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	<title>Paul Malpas &#187; Galway</title>
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	<link>http://paulmalpas.com</link>
	<description>Archaeology, history, books and Ireland</description>
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		<title>Life Is Hard Enough Without Volunteering.</title>
		<link>http://paulmalpas.com/history/life-is-hard-enough-without-volunteering/</link>
		<comments>http://paulmalpas.com/history/life-is-hard-enough-without-volunteering/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 Jul 2011 12:40:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>PaulMalpas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Arlecdon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Boyle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[British Columbia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Galway]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kildare]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laois]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ludgvan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Queen's County]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Robinson's Brewery]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[St. Bede's College]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[the Manchester Gasd Board]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Salford Diocese]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://paulmalpas.com/?p=1100</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today I have been stung into action by one of my oldest correspondents, a man who originally came from Boyle, where I now live and who likes to be reminded of the old place.  However he is getting no reminders from me this Sunday morning, as I look out of my kitchen window and watch [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today I have been stung into action by one of my oldest correspondents, a man who originally came from Boyle, where I now live and who likes to be reminded of the old place.  However he is getting no reminders from me this Sunday morning, as I look out of my kitchen window and watch 40mph howling westerlies blowing the heavy rain horizontally across the garden in an unimpressive 12 degrees centigrade temperature and this mid-July.</p>
<p>My correspondent has not liked my feeble, choleric attacks on the Salford Diocese and my alma mater, St. Bede&#8217;s College.  He, I fear, is one of the old school, I suggest, and does not want the boat rocked in any way.  So my subject this morning, brought on by another correspondent from British Columbia, where I, also have relatives, is ancestry.</p>
<p>This ex-Mancunian, but now British Columbian has briefly explained her ancestry of English ascendency, turned Irish patriotism, with solid religion both sides of the brush and always verging on celebrity status, which explains the stunning intellect that runs through all her siblings.  Her ancestors volunteered for everything, the army, the priesthood, the medical profession and the IRA.</p>
<p>However my ancestry is far from that, we Malpi were the dumb strugglers, who never raised a voice in anger, accepted what life threw at us and just got on with it and with the small amount of education we received, made the best of our meager talent but learnt enough not to volunteer for nowt.  We  were people, who when told to jump, bloody well jumped but we had enough devil in us not to jump too high.  Not for us posh colleges and velvet gloves, but village schools and no gloves at all and for a long time no bloody shoes either.</p>
<p>My maternal side I have spoken with relish about before, so I will not bore you with too much detail.  The four great grand-parents from Queen&#8217;s County, or Laois as it is now, Kildare and two from Galway all lived through the Famine and carried on regardless.  Their fathers and the fathers before them had lived all their lives paying unjust rents for scraps of land to absentee, in the main, landlords.  These four are proof to scotch that old wives tale, that England set out, with genocide in mind, to remove the Irish nation from the face of the earth and use the vacated land as an agrarian idyll, where they could holiday in peace, drinking Red Barrel beer and riding home on the backs of asses with beautifully manicured hooves.</p>
<p>These four great grand-parents eventually bore stock that decided to come to England, to haunt the religious anglicans, who were by now ashamed of their previous demographic fumblings.  None of the four made it much further than the first rung of the ladder.  They preferred to shovel coke all day into gas retorts or wheel around fruit and vegetables by the tonne.  This way they built up a thirst and met lots of people.  They were there in the latter part of the 19th century, working hard and turning Manchester into one of the main armament exchanges that was channeling weapons into Ireland and making it  into the boiling pot it became in the first quarter of the 20th century.</p>
<p>However my maternal grand-father, who survived the Fenian War, the Sudanese War, the Boer War parts 1 and 2, the First World War, the Second World War, the Korean War, the Mau Mau and Cypriot Uprisings and the Suez Crisis without bothering his arse to fight in any of them, gained victory in his old age and retirement by living to the ripe old age of 84, astounding for a man who had worked at the blunt end of a gasworks all his life.  He took a weekly amount from the Manchester Gas Board as a pension on retirement instead of the lump sum and gained great satisfaction from living in profit for his last nine years.</p>
<p>My fraternal great grand-parents were made of exactly the same metal but totally different, dissimilar in style and outlook.  For a start they were of Protestant lineage, who only saw the inside of a church when it mattered ie. for marriages and deaths as opposed to my maternal side who more or less lived in church.  These Protestants put their faith in hard work and kept at it.  On my father&#8217;s fraternal side, they were a  Cheshire species, saddlers from Poynton, on the Stockport/Macclesfield road.  They were an important part of the community.  A saddler in those days, was like a Mercedes dealership nowadays, only without the suits, free drinks, showrooms,  money and limousines.  The youngest son, my great grand-father, broke away and got himself a bit of land on the Bredbury/Denton border and began breeding shire horses for Robinson&#8217;s Brewery stables in Stockport, amongst others.  He is probably the most successful commercially of my forebears, he bedded two sisters and the two families became entwined like a can of spaghetti.  He died a happy man in the 1920s with his remarkable saying ringing in his ears.  &#8220;There is always room for one more&#8221;.</p>
<p>On my father&#8217;s maternal side, I come from generations of hard rock miners, hewing scraps of tin out of the hard Cornish sub-strata.  Henry Allen was married to Avis John, the daughter of a courageous Cornish woman, Grace John, courageous in as much as she had five children in her first three years of marriage.  They came from Ludgvan, just outside of Penzance.  When the Cornish tin mines were exhausted in the 1870s, he had two options, go to Bute in Montana, where the money was good and the danger greater or head up north to Cumberland, where seams of tin were opening up.  He chose the short distance and took with him Avis and five children, stopping off for a few years on the way at Llantrisant, in South Wales, to mine iron ore and siring another three children, before settling in Arlecdon, near Whitehaven.</p>
<p>So there we have it, all hard workers, never put a foot out of line and never volunteered for nowt.  I suppose that is what they all had in common.  That must be where my life&#8217;s maxim was bred.</p>
<p>HEAD DOWN AND KEEP PLOUGHING.</p>
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		<title>Learning The Hard Way.</title>
		<link>http://paulmalpas.com/ireland/learning-the-hard-way/</link>
		<comments>http://paulmalpas.com/ireland/learning-the-hard-way/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 14:03:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>PaulMalpas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bandon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Belfast]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Father Griffin Road]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Galway]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Holidays in Ireland]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Johnny McEvoy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Newbridge]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Red Barrel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Salthill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tramore]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://paulmalpas.com/?p=736</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[In the summer of 1967 I went on my first proper touring holiday of Ireland without staying with family or friends.&#160; Myself and two other lads in a car belonging to one of them, drove off the boat in Dublin and we travelled down through Kildare, Carlow and Kilkenny, without feeling we were in Ireland, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the summer of 1967 I went on my first proper touring holiday of Ireland without staying with family or friends.&nbsp; Myself and two other lads in a car belonging to one of them, drove off the boat in Dublin and we travelled down through Kildare, Carlow and Kilkenny, without feeling we were in Ireland, but it suddenly changed when we hit Waterford and eventually stopped in Tramore, a delightfully clean sea-side town on the south coast.&nbsp; We arranged digs in a neat B&amp;B and set off to explore the town, where we learnt that there was a festival on that weekend.&nbsp; Now it was our first taste of festivals and we did not realise that the bars all had extensions to their normal opening times.</p>
<p>We set off that evening at about 6.00pm&nbsp; visiting different alcoholic establishments.&nbsp; The loudspeakers strung from buildings were trumpeting out the new hit song of Johnny McEvoy&#8217;s<b>, Irish Soldier Laddie,</b> as he was the star of the festival that night.&nbsp; The next thing I remembered was waking up the following morning and lifting my head up and I painfully became aware that the pillow that I had been sleeping on, came up with my head.&nbsp; It was stuck to the side of my face.&nbsp; Dried blood from various wounds had created a very powerful and agonising bond.&nbsp; After much struggling and plentiful flows of blood, I managed to extricate myself from the pillow case, but to this day I do not know how I received the wounds and my companions were not able to shed any light on the matter either, or in fact whether we had seen Johnny McEvoy, although we did remember buying tickets.&nbsp; We learnt the hard way and after nine hours steady drinking we should have realised that we should have paced ourselves better.</p>
<p>Over the next few days we slowly motored down through Cork and Kerry taking things very easily and eventually recovered our equilibrium and my good looks.&nbsp; I remember during this time having a memorable breakfast in Bandon, in West Cork, that really set me on the road to recovery.&nbsp; We made a burst through Limerick and Clare and hit Galway early and found digs on Father Griffin Road at 13s 6d per night, although we were put back a little when the two old ladies who ran the place asked us whether we drank.&nbsp; We assured them that our habits were moderate and what really swung it for us was the fact that my grandfather came from Ballinamore Bridge, only a few miles from their homeplace of Newbridge in East Galway.</p>
<p>We went out for a few pints that afternoon and the two boys decided they were going to have an early night, but I as usual, a glutton for punishment, went out again and hit the town man-fashion.&nbsp; I remember listening to some great singing in one bar and probably stayed for one drink too many, but I returned to the digs, as I thought, in a reasonable state and I was fumbling with the strange key at the doorstep, when the door opened followed by anguished gasps from the two old ladies.&nbsp; As I passed them, I bade them goodnight and made my way upstairs to the room where the other two were fast asleep.&nbsp; As I was undressing there was a knock at the door and a strangulated voice cried out &#8220;if you are going to vomit, please vomit in the lavatory&#8221;.&nbsp; I went to bed wondering what all the fuss was about.</p>
<p>The lads slept through it all and the next day at breakfast the two ladies informed us that their brother had died during the night in Newbridge and that they were going back home to supervise the funeral and that they were going to have to shut up the Galway house for a while.&nbsp; We said nothing but that we were sorry for their trouble and&nbsp; packed our bags and went down the road to Salthill where we found digs for 10s 6d a night, a saving of two shillings on the Galway digs and where there was a<b> Red Barrel</b> festival on and this beer was half price that night.&nbsp; An ill wind as they say.</p>
<p>We had a great week in Salthill, meeting some priests from Manchester we knew on the golf course, who took us for lunch to a hotel in Spiddal.&nbsp; My first experience of the Gaeltech and relaxed priests, they could not half knock it back.</p>
<p>WE eventually arrived back in Dublin to find a strike had effected the B &amp; I boats, but we were told that if we made our way to Belfast, a place could be had on the overnight boat to Liverpool.&nbsp; So up through Drogheda, Dundalk, Newry and Banbridge we scuttled and into Belfast, where we eventually boarded the boat.&nbsp; The end of this journey was quite an experience for us after sampling the delights of Ireland.&nbsp; There was a general air of menace about the place.&nbsp; Pavements were painted red, white and blue and there was paintings of King Billy on his big white horse on several gable ends.&nbsp; Sectarianism seemed to be rife and this was&nbsp; a few years before the civil rights people started to protest and with good cause it seemed to me.&nbsp; It was obvious bloodshed was just round the corner and we were glad to be out of the place.&nbsp; It was 32 years before I went back to Belfast and it appeared no different, again I was glad to reach the Donegal border.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>My Grandad.  Part 1</title>
		<link>http://paulmalpas.com/history/my-grandad/</link>
		<comments>http://paulmalpas.com/history/my-grandad/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jan 2010 16:35:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>PaulMalpas</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Galway]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Irish Funerals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[irish history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Irish in Manchester]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Manchester Blitz]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://paulmalpas.com/?p=228</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The most significant presences in my life have been my wife, my mother and my maternal grandfather, listed only by age and beauty and not by craftmanship.  My mother naturally got to me first and filled my head with masses of dark curls, so much so, that I had to have my hair cut on [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The most significant presences in my life have been my wife, my mother and my maternal grandfather, listed only by age and beauty and not by craftmanship.  My mother naturally got to me first and filled my head with masses of dark curls, so much so, that I had to have my hair cut on that very first morn as it was interfering with my feeding.  Oh how I rue that fact, for if they had let it fester, I might have some growth today.  My grandfather took me over from the age of five and moulded me in his image, so that from that age, until he died when I was 12,  he modelled me on his version of an Irishman.  After that my mother re-embraced me and for a number of years pushed and prodded me into shape before eventually handing me over, in fairly reasonable form, given the rough material she had started to sculpt me from,  to my wife, Helen.  Helen had little to do but finessing the fine figure she had been given and ironing out one or two character malformations that had appeared during my education at the hard school of knocks that was St. Bede&#8217;s College and my early working years at John Laing and Alfred MacAlpine, malformations she is still struggling with 37 years on.</p>
<p>For those early formative years between the ages of five and twelve I would like to thank my grandfather because although he did not realize it, he taught me to place bets on horses, drink Guiness, shave and sing.  All the most important attributes a man needs to be able to function sucessfully in this life.</p>
<p>James Patrick Crehan was born on 1st May 1874 at Ballinamore Bridge in East Galway which, as he often told me, was five miles south of Ballygar and ten miles north of Ballinasloe and he died in Longsight in Manchester on 27th October 1958.  Born on the first day of Bealtaine, a pagan festival celebrating creativity in old age and rebirth, he was highly qualified in his senior years of 77 to 84 to put his heart and soul into my social education.</p>
<p>When you consider his life span in its historical context, nobody could have lived through a more demanding 84 years than he did.  In Ireland he was born from a union of Famine survivors and was present during the latter stages of Fenianism and the birth of the Irish Republican Brotherhood.  He was in Ireland for the First and Second Home Rule Bills of 1896 and 1893 and in England for the Third and protracted Bill 1912-1914 which became further delayed with the outbreak of war and he lived through the Land League argument for his whole time in Ireland.</p>
<p>He came to England in 1893 and never for one second forgot his birthplace.  He came during the African Wars in Rhodesia and the Sudan and the war against the Boers in South Africa.  He was 40 years old at the start of the First World War and lived through the turmoil in the Irish enclaves in North Manchester created by the War of Independence and ensuing Civil War in Ireland. He celebrated the signing of the treaty and never had any time for the &#8220;Spaniard DeValera&#8221;.   He had retired when the Second World War started in 1939 and he saw out the Korean War of 1950-1953 and sat back in his last few years as the Cold War started to unfurl.   84 years of world wide conflict,84 years of unremitting social struggle and bellicosity.</p>
<p>After a few years labouring for different contractors he was eventually employed by the Manchester Gas Works Company as a fireman or stoker, where he spent the next 39 years shovelling coal into the retorts at Bradford Gas Works in the first stages of gas production.  He kept these labours up until past 60 when his 6&#8217;4&#8221; frame could no longer work with the same youthful vigour and the Company put him collecting money out of the domestic meters.</p>
<p>He had married in 1919 at the age of 45 and helped produce twin daughters in 1922 and a third in 1925 who tragically died in 1930 of meningitis.  He spent his retired war years as an Air Raid Warden (ARP) helping the police force in protecting the public before and after air raids.  During one of these raids on Christmas Eve 1940, his house in Miles Platting, just off Oldham Road, was destroyed along with 70 or 80 others and 44 of his neighbours killed, when a land mine or aerial mine dropped from a Heinkel 111 bomber into the junction of two entries at the back of two streets of houses.  This type of bomb was a one ton high explosive bomb strung under a parachute and dropped in pairs, which came down slowly with a high pitched whine calculated to give maximum fear along with maximum explosive effect.  Although he and his family were only 50 metres from the bomb, they were in their air raid shelter as opposed to their house and therefore were safe.  My mother crawled out when the all clear was sounded some hours later and was met with a scene of devastation but she caught the 53 bus at the top of the road and went to work.</p>
<p>Has his retirement continued after the war, he was heartened by the growth of the Irish population in Longsight, his adopted home after the bomb.  Men from Galway, Mayo and Roscommon used to join him every night in the Anson Hotel for a few pints or bottles of Guiness. He collided with a motorbike on a zebra crossing on Slade Lane, the motor bike came off worse and he walked home, but a bruise on his shin turned ulcerous and knocked him back a bit and he could not walk but he had his Guiness imported and he continued with his pipe and chewing tobacco and he sang to himself or to any one who was around everyday of his life to the last.  He went quickly in the end with pancreatic cancer and St. Robert&#8217;s Church was full of old time Irishmen celebrating the end of a hard fought life.  I served as an altar-boy at his funeral mass and mingled with the congregation both outside church and at Moston Cemetery and my toes tingled as I heard these giants of mourners whispering to each other that there was never a finer man.</p>
<p>Tomorrow I will tell you of my years of education knocked into me by this very fine man and also of the idiosyncracies of living with a person one generation removed from the famine, a man of the 19th century.</p>
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