HISTORY
OF ATHENRY
My Days in Carnaun National School
On my first day there was a big welcome from the Master, Mr. Tim O'Regan.
He was standing at the school gate (waiting just to welcome me I foolishly
thought), looking every inch the master with his well groomed appearance
and steel rimmed glasses. I was escorted to the classroom and introduced
to Miss O'Regan (the Master's sister), who put me sitting in a small seat
beside my brother, Walter, who was 15 months older but he also started
school on the same day. There were other beginners also on that day,
resulting in lots of confusion and a few tears.
The excitement about going to school soon gave way to very different
feelings. Being confined for so many hours in a classroom each day,
when I could be doing more exciting things at home, was time wasted, I
felt. In a word, school to me was a kind of prison and it was to
get worse. It was bad enough to be confined in school, but when I
got older and was expected to spend much of my time at home doing school
homework, it was the last straw. Needless to say, I was neither a
good nor a willing student at Carnaun. My interest in learning was
rather a late vocation, but that was certainly not the fault of the Master,
who did his best for me but, as they say, "you can take a horse to water,
but you cannot make him drink".
Fond Memories
Just as one remembers only the fine summers during youth, so it is
with me, I can only recall the more pleasant aspects of school like the
games we played in the schoolyard, what we got up to coming home from school
and, of course, the summer and Christmas holiday breaks.
I remember too the preparation for the new school year as it meant
a trip to Galway for clothes and especially boots. Prior to school
opening, my mother (father having died when I was eight), would get out
the horse and trap and take roughly half her ten children to Galway for
shopping. That, for me, was always a most exciting event. I saw motor
cars (which one very rarely saw in the countryside), and electric light,
which was a wonder still not enjoyed in rural areas, plus all the grand
things in the shops and the smell of fresh bread from the G.B.C., plus
the mouth-watering sight of the confectionery there.
A visit to Lydon's cafe for a treat, was always eagerly awaited and
occasionally, if time and weather permitted, a spin in the bus from Eyre
Square to see the sea in Salthill was a cause of great excitement.
These are wonderful memories for me, but I often wonder now, as an adult,
how on earth my poor mother endured the hardship.
The new boots for school (usually purchased in Logues), had to be strong
and heavy to withstand, not only what small boys can normally do to footwear,
but also the rigours of bad stoney roads, farmwork, and yes, football in
the school yard. Football boots had not yet arrived in Carnaun.
Before use, the boots had a good layer of studs put on the soles and
steel tips put on the toes and heels, not just to weigh me down, but to
prolong the life of the boot. A liberal supply of goose grease or
dubbin was applied to the uppers in the belief that it would protect the
leather against the rain.
The new books too had to be given the right treatment. I loved the smell
and feel of new books, and enjoyed putting covers of brown paper on them
to protect the original covers. That, however, was almost the total
extent of my interest in the books.
The School Day
Winter was the hardest time. Getting up in the dark was bad enough,
but without electricity, central heating and carpets, it was much worse.
The first shock was the cold linoleum on barefect on getting out of
bed. Then a candle had to be found for light and the fire had to
be kindled to boil the kettle to make the breakfast. It all took
so long that one had to be up very early. The only merit winter had
was that we made slides when it was frosty and we had no school when it
snowed, and during the long winter nights we listened, around the fire,
to the story tellers.
Spring and Autumn were better but Summer was the best of all.
Going to school in Winter was less exciting and there was less time to
play coming home.
In school classes were large and mixed. During the lunch break
the girls had their school yard and the boys-well we had a much larger
space, of course, we needed for our game-a form of Gaelic football.
Usually it was Carnaun versus Castle Lambert, and it was not unusual
to have very heated controversy about fouls or scores. That was hardly
surprising when you consider that we had no fixed number of players on
the teams, no referee, no goalposts or crossbar, only two stones indicating
where the goalposts should be. Controversy, however, only rarely
ended in fisticuffs, and grudges rarely lasted more than 24 hours.
Barefeet
Strange as it may seem now, we actually looked forward to discarding
the boots for the summer months. In fact, we often started in April
by taking the boots off after leaving school and putting them on before
reaching home. All this was despite the lack of smooth tarred roads
and plenty of stones in the playground where we played football in our
barefeet. It was no great sacrifice-we loved the freedom of discarding
the heavy boots. Of course, we had casualties-stone bruised toes
or thorn pricks, and nettle stings etc., but it was worth it we felt.
There was plenty of fun on the way home from school. We occasionally
taunted Coffey's bull by throwing stones at him from the safe vantage point
of a high wall, until the animal was in a terrible temper, roaring and
rooting the ground.
Occasionally too we would change the route home, to rob an orchard
or to visit Dick Williams' forge, where we watched in awe as the red hot
horseshoe was applied to the hoof sending a pungent cloud of smoke upwards
to the ceiling.
If the smith was in a good mood we might be allowed to blow the bellows
and admire the sparks flying as the long handle of the bellows, topped
with a cows horn, was pulled downward.
In summer, we detoured to pick wild strawberries, especially in Morrissey's
wood, which we ate on the spot, or to pick wild mushrooms which we put
on a string in the form of a necklace, and brought home to be cooked on
the top of a Stanley range with a liberal supply of salt. To this
day, I can remember the flavour of these wild mushrooms cooked on the Stanley-a
flavour unique and unequalled, I believe.
We hurled too along the road, somewhat in the style of Fionn McCool,
with crooked sticks improvising for hurleys and stones for a ball, when
we had not got a ball. Stones were plentiful on the roads since the
roads were not yet tarred and the stone crusher with its big hissing steam
engine was a regular visitor.
We watched in awe as the crusher smashed big stones into little stones,
which were then used for repairing the road.
Looking back now, I often think what a miracle it was that we had no
serious injury with stones (although I have a few marks to show from stone
cuts), as we hurled them, threw them and made both slings and catapults
to enable us to launch stones further. All of this, needless to say,
was unknown to the Master or our parents.
Other occasional attractions going to and from school were the corn-threshing
or the hunt (Galway Blazers), or the farmers mowing the hay or cutting
the corn or shearing the sheep. Occasionally too, I might be brought
to the cattle and sheep fair in Athenry. This was very exciting (even
if it meant getting up at 3.00 a.m.) and made me feel very important -
far better than going to school, especially if the homework was not done.
Looking Back
All these and many many other memories of events and names flash into
my mind as I think of Carnaun National School.
Some 12 months or so after full time attendance at Carnaun ' I got
the vocation to study, and was duly despatched to boarding school in Ballyfin
in 1948, which for all practical purposes meant the end of my residency
in County Galway, as I went from there to university and qualified in University
College Dublin in 1956, after which 1 studied in Germany and came back
to work in UCD. From there I went to UCC, as a Professor in 1964.
I have never been back to Carnaun School, but I look forward to attending
the celebrations this year.
Only once did I meet the Master after I left. I was already then in
UCC, but unfortunately he was by then in poor health and regrettably died
soon afterwards. Many years later I met Miss O'Regan who was then
in very advanced years, but in excellent spirits and was I pleased that
she recognised and remembered me?
Although I was an unwilling and an undistinguished student in Carnaun,
I can honestly say that I was given, in spite of myself, an excellent foundation
from which to launch my academic career when the mood hit me in later years.
Having now spent 30 years teaching adults, who are anxious to learn,
I never cease to marvel at the patience and commitment of people, like
Tim and Babs O'Regan, who worked with children like me, many of whom were
interested in everything but learning, and yet succeeded somehow in fixing
some things in my mind which are there solidly to this day.
To them, a great debt of gratitude is due, which I am happy to express.
May they rest in peace, and may Carnaun National School continue to have
the kind of commitment to educating the youth of today, and of the future,
which the O'Regans and many other teachers displayed in the past.
By Senator Tom Raftery for “Carnaun School, Athenry
1891 - 1991
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