Frocks, Socks and Twilfits: Profile of Denis Guiney of Brosna

‘Buy in bulk with ready cash; sell at low profits but sell quickly’ Denis Guiney, a ‘Merchant Prince’ in the twentieth century business world, was born at Knockawinna, Brosna, Co Kerry on 9 September 1893, the eldest of seven children of farmer Cornelius Guiney and Julia Crowley. He was educated at Knockaclarig National School and […]

A Life in Pieces: William Twiss of Castleisland

John Twiss of Castleisland, wrongfully convicted of the murder of James Donovan in 1894 and hanged in Cork Gaol the following year, was Posthumously Pardoned on 16 December 2021 by President Michael D Higgins following a campaign by Castleisland District Heritage.   In the wake of the Pardon, Castleisland District Heritage entered into a correspondence […]

News Flash: The Kerryman Celebrates more than Four Generations in Business

Congratulations are extended to The Kerryman newspaper which this year (2024) celebrates 120 years since its first issue was printed in Tralee on 20 August 1904.  It remains a valuable resource for local news and a goldmine for local history.   Its founders were Thomas Nolan, his cousin Daniel Nolan and Maurice Griffin.[1]   Also […]

Only Falls and Causes: The Irish Wit of Comedy Genius John Sullivan

‘John Sullivan was the Dickens of our generation’ – Mark Freeland, BBC Head of Comedy John Richard Thomas Sullivan OBE, creator of the comedy sitcom Only Fools and Horses, was born in London on 23 December 1946, son of plumber John Patrick Sullivan (1908-1993) and charlady Hilda Clara May Parker (1907-1992).[1]   His father was one of eleven […]

No April Fool: Hans Liebherr of Kaufbeuren and Killarney

‘Just a master bricklayer’ – Hans Liebherr’s description of himself[1] Hans Liebherr was born on 1st April 1915 in Kaufbeuren, Bavaria, one of three children (one boy and two girls) of Wilhelm Liebherr (1883-1916) and Matilda Arnold (1890-1969).  His father was killed in the First World War and his mother remarried in 1922 to master […]

‘How are you at Climbing Fences?’ Beth O’Leary Anish finds her Castleisland Roots

In June this year (2024), Castleisland District Heritage was contacted by Beth O’Leary Anish from Massachusetts, scholar of Irish American literature, who was travelling to Ireland to attend a meeting of the American Conference for Irish Studies in Limerick. She was hoping to fit in a visit to Castleisland where her great grandfather, James Leary […]

‘Returning Ghosts’: The Unsolved Murder of James Donovan

‘Was it not the fact that the evicted tenant and the caretaker were on extremely bad terms, the tenant having on one occasion struck the caretaker on the face?’ – Arthur Smith-Barry, 1st Baron Barrymore, House of Commons, 1894[1] Castleisland District Heritage has acquired a copy of the travelogue, Now and in Time to Be […]

Profile of Michael O’Donohoe, Castleisland Historian with Co Clare Roots

This month marks the tenth anniversary of Castleisland District Heritage, an initiative that finds its roots in the research of the late school principal, Michael O’Donohoe. As part of National Heritage Week 17-25 August 2024, a selection of Michael’s work will be on display in St Brigid’s Hall, Castleisland at our Celebration Exhibition on Saturday […]

‘I have never felt terror like it’: The Murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier

‘Many of us around here are worried that there is some psychopath at large’ – Sunday World, 29 December 1996 Why boots?  Why no lights?  These baffling ‘head-scratching’ clues might have bothered the famous TV detective Columbo had he been called to the murder scene of Sophie Toscan du Plantier at Dunmanus, West Cork on […]

Cornwall to Kerry: John Mitchell’s Journey to Kilgarvan

Cornwall to Kerry, an illustrated memoir published in 2021 by John Mitchell of the Kilgarvan Motor Museum, has been added to the archive of Castleisland District Heritage. The book is a journey through John’s life from his birth at Beardon Farm, Devon in 1945 and early life in Cornwall to his family’s move to Wicklow […]