Showing posts with label The Gathering 2013. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Gathering 2013. Show all posts

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

Monday, 23 September 2013

AUTUMN GATHERING... FOR WOMEN WRITERS, COOLE PARK...




Coole Park, once the home of Lady Augusta Gregory, 
is celebrating The Gathering at the annual 
Autumn Gathering for Women Writers this Oct 3-7th.


The official genealogist of Ireland Reaching Out will be on hand to give helpful tips and advice for those tracing their roots.

 Coole Park has a long history of association with literature...

"At sudden thunder of the mounting swan
I turned about and looked
where branches break
The glittering reaches of the flooded lake."

W.B.Yeats 'Coole Park & Ballylee', 1931

http://www.coolepark.ie/nature/index.html

Just some of the wonders of Coole Park...

                                                      Autograph Tree At Coole ParkAutograph Tree At Coole Park



Head and shoulders profile of a dignified older woman with hair swept back and a slightly prominent nose. Underneath is the signature "Augusta Gregory".
Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory (15 March 1852 – 22 May 1932), born Isabella Augusta Persse, was an Irish dramatist, folklorist and theatre manager. With William Butler Yeats and Edward Martyn, she co-founded the Irish Literary Theatre and the Abbey Theatre, and wrote numerous short works for both companies. Lady Gregory produced a number of books of retellings of stories taken from Irish mythology. Born into a class that identified closely with British rule, her conversion to cultural nationalism, as evidenced by her writings, was emblematic of many of the political struggles to occur in Ireland during her lifetime.
Lady Gregory is mainly remembered for her work behind the Irish Literary Revival. Her home at Coole Park, County Galway, served as an important meeting place for leading Revival figures, and her early work as a member of the board of the Abbey was at least as important for the theatre's development as her creative writings. Lady Gregory's motto was taken from Aristotle: "To think like a wise man, but to express oneself like the common people."[1]




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augusta,_Lady_Gregory

Thursday, 31 January 2013

IRELAND REACHING OUT - JANUARY NEWSLETTER -----PLEASE PASS ON






Vol 2 Issue 1 January 2013


Welcome to our first 2013 newsletter featuring all the latest news on Ireland XO!

In this issue:

  • Ireland XO is welcomed to Virginia and DC by new volunteers
  • Animator Training and Information Day takes place in Loughrea
  • Lady writers are invited back to Gort! 
  • See our List of New Staff, Parish Administrators & International Volunteers
  • Check out our Website!
Please spread the word about the programme by sending this newsletter on to others whom you think may be interested so they can keep up-to-date with Ireland XO developments.

Best regards
Ireland XO Team


Ireland Reaching Out - News and Events
Washington DC Ireland XO volunteers hosts welcome reception for Henry Healy
Henry Healy from Ireland XO HQ attended a welcome reception by the Virginia Ireland XO volunteers this week.  Don Drach & Pat Reilly two Ireland XO volunteers arranged a meeting for interested parties to come and 

assist in promoting and rolling out our national diaspora project in DC & Virginia! The event was held in James Hobans Bar in Dupont Circle in DC. The Irish Embassy in the US was also represented by Deirdre Burke. The volunteers are organising community events and contacting local genealogy societies and Irish-American organistions who are interested in researching their place of origin.  If you would like to volunteer in your area, please contact us by email here.

Animator session in Galway sets the actions for 2013 and beyond!
Building on the success of last two years the Ireland XO programme had a training and information day event in the Loughrea Spa & Hotel last Wednesday, Jan 16th with special guest: David McWilliams. The day consisted of a short review of the Ireland XO programme and welcoming and training the new Ireland XO animators. Much progress has been made in the last 2 years. To round off the day's proceedings, David McWilliams addressed the meeting with some reflections on the programmes progress and some lighter comments on the Irish economy. Also attending the meeting were representatives from parish communities across Ireland, including state agencies, LEADER representatives, Councilor's, newly appointed animators for the Ireland XO programme, Cultural Heritage and Tourism Consultant's, Shannon development, Western development Commission, Clan connections, Heritage groups, Galway Rural Development, representatives from County Councils who have expressed interest in launching Ireland XO in their areas. Parishes from the counties of Mayo, Carlow, Kerry, Limerick and Donegal among other counties were well represented. Anyone with an interest in their community, its history, tourism, business or genealogy, is encouraged to get involved and learn more about the programme. 

Photo 1: Ireland Reaching Out Team. Back row: (l to r) Rory Shaughnessy, John Joe Conwell and Henry Healy.  Front Row: (l to r) Laura Phelan, Paula Kennedy, David McWilliams, Cynthia O Connor and Mary Shaughnessy

Photo 2: Animators for IrelandXO. Back Row: (l to r) Patrick Killeen, North Tipperary, Siobhan King, Shannon Development and Suzanne Rowley, Limerick.  Front Row: (l to r) Grace Fox, Cork South and East, Dolores O Shea, Offaly, David McWilliams, Guest Speaker, Bernadette Quinlan, North Tipperary and Amanda Slattery, Ballyhoura.

Lady writers are invited back to Gort in 2013!
Gort, Coole Park and Kiltartan Gregory Museum will host a Lady Writers event from 3rd - 7th October 2013. Each year since 1995  an Autumn Gathering has been held in Coole Park, Gort  to honour the memory of Lady Augusta Gregory (1852-1932). The cream of world speakers have contributed to the continued success of the weekend.   Lady Gregory  was  one of the co-founders of the Abbey Theatre for which she wrote many plays. She contributed enormously to the Irish Literary Renaissance  and to the collecting of folklore  in South Galway. She  fostered the genius of W.B.Yeats . Poets, artists, playwrights  and writers of every genre found a welcome in Coole Park. Since it opened officially in 1996, the Kiltartan Gregory Museum has welcomed thousands of visitors, many of whom discovered their roots in South Galway. The members of the Kiltartan Gregory Cultural Society have gained wide experience in meeting and greeting people from all over the world. They have  gained national and international recognition  in the Ireland Reaching Out  programme for the past two years.
The Directors of the  Autumn Gathering at Coole  and the Kiltartan Gregory Cultural Society have combined this year  to invite women writers worldwide, but  particularly those of Irish descent, to a weekend in South  Galway. A large database is being prepared by the two groups who already have contacts all over the globe. In fact, the weekend is not confined to the ladies.  Men will also get a cead mile failte! 
A programme is being finalised which will be of interests to poets, novelists, playwrights, short story writers and indeed writers of all genres.  The official genealogist of Ireland Reaching Out has kindly agreed  to attend the Gathering and give guidelines to those searching for their Irish roots. Local musical and drama groups will showcase their talent.  Tours will also take place, with special emphasis on the Lady Gregory Yeats Trail, the website of which is about to be seen online.For further information, please contact Rena McAllen via email here  or +353 (0) 86 8252164.

New Website is now live! Please check it out
We are working on a new and improved website over the next 12 months. A new look and feel to the site (phase one) is now available. Please bear with us while we are continuing to work on this in phase two and three which will improve the functionality of the site. The new site looks great and we are very excited to have an improved look and feel to the whole site. We have the same website address at www.irelandxo.com. Click to take a look now! Feel free to send us feedback here!

New Staff in uur HQ Offices!
As we progress and grow, we have new staff to assist with the National Roll out of Ireland Reaching Out!  Welcome to Josephine Harrison, Sharon O'Neill and Emma Carthy this month.  Both Josephine and Sharon are working hard on the website and developing parish profiles and pages while Emma joins the Genealogy team to assist in queries and creating resources. 

New Parish Administrators 
We have new parish administrators this month as well.  Make sure your civil parish has a profile on our website here. If you want to volunteer to be a parish administrator for your own parish or a number of parishes please reply to this email here

Pat O'Halloran in St Marys, Meath
Mary O'Grady in Knockainey, Limerick
Marie Costello in Moore, Roscommon
Oliver Murphy in Toomore, Mayo
Eddie Cantwell in Clonea, Waterford
Eddie Cantwell in Kilgobnet, Waterford
Karl Sachartschuk in Knockainey, Limerick
Caroline Kilker in Kilmore, Mayo
Jim Crabtree in Camus, Tyrone
Gerry Rossiter in Killimor-Bullogue, Galway
Ann Barrett in Macroom, Cork
Christine Flood in Swords, Dublin
Ann Carroll  in Clonalvy, Meath
Linda Kearney in Bray, Wicklow
Maura Rhatigan in Belclare, Galway
Beatrice Ammon in County Mayo
Andrea in Finglas, Dublin
Ann Carroll Naul Dublin
Andrea St Pauls Dublin
Patricia McInerney Ennis Clare
Maureen Neff Thornton Prior  Kerry
James Mcnamara Feakle Clare
Paul Geary County Galway, Leitrim, Sligo and Roscommon
Bernie O'Neil Kilmihil  Clare
New International Volunteers
We have new volunteers overseas who are working at promoting Ireland Reaching Out.  We are always recruiting people to assist us in promoting Ireland XO, so if you are in the USA, UK, Australia, Canada etc please assist us. If you are interested in volunteering from abroad please contact us here.

Bernadette Zappal - Florida - USA
Mary Ellen Franks-Greer - Missouri - USA
Patrick Reilly - Washington DC - USA
Ed O Connor - MA - USA
Bill Prendergast - Oregon - USA
Siobhan O Neill - Australia
Margaret Ann Donnelly - USA - Michigan
Elizabeth Khan - USA - New Jersey
Mary Cooper - British Columbia - Canada
Angela McGrath - Saskatchewan - Canada
Kerr Mitzi - California - USA

Donate to Ireland Reaching Out!
We are a not for profit organisation relying on sponsorship and donations from individuals and businesses all around the world. Your donations will be invaluable to the success and future of the programme at a truly national and global scale. This FREE service will utilise funds to spread the word about Ireland Reaching Out, provide resources and training and manage the large network of volunteers whose purpose is to assist all diaspora in the search for their ancestral parish.


Promote Ireland Reaching Out in your area!We are delighted to make available brochures and accompanying posters to market the Ireland Reaching Out programme to parish communities in Ireland and the Irish diaspora around the world. If you would like pdf copies please email us here

The Gathering 2013 - Get involved!
Ireland Reaching Out is partnering with the "The Gathering Ireland 2013" inviting anyone with a connection to Ireland to come and visit.  Have a look at the Gathering website and post your events online here




Our mailing address is:
Ireland Reaching Out
Michael Cusack House
25, Dunkellin Street
Loughrea, Co. Galway -
Ireland

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Monday, 24 September 2012

" GENEALOGY SECTOR MUST UNWIND ITS HISTORICALLY TWISTED ROOTS "



The Irish Times - Monday, September 24, 2012

BUSINESS OPINION: A SEEMINGLY logical move by the National Library to look for a partner to digitise its collections may well lift the lid on the mess that is the Irish "roots" business.
On the face of it, the National Library is not up to anything particularly subversive. Like every other State institution, it is strapped for cash and having to think of creative ways to fulfil its mandate.
But the decision to try and capitalise on the wealth of genealogical data in its archives is likely to kick over a hornets' nest of vested interests and public service fiefdoms that have combined to prevent any co-ordinated exploitation of the State genealogical records to drive tourism and revenue.
A case in point is The Gathering 2013, one of the Government's "big ideas" to boost tourism. According to its own website, "Over 70 million people worldwide claim Irish ancestry. The Gathering Ireland 2013 provides the perfect excuse to reach out to those who have moved away, their relatives, friends and descendants, and invite them home." You would expect such big enterprise to be supported by a slick online genealogical platform, But go to the "Tracing your roots" link at the bottom of the page and you are provided with links to no fewer than eight disparate bodies – including the National Library – that are in the roots game to some extent or the other. By moving to digitise its collections – including the all-important parish records – it is clearly moving to become primus inter pares in this muddle through bringing in a top-notch partner.
Any organisation seriously considering a joint venture with the National Library will zone in on the genealogical records. The early favourite, Scottish group Brightsolid, is first and foremost a genealogy business.
The hope is that the National Library will be able to get it – or whoever else chooses – to digitise the rest of its collection. This is equally important in the national context but far less commercially valuable. But it can expect a pretty rough ride.
The record books of the Irish churches are the mother lode for Irish genealogy research as they are the only reliable records of births, deaths and marriages in the period up to the Civil War, when the national archive was destroyed. They are in theory the property of the various bishops – Catholic and Church of Ireland – but the National Library has microfiche copies, which it owns and which will no doubt form the heart of any deal it does with a third party. Then there is the Irish Family History Foundation, which operates a commercial site ( RootsIreland.ie) and is led by Fianna Fáil Senator and putative presidential candidate Labhrás Ó Murchú. It has its own version of the parish records database – copied by hand from the National Library microfiche apparently.
A somewhat opaque organisation, it is described on its website as "a company limited by guarantee with no share capital and no distribution of profits. As such it is a voluntary organisation made up of local genealogy centres, the majority of which are legally established on the same basis. It is governed by its articles and memorandum of association, which set out how it operates and limits its membership to 35 local centres with specified catchment areas."
The beneficiaries of its activities would appear then to be the promoters of the various local genealogy centres, many of which are subvented by county councils and other State bodies. They are certainly a powerful bunch as they appear to have been able to stymy any efforts by the Government to control the exploitation of this State asset.
The Government's main investment in this area is IrishGenealogy.ie, run by the Department of Arts, Heritage and the Gaeltacht. However, it gets only equal billing with RootsIreland.ieon The Gathering website. The reason being presumably because it only offers access to the Catholic parish records of Cork and Ross, Dublin and Kerry. (It also has the Church of Ireland records for Dublin, Carlow and Kerry.) RootsIreland seems to have the rest.
The National Library's decision to get into the "roots" game raises the prospect of real competition for the Irish Family History Foundation. It also creates a situation where one arm of the State ( IrishGenealogy.ie) will be competing (albeit half-heartedly) with another (the National Library), while both compete with the peculiar beast that is the Irish Family History Foundation.
It is a mess and needs to be sorted out for a number of reasons, the first being that if the Government thinks it is good idea to commercialise the National Library collection in order to preserve it digitally, then it had better ensure that any potential partner is encouraged.
The second reason is that if the Government is serious about using genealogy to drive tourism, then it had better get serious about genealogy.