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Bandon Stories

Bandon Stories

Von: Bandon Walled Town Festival
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Bandon stories - come and listen to stories of Bandon

In celebration of the town around us, come and listen to tales young and old, new and reimagined.


Funded by the Heritage Council and coordinated as part of celebrations of National Heritage Week.

https://www.bandonhistory.com/

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Bandon Walled Town Festival/2nd Class 2022/3 Presentation Primary School
Welt
  • Bandon Railway
    Aug 10 2023
    In this first episode in our Bandon Stories series, the second class students of Presentation Primary School tell us all about what they have learned about the history of Bandon Railway.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    10 Min.
  • Scéal - The Hercules of Crosshaven
    Sep 1 2023

    Scéal Trail – Creative Bandon wanted to highlight the wonderful Dúchas tales from the Bandon area. Scéál tells the story of our cultural heritage in a contemporary way, bringing the best of Irish Street Artists together to create murals inspired by the stories of Bandon from the National Folklore Collection. Zoe Tennyson and Neasa Madden O’Connor mined the National Duchas folklore database for local folk lore about Bandon. Creative Bandon worked with artists GW Joyce and Kevin O’Brien to create these vibrant, contemporary interpretations of these old folk tales, strengthening our unique connection with the town we live in.

    In 2021 in celebration of Culture Night and with the support and funding of Cork County Council Arts Office they commissioned David Jackson to create a reimaging of these tales and created a storytelling trail highlighting these tales.

    Join David on a walking tour of Bandon as he weaves a tale based on the original folklore tales gathered by Bandon children as part of the folklore collection 1937-1939, re retells the stories with a modern twist.

    Each of the 7 stops/episodes on a single image and story.


    The Hercules of Crosshaven:

    "As strong as Philip Oscar Sisk", is a proverb current among the inhabitants between the Bandon River and the Owenabwee in Cork, which shows that after the lapse of more than a hundred years the fame of the great Crosshaven man is still alive.

    A man was asked. "What was Phil Sisk? and he replied, "He was a giant. That carriage there, was no more than a daisy in a bull's mouth to him. He could do anything that motal man ever did."

    From the descriptions of Phil Sisk as an old man, it is easy to reason that in his prime he must have been a being of extraordinary size and bodily strength. He was born at Fennell's Bay, Crosshaven towards the close of the eighteenth century, being the youngest of six sons. It happened when he was about fifteen years old there was a hurling match coming off in the neighbourhood and naturally of course all the young Sisks were preparing to witness the contest. It was probally at this period of his life that our hero received his name of "Oscar".

    Many a night Phil Sisk spent with his comrades in the brakes of Fountainstown, during the Fenian Days. It was little rest they could get while the man-hunter was on the prowl. At length, one night, Oscar was surprised by the press gang. Leaping to his feet he found himself surrounded by a strong party of a man-o'-war's men. He must have fallen asleep to be taken unawers like this. What a prize they thought was in this young Hercules, but he escaped from them.

    There is one story told of Phil how on a certain day he was watching five or six men endeavouring, in vain, to lift a huge anchor. which was half-buried in mud by the sea shore. "You're a nice lot of boys," said Phil contemptuously descending from the quay, "It that what's the matter with you"? asked Sisk. "There then" and with a mighty heave he flung the anchor back into the soft mud, burying it almost entirely.

    "Now you can go and get it out for yourselves and it will take long enough",

    and with that he walked away.

    It is said that in his closing years his sinews were like ropes. There are not many of the old families of Kinalea Fountainstown, that can claim kinship with the Hercules of Crosshaven.


    Original story can be found at:https://www.duchas.ie/en/cbes/4921897/4899388/5183915

    Map of Scéal Trail can be downloaded from:

    https://www.bandonhistory.com/_files/ugd/190fcf_7257a182680140f48d7ee6cb65883012.pdf

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    2 Min.
  • Scéal - Ghost Stories
    Sep 1 2023

    Scéal Trail – Creative Bandon wanted to highlight the wonderful Dúchas tales from the Bandon area. Scéál tells the story of our cultural heritage in a contemporary way, bringing the best of Irish Street Artists together to create murals inspired by the stories of Bandon from the National Folklore Collection. As part of Creative Bandon’s passion for place making, Zoe Tennyson and Neasa Madden O’Connor mined the National Duchas folklore database for local folk lore about Bandon. Creative Bandon worked with artists GW Joyce and Kevin O’Brien to create these vibrant, contemporary interpretations of these old folk tales, strengthening our unique connection with the town we live in.

    In 2021 in celebration of Culture Night and with the support and funding of Cork County Council Arts Office they commissioned David Jackson to create a reimaging of these tales and created a storytelling trail highlighting these tales.


    Join David on a walking tour of Bandon as he weaves a tale based on the original Dúchas tales used to create the contemporary street art images for Bandon’s Scéal Trail. Based on the original folklore tales gathered by Bandon children as part of the folklore collection 1937-1939, re retells the stories with a modern twist.

    Each of the 7 stops/episodes on a single image and story.



    Ghost Stories

    Once upon a time a protestant man named Jerry Bird lived a Crossmahon. He did something to altar of the chapel and a big long tail grew on him. A week before he died he was barking like a dog. When he died there was a big black doc seen walking up and down the road every night.

    Along time ago a man sold his garden. The man that bought it from him fell sick and he asked the gardener to mind it for him. He said he would mind it for him dead and alive. The gardener died and when he died a big black dog used to be seen sitting up on the ditch every night. One night a man was coming from Crossmahon on a saddle horse. He saw the dog on the ditch. The dog jumped off the ditch and followed the man. The man made the horse run and the dog ran. He made the horse walk and the dog walked. After a while he took out his rosary beeds and began to pray. When he began to come near his own gate the dog kicked gravel up in the air and disappeared.

    One about twelve o-clock to men were going to Bandon fair and they saw a woman washing clothes in a stream. One man said to her in the name of God wasn't it early in the morning she was out. She hit the bittle on the water and wet them all.

    Original story can be found at: https://www.duchas.ie/en/cbes/4921639/4887186/5162674

    Map of Scéal Trail can be downloaded from:

    https://www.bandonhistory.com/_files/ugd/190fcf_7257a182680140f48d7ee6cb65883012.pdf

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Mehr anzeigen Weniger anzeigen
    1 Min.
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