Creena O’Connell: Gurranabraher, Shawls, Allotments

MemoryMapCollection.jpg

Title

Creena O’Connell: Gurranabraher, Shawls, Allotments

Subject

Life History:

Description

Creena was born in 1932. Her family were one of the first to get a house in Gurranabraher, an estate built in 1934. Her father was able to get part-time employment with Cork Corporation working on the roads; he died when he was 58.
She recalls a funny story about a School Attendance Officer calling to the house. She talks about local places where she used to play. Unemployed men were given allotments, called plots. She recalls Julie Healy’s milk and cake shop in Shandon Street.
She remembers her mother’s shawl and two shops where shawls were bought.

Date

24 August 2011

Identifier

CFP_SR00433_oconnell_2011

Coverage

Cork, Ireland, 1930s-2000s

Relation

Other Interviews in the Colection:

CFP_SR00387_sheehan_2010; CFP_SR00388_sheehan_2010; CFP_SR00389_healy_2010; CFP_SR00390_kelleher_2010; CFP_SR00391_crean_2010; CFP_SR00392_mckeon_2010; CFP_SR00393_twomey_2010; CFP_SR00394_stleger_2010; CFP_SR00395_speight_2010; CFP_SR00396_lane_2010; CFP_SR00397_obrienoleary_2010; CFP_SR00398_jones_2010; CFP_SR00399_saville_2010; CFP_SR00400_magnier_2010; CFP_SR00401_marshall_2010; CFP_SR00402_marshall_2010; CFP_SR00403_murphy_2010; CFP_SR00404_prout_2011; CFP_SR00405_walsh_2011; CFP_SR00406_prout_2011; CFP_SR00407_newman_2010; CFP_SR00408_newman_2010; CFP_SR00409_leahy_2011; CFP_SR00411_newman_2010; CFP_SR00412_newman_2010; CFP_SR00413_finn_2011; CFP_SR00414_ohorgain_2011; CFP_SR00415_oconnell_2011; CFP_SR00416_sheehy_2011; CFP_SR00417_mcloughlin_2012; CFP_SR00418_gerety_2012; CFP_SR00419_kelleher_2012; CFP_SR00420_byrne_2012; CFP_SR00421_cronin_2012; CFP_SR00422_ohuigin_2012; CFP_SR00423_meacle_2012; CFP_SR00424_horgan_2012; CFP_SR00425_lyons_2012; CFP_SR00427_goulding_2011;

CFP_SR00491_fitzgerald_2013.

Heritage Week 2011: CFP_SR00429_casey_2011; CFP_SR00430_tomas_2011; CFP_SR00431_newman_2011; CFP_SR00432_stillwell_2011; CFP_SR00434_lane_2011; CFP_SR00435_montgomery-mcconville_2011; CFP_SR00436_ocallaghan_2011; CFP_SR00437_corcoran_2011; CFP_SR00438_jones_2011; CFP_SR00439_ohuigin_2011; CFP_SR00440_mccarthy_2011; CFP_SR00441_crowley_2011; CFP_SR00442_obrien_2011; CFP_SR00443_jones_2011; CFP_SR00444_mcgillicuddy_2011; CFP_SR00445_delay_2011; CFP_SR00446_murphy_2011;

Video Interview: CFP_VR00486_speight_2014

Published Material: 

O’Carroll, Clíona (2011) ‘The Cork Memory Map’, Béascna 7: 184-188.

O’Carroll, Clíona (2012) ‘Cork Memory Map: an update on CFP’s Online Project’, The Archive 16: 14. https://www.ucc.ie/en/media/research/corkfolkloreproject/archivepdfs/archive16.PDF

Dee, Stephen and O’Carroll, Clíona (2012) ‘Sound Excerpts: Interviews from Heritage Week’, The Archive 16: 15-17. https://www.ucc.ie/en/media/research/corkfolkloreproject/archivepdfs/archive16.PDF

O'Carrol, Clíona (2014) 'The children's perspectives: Place-centred interviewing and multiple diversified livelihood strategies in Cork city, 1935-1960'. Béaloideas - The Journal of Folklore of Ireland Society, 82: 45-65.

The Curious Ear/Documentary on One (Cork City Memory Map) http://www.rte.ie/radio1/doconone/2011/0816/646858-curious-ear-doconone-cork-city-memory-map/

To view the Cork Memory Map Click Here

Source

Cork Folklore Project Audio Archive

Rights

Cork Folklore Project

Language

English

Type

Sound

Format

1 .wav File

Interviewee

Interviewer

Duration

20min 42sec

Location

Civic Trust House

Original Format

.wav

Bit Rate/Frequency

24bit / 48kHz

Transcription

The following is a short extract from the interview transcript, copyright of the Cork Folklore Project. If you wish to access further archival material for this interview or other interviews please contact CFP, folklorearchive@gmail.com


                             COC: What kind of things would you play?

                             CC: Em there was a stream there and we used to make a dam and then we’d paddle in the stream and so you couldn’t go beyond the stream – the stream that’s right – you couldn’t go beyond the stream because that was the farmer’s fields and awh if he caught you, you’d be in trouble. But on – in Summer nights then they used to play, what was it called? Housey house then, it’s Bingo now. They’d all sit down on the field and the mam would call out the numbers and – I think it was a penny to play or something like that you know. And then there was em – what was that stall with Rasa [Raspberry Cordial], a penny a glass and Peggy’s legs and all that like, you know. So it was lovely, you really think the summers were good then that it was always sunny. [Laughter] And em, ere you know until about half-past nine then all the children would move off and go to bed like you know.

But I was just thinking there now that did anyone talk about the SAO? The School Attendance Officer. Nobody spoke about him, did they? And eh he was a Mr Stanton and he used to come up the road and I never saw him on the bike, he’d walk with the bike you know? And em, if you were away from school he’d call to the house to know were you away from school and I was away from school. One day my mother asked me to stay home, she probably wasn’t feeling very well and em so she sent me down Shandon Street for em messages and I met Mr Stanton and he said to me eh ‘Why aren’t you in school today?’ So I said ‘My mother is sick’. So anyway I came back home anyway and my mother said ‘Mr. Stanton called’. So I said ‘Oh did he?’. And she said ‘I told him you were sick in bed’. [Laughter]

Citation

Cork Folklore Project, “Creena O’Connell: Gurranabraher, Shawls, Allotments,” accessed April 19, 2024, https://corkfolklore.org/archivecatalolgue/document/143.