Saturday, May 20, 2017

Lehenaghmore Park - Official Opening - 20th May 2017

On Saturday 20th May 2017 , the official opening of Lehenaghmore Park in Togher took place. The formerly known Green Patch had now become a fully fledged Sports ground. As it was a Togher Community Association undertaking from the very beginning , it was heavily represented by members including John Dennehy , Niall McCarthy ( Chairman ) and Fergal Dennehy , who also acted as Lord Mayor for the day. Performing the official cutting ceremony and delivering the keynote speech was County Mayor - Seamus McGrath. Also in attendance was his mother Marie McGrath , sister of Kathleen O'Keeffe who represented the Togher Historical Assoc. Afterwards refreshments were served in the local Community Centre.


 Fergal Dennehy 
& County Mayor Seamus McGrath


 John Dennehy , Seamus McGrath ,
Niall McCarthy & Fergal Dennehy


 Cutting the tape ceremony


Seamus McGrath with mother Marie McGrath
Niall McCarthy & Kathleen O'Keeffe


 City Mayor vs County Mayor


 Panoramic view of official opening


 After-talk back at Community Centre

Phillipine House - The End - 1639 ~ 2017

There is nothing quite so sad as watching history quite literally disappearing in front of your own eyes. Unfortunately though structurally sound , the former seat of the Ronaynes and Sarsfields was uninhabitable by modern standards and no choice remained but to consign it to the wrecking ball. Whatever the factors involved in deciding its fate , it was still a numbing experience to witness almost 4 Centuries of local history being eradicated for evermore.


Eamonn Pearse & Kathleen O'Keeffe


Eamonn Pearse and Kathleen O'Keeffe of the Togher Historical Association were specially invited on Thursday May 18th 2017 onto the site after intensive negotiations between local community stalwart Keiran O'Connell and the site manager in charge of the works. Eamonn quickly lost no time in setting up several cameras to capture the whole process of leveling the ancient abode.


Kathleen witnessing the passing of history


Kathleen remarked on the sheer width of the walls which were approximately 4 feet in thickness! Obviously built to last and last it did from 1639 which was a whole decade before Cromwell landed in Ireland right up to the close of the second decade of the 21st Century! That is almost 380 years old!


Original door defiantly standing amongst the ruins 
of its former home


The team were even invited to tea during the proceedings by the friendly workforce who were very obliging and sympathetic to the reasons for the visitation. Togher has lost its oldest house forever. However out of the ashes of the old will rise a similar building which will be a close replica of its former self. The video below has been rendered up x6 times original speed as the shoot captured over 2 hours of continuous footage. At the end is a short history of the now gone house and its many names and uses.


Full video of demolition of Phillipine House
May 18th  2017


UPDATE 4TH NOVEMBER 2017 : The Team made a brief visit to the site of the Fellowship House building project to check on the progress to date. While they were denied access by the Site Manager due to safety regulations , they were able to take a photograph from a safe distance at the gate. The Site Manager hinted that access may be granted in the near future when building is completed. It can be seen that the replacement build for Philippine House is an almost exact replica as can be seem by the twin pitched roofs.


New Fellowship House under construction


UPDATE 11TH NOVEMBER 2017 : The Team made a return visit the following week to document the progress of the new build. The photos below show side and front views of the development. The short video shot from the lower field shows the near completion of the replica build.



 Front View of new build from lower field


 Side View from main gate of Fellowship site


 Video of near completion of new Fellowship House

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

Phillipine House - The Fireplace

On Tuesday 16th May after plans put in place by the Togher Historical Assoc. and Keiran O'Connell of the Togher Community Assoc. a visit was paid to the Phillipine House to undertake a poignant mission - the removal of a fireplace which had in part been in situ for almost 4 Centuries! The outer casing is a blue marble pillar of Victorian vintage with the inner metal insert of Cromwellian age , possibly earlier. Quite aside from this amazing fact was the historical connection with the Sarsfield Family - who used it as their home in the distant past. Added to this was the news that Phillipine House was slated for demolition the following morning. Time was of the essence and local resident , Keiran McCoy of McCoys Memorials , a qualified stone-cutter from Palmbury Est., graciously offered his services free gratis.


Fireplace before extraction

The photos above and below show the fireplace site pre/post extraction. As the house was awaiting the wrecking ball , the operation was a simple destruction rather than the usual careful piecemeal chizel and hammer approach. It was noted that pre-extraction that the fireplace bore an old crack , which was judged to be a simple repair task. Unfortunately , such was the age of the object , even with careful work , it ultimately came out in 20 pieces. However , a colleague of Keiran McCoy has kindly offered to undertake a restoration job which may take up to a month. It is hoped that the much wished for Togher Museum can now become a reality and the fireplace become literally the hearth of it all. The Blog would like to thank Keiran O'Connell ( Togher Community Assoc. ) and Keiran McCoy ( McCoy Memorials ) for their hard work and dedication in preserving a part of Toghers past history for future Generations to enjoy.

Site after extraction
...to be cont'd ...

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Long's Farm , Togher Road - An Introduction

 On Saturday 8th April 2017 at 12.30 ,  Billy O'Brien met up with Therese Murphy for an interview regarding her Grandfather Patrick Long of Togher. The encounter was an excellent opportunity to gain exclusive information and pour over rare never before seen photographs. The Togher Historical Assoc. & Blog would like to thank Therese for her time and for the history she has passed on to the people of Togher about a time sadly forgotten but now hopefully remembered and added to the historical record for posterity.


Therese Long ( aged 9 ) 1960


Therese Murphy ( nee Long ) 2017


It may be difficult even impossible for modern day residents of a certain part of Togher to imagine quite what the area looked like in the past before any development took place. The region in question is a plot of land which stretched in a line North to South just below Ardmanning Avenue and culminated ( lands of O'Riordans ) approximately where Rose Lawn is today and bordered on Togher Road on its Western axis right across to stop just short of Pouladuff Road on its Eastern axis. This land was Long's Farm but known more colloquially as Togher Farm. Primarily a Dairy Farm , it also served as a Market Garden. Adjoining houses in the nearby vicinity were known as Ardmanning Cottages. All are now gone. To understand the full story it is necessary to go back to the 1920s.


Paddy & Hannah Long


Paddy Long with horse and cart delivering milk 
in Cork City - Holly Bough 2009


The story of Long's Farm begins in the trenches of France during World War I between 1916 and 1918. Young Patrick " Paddy " Long was a young Irishman who found himself caught up in the Great War in France along with thousands of his fellow countrymen. Enduring two horrifying years in No Man's Land , he finally succumbed to a gas attack and was blinded. Repatriation back to Ireland was his ultimate reward. However the story does not end there. With each ending , there is a new beginning. Remarkably two years later Paddy Long regained his sight! As the 1920s dawned , he went on to purchase a small farming interest in the then agricultural hinterland of Togher and worked and raised a family and lived contentedly for the next 40 years. During that time , the couple raised a family of 3 boys and 4 girls : Daniel ( a.k.a. " Donal " - Therese' Father ) , Edward & Patrick ; Vaunie , Therese ( a.k.a. " Terry " ) , Margaret & Claire ( girl in famous photograph ).


Edward Long ( 2nd from left )
 & sister Claire Long ( holding teapot ) 
with labourers during harvest time in early 1950s.
  Kerr's Farmhouse on brow of hill


Throughout the intervening decades , he tilled the land ; milked his cows , the produce of which he sold to the bigger Dairies in the locality and with his wife Hannah , ran a market garden growing vegetables including carrots , cabbages and onions. It was during the early 1950s that Therese' Uncle Eddie and Aunt Claire featured in an iconic photograph ( see above ) depicting a harvest scene in September. Therese remembers that the Long house was situated on the flat at the bottom of Ardmanning Hill where the present day entrance to Edward Walsh Road is now. The only landmark from those halcyon days still standing today is the house of the Kerr's'O'Driscolls which formed the backdrop to the famous photograph ;  everything else being leveled and erased from memory.


Old lady with paper bag collecting shamrock
on Long's Farm ( name and date unknown )


During the 1950s his Granddaughter , Therese would regularly be brought by her Mother from Cait O'Sheas Lane where they lived to visit and play on the land which included jaunts on a pony called Royal Tan , reputedly a former Grand National winner and helping her Grandmother , Hannah , picking blackberries in the garden. Sadly her Father , Daniel " Donal " Long ( born 1918 & married 28th June 1949 ) had succumbed to throat cancer when Therese was very young. As she grew older , she would accompany her Grandfather Paddy in his van delivering milk to the producers which may have included Hosfords Dairy Farm across the road.


Therese Murphy ( nee Long ) with Aunt Terry
 at Long's Farm 1952 ( house in background )


As time wore on in the Long farmstead , the dawn of the 1960s heralded tremendous change for many local farmers and market gardeners in Togher when the Corporation encroached with Compulsory Purchase Orders for the sale of the lands to construct much needed housing schemes for the increasing population of Cork City. Paddy Long was paid the princely sum of £64,000 for Togher Farm in 1962. His neighbours also lost much or all of their former lands ; Murphy's ( Joe Murphy house ) to the east and O'Riordans to the south ( Vicars Road area , Deanwood Ave ). Therese also recollects playing with the children of Bannon's house which was situated across from her Grandfather's farm. It may have at one time served as a lodge , as she recalls a green wooden door/gate opening on to a path with gardens on both sides leading onto a 2 storied big house - which can be inferred as being Clashduff House!


 View from Ardmanning Hill 15th October 1961
Longs farm on left ; O'Bannon's House on right


Paddy bought one of the new houses which would become Earlwood Estate as a replacement for the family home which was situated next to  the Ardmanning House. Later he would build a confectionery bakery for his daughter Vaunie ( who never married ) adjacent to the house. Here Vaunie baked cakes and other confectionery for the locals of Togher up until her sad demise in the 1980s from bowel cancer. She was a wonderful baker and lived for her work. Therese remembers : " I have happy memories of all the time I spent helping. I started when I was about 5 years old until my late teens. Magical ; loved every minute and she was spotless. " Vaunie , who was also known as " Bawnie " is still to this day remembered fondly by the people of Togher.

 
Long House at top of Ardmanning Hill
with " Bawnie's " bakery to rear


Claire Long who famously featured in the harvest photograph holding the teapot ( married in her 40s but regrettably had no children )  now resides in the family home. Brigette Byrne remembers : " My Uncle , Jack Linehan married Claire Long at the Lough Church in 1974. She wore a beautiful lilac dress. We thought he would never marry as he was a confirmed batchelor. " Therese Murphy remembers : " Jack brought great happiness to her life as she thought she would never meet her soul mate. His death was such a terrible loss. "


 Long's new house under construction 15th October 1961


Therese remembers as a child being brought by her Grandfather Paddy to view the construction of their new house ( shown above ) and distinctly recalls the sadness in his eyes at the loss of his beloved farm which proved too much and he passed away at age 63 a few short years later. Below are some photos from the Family album showing cousins and friends.


Abina Lucey R.I.P. 2005, Glasheen ; 
Claire Long - fathers sister ;  
Nora O'Brien ( married - Newman ) mothers sister 
still alive at 85. Abina and Nora- first cousins


Uncle Steven O'Brien - mothers brother; 
Gerry Lucey - Albinas brother ; 
Margaret Long ( check skirt front of pic ) ; 
others unknown


Cousins group photo - Long's ; O'Brien's & Lucey's