Protestant Ireland pre-1920

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Patrick Shea, author of Voices and the Sound of Drums and the only Catholic permanent secretary at Stormont at the outbreak of our Troubles prepared a memorandum for the perusal of ministers and fellow senior civil servants on ‘understanding the relationship between the Northern Ireland communities’. 

Robert Macan,Newry Bank 1807-16

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Family background

Robert Macan (b. 25 October 1774) a banker of Ballinahone House, Armagh and Canal Street, Newry, was the only surviving son of John M’Can, (later Macan), (1729-1801), grandson of Robert McCann (b.circa 1685) of Cloghoge, Co. Armagh. Robert is listed as a freehold landowner in Armagh in Coote’s Statistical Survey, 1804 and was High Sheriff of Armagh in 1814.
 

Mick the Thief

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This, allegedly a true story, was contributed. Only the names have been changed, for many of us might hazard a guess as to the real identity of the main protagonist!  Please note it is not the character here pictured!

     Mick was a thief.  From the time I knew him he was always up to something shady.  He had never worked yet he always dressed well and most of the time had money in his pocket.

Bard of Armagh

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The Williamite ‘settlement’ following the defeat of the Irish at the Boyne saw extremely harsh laws introduced to suppress the Catholic faith and the priests and bishops who helped maintain and propagate it.
 

John Martin

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Although born into the privileged life of a landed Presbyterian family, John Martin laid it aside to serve his suffering fellowman through the dark days of the Famine.  He also endured exile to a foreign land because he sought to reform the Government which he saw as destructive to his native land during the poverty stricken years of the 1840’s.  

John Mitchel

John Mitchel

John Mitchel (1815-1875) was a Young Irelander leader and perhaps the most esteemed…

Charles Russell

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                                        Charles Russell 1832-1900

A handsome bust in the foyer of our Town Hall commemorates one of Newry’s most famous sons, Charles Russell, the only ever Irish Catholic to become Lord Chief Justice of England.

Inniskeen Road: July Evening

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The bicycles go by in twos and threes –

There’s a dance in Billy Brennan’s barn tonight,

And there’s the half-talk code of mysteries

And the wink-and-elbow language of delight.

Kerr’s Ass: Kavanagh

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We borrowed the loan of Kerr’s big ass

To go to Dundalk with butter,

Brought him home the evening before the market

An exile that night in Mucker.


Art McCooey: [Kavanagh]

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I must appeal to proper Kavanagh scholars who may explain why the poet dedicated the following to his predecessor poet of our region, Art McCooey. The collection ‘A Soul for Sale‘ was published in the year of my birth by Macmillan. Other poems in this anthology were similarly dedicated to those who went before.

Kavanagh: The Green Fool

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While deliberating whether Patrick Kavanagh would be acceptable as a ‘local’ poet to our readership, the great irony struck me: that Kavanagh himself, from the black hills and sour fields of Monaghan, struggled to demonstrate the universality of man in his verse and indeed celebrated his people, their time and their landscape to encapsulate the problems of mankind, and of the artist through all regions and ages.


In short, he feared lest he be seen as just a ‘local’ poet!