T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
80.1 | Cork | COIN::LEONHARDT | Dick Leonhardt | Thu Sep 18 1986 19:15 | 4 |
| Re Hurlers: I have a cousin who played in Cork in the 70s, name
of Stephen Hayes. Anyone know him?
Dick
|
80.2 | cork | CSWVAX::MANNING | | Fri Sep 19 1986 13:25 | 2 |
| I might possibly know him - he is probably from Blackrock.
I will find out.
|
80.3 | cork | COIN::LEONHARDT | Dick Leonhardt | Sun Sep 21 1986 21:28 | 1 |
| His mother is visiting here, found out he works for Apple.
|
80.4 | | MTV::FOLEY | I kinda lost track myself.. | Mon Sep 29 1986 11:08 | 6 |
|
A cousin of mine works for Apple. He's a high level manager. His name
is Dan Byrne.
mike
|
80.5 | BLACKROCK HURLERS | CSWVAX::MANNING | | Thu Oct 09 1986 13:50 | 8 |
| A D.Hayes played on the 1953 and 1954 Cork All-Ireland teams.
His local club was Blackrock. Is there any relationship?
Just about all the Hayes hurlers came from Blackrock, now
a suburb of Cork City but once, a tiny fishing village on the
shores of Lough Mahon on the River Lee.
Pat M.
|
80.6 | Maybe, but.... | PRISM::LEONHARDT | Dick Leonhardt | Mon Oct 13 1986 10:42 | 5 |
| Don't think so. He now plays rugby for a team his
father Bart Hayes played for, but I can't remember
the name of it just now.
|
80.7 | THE HAYES'S | CSWVAX::MANNING | | Tue Jan 06 1987 12:00 | 3 |
| Batt Hayes used to play rugby for Cork Constitution in the forties.
A very tough customer, by all accounts!!!! He comes from the Ernie
Keeffe, Noel Murphy era.
|
80.8 | That's the one, I think | CSSE::LEONHARDT | Dick Leonhardt | Wed Jan 07 1987 20:06 | 2 |
| I think you got him. His son Stephen is playing for them now if
my info, or recollection, is correct. Stephen is my second cousin.
|
80.9 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Aug 25 1992 01:06 | 11 |
| My Grandmother's people, the Lanes, and the Cahalanes were from there.
On my visit last June, I had a very nice dinner at the Innishannon
House hotel with its green lawn stretching down to the banks of the
Bandon River flowing to meet the tide at Kinsale.
I could not help but wonder, as I looked across to the green hills
where my ancestors worked the land, if this may have been the onetime
home of their landlord and were they looking down upon me taking my
ease.
|
80.10 | Innishannon House Hotel | CRAIC::DFALLON | For a lie to become a rumour, It must be printed by a newspaper | Tue Aug 25 1992 10:48 | 41 |
| Innishannon is best known nowadays for producing Alice Taylor, writer
of hokey books about going to school in the "good old days".
I have reason to visit Innishannon fairly regularly, a house very near
to the Innishannon hotel in fact. Recently, in Galway (Freeneys pub to be
exact), someone told me that there is a room in the Innishannon hotel
which is haunted and unused.
This guy, a middled aged engineer from Galway was having dinner in the
hotel with friends and they told him that there was a haunted room
upstairs. He asked the Manager of the hotel about it and the Manager
verified it. He asked not to be told the story of the room, but that he
would go up to it and within a half hour tell, one, if it was haunted
and if so, two, what the source of the haunting was.
He entered the room and, told the Manager to come back in a half hour.
Nothing happened for a few minutes so he called out if there was
anybody there. The lights began to flick on and off and then remained
off. He thought he saw the spectre of a child in great distress in the
room with him. The child was dressed in old clothing but he couldn't
place from when. He said at this time that he wasn't sure if there was one
child or two, but I suspect what he was told later influenced that.
Anyway, he said he sensed great sadness and asked if there was anything
he could do. He also said that he sensed underlying anger. The spectre
didn't respond.
The lights came on after a few more minutes and the manager came back for
him (he had extended his time in the room the first time the manager
came back).
I cannot remember what the actual story is but I know that at one stage
a couple with two children had returned to inherit the house after they
had been away for a number of years. The women had been mentally ill
before that and ended up killing both of the children in that room.
There's a story for you to ask about next time you are in Innishannon
Dennis.
Daith�
|
80.11 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Tue Aug 25 1992 12:18 | 36 |
| RE: .10
>Innishannon is best known nowadays for producing Alice Taylor, writer
>of hokey books about going to school in the "good old days".
I'm not sure but what she was "produced" elsewhere and settled in
Innishannon as an adult. Though I haven't bothered to read any of
them, I was under the impression that the village mentioned in her
"hokey" books was elsewhere.
I did, however, read some of her poetry. I haven't come across any of
them in Libraries over here, but one book had I poem I rather enjoyed
which was about somebody missing out on the sounds of silence because
they were plugged into their walkman all the time.
Her family owns the grocery store in the village and I understand she
has an office upstairs.
I stayed at a B&B just up the street on the opposite side. It was very
nice. The house used to be the fishing lodge for the estate of Winston
Churchill's uncle and local legend has it that Winnie played by the
river's edge as a wee lad.
If you get a chance, stop by the old forge where the road to Bandon
crosses the river. There was a man there, Billy O'Connell [?] who
claims to be one of the last hot forge farriers left in Ireland. Most
of them now put the shoes on cold and too bad for the poor horse if
it's not a perfect fit. He tried to get the government to subsidize an
apprentice he could pass on his trade to, but nobody was interested.
His family has had that forge for three generations, I think he said.
He's a good one to talk with if you want to know some local history.
And, speaking of local history, the B&B had a thick notebook of
material on local history from back before the Battle of Kinsale.
|
80.12 | | CRAIC::DFALLON | For a lie to become a rumour, It must be printed by a newspaper | Tue Aug 25 1992 12:32 | 18 |
| I believe that that blacksmith died fairly recently and that the forge
now lies empty. The front of one of Alice Taylor's books (I don't know
which one) had a picture of that blacksmith on the front. Perhaps it
was the book of poetry.
I visit a GPs house on the opposite side of the road to the Innishannon
Hotel further out from the town, now and then. In fact I am going to marry
the GP's daughter next year sometime. The Doc knew that blacksmith well and
my girlfriend remembers visiting the forge when she was young when her
father stopped in for a chat.
I don't know whether Alice Taylor actually grew up in Innishannon, but
I do know that one of the stories in her latest book is about the local
GP who is my future father-in-law. He was very peeved recently when
looking up a book on towns in Cork, the only thing that was said about
Innishannon was that Alice Taylor lives there.
Daith�
|