PASTIMES & CUSTOMS
Hurling and football, before the formation in 1884
of the G.A.A., was played uin Carrigtwohill. The game at that time was
played across country; usually the ball was placed on the boundary between
2 parishes with no referee or goalposts and the game ended when darkness
fell. Then the teams numbered 20 a side and slogged at a very large ball,
but big men were in Carrig in those days, and the ground shook beneath
them. At practice, the doctor ran out of thread, wounds were so frequent.
Records are available of many rough and tumble matches being held at
Leamlara & Dundellerick.
On the Barryscourt Road, on Ludgate’s
land, there was a racecource; the race-stand was on its highest point; no
ditches or fences were there then, the only fenced-in portion being at
Murty’s Cross Corner, the property of Fouhy’s of Barryscourt. The
racecourse went, and a hurling field, known as the enclosure, came into
existence on this same spot. High trees then lined the roadway, where on
their leafy branches, men found a free grandstand view when matches were
in progress. It was known as the “enclosure” because it was enclosed by
corrugated iron, and had two dressing rooms. A day came when the
corrugated iron was pulled down, each shareholder got his share of it. A
convoy of about twenty sidecars ws the usual match outing to leave the
village, around 1918.
Rounders, one of the oldest of Irish games,
was at one time, a great pastime in the parish. Two teams would line out;
the striker hit out the ball with a bat – his comrades then ran to fixed
stops, places round in a circle trying in turn to get home. The opposing
team would knock a man out if they succeeded in hitting him with the ball
between two stops. On a hard frosty moonlight night, in those years, it
was the usual sight to see a long line of grown –up men at the game of
leap-frog up and down the village street. They also played “bum-barrel”
and “donkey-go”, “quates”, “four-corner-fool”, “duck in the granny”, and
“blink man’s buff”. The mulling of porter by stabbing a red-hot poker into
it had also ceased. Crowds of men congregated at the cross midway in the
village, at O’ Connell’s Cross, Mary Ann’s Corner, Anngrove Cross, Slatty
and Murty’s Cross.
A story goes that, in ancient days, the smoke
from a pagan fire was blinding the Christians, so a saint told the
Christians to make a fire with a bone in it, and to repeat prayers. This
rendered the fire of the pagans powerless, and this is how the term
“bonfire” originated. On Bonfire Night, St. John’s Eve, cows would be
driven through the bonfire, as it was believed that this custom increased
their milk yield. Partly-burned sticks from the bonfire would be thrown
into potato gardens and crop-fields for luck, prayers being said. Over the
bonfire the sign of the cross was made with a plant called “magould”. This
plant would then be kept in the dwelling-house until Bonfire Night came
around again. There was a cure in this plant when the sore eyes of lambs
were blessed with it.
On St. Bridget’s Eve, girls carrying a cloth
image of the Saint called the Brideog went from house to house, collecting
pennies. In honour of St. Bridget, also, rushes were plaited into a cross
called the Boga Bride, St. Bridget’s Cross. This was then hung on the
rafters until next St. Bridget’s Eve when a new one would be made. St.
Bridget’s Cross originated from the story of Bridgid being at the bedside
of a dying pagan chieftan. She picked up some rushes from the floor and
began to weave them into a cross. He watched her, and asked her what she
was doing and she began to tell him the gospel story. Before he died, he
was converted and baptised.
Another old custom, said to cure a pain
in the head, was the putting-out of a rag or piece of cloth on St.
Bridget’s Eve.
On Skellig Night, with blackened faces, men went out
to celebrate the custom of “taking to Skellig” any marriageable female
found out of doors on this night. Surrounding her with a rope, she was
pulled about before she was finally released. A rag-made image of a man
would be placed on the chimney-top or outside the door of an old maid.
This custom originated from the match-making ceremonies held at
pilgrimages near the Rock of Skellig in Kerry. A match made in the
north-eastern portion of the parish had many verses composed about it. The
following few lines were taken from it :-
“Young Will and Joan are very
well known,
For trotting very often
Up the lane, to the fair-haired
dame,
Old Kearns for to softe;
He gave the hill with all his
will,
But Joan want the field below,
Dead or alive, old Kearns
swore
He’d never let it go”.
At midnight on New Year’s Eve, a
lump of bread, usually stale, was beaten against the kitchen door in the
custom of “beating out the hunger”.
Early Days of the village -
Early Roads in Carrig -
Pastimes and Customs
The Norman period to Reformation -
The Fenians -
Carrigtwohill Caves -
Ryan and Ahern
Churches -
Ballyannon Castle -
Barryscourt Castle -
The By-Pass
The Boston Band/Old Fair -
Tour De France -
Ploughing Championships