The Old Mill, Tallaght, Since 1871- A History
THE OLD MILL, TALLAGHT, SINCE 1871
(Bridget
Burke’s ‘Old Bawn Tavern’, Burke's, Kennedy’s, Lennon’s, Jordan's, Burke's)
There is a generation of people living in
Tallaght for whom The Old Mill at Old Bawn Cross, will forever be
known as 'Burke's' of Old Bawn. It is a generation, most probably now in
decline and slowly dwindling. And so it was one hundred years ago in
1919, when locals in the district still referred to the licensed bar and
grocery at Old Bawn Cross, as Mr. Burke’s, despite it not having been so for
over 25 years.
The site on which the Old Mill now stands was
once part of an extensive and farmed estate attached to Allenton House, only a
stone’s throw away from the bar and grocery, up a tree lined avenue. While a
licensed grocery shop has operated here since at least 1871, it was in the
early years a modest and marginal enterprise. The principal interest in
the lease on much of the lands at Allenton changed hands several times in the
closing decades of the 1800s. A forty year lease on the extensive farm
transferred from Mr. Nicholas Reade, on his death in 1877 to Mr. Bartholomew
Kelly who held it until his own death eight years later. A Ms. Margaret
Reynolds then briefly held the farm, until the death of her brother Philip
Quinn, who managed it on her behalf, forced her to relinquish her interest in
1889.
Burke’s of
Old Bawn (1871- 1894)
All the while, from 1871 Michael Burke, a
nephew of the Rev. C. Burke of Saggart, ran a small licensed grocery
and bar, ‘underlet’ from the principal lessor, of the surrounding farmland.
Michael Burke held the licence until his own passing in November 1890. He
died at 48 years of age, at which time the licence transferred to Margaret
Burke. The licensed shop was held on 4 acres of land, surrounded by evocative
and poetically named holdings such as “Sloefield” and “Butcher’s Park”.
By the mid-1890s, much of the adjoining land appears to have been held by
Michael Jordan of Old Bawn, an extensive farmer and prominent Nationalist in
the district. In 1893 the licensed grocery was held by Margaret Burke.
After her passing, in 1898 the Public House was still known locally as Burke’s
Public House. When it was put up for auction the following year it was
sold as “Jordan’s" of Old Bawn. It appears that Michael Jordan acquired an
interest in the site and surrounding lands shortly after 1889. The sale
of the bar was agreed only two days after Michael Jordan's eldest son, John
Jordan, died.
Advertisement for the Sale of 'Jordan's' (better known as Burke's) of Oldbawn (May 1899)
Below- Notice of the completed Sale (August 1899)
Lennon’s of
Old Bawn- 1899- 1921
Mary Jane Lennon, had been a licensed
publican in Newtown Park, Blackrock, when she applied for a new licence for the
Eagle House in Stradbrook, Blackrock in 1898. Having had the licence
refused on the grounds that the premises were unsuitable, she moved with her
husband Christopher Lennon to Old Bawn Cross in 1899. In 1901, 39 year
old Christopher Lennon and his 46 year old wife, Mary Jane ran Lennon’s
Bar and Grocery, in which their 17 year old daughter Emily, was a
barmaid. A relative, Annie Coates, also lived with them and worked as a
barmaid. Mr. Lennon was ably assisted on the four acres of adjoining land
by the two servants who lived with them, Patrick Brennan and James Molloy- both
general labourers.
I cant
believe it's not real butter!
In 1905, Mary Jane Lennon was charged with
three offences- all minor and related- selling margarine as butter; not
having the label attached to it when exposed for sale, and for not
wrapping it in paper with the word ‘margarine’ printed on it, after the sale.
Lennon pleaded ignorance of the offences and said she only kept a
small portion of the ‘mixture’ in the shop ‘required for the workmen coming in
for a roll for their dinner”. She rarely sold it as a portion. As
it was a first offence and in considering the good character of Mrs Lennon, she
was fined only 20d for the offence and a further 20d costs.
A Body in
the Bar
On the 1st January 1907, Edward O’Neill
and George Sullivan, arrived into Lennon’s of Old Bawn at 8pm to welcome in the
new-year. Together they had one, perhaps two drinks before departing at
9.35pm. There were six other men in the pub at the time and all men left the
pub together.
Sullivan would be returned to Lennon’s a day
or two later, but in no fit state to imbibe. His body would be found
lifeless on Bohernabreena Hill the next day and his remains would be brought
back to the public house, in which an inquest would be held. The 28 year
old farm servant had been found face down on the roadside at Bohernabreena
Hill. There was blood on the road and the deceased’s coat was found lying
about a yard from the body. Dr Poett, having undertaken a post-mortem in
the pub, found both the stomach and the mouth of the deceased to be loaded with
liquid mud. There were no injuries of any description on any other part of the
body, other than a slight abrasion on the face. Sullivan had bled from the
nostril. The abrasion on the nose might have been caused by a fall or a blow.
There was the appearance of a struggle having taken place and death was deemed
to have been caused by asphyxiation, from lying in an unconscious state in
liquid mud. Sullivan had left the pub sober. Edward O’Neill would,
three weeks later, be charged with having caused the death of George Sullivan.
The Lennon’s would, for over 20 years, run an
orderly shop, modestly trading through the war years from 1914 to 1919, and
through the War of Independence. When Mary Jane Lennon died on the 1st March
1921, the executors of her will put “Lennon’s Bar and Grocery” on the market
within three weeks.
On the lash
Her husband, Chris, now 59 years old, was
last recorded visiting Swords on the 27th March 1921, only four days
before the auction of the pub and likely the day of his wife’s Month’s Mind
Mass. Having travelled in company by horse and trap from Tallaght to
Swords that Sunday, Mr. Lennon both literally and figuratively went on the
lash. He was found that evening in Daly’s public house on Main Street,
Swords. Lennon was seen drinking at 4.15, in Daly’s, a bona-fide establishment.
When the Guards called back at ten minutes to six, Lennon was still there, and
still drinking. He was drunk, very drunk.
Both Lennon and the publican were brought up
on charges- Lennon of intoxication, the publican of serving a man known to be
intoxicated. The publican noted Lennon had travelled to Swords on
business, to inquire about a licensed premises for sale in the town. He
had had tea and his dinner there, and the publican claimed he didn't know
Lennon was drunk. He had only been served one drink in Daly’s.
However when questioned in the pub by the guards, Lennon, attempting to stand
up to face the guard, promptly fell to the floor. The defended (Lennon),
the Judge ruled, “was a very decent man, but fond of a drop”. He was fined 10d
and charged 5d costs.
Lennon’s fully licensed premises in Old Bawn,
now with 9 statute acres, was auctioned the following Thursday, the 31st March
1921. It was held on a 500 year lease dated from 25th March 1914, at an annual
rent of £40.
The Executor's sale of "Lennon's of Old Bawn", March 1921 |
Kennedy's
Corner (1921- 1945)
During the war of independence and subsequent
Civil War, a local publican would do well to keep their politics to themselves,
for fear of alienating one market or other, and for generally keeping order on
the premises, or ‘running a tidy shop’ as the local Guard might describe it,
when it came to renewing the licence.
On the 6th September 1921- John (Jack)
Kennedy, a Tipperary man who had worked for many years in Dublin, sought to
transfer a 7 day licence to his newly acquired establishment at Old Bawn.
"The 7 Day Licensed premises, long established with no competition, had road frontage on both the Old Bawn and Bohernabreena roads. The dwelling adjoining the pub was neat and compact, containing a sitting room, three bedrooms, kitchen with spacious yard, W.C., and numerous outbuildings. Well fitted neat bar and lounge, bottling stores and wash room".
Along with the Pub, Kennedy purchased
additional land, bringing the holding to 12 acres. The annual sale of hay from
the 12 acre meadow was an important annual income which offset the annual
ground rent. Here Jack and Alice Kennedy raised their family of two
daughters Margaret or ‘Rita’; and Sarah Josephine (affectionately known as
“Sid”), and their sons James and Sean. John Kennedy’s brother Andrew
Kennedy, lived with them for a number of years in the 1920s, before he
purchased and ran The Embankment in Corballis, above Jobstown, where young Sean
would go to live and work with his uncle Andy.
Kennedy's primary market was quarrymen or
gravelmen and drovers, recreational fishermen and labourers working on the
local stone crusher, located only several hundred meters from the pub, beside
the bridge crossing the river dodder.
Within a year, the Kennedy's would feel the
impact of the Civil War and in August 1922 John Kennedy of Old Bawn lodged a
compensation claim with town clerks, for loss of goods and damage to property
to the value of £110, 'arising from the recent military operations'.
Fourteen months into their new premises, on a Friday evening, the 7th November
1922, at 6.30 pm the pub was raided with a loss of fifty shillings worth
of cigarettes and tobacco. The incident was part of a series of
raids across the city that weekend.
With the end of the civil war, the day to day
business of a publican returned to normal- a game of cat-and-mouse between
vintner and local sergeant, serving after hours, and drink to locals and
regulars who were not 'bona-fide' or travellers away from home.
On Sunday 6th May 1923- Kennedy was found to be serving alcohol to a
drinker who was not bona fide. (Patrick Lawless of Killininny)
Guard Brennan was the officer. Lawless was fined 10s, and costs and
Kennedy was excused. He appears to have developed favourable, and
functional relations with Garda Nyhan in later years, which one can only
assume, in Ireland of the 1930s and 1940s might have suited both rather well.
Finnegan’s
wake- “About that Seven-pence!”
On 20th May 1924, William Finnegan from
Oldcourt, was passing Kennedy’s Corner when he was approached at a distance by
Jack Kennedy who was carrying a double barrelled shotgun. Kennedy
shouted over to Finnegan, inquiring “about that seven pence”. Finnegan
was over due in settling up, an account he held with Kennedy’s Grocery.
Finnegan said he would settle the account in a couple of days. Kennedy
then proceeded to load two cartridges into his gun, and fired at Finnegan,
cutting the leaves and branches of a tree over Finnegan’s head. John Kennedy
was later charged with shooting at, with the intent to kill, William
Finnegan. Kennedy informed the court that while talking to Finnegan, he
happened to spy two Woodquest (Woodpigeon) in the tree overhead and was only
shooting at them. In Finnegan’s haste to get to the guards in Tallaght,
he fell into the river Dodder and ran through it, rather than try to negotiate
the nearby bridge. The judge noted that Jack Kennedy was a most
respectable and very decent man. Finnegan acknowledged that he had never
any cross words with Kennedy over anything other than the 7d owed.
Kennedy was convicted of common assault and fined 30d with 10d costs, and bound
over to keep the peace. We might assume the account was settled, quite
promptly after.
Petrol
Bombed
At 1.15am on a Sunday morning in mid May
1928, Mrs Kennedy was lying in bed about to doze-off after a busy nights work.
Her husband was in a deep slumber beside her in the bed and her three children,
Rita, Sean and Seamus, were all long asleep. Jack's brother Andy was also
asleep in the house. Alice Kennedy heard a crackling noise and got a smell of
woodsmoke, before hearing a loud explosion downstairs in the bar below.
Looking toward her bedroom window she saw an unusual bright glare in the street
below. She then heard the sound of a motor car screeching away from the
crossroads.
Rousing her husband, they went down stairs to
investigate and found the front of the premises in a growing inferno.
Quickly removing the children to a place of safety outside the back of the
building Jack, Alice and Andy spent 30 minutes fighting the flames,
eventually successfully extinguishing the fire. They found a large
quantity of sacking paper, sprinkled with petrol and stacked against the doors
of the shop and dwellinghouse. In the centre of a large stack of paper up
against the door had been placed a can of petrol and it was the sound of this
exploding against door which had caused Mrs Kennedy to stir. The
explosion of the can had scattered much of the flammable material away from the
building, and only for this, it is likely the entire premises would have been
destroyed. The doors and downstairs windows had been liberally sprinkled with
petrol. Clearly, whoever was responsible, had intended the attack to be fatal
for the entire family. The motive for the attack remained a mystery, and the
perpetrators elusive, at least to the guards who investigated it.
For almost twenty five years, Jack Kennedy
successfully ran a tidy shop at Old Bawn Cross, rearing his family in relative
comfort though a difficult period, both politically and economically. In
August 1945, Jack Kennedy announced his retirement from Old Bawn and the sale
of 'Kennedy's' due to ill health. Oddly for someone retiring due to
illness, that same month Kennedy purchased Keegan's of Blackrock- perhaps with
a view to one of his sons taking the reigns in the new establishment. Himself
and his wife Alice, retired to Williamstown House in Blackrock. He died
"at an advanced age" the following year, in September 1946.
After her husbands death, Alice
Kennedy, the family matriarch, moved to Waterford, where her son and daughters
all acquired licensed premises. She lived at 12 Michael Street, Waterford City.
She died in 1988 at 99 years of age. Rita Nolan (nee Kennedy) having
briefly traded in Firhouse (now Morton's), bought the Pearl Bar in
Waterford City in 1945, quickly disposing of it for £3000 in 1947, before
buying out Dooley's Hotel from her brother James who had purchased it only one
year earlier.
Sid Kennedy, would set a new record for the
price of a licensed house in Waterford City, when she purchased The Corner
House, on Michael Street in Waterford in 1951. The price would not be
disclosed. She would marry Thomas Halpin from Portlaw, Co. Waterford. Though
several years out of Old Bawn, she married in her old parish Church in
Rathfarnam.
Sean Kennedy, who lived and worked with his
uncle Andrew Kennedy at the Embankment in Corballis married Audrey
Kendell. He emigrated and settled in Melbourne in Australia.
James (or Seamus) Kennedy, marrried Grace
Ryan from Tipperary in 1945. Between 1945 and 1950 James bought and sold The
Ball Alley in Lucan and Dooley's Hotel in Waterford. He bought out the
Old Bawn tavern, from his father, and substantially extended it, with a view to
selling it on. When it failed to sell at an agreeably price in 1946, and
again in January 1947 (withdrawn from auction of £10,000) he retained an
interest in it until the late 1950s. Rita Nolan, his sister, also retained a
share in the business.
In November 1948 James Kennedy was fined £5
for a breach of the licencing laws. Sid (Sarah) Kennedy would transfer
her licence from Dooley's Hotel in Waterford, to Old Bawn in 1949 before
transferring her licence again in 1950 to a pub on Bolton Street in
Dublin.
Kennedy's Lounge- 1946 |
Kennedy’s
& Burke (1950- 1970)
Local folklore has it that Tom Burke, from
Prucklish, Newtown Forbes, Co. Longford, started working as a young man
in Kennedy’s Corner in August 1945- the day the American’s dropped the bomb on
either Hiroshima or Nagasaki, therefore either the 6th or 9th of
August 1945. It was the month in which Jack Kennedy announced
his departure from Old Bawn, and his purchase of Keegan’s in Blackrock.
With the departure and death of Jack Kennedy
and with the Kennedy family members, by now all holding separate licences in
their own names, by 1950 it fell to Tom Burke to apply for a 7 day licence for
what was still known as Kennedy’s. In May 1952, when 6 people were found to be
on the premises after hours, it would be Tom Burke who would be fined £10.
Rough
Justice
On the evening of the 5th September 1958
four young Gardai from Kevin Street Station, McGaraghan, O’Malley, Kehoe, and
Carey, entered Kennedy’s public house and ordered a round of drinks. They
were celebrating the passing of an examination, by one of their number, and
were in ebullient form. They had started drinking at 4 pm earlier that
day. They had three pints and a small whiskey each in Kennedy's, when three of
the young guards started singing and the fourth began dancing about the
pub. Tom Burke quietly asked the gentlemen to desist and to ‘keep it
down’. The dancing cop, McGaraghan then approached a young barmaid, Anne
Keating, demanding ‘change for the jukebox’ and threatened that if he wasn’t
given change, he would break the machine. At this point Tom Burke had
words with the four young men.
The local guard, Sergeant Burke (no relation
to Tom), called into the establishment shortly after and spoke with the four
men, who quietly left. A short time later, on leaving the pub, Sergeant
Burke found three of the four young guards fist-fighting among themselves on
the street outside. On attempting to intervene, Sergeant Burke was struck
in the face. The sturdy guard responded in kind, and all hell broke
loose. The four rookie cops turned on Sergeant Burke, who managed to escape
to a waiting car, before the front window of Kennedy’s public house was smashed
in. Sergeant Burke promptly returned with assistance, and found the four
engaged in a full on melee, in which two local civilians, George Brasil and
James O’ Connor, were assaulted. McGaraghan was in the process of forcing
his way back into Kennedy’s Bar. Tom Burke was manning the door and
struck McGaraghan in the face, to good effect. McGaraghan hit the deck
before staggering back to his feet in pursuit of the retreating publican.
McGaraghan, now stripped to the waist and waving an empty bottle of stout
about, declared his intention to wreck the place. Tom Burke was having
none of it, and after a brief struggle McGaraghan was successfully ejected from
the pub. He was found a short time later, lying on a pavement by Sergeant
Burke. But the night was but a pup! On attempting to arrest him the
Sergeant found him still in fighting form. He resisted arrest and had to
be restrained by several guards and cuffed, before being bowed into a waiting
squad car. O’Malley, in the melee, had lost both his shoes and his trousers,
before scurrying off to a nearby house in Oldbawn. He was picked up a
short time later and went quietly. Kehoe resisted arrest and had to be restrained
with force, while Carey went sheepishly.
The men were subsequently brought up on a
range of charges including Disorderly Conduct while Drunk, Violent Conduct,
Assaulting a Garda, Malicious Damage, Resisting Arrest and Obstructing a Garda
in the execution of his duties. The men apologised to the court for their
conduct, and said they felt they had brought the force into disrepute. District
Justice Murphy described it as the worst drunken brawl, to ever come before his
court. They were found guilty of all charges except one- malicious damage to Kennedy’s
window- which might have been accidental!
“Whatever I
do to them, is nothing to what the commissioner of the Garda will do to them”
District
Justice Murphy noted, rather optimistically.
McGaraghan was fined the princely sum of
£6. Kehoe was fined £4, and Carey and O’ Malley were each fined £3.
To put that in perspective, it is worth remembering, Tom Burke had been
fined £10 six years earlier, for having punters on site, after hours!
In 1958, Grace Kennedy, James's wife, was
named as the proprietor. Over the years as Jack Kennedy’s children
relinquished their respective interests in the old family business, Tom Burke
and his family, incrementally bought them out. The only member of the
Kennedy family to retain an interest in the pub after 1962, was Rita Nolan,
Jack's eldest daughter.
Tom Burke ran a somewhat liberal house, making it a popular watering-hole for locals and day-trippers in the 1960s. It is said that Tom Burke enjoyed the life of a publican, and was as comfortable on one side of the bar as the other. Not uniquely for a publican in the district, he didn't always enjoy amicable relations with the local sergeant, or some local housewives, who held more conservative views on late night drinking. In 1968, both Burke's and Morton's in Firhouse, would be reprimanded and refused a renewal of their restaurant licenses, on the basis that they were being used only to serve drinks until the wee small hours!
The State opposed the granting of a renewal of Tom Burke's limited restaurant licence in 1968.
|
Tom Burke died in Baggot Street Hospital, on
Sunday the 12th April, 1970. He had been unwell for some time.
It is fair to say, in later years Tom Burke
did not enjoy the best of relations with the local Gardai and that he had a
particularly strained relationship with a prominent local guard in the
district. A known anecdote among Tallaght publicans, relates to a
particular incident in the year after Tom Burke's death, where at a large
gathering of Tallaght’s business community, another prominent publican and a
friend of Tom Burke, after a few drinks, publicly called the guard out as
having ‘chased that poor man Tom Burke into an early grave’. The
allegation was received with as much grace as it was delivered, and both men-
guard and publican- had to be physically restrained to prevent the incident
escalating, much to the frustration of both.
Bridget
Burke’s- Old Bawn Tavern (1970- 1991)
Bridget Burke with her parents, Peter and Anastasia Walsh at the opening of her new lounge in 1977 |
Following the death of Tom Burke in April, on
the 1st September 1970, Bridget Burke was granted a transfer of the
licence for the Old Bawn Tavern.
Bridget Burke, was born Bridget Walsh,
daughter of Anastasia and Peter Walsh from Dunlavin, Co. Wicklow. Bridget
(or Bridie), had started working in the pub as a cleaning lady in the
early 1960. She became romantically involved with the long time, and somewhat
older licensee, shareholder and barman, Tom Burke. They married in 1968,
but Bridget would be widowed within two years of their wedding.
Bridget Burke transformed the establishment-
quickly bringing her own ambition, energy and unique tastes to the
business. In the immediate years after Tom Burke’s passing, Bridget
quickly established Burke’s of Old Bawn as an entertainment venue as distinct
from simply a drinking house. Tuesday night was Talent Contest night.
Locals were regularly entertained by Blonde Bombshell Eithne Dunne and a
variety of acts would provide nightly entertainment, for no cover charge.
The entrepreneurial spirit coincided with the significant growth of the local
population, and a changing demographic of clientele.
Bridget also brought her own unique taste in
décor, with what might best be described as taxidermy! Between the early and
late 1970s, she assembled and installed an unusual, if not unique menagerie of
stuffed animals, to watch over the giddy and at times disconcerted
punters. For day trippers and Sunday drinkers coming out from Dublin, the
stuffed animals and old wagon wheels arranged about the place, may have given
the establishment an air of old Hunting Lodge chic, at the foot of the Dublin
Mountains. It was a taste, perhaps of it’s time, and did little to dampen
the growing demand for what was being offered by way of refreshments and
entertainment. On Thursday nights regulars could enjoy the “beer drinking and
sausage eating competition”, under the watchful gaze of a pokerfaced Elk, Bison
or Deer.
By the late 1970s and early 1980s regular
entertainment acts included Laurie Hartz and Sil Fox. Mr. Pussy
paraded his wares and shook his- whatever it was he had- among the mounted
birds and preserved specimen fish, much to the amusement of regulars enjoying
their night off from working in Packard Electric, Telectron and
Jacobs.
In 1985, the High Court granted an injunction
to Cantrell and Cochran Limited, restraining the shareholders of the Old Bawn
Tavern (trading as Bridget Burkes) from “selling as ‘Club Orange’, orange
drinks not manufactured by the plaintiffs”. Kathleen Burke, Sarah Burke,
Bridget Burke and a certain Mrs. Rita Nolan were the named parties.
Clearly, Rita Nolan (daughter of Jack Kennedy), who was by now 40 years out of
the district, had retained an interest in the old family concern.
“Dwan’s Orange Drink”, was routinely presented to those punters ordering a
“Club Orange”, without any distinction being acknowledged, much to the
annoyance of, and loss to Cantrell and Cochran.
Closing Time
Rita Nolan, an original shareholder in the
establishment died at her home “Glenasmole”, in Ferrybank, Waterford, in
1990. The following year Bridget Burke would announce her retirement from
the licensed trade after 30 years in Old Bawn. The premises would be put
up for auction in November 1991. It was the end of a memorable era.
The Old Mill- 1997
Louis Fitzgerald at the razing of Bridget Burke's- 1997 |
The premises of Bridget Burke's were due to be auctioned on the afternoon of the 6th November 1991. However, a few hours before the auction was due to take place, terms were agreed privately between the selling agent and the new owner. The premises, now standing on 10 acres of land sold for a reported figure of £1.2 million. In its previous year of operations the pub had a turnover of £700,000. The new owner was Louis Fitzgerald- a Tipperary man, long-time resident of Rathcoole, and no stranger to Tallaght. He was also one of the most successful publicans in the country and had had designs on the neighbourhood of Old Bawn since at least 1978.
After changing hands, the pub initially continued
to trade under the name “Bridget Burke’s” through 1993, hosting cabaret
and music acts like “Joanna and Tequila Sunrise”, “Who’s Eddie”, “Dave
Marr”, “Off the Record” and “Wicked Sensation”.
In September 1994 the contents of Bridget
Burke’s Old Bawn Tavern were sold off and three years later The Old Bawn
Tavern, was razed. In March 1997 the whitewashed- rock dashed building
was finally bulldozed under the watchful eye of Louis Fitzgerald. The
previous month a licence application had been made by Burston Ltd, a Louis
Fitzgerald Company, in respect of the new premises, constructed by the
applicant.
Sometimes, in order to move forward we must
look to the past, and so it was that Louis Fitzgerald developed a most
contemporary establishment, from ancient workings. The distinctive
features of the New “Old Mill” were largely assembled from the remains of a 200
year old mill that once stood on the banks of the Ballyfinboy River in
Borrisokane, Co. Tipperary. Fitzgerald bought the mill workings for
£15,000 from Tim Heenan, before having them transported- the mill stone,
sack hoists, flour chutes and grain bins- from the banks of the
Ballyfinboy river to the banks of the Dodder. The Heenan family had owned the
mill in Borrisokane since 1924, though the mill itself hadn’t been operational
since 1944.
The new development was a significant
improvement on Bridget Burke’s formaldehyde stuffed menagerie. The new premises
at 14,000 square foot, while large, was still less than a third the size of
Tallaght’s largest watering hole- The Belgard Inn which extended to 50,000
square foot.
The Old Mill, like Fitzgerald himself, had
come a long way. It brought Fitzgerald’s pub-count to 14 in total and he was,
by 1998 already eyeing his 15th, a new development in Lucan. By 1998, Louis
Fitzgerald was generally considered to be the publican with the most pubs in
Dublin. The Tipperary native, now had control of the site which had,
seventy-five years earlier come to be known as Kennedy’s Corner, after that
other Tipperary man, Jack Kennedy.
When awarded the 1993 ‘Tipperary Man of the
Year’ award, Louis Fitzgerald credited his success in the licensed trade with
his early apprenticeship in the business. Fitzgerald had at only 21 years
of age, managed “The Embankment” in Corballis, a pub which 20 years earlier had
been run by Jack Kennedy’s brother Andrew Kennedy until his death in
1947. It was a small world. And Fitzgerald’s latest addition would
provide serious competition to another family from Tipperary pulling pints in
the district, Aherne’s of Old Bawn.
Louis Fitzgerald at the Old Mill 1997 |
Like much of Tallaght and district, Kennedy's Corner, would now be unrecognizable to most of those who had a pint pulled by Jack Kennedy. But, as one of that generation, who grew up in Tallaght in the 1970s and 1980s, like those who lived there 100 years before, the pub at the crossroads, between Tallaght and Firhouse, between Bohernabreena and Dublin, will forever be remembered, as “Burke’s of Oldbawn”.
Albert
Perris
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excellent true story.
ReplyDeleteGreat story
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. In my time in Tallaght if I wanted to talk to Provos I’d go to the Dragon. I’d find the IRSP lot in Burkes of Old Bawn. That was 1970s and 1980s. Of course not all customers in either place had those allegiances, just a handful in each but they could be quite a handful.
ReplyDeleteExcellentLy interesting bit of history !
ReplyDeleteWorked there 71/72, great experience
ReplyDeleteIs there an email address for Albert Perris? My grandfather had some information on the area that may be of interest.
ReplyDeleteThanks
my name (all lower case) @gmail.com. Thank you. I look forward to receiving that information. A.P.
DeleteThis website is remarkable information and facts it's really excellent. real estate
ReplyDeleteWhat a delight to find this story, for my great-grandmother was Mary Jane King Dunne Lennon, owner of the pub from 1901 to 1921. Her age and that of 2nd husband Chris Lennon are still a mystery. She did visit an unidentified relative in Houston Texas in 1891 and daughter Emily, the barmaid mentioned in 1911, made her 1st Communion there. Mary Jane had owned the pub in Newtownpark now known as The Wishing Well, which had been in the Dunne family from about 1820.
ReplyDeleteI worked there in the mid 80s I found the owner (Brigid Burke ) hard to work for I stayed a couple of weeks .I couldn't wait to go thats my comment .
ReplyDeleteThis is a brilliant article of history for Old Bawn, I’m so glad I stumbled upon it. My dad was stationed in Tallaght in the 80s on his first placement, a big change for him from West Cork! I’ve just moved into Firhouse and my dad would always refer to the Old Mill as Bridget Burkes, now I know all about it! He will enjoy this article, thanks
ReplyDelete