Jim Callery marks his 90th Birthday by walking The National Famine Way

Founder of the National Famine Museum Jim Callery On Dublin’s Custom House Quay after Walking the 165 kilometre National Famine Way on his 90th birthday

Jim Callery founder of The National Famine Museum in Strokestown marked his 90th Birthday by walking the National Famine Way from Strokestown all along the Royal Canal to Dublin. He set off on 25th September walking the 165km, which commemorates the journey of 1,490 tenants of Major Denis Mahon that were evicted from Strokestown Park House Estate in May 1847 and had to walk along the canal to Dublin to board ships to Liverpool during Ireland’s Great Famine.

From Liverpool’s over- crowded and disease ridden port the tenants then sailed on ships to Canada and Quebec. Many would lose their lives on the ill-fated sea journey, some buried at sea or dying in the quarantine sheds of Grosse Isle or in Quebec’s Marine Hospital .Those that survived the harrowing conditions working hard to make new lives in Canada.

The incredible Jim Callery arrived into final stage of his long walk to Customs House Quay and the Famine Statues near the Epic Museum on Tuesday 15th October …his actual 90th birthday to be greeted by his proud family and friends celebrating the long life of this incredible man.   Along the way he has raised over Euros 50,000 for charities to help Immigrants and talked about all those who have are still forced to immigrate and leave their home place behind and how little has been learned by mankind in over 200 years of history.

 Jim Callery is an inspiration to all of us who have the good fortune to know him and has made a huge contribution to Ireland and preserving our history. So instead of a big birthday party he decided that walking the National Famine Way to commemorate the Great Irish Famine and retrace the footsteps of the Strokestown Tenants was what he wanted to do. What an achievement to celebrate his 90th birthday! 

Details about walking the National Famine Way are on:   https://nationalfamineway.ie   

Bronze shoes that mark the National Famine Way Jim Callery on canal with friends and family

‘THE MAGIC OF STORIES FESTIVAL’ AT SWORDS CASTLE

With Author Illustrator Niamh Sharkey

The sun came out for Saturday’s ‘The Magic of Stories’ Fingal Festival of Children’s Literature held in the grounds of Swords Castle in Swords in County Dublin.

The castle was a hive of creativity for kids and families of all ages, with something to entertain everyone. There were talks and art, games, music and theatre, workshops, and lots of fun filled activities with artists, writers and illustrators Niamh Sharkey, Paddy Donnelly, Tarsila Kruse, and Margaret Ann Suggs, Alan Nolan, Derek Landy, Leona Forde, Eve McDonnell, Alan Nolan, Sarah Bowie, Owen Churcher, and Chris Judge.  

I had great fun meeting everyone in the Castle’s Chapel where author Megan Wynne and I had a lovely chat about writing and books. There were so many things to see and do and everyone who came along got a free copy of a book from the author or illustrator they met.

Well done to author Shane Hegarty and Fingal Library for putting on such a super free Festival. The fun will continue with The Magic of Stories in some of Fingal’s s libraries with artist Kim Jenkinson.

Marita with Writers Shane Hegarty and Megan Wynne

Charlotte Book Launch

Martina Devlin at the launch of her new book ‘Charlotte‘ .

The autumn book season has begun with the crowds packing into Hodges and Figgis on Dawson Street in Dublin for the launch of writer and journalist Martina Devlin’s rich and insightful novel about Charlotte Bronte’s pivotal honey moon visit to Ireland following her brief marriage to Arthur Bell Nicholls, her father’s curate. 

Told through the eyes of Mary Nicholls, Arthur’s cousin, we get to see a very different side of Charlotte Bronte and the fleeting happiness that her marriage brings. Mary, unaware that she will in time will marry her widower cousin, both of their lives touched by the life of an extraordinary writer. It is a story of three people whose love and lives become intricately intertwined.   

Among the writer friends who came along to celebrate with Martina, were Catherine Dunne, Patricia O’ Reilly, Carlo Gebler, Sarah Webb, Lia Mills, and Cauvery Madhaven with Northern Ireland’s Eoin McNamee helping to launch Charlotte, which is published by Lilliput Press

Sarah Webb and Marita in Hodges Figgis Book Shop

Johnstown Castle in Wexford

Johnstown Castle in Wexford

I’m just back from a week staying in a friend’s lovely beach house in Rosslare. One of the days we went to visit nearby Johnstown Castle which after many years has opened to the public.

I love Castles and this one is certainly well worth a visit, it dates back more than 800 years and the original castle was built by the Esmonde family who were rewarded for their part in the Norman Invasion of Ireland in 1169. However during the time of Oliver Cromwell in 1640’s the castle and lands were confiscated and the Esmonde family were forced to leave Wexford and the place they loved.

The castle and estate changed hands a few times and in 1692 became the home of the Grogan Family. They developed the Castle, the gardens and the land. The ornamental gardens, lakes and grounds were designed by Daniel Robertson, who also designed the garden terraces at Powerscourt House in Wicklow. The family remained living there until the 1940’s when it was gifted to the Irish nation in 1940’s and taken over by the Department of Agriculture, originally to be used as an institute with them maintaining the large grounds.  The castle is now under the wing of Irish Heritage Trust and is being restored.

We went on the organised tour and our guide Eileen told us off the tragedies and triumphs of the great families who lived there over the centuries as we walked around the rooms and we even got to see the kitchen and the underground servant’s tunnel. The gardens and walled garden and lakes are stunning with peacocks and peahens walking around, one with their chicks also saw a beautiful family of swans and five growing cygnets on the lake. There is much to see as there is also a big exhibition of Farm equipment with tractors, machinery and tools, as well as farmhouse kitchens. There is also a section about the Irish famine, which includes a simple cottage and how the failure of the potato crop had such dire consequences in Ireland. On top it all is a great visitor’s centre and The Peacock Café which serves really good toasted sandwiches, snacks and coffee and cakes. Tours of the castle must be booked as numbers are limited.

The Walled Garden and swans on the Lake in Johnstown Castle

SAFE HARBOUR – A FAMILY BOOK TOUR IN GREYSTONES

It is always a joy for me to be in Greystones, the beautiful Wicklow seaside town where I spent so much of my childhood and which had so much influence in my becoming a writer.

When Trish Hennessy and Sarah Webb of the local bookshop Halfway Up the Stairs asked me about doing a very different event based around my book Safe Harbour which would involve a walk with young readers to see and talk about some of the important locations in the book  I was intrigued and perhaps a  little nervous. They wanted me  bring people to see the place that Sophie and Hugh discover when they are evacuated during World War II from London to Ireland and to Greystones.

When Sophie and Hugh’s  house is bombed and their mother is badly  injured during the London Blitz they are evacuated to Greystones to live with their strict and regimented grandfather, who lives in a big, old house overlooking the sea. They have never seen or even heard about him or spoken to him so it is a big shock and a change to be sent to someone who they quickly sense doesn’t really want them.

The sun shone and the beaches were busy as we set off on our walk. It was wonderful to be able to show my readers and their parents the places Sophie and Hugh came to love and know and were important parts of the book and to even get to see the old air raid siren over the garage which helped give me the idea for the book…  Afterwards we went back to the shop to sign books and chat.

The Greystones Book Walk was fully booked out but thanks to the lovely readers who still came along to join us in the bookshop afterwards.

 Huge thanks to Sarah, who came with us and Trish for organising such a lovely book event