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What I had hoped for in a couple of posts last week has come true. I’m finding it hard to gather my thoughts on it, with two games to go, Bohs could actually snatch victory and win three league titles in a row… I’ll post up more later, but for now, I’ll leave you with this gem from Bohstim.

Glen Crowe, always a legend

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Between 9/11 lunatics and the ‘tap water will kill us all’ people, there’s never a dull lamppost in Dublin.

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A time before 'Health and Safety'

“For some thirty-five years now this great grim building, empty and neglected, has been falling into serious disrepair.”

My thanks to Luke Fallon for permission to upload this here.

This surfaced recently, and makes for excellent reading. As ever, best read in full screen.

At the minute there is an excellent photo-exhibition running at Kilmainham Jail on the restoration years, entitled Kilmainham Calling. It is important to remember we owe all this to the hard work of volunteers (in some cases ‘Volunteers’ of more than one kind!) who gave up time to help restore Kilmainham Jail to what it is today.

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So there you have it. The morning after the night before. When I posted on Monday, I wasn’t in any great confidence about Bohs chances. I was hoping, praying for a result, a goal in off Ken Oman’s arse would have kept me happy. But what I got last night was Bohs playing their hearts out for ninety minutes and getting the result they, and the crowd, deserved. For those in Red and Black sang solid for the whole game, before and after too, creating arguably the best atmosphere in Dalymount Park this season; the Roar was back with vengeance. And while we wait and plead for Rovers to slip up against Sporting Fingal this weekend, the win last night was not only about the result; something that was amiss seems restored.

After the disaster that was TNS and the Champions League, the defeat to Galway and the drubbing to Rovers in Tallaght, a certain something had been lost between team and fans that seems to have been restored last night; that something being pride and passion. For there is such a thing as playing and losing admirably with a certain pride, that was not what Bohs were doing. They were losing miserably, to Galway. Who had nine men.

Oh Jayo, Jayo- You used to be a...

On the back of last nights victory though, can we say that the tides have turned? The run in for Bohs consists of St. Pats, Galway and Dundalk. Two of those teams we’ve struggled against badly this season. The run in for Rovers consists of Sporting Fingal, Bray and Drogheda. Now under normal circumstances, you would say that the league is a given for Rovers. But after capitulating to UCD last week, and last nights hammer blow from Bohemians suggests that its not wrapped up yet. Could Fingal do us a favour and turn Rovers over this weekend? Could Bohs still win the elusive three in a row? Its hard to know.

Has last nights performance come too late? Keegan and Cronin played like men possessed in the middle of the park, the Rovers middle three barely getting a sniff in, with the majority of their attacking play coming down the wings. Shelley and Oman (silly back pass aside) were solid at the back, and Powell was a constant threat with his storming forward runs. And Jason Byrne, what else do you say only he’s been Bohs only player to score against Rovers in over two years. And what a goal it was.

And while the night was spent on tenterhooks, the elation after the goal (where everyone suddenly found themselves eight steps away from where they started) and the final whistle, with the majority of the Jodi staying and waiting for the team to come out for the warm-down (in what was obviously a feel good exercise orchestrated by Nutsy,) the singing and chanting continuing apace while the players jogged up and down in front sections F&G,  felt special. People were walking into the bar lightheaded and speechless. There were smiles on faces, of disbelief and joy. Smiles that said “We could win it yet. ”

I hope I'm not going to be kicking myself for this...

Three games to go. And while Bohs are relying on Rovers to bottle it again, if the team plays like they did last night, there will be no despair come the seasons end. Much of this season has been spent in pessimism, with horror stories about the Club’s finances and tales of striking players and unpaid bonusses. Win those games and those tales might be forgotten. Win those games and we may speak of Bohemians’ glorious 2010 battle for three- in- a- row for years to come.

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Gives Me Hope.

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A bit of a mystery post this. On going through the National Libraries excellent online collection of photographs (which can be found here) I found the glass plate below. And while there were a set of mock gates erected on Leeson Street Bridge for the visit of Queen Victoria in 1900, they don’t fit the description that follows and besides, the scene looks much older than 1900.

Dublin City Gates?

The large mock medieval castle gate and tower erected at the bridge echoed the more ancient gate to the walled city of Dublin. The 70 foot high tower made of wood, covered in canvas and painted to imitate the 16th century stonework of medieval Baggotrath Castle. A number of beefeaters in their tradition costumes flanked the gate and a stand was erected nearby to seat various dignitaries…

 An image of the above gates can be seen below, as found here.

Leeson Gates, as from Chapters of Dublin

 As you can see the two gates look very different- but the top one definitely looks like Leeson Street Bridge if you were heading towards town from the UCD direction. The visit of Queen Victoria to Dublin was a momentous one. An estimated 200, 000 lined the streets of Dublin and the occasion was marked by declaration of a public holiday. The Queen was presented with the keys of the city from the Lord Mayor and was given a rapturous welcome from the students of Trinity College as she passed by on her way to the Phoenix Park.

If anyone could shed any light on the first gate, an e-mail to ci_murray@hotmail.com would be much obliged. Alternatively, you can comment on here.

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Throw in the towel.

Spotted on the Pats site this morning. Fair play Stacey, there’s hope yet.

I’ve a friend who follows Bohs and was offered a sizeable bribe in terms of branded merchandise from a certain Pat ‘Saintsmania’ Dolan as a youth to transfer from one side to the other. Needless to say, he turned it down. Stacey on the otherhand….

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El Classico. The Eternal Derby. The Old Firm. El Superclassico. In cities across the world, there is always one game that captures the imagination, the wits and emotions of the masses. From Rome to Liverpool, Glasgow to Buenos Aires, football fans wait tentatively for those days of the season where you meet your fiercest rivals; shaking in anticipation, that constantly nervous feeling grips at your every bone. Sometimes its pure fear, that sick feeling in the pit of your stomach- a dull ache that spreads into your chest the closer the time comes, culminating in chest pains and a dry throat on the day itself. Hoarse before the game even starts having spent the last couple of days yammering onto anyone who’ll listen, whether they have an interest or not, about the game in question. Drunk on the occasion, not on the pints you swallow before it, you know you’ve got just a couple of hours before you’re walking home with either your head in the clouds or the gutter.

Clash of the Titans

That feeling is with me now. For tomorrow night, in Dalymount Park, arguably the most important derby in recent memory is taking place. Shamrock Rovers sit at the top of the table, five points clear of Bohemians with four games to go. A win for Bohs tomorrow pegs that back to two points with three games to go. All to play for you might say. And to be honest, its mere luck that has Bohs in this position-where they have bottled it this season, Rovers have also. So for the last four games, it really is a case of who bottles it less, starting with tomorrow night. What used to be a stroll in the park, three points in the bag for Bohs game is now turning into a nightmare, if memory serves, Bohs haven’t beaten Rovers since the 2-0 victory at Dalymount in March last year- and that seems like an awful long time ago now. It should be a tight affair, Rovers losing Bayly and Murphy to red cards in Friday nights shock loss to UCD and Bohs losing Quigley for a stupid headbutt and O’Connor for a silly challenge outside the box during the dour draw with Bray.

We are Bohs!

To be honest, the nerves are at me already, and have been since Saturday morning. This game always sets the pulse racing for me, the amicable respect generally shown between League of Ireland fans goes out the window and it’s all out war for the evening. The Northside versus The Southside; The Clash of the Titans. Its an all ticket affair so if you’re on for it, get yourself to the bar in Dalyer tonight and pick one up; I can’t bloody wait. Never mind your Anfield or Stadio Olympico; theres nowhere I would rather be tomorrow night than Dalymount Park.

Come on Bohs.

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The 1902 strike was one of the bitterest and strongly fought in the city’s history. Led by the Amalgamated Society of Engineers (ASE) and over the issue of wage increases, the strike lasted 25 weeks. The following extract, regarding the issue of British scabs, recently caught my attention. It is from Hugh Geraghty and Peter Rigney’s excellent article ‘The EngineersStrike in Inchicore Railway Works, 1902‘ from Saothar Volume 9.

The blacklegs at Inchicore were housed in wooden huts built inside the works wall … They worked the normal fifty-four hour week for thirty shillings and all efforts were made to keep them content – “They left the work by train to Kingsbridge”. Bed, board, tobacco, ping-pong, piano playing, air gun practicing, skittles, cards and dominoes”

Nevertheless, they lead what was described as ‘prisoner of war’ existence, being unable to leave the works, even in groups and under police protection, without being attacked by the people of the area. On June 7 for example, four scabs were out walking, accompanied by policeman. They were attacked by a group of strikers and beaten, one being hospitalised. On another occasion, an attempt was made to set fire to the scabs’ living quarters.

As the summer progressed, an English or Scottish accent became a dangerous attribute in the Inchicore area. Three innocent Englishmen, employees of Guinness, were beaten while walking up Inchicore Road, being mistaken for scabs.

Billy Walker, a retired fitter whose father was on strike, recalled some incidents:

They were about to hang a scab on the lamp-post opposite Cleary’s pub. Father Ryan saved him. The RIC came along then and my father would have been arrested expect Mrs. Tuite pulled him into her house. Mick Flynn threw a scab off the top of the tram, he got six months, but a job later in Broadstone”.

The Irish Times. Monday, July 28, 1902.

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A few quick snaps…

The delights a stroll around Dublin can bring you. I’ve always carried my camera around with me, but have only recently started to take it out and not give a shite that I look like a tourist.

A moody shot, if I say so myself

The above shot was taken from the roof of the Stephen’s Green Shopping Centre- it makes you realise how small this city is! The roof gives you an almost 360 degree view of the city… almost.

I could tell you, but its a Secret

Ah… the Secret Book and Record Store. Manys an afternoon has been spent in this place combing the shelves- not as much now since Freebird have usurped the spot once held by Mero’s- my first introduction to punk came from this place, and I hold fond memories of it. Always a great place to pick up a good read for less than a skindiver too.

Woof

These little chaps scare the beejaysus out of me… I could ask if anyone knew where they were but I reckon the act would be futile. And its somewhere we all know and love too- instead of heading downstairs to Pygmalion, have you ever thought of going upstairs to the antique rooms? They’re full of  “treasures” like these and more.

Quack?

Off Liffey Street, there’s a laneway covered with graffiti like “Lithuania Rules,” “I’m against everything” and profanities I wouldn’t care to mention, but amongst them all is this little sticker. I think its deadly anyways.

Last but not least, the below image is of the “Wall of Fame” on the side of the Temple Bar Music Centre… Sorry I mean “Button Factory.” I guess someone thought it wasn’t ghetto enough and added their own two cents…

Ghetto Fame

These pictures, and more, can be found here.

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With RTÉ currently running a weekly programme geared towards finding Ireland’s greatest ever citizen, its nice to see SIPTU getting in on the act in calling for James Connolly to be voted number one. And who wouldn’t, considering the remaining top five contains none less than, as Donal recently called them, the “Freestate Prick” Michael Collins and the “Northside Dick” Bono. Lucky enough we are I suppose that Stephen Gately and Adi Roche missed the cut (no offense to either of course…)

Do what the ominous big building tells you to

I can say with a good deal of confidence that the other two lads on here would be with me in calling readers to vote Connolly, and never mind the biters who try and say “sure he’s not Irish…” Take half an hour out of your time and watch TG4’s newest “Seachtar na Casca” programme on the man, then try and listen to someone tell you that James Connolly is not Irish…

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A portrait of legendary bare-knuckle boxer Dan Donnelly.

Ye sons of proud Britannia, your boasting now give o’er,
Since by our hero Donnelly, your hero is no more;
Eleven rounds he got nine knocks down, broke his jawbone,
Shake hands, says she, brave Donnelly, the battle is our own.
(from the ballad “Donnelly and Cooper,” words here.)

Irish history is rich in stories of playwrights and poets whose characters matched if not outshone their talent with a pen. When it comes to sports people, we are arguably equally rich in those characters. When it comes to boxing, one name that comes to my mind (and in honesty, only because I saw an excellent documentary on TG4 about the man) is Dan Donnelly, beknighted (though that tale behind this is a story in itself) prize fighter who won the hearts and minds of Irish men and women in the early 19th Century.

Dan Donnelly

With Ireland still under British rule, and with ten years yet to pass until the uprising of 1798, Dan Donnelly was born into poverty and a house already full of children (eight before him, with another eight to come after him) in the heart of Dublin’s Docklands. He trained as a carpenter at early age, but it was with his fighting prowess that he excelled, garnering a reputation as a man “handy” with his fists with a few pints in him; what wages he had left after he had provided for his family, he spent on drink, or on some occasions, the other way around.  He grew to be a formidable beast of a man, standing six foot and one half inch tall and weighing fourteen stone. His arms were said to be unnaturally long (a fact since proven false) giving him a reach to worry opponents. But as scary as he looked, he was said to be a man of manners, and on more than one occasion stepped in to stop muggings or assaults around the area of Townsend Street where it is said he lived. (His introduction to boxing came from fighting, and beating, a bullying English sailor in a bar close to his home.)

Dan’s infamy as a bareknuckle boxer grew, and he soon progressed from drunken brawls outside taverns to organised fights, with a purse to be taken home by the winner; and though it is said he only ever took part in three of these bouts, it is the manner of the victories and the opposition he faced and defeated that ensure his place in history.

The fight he is remembered for was his second and took place on December 13th, 1815 in The Curragh of Co. Kildare. Now called Donnellys Hollow, the area was a natural amphitheatre with sloping hillsides surrounding a flat area of ground where the fight took place. It is said that over 30, 000 people made the trek to Kildare for the fight by foot and carriage, with the upper classes mixing with slum dwellers, as each had a stake on the outcome.

The fight itself was said to be a dour affair, with the favourite Cooper (1/ 10 to win) using dirty tactics and falling to his knees on a couple of occasions in order to get a round to be stopped. Donnelly put paid to the Englishmans arrogance when he broke his jaw with a right hook in the eleventh round, taking the fight in the process.

A victory against English opponents these days is greeted with a cheer, so it’s hardly suprising that Donnellys victory against Cooper was seen as a national event. His trip back to Dublin is said to have taken over two weeks, so many were his stops, doing his best to spend the £60 purse he earned from the fight in taverns along the way. His footsteps from the Hollow itself are still there to be seen, as supporters, keen to follow in his footsteps, did so physically, marking out the steps on the landscape, as people still do to this day- as can be seen from the photograph above.

The stone obilisk surrounded by an iron fence below marks the spot where the fight took place, bearing the inscription “Dan Donnelly beat Cooper on this spot 13th Dec. 1815.”

The Obelisk marking the spot.

Donnelly decided to make his way to England where he became parlour entertainment for the wealthy upper classes who welcomed him at their parties, no doubt as a lumpen Irishman with extraordinary strength. it was at one of these parties that Donnelly (according to legend as there is no documentation to prove so) knelt before the Prince Regent, George IV and was granted knighthood with a sword tap on each shoulder- an Irish pugilist who once worked with the brother of Anne Devlin, a figure central to Robert Emmets revolt of 1803 receiving knighthood from the future King of England. Implausible, but apparently true.

He moved back to Ireland and with the money he had earned from his fights (and with his reputation still intact,) he decided to go into business, opening four bars in succesion. But, as is often the case, he was often the bars best customer and this was eventually his undoing. Of all the bars, Fallons Capstan Bar is the only one that remains in business today. He died broke and lonely on February 18th, 1920 at the young age of thirty two. The procession that followed his coffin numbered in the tens of  thousands and he was buried in Bullys Acre- a paupers graveyard and one of Dublin’s oldest. Within days, his body was stolen by grave robbers; Riots broke out in Dublin upon the news and Surgeon Hall, who had purchased the body, returned Donnelly to his grave in Bully’s Acre- minus his right arm. The arm was transported to Edinburgh University where it was used in anatomy lessons, was taken around England by a travelling circus, was brought back to Ireland and displayed in several pubs throughout the twentieth century, and went to New York and back before it found its resting place in The Hideout Bar, Kilcullen where it remained on show until 2006 before being removed from public viewing.

Dan Donnelly's arm

While undoubtedly, it’s Dan’s arm that garners most interest in him, its his story that gets me most. Maybe I’m just a sucker for social history but the thought of 30, 000 people making the trek out to the Curragh in the days before Bus Eireann to see what equates to an amateur bare- knuckle fight, the image of the streets lined on his victorious return, and the 70, 000 that showed up at his funeral, and yet I only know about him because of a chance viewing of a documentary on TG4 makes you think how many other stories like Dan’s have gone beneath the radar.

Underneath this pillar high,
Lies Sir Dan Donnelly;
He was a stout and handy man,
And people called him buffing Dan.
Knighthood he took from George’s sword,
And well he wore it by my word!
He died at last from forty seven
Tumblers of punch he drank one even.
O’erthrown by punch, unharmed by fist,
He died an unbeaten pugilist.
Such a buffer as Dan Donnelly,
Ireland never again will see.

—————————-

Links used for research on the above piece:

http://issuu.com/onlinemedia/docs/nw-19-08-2008/11?mode=a_p

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1072458/index.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Donnelly_(boxer)

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