran and the Assaroe Ceilí Band  playing in the Rock Hall and also shared in the fun provided by artistes such as Michael Gillespie, Maureen Kane and Lily Heresey to name but a few. Charlie McGettigan perfomed for the first time in the Rock Hall with his new Egbert electric guitar in 1963 where he sang “Where Have All the Flowers Gone.” And the rest is history.

The guardian of the hall who ensured that everything was properly looked after was Terry McDermott with his distinctive walking stick. His sister Annie looked after the church and Eileen Kennedy continues the family association with the parish as church sexton today. Renovations to the hall in 1947 were continued over the years and developments in 2014  have resulted in an excellent modern facility which will serve the needs of the community far into the future. Activities such as parish events, drama, Gaelic culture, school events,cinema socials, bingo, meetings, badminton,  sport, dances, youth clubs, card playing and ceilí dancing have  provided enjoyment and community spirit  to generations of people in the wider community. The history of the Rock Hall is a proud one of service to the community and we remember all our clergy, friends, neighbours and parishoners who have passed on this small but unique hall to our keeping in  the twenty first century.


A local history book for all special occasions available at The Novel Idea Bookshop Ballyshannon, Ballyshannon and District Museum and The Four Masters Bookshop Donegal Town.

50% Reduction on postage for orders for this book to all destinations. Genuine special offer from author. Signed hard back and soft back books available at special  price for postal delivery or collection. Book Available from Anthony Begley West Rock Ballyshannon. anthonyrbegley@hotmail.com  Enquiries welcome for postal and other details

Friday, 9 May 2014

Invitation and Background to the Opening of Famine Orphan Girls' Memorial


                  
                        

 Invitation and Background to the Opening of Famine Orphan Girls' Memorial

Venue: Ballyshannon Workhouse

Date and Time: Sunday 18th May 2014 at 5 p.m.

On Sunday 18 May at 5 p.m. a memorial to 19 orphan girls shipped to Sydney Australia during the Great Famine will be opened in Ballyshannon. 
Everyone in the area is most welcome to attend and refreshments will be served
Book cover shows the new Famine Orphan Girls’ Memorial in Ballyshannon Co. Donegal. A limited edition book costing a nominal five euro with lots of photographs describes how they survived in Australia and how their descendants have reconnected with Ballyshannon.
The girls were from Belleek, Mulleek, Kinlough and the Ballyshannon areas.
This memorial and book has received substantial funding from Ballyshannon Town Council along with generous donations from home and abroad. The book will be available on the day or in the Novel Idea Ballyshannon and Ballyshannon and District Museum. I will also have copies which can also be posted. Postage details from anthonyrbegley@hotmail.com

Background

From 1848-1850 a government scheme sent 4,000 orphan girls from Irish workhouses to Australia, where they were short of females for domestic work and ultimately for marriage. This resulted in 19 girls from Ballyshannon workhouse being shipped to Australia. How the girls were selected and the journey via Plymouth to Sydney in Australia is recounted in the publication “From Ballyshannon to Australia. Memories of Famine Orphans.” How the girls felt at being separated from siblings and going “down under” is discussed. Original research over the past 30 years has resulted in many contacts with their descendants in Australia and most orphans’ stories from first landing in Sydney are revealed. Not all of them had happy endings. Nevertheless their descendants are proud of the resilience of the 19 girls who all settled in Australia and indeed one great- great grandchild of an orphan girl will be visiting the memorial in Ballyshannon in September. We hope to mark the occasion and you are all most welcome to attend. Other descendants plan to visit as circumstances permit.
This project would not have been possible but for the support of Ballyshannon Town Council and its Town Clerk Mary Daly. Their funding made the memorial possible and also the publishing of the girls’ stories. In the book acknowledgement is given to other generous sponsors in Ireland, U.S.A, Australia and elsewhere. All who assisted in any way with the construction work etc. are recorded in the book. There are lots of photographs from Ballyshannon and Australia in the book as well as rare images from inside the workhouse and of descendants of the orphan girls.

Spread the word:  Please tell people in Mulleek, Belleek, Kinlough, Glenade and Loughside and the areas in and around Ballyshannon that this event and book are happening. Who knows we may be able to create direct links for the orphans in their homeland. Ballyshannon workhouse served Bundoran and Tullaghan, out as far as Rossnowlagh, Ballintra, Cashelard, Garrison, Devenish and other areas in Fermanagh as far as Churchill. Some of the orphans roots are there.

You are most welcome to attend the event and in a sense show solidarity with these orphan girls who left Ireland through circumstances completely outside their control. They were survivors.

Friday, 14 February 2014

Ballyshannon Town Clock- A Landmark since 1878







                         
The storm damage this week to the face of the town clock, pictured above, brings to mind the history of a building which has been a landmark for generations of people who have admired this picturesque building and its chimes. Paddy "Go Aisy" Slevin and his Model T Ford lorry were given the honour of opening the bridge at Ballyshannon, beside the town clock, in the 1940s during the Erne Hydro-Electric Scheme. 

The town clock has an interesting history and is probably the most distinctive and recognisable building in Ballyshannon, for the countless thousands who visit or who pass through the town. Perched at the top of a most impressive Scottish style baronial building built in 1878, the tall two-storey clock and bell tower with crow-stepped gables was built for the Belfast Bank who had commenced business in the town in 1869. It later was occupied by the Royal Bank. In the immediate vicinity was the Provincial Bank, the earliest bank in town in 1835, where the poet William Allingham, his father also called William and his brother Hugh, the historian, worked at various periods. Across the street was the National Bank which today is the Bank of Ireland, all three banks were signs of the commercial prosperity of the area. The history of the clock tower recalls an agreement reached between the Belfast Bank and the planning authorities of the day. In return for giving the bank permission to build the bank outwards towards the road, the bank agreed to provide the town with a clock. The date of the erection of the clock, 1878, can be seen in the stonework just below the recently damaged clock face.

The immediate area around the clock is one of the most historic in the town with the old customs house just across the street where the Saimer Shopping Centre is today. The site of the town clock was very close to where the "Speaker" Conolly (1662-1729) was born and where his family had a tavern in the 17th century. In sight of the clock tower is the Market Yard where the O’Donnell chieftains had their castle and where in later times the farmers’ markets were held. Across the street was the old military barracks built in 1700 and which stands today as the oldest building in town and the town clock also overlooks the bridge crossing the river Erne.
  
The building ceased operations as a bank when the Royal Bank amalgamated with the Provincial Bank next door and became the Allied Irish Bank around 1966. The Gallogley family who had been in business in the town for generations carried on their clock and jewellery business in the building until very recent times. 

 

A local gift for all special occasions available at The Novel Idea Bookshop Ballyshannon, Ballyshannon and District Museum, Local Hands and The Four Masters Bookshop Donegal Town.



Signed hard back and soft back books available at special  price for postal delivery or collection. 
Book Available from Anthony Begley West Rock Ballyshannon. anthonyrbegley@hotmail.com  Enquiries welcome for postal and other details

Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Memories of an Historic Convent Building in Ballyshannon to be Developed as a Primary Health Care Centre




An historic building in Ballyshannon which in recent years has been in sad decline is to be converted by the Health Service Executive into a Primary Care  Health Centre for the community at a cost of €5.9 million. The community welcomes this development and preservation of one of the most impressive buildings in the town, which is deeply imbedded in the history of Ballyshannon.Pictured above is the Convent of Mercy alongside the Sheil Hospital which it will complement.

The Sisters of Mercy in Ballyshannon  Since 1867

The Sisters of Mercy have played a prominent role in the spiritual, educational and humanitarian life of Ballyshannon since 1867. Indeed they have expanded that role throughout the county and to the U.S.A. The Convent of St. Catherine was founded on the 30th April 1867 by Sister M. Ignatius Joseph Mc Carthy and three sisters from Kinsale. They were accompanied on the journey by Sister M. Agatha Sheil who had entered the convent at Kinsale for the Ballyshannon Mission, but due to illness had to leave. This lady was a member of a prominent Ballyshannon family which included her brother Dr. Simon Sheil, benefactor of the Sheil Hospital, and this early link between Kinsale and Ballyshannon was developed and continues to the present day. Their first residence was on College Street where the Day Centre is today, and they were given accommodation by Bishop Daniel Mc Gettigan who lived in Ballyshannon at the time. The Sisters quickly established a school and a small orphanage near their residence, and also visited the poor and sick in their homes. They also provided women with employment in craft work.

Site for a New Convent

The site for a new Convent building was endowed by William Stephens, Draper, The Cloth Hall, in Market Street, who left over a £1,000 to the Sisters of Mercy in his will.  This was a substantial sum of money at the time and the Stephens family also contributed generously to the local church building. (The Cloth Hall is now the location of Sean Ógs) The Convent buildings were constructed for the Sisters of Mercy on land which originally belonged to a local business family called Sharkey. The Sharkey family had  property and business interests in the College Street, Market Street and Bundoran areas in the 19th century, including a tannery in Market Street.  Part of the grounds of the present St. Catherine’s Convent were once known as Sharkey’s Field.

Foundation Stone Laid 1879

The foundation stone for the new convent was laid on 15th September 1879. The architects for the project were O’Neill and Byrne, a firm based in Belfast and Dublin. The contractor was Matthew McClelland of Derry. Building work was suspended for a period during 1881-1882. The new building was to consist of a detached nine-bay, three- storey convent with projecting gabled end bays, recessed entrance, projecting accommodation, sanitary and stair wings to the south.

Convent Occupied in 1883

The Sisters of Mercy occupied the building on 2nd April 1883. The new convent was dedicated, on the 17th March 1884, by Archbishop Mc Gettigan of Armagh, who had been elevated from the position of Bishop of Raphoe. The Sisters of Mercy were locally to be involved in the running of The Workhouse, The Sheil Hospital, The Rock Hospital, St. Catherine’s Primary School, Carrickboy N.S., Our Lady of the Angel’s Primary School and The Sacred Heart Secondary and Boarding School.





A local gift for all special occasions available at The Novel Idea Bookshop Ballyshannon, Ballyshannon and District Museum and The Four Masters Bookshop Donegal Town.

50% Reduction on postage for orders for this book to all destinations. Genuine special offer from author. 

Signed hard back and soft back books available at special  price for postal delivery or collection. 
Book Available from Anthony Begley West Rock Ballyshannon. anthonyrbegley@hotmail.com  Enquiries welcome for postal and other details