Fresh Tarring or Loose Chippings, Co. Cork, Ireland 1974
Ойын-сауық
A chance meeting with a Cork County Council road crew gives one man a chance to demonstrate his prowess on the fiddle.
While working on a feature about John B Keane, Frank Hall chances upon some Cork County Council road workers tarring a stretch of road between Kiskeam and Boherbue. The men led by ganger Maurice O’Keeffe, are Jerh Murphy, Ned Dennehy, Dan Scannell and Michael Helihy. Thady O’Connell watches on from his tractor.
Frank Hall initially wants to know if the men have seen Eddie Bradley, but the subject soon turns to turns to the difference between fresh tarring and loose chippings. Maurice O’Keeffe explains that loose chippings means there is a dangerous surface and Ned Dennehy adds that they could break the glass in the car.
Maurice O’Keeffe does not have a preference but decides fresh tarring gives a better result. He then asks Frank Hall if he has a fiddle in his car.
If you had a fiddle I’d play a few tunes for you.
When Frank Hall cannot provide a fiddle, Maurice O’Keeffe sends him on an errand to collect his own fiddle from his home in Kiskeam so he can play some music while the men take their lunch break. Frank Hall agrees and asks if the trip will take five minutes to which Maurice O’Keeffe replies,
If you go fast enough it will take you less.
Frank Hall returns with the fiddle and sits down at the roadside with the men to have a cup of tea while Maurice O’Keeffe plays for them.
This episode of ‘Hall’s Pictorial Weekly’ was broadcast on 2 October 1974. The presenter is Frank Hall.
Пікірлер: 185
My beautiful uncle Maurice. Loved listening to him playing the fiddle. His brother Jeremiah is my father. The whole family have the kindest hearts.
@michellemcdermott2026
Жыл бұрын
my great granda was Jeremiah Connaghan from Raphoe in Donegal
@extanegautham8950
Жыл бұрын
having recently been to beautiful Kerry and its lovely folk, dont doubt it for a second...!
@stephensmith4480
Жыл бұрын
I have always found the Irish people to be amongst the friendliest and nicest people you could ever meet, but I may be a bit biased as I am of Irish decent. God Bless Eire.
@finbarrdolan
Жыл бұрын
@@michellemcdermott2026 those lads are not from Donegal, definitely.
@mairesavage6815
3 ай бұрын
The location was Newmarket Co Cork
_One of the great Sliabh Luachra Fiddle Players Maurice O'Keeffe...Maurice passed away in March 2017 at 98 years of age. Go ndéana Dia trocaire ar a anam_
@markcorr6704
3 жыл бұрын
And a true gentleman.
@atmywitsend1984
3 жыл бұрын
He seemed like a wonderful character. Really makes me proud of my Irish blood. If my calculations are correct he would be 55 in this film. Its great to hear that he reached such a grande age. Films like this are pure gold.
@socialpiratekeyboardwarrio6546
3 жыл бұрын
What a lovely guy
These same boys started at the top of my road in 74. Still waiting for them to get to the other end of it. Any day now with the help of God.
@peterfitzpatrick7032
4 ай бұрын
Sure whats the hurry... have ye somewhere better to be ??... 🤷♂️🙄 😅👍☘
I know everyone says this about the older days but honestly in all these videos and other ones I've watched everyone just seems so decent and nice.
@marymcsherry1965
3 жыл бұрын
They were. Their kindness and earthiness with their sense of humour were unique. As kids, we felt totally loved and accepted. But we too had to do our 'party piece' always to great applause!
@padraiccunningham3790
2 жыл бұрын
And relaxed
@helenbyrne7663
6 ай бұрын
lovely times with very little money but every one happy out
@lauradesmarais2044
5 ай бұрын
I miss the auld ones😢. Never were better people than these dears. 🍀🇮🇪
@peterfitzpatrick7032
4 ай бұрын
Its humility... a human trait completely lost to modern society... 😒
Great times.. A canister of tea, soda bread and a fiddle.. Frank Hall was a man of the people..
This is just brilliant. My father and myself used to tar and grit farm roads. He started from nothing with a barrow and couldn't read or write but new how to rokka to a ry mush. This is a lovely old film of days gone by we shall never see the likes of again unfortunately. God bless you all those tarring men. 👍
Classic. They sent the TV reporter back to your mans house to pick up his fiddle for him to play a tune at the end. The tea out chilling. People knew each other back then and stood for each other. Prices footage.
What a fantastically simple life, the tin lunch, the fiddle, cup of tea... I bet that day was a highlight for those old guys, with the cameras there.
If you go fast enough it'll take you less, classic
A gentler time great stuff legends
A cuppa cha and a slice of soda bread for the lunch, and feck all work getting done haha. Great stuff.
Lovely people 🙏🏻
@brendadrumm9451
2 жыл бұрын
As long as ur not married to one of them
Ah the old Irish... Stuff of legends.
That was the job to have on Kerry County Council.
@seanthorntonthornton
3 жыл бұрын
They’re still at that job down here
@noreenleahy8112
3 жыл бұрын
Title is wrong. It's Cork actually. My granddad one of those men. xx
@patrickball2493
2 ай бұрын
That's somewhere near Newmarket Co Cork .
Frank Hall reminds me of John Hume the accent and everything
@michaelkavanagh5947
3 жыл бұрын
His like Terry Wogan too.
@peterfitzpatrick7032
4 ай бұрын
Now that you say it Sir , I can see that too... 🤔
1974 - Mrs Doyle aged well!
Lunch out of the auld biscuit tin😊 I miss those days and that wonderful generation.🇮🇪❤️🇮🇪
Them days you could leave one job and get another within the week. How beautiful Eire was back then.
These men didn’t want to overshadow one another that was the acting was going on. Great people
This is one of best channels on youtube . By the way he's having a quiet pint or two.
What a treasure these videos are ....
I'm from upstate New York. It's civic duty up here to honk your horn when you hit a pothole, that way the fella driving behind you doesn't get stuck in it too. 😂😂😂
@burntbacon7995
3 жыл бұрын
I was in upstate New York back in 1989, 1990, 2002 when I lived in Pennsylvania and Bronx, NYC.
@cyrilpeter1958
3 жыл бұрын
We used to have potholes so big, You could meet a car coming out of it.
Brilliant
Fantastic , So so fantastic
My uncle worked on the roads like these guys on kerry County Council in the 40is, 50is,60is,70is. Different times.
🎶Oh happy days 🎶
Back in those days, my uncle had the same job with Sligo CC. That and a bit of farming.
Thank you for posting C R, I've been waiting a long time to see a film like this
I love these videos. 👍👍 up from Galway
No messing. Men at work. Filling holes. No safe work plans, I pads, reports, phones, certs, inspections, training courses, tattoos, drugs, welfare facilities (except the one with a hole in the roof) or traffic lights.......arent we cutting edge in 2021. Irelands prime years. 70, 80 and 90s
@user-en5nh8lt4q
3 жыл бұрын
There's no soul in it nowadays
Many the happy summers I spent down in Ballydesmond. Lovely people. The roads have not improved.
The Manta A is a rare sight now
I think it's sad how this is why the Irish were loved all over but that's completely gone now, were just a mixed European country now there is no national identity or uniqueness anymore, rip to all these men.
@eddieoconnor8560
3 жыл бұрын
Nonsense
@user-fu3fu4ye7j
3 жыл бұрын
@@eddieoconnor8560 in your opinion
@raybans8712
3 жыл бұрын
@@eddieoconnor8560 in what way nonsense?!
@ulpetzmaznat1366
2 жыл бұрын
@@user-fu3fu4ye7j Wow, well spotted - he can hardly give an opinion other than his own, can he?
@user-fu3fu4ye7j
2 жыл бұрын
@@ulpetzmaznat1366 yeah of course he can, not everything is opinion some things are facts, anything else u need me to explain to ya
Ah the good old days when we were all colour blind👀(& some of driving Ford Anglia's!!) with the grass black & white📺, until we went out the back door and saw it was green!! 😀
@sentimentaloldme
3 жыл бұрын
A time when a bloke in a pub would tell you he drove his car better after he had 6 or 7 pints of porter.
Lovely video. Surprised the title says Co Kerry. All the places mentioned are in Cork - e.g. Boherbue, Kiskeam and Ballydesmond (though Ballydesmond is right on the Kerry border).
Frank Hall was great , he even interviewed The Beatles
@James_BAlert
3 жыл бұрын
His best interview was the one with Satan👺, Frank Hall's bookies was sorry to hear it as Frank cleaned him out! 😃
Now the Healy-Rae dynasty does all the council work and they rent machinery to the council, making an absolute fortune, Up Kerry...😂😂😂😂
He played a nice tune on that fiddle
Reporter - “How long will that take, about 5 minutes” Maurice - “Well if you go fast it’ll take less” Top lads, the lot of them
It's like they've never been through modern highschool where everyone turns into party poopers for life and shits on any unique charismatic features...
@peterwerner651
3 жыл бұрын
A fun comment. Thanks!
@seamusburke9101
2 жыл бұрын
Did you hear the way Frank even kept the men out of teouble by saying it s now 10 past 1 bwfore Maurice started to play. Great times.
4:46 "how long will that take us to get there 5 mins"...."well if you go fast enough it will take you less" .......priceless
This would make you smile Eire go brath
'If you go fasht enough it will take you less' Love Kerry.
@patrickoconnor6566
9 ай бұрын
Cork
@eddie12454
9 ай бұрын
@@patrickoconnor6566 Close 😊
I think that was filmed in County Cork I remember most of these men and they all came from the Cork side of the border. Frank Hall was very popular around that area there was a Pub in Newmarket called the Newsbeat Inn in his honour'
@irishizan
3 жыл бұрын
somewhere along the Kerry-Cork border anyway. He mentions the road to Ballydesmond. I cant make out the name of crossroads or bridge sounds like"Cishkeen"
@mauriceangland9468
3 жыл бұрын
The Village is called Kiskeam The man who played the Fiddle lived between Kiskeam and Ballydesmond I was born in that neck of the woods some of my relations worked for Cork County Council on those actual roads that are on that video clip
@mariewoods4107
3 жыл бұрын
My grandfather, Ger Murphy was the legend on the cork county council. He is the man with pipe.
@mariewoods4107
3 жыл бұрын
Maurice, this was filmed on the boherbue to kiskeam road. My grandfather, Ger Murphy is the man with the pipe. Great to see this
@mauriceangland9468
3 жыл бұрын
@@mariewoods4107 I Partly guessed I went to Foyle NS with the Young chap Driving the Tractor who was wearing the Cap with the flaps
Great bit of all round hurling
Very Good craic!
The way Frank frustratedly gives your man a few taps at 0:37
@James_BAlert
3 жыл бұрын
Frank was coming onto him, he was suave, he knew all the pick up techniques! 😀 In emergencies he would break out the big legion of Mary medallion🏅, put it on & open up his shirt to expose his hairy chest, County council workers couldn't resist him!! 😜
Six men all day to fill a couple of holes with lots of tea-breaks and sitting around. 'Make it lasht' was the motto.
@seamusburke9101
2 жыл бұрын
If you were driving a lorry they'd all stop work when you were passing just to have a look. They'd stand with the shovel leaning on their chest. We used to call it breast feeding the shovel.
Lovely tune.
A whole other world back then.
If u go faster it will take ya less..some codgers
Just for the record it's ''Cup O' Tae'' 🤣
Love it!
Ah, the '70s and '80s - 'loose chippings' signs were everywhere, cracking windscreens, and stripping the paint off the front of the car. The tractor is a Fordson Major, I can tell by the sound of the engine ticking over and the shape of the rear lights. The front of it is not view, if it was I could tell if it was a Major or Super Major. The car Frank Hall arrived in was an Opel Manta. A friend of my parents worked in RTE radio at that time and he also drove an Opel Record. I wonder did RTE have a fleet of them back then.
@seamusburke9101
3 жыл бұрын
Im almost sure its a Super Major, it has the long badge on the side of the bonnet.
@seamusburke9101
3 жыл бұрын
That wasnt a Rekord it was an A series Manta. Four headlamps and no top rail on the door.
@seamusburke9101
3 жыл бұрын
Did you spot the Anglia 1200 super.
@dellhell8842
3 жыл бұрын
@@seamusburke9101 Forgot about the Anglia!
@dellhell8842
3 жыл бұрын
@@seamusburke9101 Thanks for the correction. I see the door now in the Opel. Bit of a dent in it too I think.
I remember the little huts they used, they had an orange top on them
@seamusburke9101
2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, they were made by Presco. It was on a plate above the door.
Frank Hall is 43 years old here.
Id be really interested to know what was wrong with the 5 people who gave this a thumbs down.
@robkunkel8833
3 жыл бұрын
Don’t think about thumbs down.A simple push of a button by people who hate. They don’t need reasons. They cannot comment. No minds are present. They are in a deluded group of people who need nothing but hate and someone to follow.
@seamusburke9101
3 жыл бұрын
@@robkunkel8833 you're right Rob, two more joined in since I made the comment.
@SuperMikado282
3 жыл бұрын
@@robkunkel8833 Well said Sir
@BrayTube
3 жыл бұрын
There's 15 thumbs down now, and I think that's probably every surviving member of the Pothole Preservation Society.
was the fiddle anywhere near in tune?
@robwilde855
3 жыл бұрын
They had different priorities...
@banjodeano2202
3 жыл бұрын
@@robwilde855 yeah i understand what you mean, you are correct sir
@seamusburke9101
2 жыл бұрын
Who cares!
It starts out as like the original pilot for cowboy builders
You do still see the loose chippings sign.
I lost a few windscreens to "chippings" on Cork roads back in the 1970s.
Fresh like. I'll be coming back.
The roads haven’t changed at all.
The boys having crack!
I was hoping to see them “ Breast Feeding” the shovels lol. Council workers were famous for that.
Ah the little folk.
The lost pot hole machine paid for by the EU in the 80s to fix the roads in kerry, and locked safely away in a council shed never to be used... comes to mind....
@goodgod77
16 күн бұрын
they had a pot hole machine in the 00s pulled behind a lorry
❤️
When Ireland, was Ireland...☘️💚☘️
LOL LOL This was a real display of TRUE IRISH BLARNEY!!! LOL LOL
That’s lovely
When the world was in black and white . ☺
He is murdering that poor 🎻
Came away more confused than I was at first.
@seamusburke9101
2 жыл бұрын
Understandable.
And council's have been bodging road repairs ever since !!
This was the lovely Irish culture we grew up with. How I hate the way our country has been utterly destroyed.
still waiting on them to make it down to ballydesmond 😂
When did Irish TV switch over to colour? In my part of Canada it was in the mid 60s but at my parents farm it was closer to the mid 80s.
@edmondfinucane5506
3 жыл бұрын
90s
@niallcampion78
3 жыл бұрын
It was all colour when I was growing up in the 80’s. So it changed well before that.
@johnnyfeen1347
3 жыл бұрын
A few experimental colour broadcasts from 1970, mainly major sporting events but it was still largely black and white up to about 74. Last B&W broadcasts by RTE in early 76. A lot of people still had black and white TVs into the 80s.
@disprogreavette8545
3 жыл бұрын
@@johnnyfeen1347 thanks Johnny. We had a black and white T.V well into the 80s.
@mickosullivan3827
3 жыл бұрын
Didn't matter about colour in our house the only time we watched TV was for the Angelus and the News.
If you go fast enough it will take you less - ha ha
they were all probably shittin it cause of the big camera there filming them haha theyd never seen the like before in kerry
@seamusburke9101
Жыл бұрын
They didn't look like they were shittin it to me. Looked like they hadn't a care in the world.
IF YOU. WENT FASTER. IT WOULD TAKE YOU LESS (. Great, . Not. As Green as they are cabbage Lookin)
They had nothing elce great folks
So is the fella moaning that there not rolling the chippings into tar?
Ray Darcy, and have you any dead or dying relatives, Jenny can play the Piano, You know I played junior rugby for 2 years...Tubirty have you read Shaw or Keats?
did he call the tea a "cup of cha?" like the hindi Chai?
2:30 some bird
East kerry.
These old guy got no clue what they doing 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Loose chippings, Angela car pass, connected tarring.!
This is just northern Irish propaganda.... just kidding it’s amazing 😍
@scoyle1750
3 жыл бұрын
Forgein idiot
@JJmetaphysics
3 жыл бұрын
@@scoyle1750 Come on it made ya laugh
Go hana Maith ar fad.
I feel I didn't learn anything...
@joekavanagh8997
3 жыл бұрын
You should have learned this Mattino: That there was a time when people talked to each other ,even on television ,just for the pure act of partaking in human interaction. Psychiatric drugs and illegal drugs were not needed because of this. People were happier and in tune with themselves and the nature that surrounded them . I'm sure we have much to learn from the people portrayed and indeed from the people that lived in the Middle Ages even. We have progressed scientifically but I'm convinced we have lost part of what it means to be human. I think we have not reached the bottom yet so prepare yourself for The coming days!!
@seamusburke9101
3 жыл бұрын
@@joekavanagh8997 well said Joe. Top comment.
@joekavanagh8997
3 жыл бұрын
@@seamusburke9101 Thank you ,Seamus,It's good to know that there are people still out there who are in tune with what it means to be a human being.Its got very clinical especially since Facebook etc . We are on a downward trajectory and we have a while to go before we hit bottom. Like my mother ( a devout Kerrywoman )said before she passed ,"I don't envy the young anymore!"
@adreenryan2901
3 жыл бұрын
@@joekavanagh8997 that exactly what my mother said as well when we talked about life she said nobody stops to talk anymore and she felt sorry for the youth of today
@joekavanagh8997
3 жыл бұрын
@@adreenryan2901 yes, the older generations in Ireland may not have had the education due to their adverse circumstances but they had common sense and common sense has now become uncommon on both sides of the Atlantic.