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It was a brave
move to establish a business in Feakle, Co. Clare, when Michael and Anne
Fitzgerald opened a grocery, bar and tailors in the town in the 1890s.
At that time, the land war was at its height in Co. Clare.
Falling prices for agricultural produce meant tenants were unable to pay their
rents. Seven miles away, the infamous Bodyke evictions had taken place in 1887,
when 28 families were forcibly ejected from their homes. Publicity surrounding
the evictions, which took nearly three weeks to complete, led the British
government to tackle rack rents and to introduce measures that would give Irish
peasant farmers ownership of their lands.
The Land League urged peaceful
means of protest during the Bodyke campaign, but many of the dispossessed
peasantry took the law into their own hands and joined a secret agrarian
society, headed by the mysterious Captain Moonlight, to attack landlords'
property, particularly their livestock. These attacks, known locally as
"moonlighting", in turn prompted reprisals, creating a spiral of
violence.
In these troubled times, the Fitzgeralds were fortunate to
remain in business. One reason they might have survived was Michael's physical
stature: at 6 feet 6 inches in height, he would have been a giant of a man at a
time when many of the local population would have been malnourished.
The couple had three children, but their two sons, like their
father, died of arthritic fever and in 1927 the pub was inherited by their
daughter, Bridget. During her time as licensee, the pub comprised a small bar, a
snug across the hallway from the bar and a kitchen which had a serving hatch
connected to the pub. And though she wasn't a tailor like her father, she
continued the drapery business, selling ready-made suit lengths.
In 1932,
Bridget married Michael Bohan, but she remained the licensee because of
Michael's job. He was a policeman, one of the first 1,200 recruits to join the
Garda Síochána when it was founded in February 1922. The licensing laws, which
remain in force today, forbade Garda Bohan from being on the premises while on
duty. As a result, once he married, Michael was transferred from Feakle to
Ennis. For the next 22 years, until his retirement in 1954, Garda Bohan lived
permanently in Ennis, cycling the 18 miles home once a month to spend the night
with his wife and family.
These visits home usually coincided with the village's monthly
fair when cattle and sheep were sold by local farmers, says the current
licensee, Seamus Bohan, son of Michael and Bridget. He says his father's
presence was often needed. "Farmers, if they sold cattle, would have a few
drinks, but their capacity for drink would have been small, as their food intake
wouldn't have been great and they wouldn't have been used to consuming alcohol,"
he says. "As a result they would get drunk very easily and as a follow-up,
invariably fights would take place, especially with regards to civil war
politics, particularly as de Valera was the local TD."
Following Michael's retirement at the age of 52, he and Bridget
ran the pub together until Michael died in 1972, when Seamus became more
directly involved in running the business. Following his mother's death in 1980,
he became licensee.
Seamus demolished the old bar, snug and kitchen in 1981,
replacing them with a larger, more modern, building, able to accommodate 50
people, but decorated in an "old world" style, furnished with rope chairs and an
open fireplace. In 1990, he added a function room that can accommodate up to 250
people and which is one of the main venues during Feakle's Traditional Music
Weekend, which is held on the weekend following the August Bank
Holiday.
According to Seamus, the pub did not have draught Guinness until
the 1970s. Before then, the black stuff was bought from wholesale bottling
companies:
Hassett's in Ennis or Twoomey's or O'Byrne's who were based in
Limerick.
Limerick's Guinness arrived from Dublin by barge via the Grand
Canal and the Shannon. Seamus says: "An old boatman, Dinny Weir, told me it was
very pleasant work: they had a way of loosening the hoops on the barrels and
getting at the stout inside during the journey. After they had their sup, they
would tighten up the hoops again and no one knew the barrels had been tampered
with. On another occasion, during a storm, one of the barges broke free and
ended up running aground in Whitegate where the locals had a week of free
drink."
Inside Bohan's, it is obvious that this is a strong GAA pub,
with photographs of the local Feakle hurling team dating back to 1910 and
portraits of the All-Ireland winning teams of 1914 and 1932. Pride of place is
given to a hurley that has been autographed by those who served on the Clare
team between 1973 and 1980, when it was managed by Seamus's brother, Fr Harry
Bohan, who has also been a major force in Irish rural
redevelopment.
Extracts from 'The Story of the Irish Pub' by Cian Molloy,
supplied with permission of the Liffey Press. For more information on the book
check the Liffey Press
website.
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