If you see a drone hovering over Kilcullen's streetscape in the coming months, it's not sinister,
writes Brian Byrne. It will just be another KCA project getting underway, to survey the heritage area of Upper Main Street. The survey is the lead story on this month's issue, and the images with it are an interesting comparison of what the street is like today compared to 126 years ago.
The centre spread story is of the 'grand' celebration of two creative people who left significant legacies in Kilcullen before they passed away — sculptor Noel Scullion and musician Liam O'Flynn. Ray Kelly's account is of the evening devoted to their linkage through the heritage of Dun Ailinne, which simply had to be recognised. Even if you are a newcomer to Kilcullen, the two people concerned were part of what you will be — our local heritage is the foundation of all the futures of those who live here.
Then there are the people who simply passed through, but left a mark that might not be noticed, yet will always be there as long as someone has written down the memory. That's the 'Passing Strangers' basis of Mary Orford's contribution this month, recalling such fleeting visitors as William Makepeace Thackeray, Daniel O'Connell, the writer Maeve Brennan, who spent time in the Cross and Passion before becoming famous, actress Rita Hayworth, Henry Kissinger and Jackie Onassis. As she writes, there were many others, no doubt, who, to one degree or another, got the taste of a Kilcullen welcome.
One of those was the late Ronnie Delaney, and there's a reflection in this issue on his inspiring life, from Henry Murphy, one of the members of the Creative Writers group. The Olympic hero was in Kilcullen in 2019, and there are local memories of him spending time in The Spout with some of our own Olympians, heroes in their own right for simply taking part.
In other features, Jim Kelly continues his recollections of a lifetime managing Castlemartin for the late Tony O'Reilly. A career that involved resurrecting a Kilcullen heritage, maintaining and enhancing it, and we feel very fortunate to have such a record in The Bridge. There's also the regular contribution from the Kilcullen Photography Club, whose pictures are another way of capturing and preserving today's town for future perusal.
From our regulars, Julie Dunlop Felsbergs ponders on a period of not being able to drive due to recovery from a medical procedure and how she eventually accepted that as a signal that she should slow down for a time from a hectic modern life. Noel Clare goes Out and Away to Curracloe and Wexford, finding the former a true haven for an extraordinary range of wildlife. Eugene Brennan explains the importance of counterbalances in keeping things where they should be, and Billy Redmond muses on the differences between American football and our own Gaelic kind. With the Festival almost upon us, the Places Around Us contribution from Daithí de Róiste about Punchestown's history is timely.
With all the usual, and the usual much more, the April Bridge is now on sale in the usual outlets. With much about Kilcullen's heritage, and of itself a part of it.
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