A Private Collection of Museum items, that Seamus collected over the years was on display and opened to the general public up to the end of the summer of 2015.
The Nore Folk museum played host on Sunday to the South East Honda Fifty
Club from Wexford and several of their impeccably preserved vintage bikes.
Ten members of the Club set off for the renowned museum in scenic
Bennettsbridge after enjoying a hearty breakfast at Doyle’s pub in Bagnelstown.
Bikes that once were commonplace on our roads but have almost disappeared from twenty first century Ireland made a heart-stopping comeback as they rolled up Cannon Hill and through the open gateway into the grounds of the museum.
The bikes were in good company there…resting alongside 1930's iron wheeled
tractors, 1950's phone booths, 19th century open fireplaces, cannons from the
days of Cromwell, agricultural implements, and assorted other relics of an
Ireland lost in the mists of time. And these were just the items on show
OUTSIDE the museum.
Inside, the Honda Fifty Club visitors felt drawn to ancient petrol pumps of the kind that might once have kept the Honda's tanked up. The replica 1920's pub also fixated them, with its atmospheric insight into pre-smoking ban days and a time when even Honda Fifties had not been heard of.
Pat Leacy on behalf of the Club said he had never in his life seen a museum
like it. He enthused: “We were simply amazed and dumbstruck at the scope
and nature of Seamus’s collection.
Honda 50 Club
members Bernard Bryon
and Brendan Morgan posing in the replica 1920s “pub” at the museum.
"We all have our memories of growing up in Ireland and to see items which were an integral feature of our daily lives all those years ago was a unique experience.
Seamus is such a mine of information and knowledge about all aspects of Irish life and antiquities.We were transported to another world, a different Ireland, when we listened to his stories and anecdotes concerning the exhibits.
"The museum is more than a collection. It’s a receptacle of memories and
treasures…an absolutely wonderful resource. We all agreed that this was the best place
we had visited in the course of our many bike tours and we intend to return later
in the year. And Seamus welcomed us like kings. He’s a one man tourist board and I can’t
speak highly enough of him.”
The curator laid on a special treat for the bikers. Tables with attached
parasols were laid in the grounds of the museum and the visitors had
themselves a pleasant snack with Seamus in the shadow of the Blackstairs
Mountains.
Curator
Seamus Lawlor has acquired
the roll book of Danesfort National School covering
the years 1913 to 1920. It is in excellent condition, having been lovingly
preserved for decades by the O’ Shea family in Danesfort, who have now kindly donated it to the museum.
The school
itself was a two room building located beside Saint Michael’s Church in the
village. It was built in 1836 and continued to meet the educational needs of the
district until its closure in 1988, when the present school replaced it
following a brilliantly organised and well supported community fund raising
initiative.
Seamus showed me the pages of the roll book, where
appear the names of local children, all of whom, he remarked sadly, have since
passed to their eternal reward. Included among the entries are Seamus’s own parents, James Lawlor
and Bridget Corcoran. The attendance
records for all the children recorded, as well as other information and comments
pencilled in by the teachers are clearly legible. Also listed are the teachers
of the period: Annie Wall and Brigid M. Hogan.
Seamus expects a flood of inquiries about the roll
book once it goes on public display at the museum from this week.
He
explained: “The descendents of the people who attended the school and whose
names appear in the roll book can be found not just in the Dansfort area, but naturally, all over Ireland and beyond
our shores because of course a percentage of the school-goers or their offspring
would have emigrated. I plan to have information on the roll book publicised on
the internet with this in mind.
“This is a
precious resource. Each name recorded is a treasure, a human being who once trod
this earth and walked miles through hail rain and snow, in all seasons, in many
cases barefoot, to avail of an education that in those days was never taken for
granted. The period covered...1913 to 1920, was a tumultuous one in Ireland. It
took in World War One, the 1916 rising, and the war of independence.
“The
parents of the children who attended Danesfort
national school would have been affected to a greater or lesser extent by those
national upheavals. The children’s lives, though, would have been dominated by
their daily trek to the school and their learning
experience.
“And
learning didn’t come easy to those good people. Corporal punishment was in vogue
back then and it hung like a cloud over any boy or girl who arrived late for
school or fell behind in class. The rod was applied liberally and none of the
children ever forgot the sting of it in later years. Thankfully, they all
benefited from their lessons and went on to become the backbone of the thriving
Danesfort community. People are
invited to view the roll book at the museum.
Seamus showing an old writing slate that was once used in classroms all over
Ireland.
Museum’s tribute to carpenters of
another era for Heritage Week
the most famous carpenter of all
Seamus Lawlor has unveiled
a new monument on the grounds of his acclaimed Nore
View Folk Museum in Bennettsbridge to coincide with
Heritage Week. It honours the carpenters of another era in the locality and
every other part of Ireland whose skills were vital to our quality of life as a
nation. In good times and bad, the carpenter was always in demand, the curator
told a contingent of visitors from Australia on Monday. He added: “Whether in
war or peace, boom times or economic downturn, the carpenter can’t be done
without.”
The
monument, on a beautifully crafted plinth, is topped with a steel display case
fronted by quarter inch thick glass which contains a selection of vintage
carpenter’s tools.
Seamus produced a two hundred year old bow saw at the
unveiling. He said it reminded him of a legend associated with the Holy family
that was current in his childhood: It stated that Saint Joseph, one of the most
famous of all carpenters, one day noticed the infant Jesus playing with a piece
of broken steel which he was rubbing against a stone. It gradually assumed a
jagged edge. The future Saviour of Mankind then proceeded to cut a sliver of
wood in half with it, thus inventing the saw.
Joseph,
according to the legend, immediately recognized the significance of this and
spread the word and before long all the carpenters in the Holy Land were happily
sawing timber for fires and building.
Whatever
about the accuracy of this legend, Seamus paid a warm
tribute to all those skilled craftspeople, whether practical carpenters or
artists, who have been “knocking on wood” since the dawn of time. He especially
hailed those in his own locality who had served the community with their craft.
He recounted how the first carts in the district had wooden wheels, these in
time being reinforced with steel rims by the blacksmiths. He also emphasized
that Bennettsbridge carpenters had a proud record in
wisely utilising wood from trees felled in sustainable forests.
Seamus says everyone is welcome to view the monument,
along with the 12,000 other exhibits at the museum, which continues to attract
visitors from across the globe.
Though the
monument was designed by Seamus himself, print and
sign work was by Derek Maher of Dublin Road, Kilkenny, Pre-Cast Concrete
supplied the plinth, and Stephen Fitzpatrick of Bennettsbridge engineered the monument impeccably into place
with his forklift.
******
Seamus with a two hundred year old bow saw and a
picture of Saint Joseph,the most famous carpenter of all
Renowned
Cannon Hill in Bennettsbridge, on which the almost
equally famed Nore Folk Museum stands, was “occupied”
by the military last week!
On
Thursday, a group of cadets visited the museum to acquaint themselves with its
fascinating collection of antique household items, old farm machinery, and war
memorabilia.
Curator
Seamus Lawlor guided them
around the collection of more than 12,000 exhibits, drawing sighs of admiration
and exasperation from the enthralled future defenders of the nation. Outside the museum, they toured Cannon Hill,
treading over ground where once rested and dined no less a man than Oliver
Cromwell, the feared Lord Protector of England who stopped off in Bennettsbridge on his way to capture Kilkenny City in March
1650.
The cadets
were shown a patch of earth upon which the man Irish people have always loved to
hate is believed to have actually sat down and enjoyed a few sandwiches and a
drop of tea with his troops when he took a break from his long cross country
march towards the former Confederate capital.
On Friday,
a senior Army Officer stationed at the Curragh called
in. Lieutenant Colonel Stephen Ryan complimented Seamus on his collection, extending an invitation to him to
visit the highly rated museum at the Curragh.
Seamus proudly showed the Defence Forces officer a
set of cannons outside the museum entrance, all pointing towards Kilkenny in
remembrance of Cromwell’s overnight stay on the spot.
The Lieutenant Colonel thanked Seamus for taking him
back to ages long past, to the long forgotten era of the horse-drawn plough, the
sword and musket, of the threshing engine, hurling without helmets, dentistry
without anaesthetic, smoke filled pubs (there’s a replica of such a pub in the
museum) and primitive household appliances like a manually operated vacuum
cleaner.
Seamus said he was delighted to have soldiers again
visiting Cannon Hill. “Friendly ones this time”, he hastened to add!
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