DATE ERROR CORRECTED … ORIGINAL HAD JUNE, SHOULD BE JULY
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From: ALAN SKEOCH <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>Subject: EPISODE 66 BUNMAHON, IRELAND SUNDAY JULY 17, 1960 TO CATTLE CHOMPING AND CASTLES BURNINGDate: June 15, 2020 at 9:00:16 PM EDTTo: Alan Skeoch <alan.skeoch@rogers.com>
EPISODE 66 BUNMAHON, IRELAND, CATTLE CHOMPING , AND CASTLES BURNEDalan skeochJune 2020Our crew assembling on a roadside. The local newspaper from Waterford took this picture when they did along article on our poject. I count 7 men here. At one point I think we had 10 men employed. Quite a job tokeep things moving.SUNDAY, JULY 17, 1960I’m getting to be familiar with Mass at St. Mary’s RC church but todaywas a cold weather experience….no heat in church. What really amusesme at the church is the Holy Water urn at the door. My employees alwaystry to hit me with a handful. Sometimes successful.I spent the part of the day reading The Bramble Bush…very sad book about mercykilling, religions and, of course, sex. Not sure it was worth the time. In theafternoon we went down to Kirwin’s and Frank let us into the ‘secret’ room…the room hasconnection with Time of the Troubles and the IRA. I never know whenpeople are telling the truth as they love mysterious stories. Hard to imagineBonmahon people full of hatred.Then I went for a walk on Bunmahon beach alone. There were clustersof people walking along the cliffs higher up. Every evening. So I was not alone.A group of girls appeared and greeted me by my name much tomy surprise. Scared me a bit really. I think they used my first name, Alan,rather than the usual Master Skeoch. Sounds odd to be called Master Skeochbut it is very natural and I think a term of respect. Certainly funny.We talked but I never quite understood the accent. Nice kids…a coupleof the girls were about my age.Then around 9 p.m. a couple of the boys arrived to take me to a dancein Tramore. We had a grand time. Dancing is a big time thing here inIreland. Both of the ‘boys’ were older and married.MONDAY, JULY 18, 1960The sea was changeable. In bad weather the waves came so far up the beach that our grounding rods were compromised. Waternever reachedthe generator. My fault for thinking grounding rods were secure.Today we attempted to lay a new base line east of Bunmahon. Not easy.Barney and I had to scale down a 200 foot cliff to get a good groundingpoint. I wish I knew more about grounding. Perhaps top of cliff would havebeen fine. Cliff climbing was frightening. No sooner did we get the base linein place than new herds of cattle began browsing on what looked like specialfood to them…our yellow wire. Five cable breaks reduced our daily mileageto 3,100 feet.I spent the evening working on my earphones and then Mrs. Kennedyasked me to repair her vacuum cleaner.I think this lad’s name was Tim. He never spoke to me but loved the job. I am not surehe could speak. Maybe he was just shy. He sure was dependable…almost like he wascamping at our motor generator.Bunmahon has quite a few handicapped people. We hired one younglad to guard our motor generator. He is handicapped. Overjoyed to havea job so he set up a campsite beside the motor generator Very cute.I estimate there are 5 severely handicapped people in and around the village.TUESDAY, JULY 19. 1960This was our first full working day on new base line. Disappointing. The localcattle destroyed 1,500 feet of new cable…wire a jumble as cattle draggedlengths of the cable into a tangled mess. Then they ate some.Worse still today the ocean got to our grounding rods. My error. Relocatedthem. By 11 a.m. we were ready to try to get some readings done. Managedto do four lines. Not bad.Passed through a tiny chapel with an ancient graveyard…all that remainsof a monastery. The boys told me the “chapel jumped across the stream”and that is why it was saved. Believe it or not.Returned home quite pleased with the day. Mrs. Kennedy assured me shenow had enough peanut butter as she drove to Waterford where it wassent from Dublin. Nice of her. Seems she did know about peanut butter’sexistence. Sometimes her dialect confuses me but she is a quite outstandingwoman and certainly has strong opinions about human behaviour. Neithershe wore her husband go to Kirwin’s pub. She disapproves of local peoplespending money there because they have so little money.WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1960John Stam and John Hogan drove to St. Patrick’s, a mining community,in search of more business for the Turam…or maybe just curiosity.The boys and i pushed the distance we could be from the electrifiedbase line. I was able to read a signal at 4300 feet. but only faintly. Weusually terminate the lines at 3,000 feet distant at a right angle from the base line.Dr. Stam thinks some of our anomalies merit deeper consideration sowe have hired more men to did trenches down to bed rock just incase there are mineralized exposures. I visited our first trench todaywhere we found a little quartz exposed. I do not know if this wasimportant or not.What is most amusing, however, is the way a herd of pigs clusteredat the top of the trench while the men were digging. Barney thinkssome pigs are dangerous but this group were just curious. When I getstrapped in to the Turam receiving coil and console and battery packI cannot get away should the pigs let hunger trump curiosity.Barney tells me stories endlessly. Always with the hint of a smile so i am never sure what tobelieve. The pig story for instance. He mentions it every time we meet a gang of pigs.“Story is told of a Nun taking a short cut to church across a farm field. The pigs gother. All that was found were her boots with her feet in them.” Chuckle…chuckle.Took a bath tonight. Needed itTHURSDAY, JUlY 21, 1960Today we entered the O’Shea forest at Garnemorris. Purgatorywould be nicer than this expanse of tangled Holly and Ivy. Dense.Higher than any person on our crew and difficult to cut. All part ofof a large heavily treed forest. Part of the 1500 acre O;Shea estate.The manor house was set on fire in 1922 by IRA members protestingthe large landowners wealth at the expense of ordinary Irish who livedin poverty. Must check out the name “Power O’Shea”.Mr. Cunningham arrived to check out our Turam work . He representsthe Geological Survey of Ireland. We picked up a hue anomaly. Not sureif reading is reliable though as signal was very weak due to leak.We had to give up around 3 p.m. because foliage was so dense wecould hardly move and I was not sure the compass baring was accuratewhen the lines were cut.NOTE: Before we attempt to ‘read’ the Turam, a linocutting crew issent to cut and mark lines 3,000 feet on either side of the electrified baseline. The line cutters pound in stakes marking 50 or 100 feet‘stations’ as they proceed. Usually a two or three man crew do thisusing a compass for accuracy…ie. to ensure the lie is straight. In theO’shea forest errors occurred because straight line compass sightingswere difficult.Fener Bog, County Waterford…where Larry Deygot caught and was sinking. Fenor Bog began to grow 10,000 years in a lake basin at the bottomof Ballyscanlon Hill. Peat – the partially rotted remains of plants filled the basin to form a raised bog.
In historic times the bog was cut by local people. The turf removed was used to heat family homes.
About 100 years ago, turf cutting ceased and the bog began to regenerate into the wet fen habitat we see today.
Larry Dey got stuck in the Fener bog hole today. He was trapped andsinking when Johny came along and pulled him out. Probably wouldnot have sunk much deeper. But bogs can paralyze.FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1960We got an early start todayThe day was full of troubles as rhe staking crew were inaccurate dueto the heavy forest and low brush and bog vegetation. Very difficult tokeep the lines straight. I was irritated but should not have beensince the crew tried hard to keep at right angles to base line.I should not have been angry…but the feeling of responsibility overcamegood sense … and good public relations.WHAT HAPPENED IN THE TIME OF THE TROUBLES?upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b9/A_family_pose_beside_a_make-shift_shelter_Alexander_Street%2C_Waterford%2C_Ireland%2C_1920s_%286805869735%29.jpg/1575px-A_family_pose_beside_a_make… 2x” data-file-width=”2485″ data-file-height=”1890″ class=””>Pictured above are three generations of a poverty stricken Waterford family living under a old tarpaulin.The picture may have been staged somewhat . photo credit 1900 to 1920 by a reporter associatedwith the IRA movement.NOTE: While there were almost constant references to the “time of the Troubles” byour Irish hosts, the Kennedy family…and also by our work force and people at Kirwin’spub, these comments were never made in a hostile manner. The Irish were warm andfun loving in my experience. When one of our workers father died i went to thewake which was a warm tribute to the man… feeling of warmth…of acceptance…of sincere interest. It wasvery hard for me to visualize either the potato famine of the 1840’s or the violence ofthe move to independence in the 1920’s. But there were definitely bad times.The mention by Mrs. Kennedy that the O’Shea manor house had been burned by he IRAin 1922 was an offhand remark. I thought it might be an isolated event. Wrong. In the Timeof the Troubles IRA men burned 274 Irish mansions mostly owned by Protestant Irish (manyof them former English). The goal was to get land back to Irish peasant farmers but much ofthat had already been done. A Land Reclamation program had been redistributing land forsome time. As a result The burnings backfired on the IRA since many jobs on theseestates were lost. That was the 1920’s. But the IRA was making a point no matter what the cost.So in the 1920’s many great mansions were lost. In the 1950’s and the 1960’s the same thingwas happening to English country housesby the hundreds….in1955 one was being demolished every five days… auctioning contentsand demolition because aristocratic familieslost their heirs in the World Wars or the owners could no longer pay the taxes on big estatesthat amounted unto 65% Succession duties. In both cases…Irish violence and English post warpoverty resulted in the loss of hundreds of magnificent buildings. National treasures gone.(Later I hoped to visit the Eywood Estate in England which was demolished in 1955. My grandfatherEdward Freeman had been he head gardener on the estate Mom was born there. I wonderedwhat would be left standing. I knew the huge country house was gone. Was it all gone?)How much of this violence happened near Bunmahon in the 1920’s? Two events stand out.1) THE BURGERY AMBUSH:(Dungarven)“On the night of 18–19 March 1921, IRA volunteers of the West Waterford flying column ambushed a British military convoy at the Burgery, about a mile and a half northeast of Dungarvan. The convoy included Black and Tans and a Royal Irish Constabulary Sergeant, named Michael Hickey.[2] In overall command of the IRA unit was IRA GHQ Officer George Plunkett. Also present were West Waterford Brigade Commandant Pax Whelan, ASU leader George Lennon, and Mick Mansfield. A British Crossley tender was set on fire and prisoners taken by the IRA, including Sergeant Hickey. Hickey was later killed by an IRA firing squad[3] with a sign reading “police spy” affixed to his tunic. He was later buried in an unmarked grave.[2] Other prisoners including Captain DV Thomas, the commander of the British garrison, were released.After the ambush, a group of volunteers under Plunkett returned to search for any armaments left behind by the British forces. Crown forces who were now searching the area engaged the IRA party; IRA volunteers Seán Fitzgerald and Pat Keating were shot dead. A Black and Tan, Constable Sydney R. Redman[3] was shot dead during the return fire.” Wikipedia2) BURNING OF THE POWER O’SHEA ‘BIG HOUSE’(This mayor may not be the O’Shea big house (Country House, Mansion…other terms). After the fire thehouse was rebuilt and repaired)The ‘big house’ on the O’Shea estate was one of the nearly 300 country houses set on fire by the IRA in the 1920’s…set on fire because they were symbols ofthe English oppression of the Irish. The OShea house was only partially destroyed so it was subsequently rebuilt. Lost in the fire, however, were the artworksand the library. Other Country Houses had a much darker fate .. i.e. totally destroyed.Quote below:
“By the start of the Irish revolutionary period in 1919, the Big House had become symbolic of the 18th and 19th-century dominance of the Protestant Anglo-Irish class in Ireland at the expense of the native Roman Catholic population, particularly in southern and western Ireland.[4]The Anglo-Irish, as a class, were generally opposed to the notions of Irish independence and held key positions in the British administration of Ireland. The Irish nationalist narrative maintained that the land of Irishmen had been illegally stolen from them by the landowning aristocracy, who had mostly arrived in Ireland as Protestant settlers of The Crown during the late 16th and 17th centuries. The Irish Big House was at the administrative centre of the estates of the landowners, as well as being the family seat from which the Anglo-Irish exerted their political control over the island.[5]This perception was popularly held by nationalists, despite a considerable increase in Irish landownership in the previous decades due to the Irish Land Acts. Whereas in 1870, 97% of land was owned by landlords and 50% by just 750 families, by 1916, 70% of Irish farmers owned their own land.[6] Catholics had been emancipated in 1829 and the political dominance of the Anglo-Irish in Ireland had consequently declined following the electoral successes of the Catholic nationalist Irish Parliamentary Party through much of the 19th century.[7]The former Protestant Ascendancy had lost its economic power following the Great Famine of 1845-49, and the Long Depression of the 1870s; and then lost its political power after the Representation of the People Act 1884. By 1915 the Irish Land Commission had transferred over 60% of Irish farmland to tenant farmers, leaving most of the former landed gentry with a house and a home farm known as a “demesne”. The former landlords could afford to employ gardeners and household staff as they had received, as a group, the equivalent of over €60 billion (in 2019 euro).[8] Burning country houses from 1919 was therefore largely symbolic, and removed the former landlords’ capital from the Irish economy when they emigrated, as well as ending the employment of thousands of their staff, with an inevitable knock-on effect on local economies. “ (wikipedia)Bonmahon was not such a peaceful friendly place in the years of the Great Potato Famine muchof which was blamed on the English. Negative comments made in the 1850’s by the local Protestant ministerin Bonmahon, Rev. Doudney. who left Bonmahon in 1857 nearly triggered a blood bath but thatcould be an exaggeration. No one seems to have lost their life. People just moved on.Postcard pictures of Bonmahon between 1900 and1920’s. Mr. andMrs. Kennedy’s home survived but other homes were gone by 1960END EPISODE 66