History of Connemara, Galway, Ireland

Extracts from "The Way It Was", Part 2

compiled and edited by Paul Gannon

"We were always judged on our standards of work. If we were seen to be good workers, get good results in school, college, shine and dust well, we were labelled as a 'good nun'. There was little sympathy for the weakling or the one in poor health. It was a lonely life. Today we hear so much about relationships. Sound friends and healthy relationships are the 'in thing' today, especially in religious life and the priesthood. As young Sisters we had no shoulder to cry on, no sympathetic listening ear, and no warm arms to give us a hug. We were expected to get all our consolation in the presence of the Blessed Sacrament. Having said that, we kept each other sane. We laughed and giggled at nothing; a strong sense of humour was our safety valve. Common sense told us that half the rules were crazy. Some found the rule of silence very difficult. Others valued it as an escape."

From "A Mercy Pilgrim Travels Back", remembered and written by Sr. Phyl Clancy


"The boys and girls walked to school together. Fights usually took place on the way home after school. Sometimes the mothers would intervene on behalf of their own offspring. In the last term we used to take a shortcut home through the fields and I remember a particular orchard of crab apples that we used to raid. There was also a particular spot where we could get wild strawberries close to the well which many families drew their water from. It used to often take us half the evening to get home because we would be so long saying goodbye to each other at various crossroads. We would sit on fences and linger at crossroads and as we departed everyone would be excitedly looking forward to meeting up again the following morning.

There were hardly any cars that time and we used to have the whole road. The only thing we were afraid of was one particular old lady who was very contrary. No fear of abuse or abduction. There was a great sense of camaraderie among us. We all looked out for one another. We were like one big happy family. If somebody was not feeling well we would usually make a chair with our hands and carry the sick person home between us. Adults were not really part of our world. We were left very much to our own devices."

From "Educational Odyssey", remembered by Jenny Conboy

Part 1 - Part 3

See also

Restoration of St Mary's RC Graveyard

Using St Mary's Church, Clifden's first Roman Catholic Chapel, and the nearby graveyard, as a focal point, Kathleen Villiers-Tuthill traces Clifden's history from 1812 right up to the present day.

The Man from Mullaghgloss - The Life and Times of Johnnie Coyne

written by himself, on Jürgen Kullmann's Irelandman.de site.

History of Clifden Coastguard Station

"...built on land that had been farmed by the Whelan family who were tenants on the D'Arcy estate and resident in the area since before the famine." From coastguard-station.com.