Posted on 06/13/2006 10:40:14 AM PDT by Irish_Thatcherite
Dozens of mourners queued today to pay their respects to former Taoiseach Charles Haughey within minutes of a book of condolence being opened in the heart of his old constituency.
Outside. Workers scrambled to repaint railings and touch up the flagpole where the Tricolour flew at half-mast at Our Lady of Consolation Church in Donnycarney, north Dublin.
This is where the one-time TD for the area will lie in state before being buried on Friday.
Joe Mirolo, 73, from nearby Clontarf was a classmate of Mr Haugheys at St Josephs in Fairview. We used to meet every year at the past pupils annual dinner. This was the first year he didnt come.
Everybody held him in tremendously high respect. The people in this parish of Donnycarney he did a tremendous amount of work for them.
He was unique. I can find no fault with the man whatever he did. He was a man of the people.
Mr Mirolo said his former school friend was a man of foresight and vision. The people of north County Dublin will miss him, he said.
Mr Haugheys remains were removed from his family home at Abbeville, Kinsealy, at around 1.45pm today. They will be taken to the church on Thursday.
Across the way, gardener Joe Walsh, 34, of Donnycarney tended to the lawns of one of Mr Haughey's neighbours.
He recalled, as a child, meeting the former Fianna Fáil TD at the opening of the Rockfield Park, near where he grew up a couple of decades before.
I was about 10 or 12 at the time. He was Taoiseach. I asked him did he have a fiver on him, he said he didnt carry money he probably didnt need to, laughed Mr Walsh.
Around here he is Lord Haughey. Hell be well remembered for what he did for the people of North County Dublin.
My father was a builder and all the work that Mr Haughey brought this way put bread on our table.
No one here cares what he was taking. At the end of the day werent they all doing it. At least he gave something back.
Father Peter Finnerty, Parish Priest of Our Lady of Consolation, where the funeral Mass will be held, said the doors of the church would be open for local people to attend.
Expecting several thousand mourners at the church he said: I would say it would hold up to nearly 2,000 and I would say we are certain to fill it.
Can I say now to Mrs Haughey, and Eimear, Connor and Ciaran and Sean, we will give him a good send off here and give him a good Christian burial.
Chief celebrant will be Mr Haugheys brother Fr Owen Haughey and the burial will take place in St Fintans Cemetery overlooking the sea in Sutton.
This is in Donnycarney Parish and to anyone in Donnycarney they are most welcome to come along, it is your parish church.
Jim McGuirk, 60, an exhibition organiser from Rathfarnham, Dublin, made the journey across the city to pay his respects. He was a genuine man, he said. I was friendly with him since the 60s. I didnt find that austere side to him at all. He helped me out on a number of occasions. I would go and visit him at his home in Kinsealy.
Mr McGuirk remembered the former Taoiseach as a warm, friendly man who always helped people out. He always remembered people when you think of the thousands of people he met, he always remembered everybody.
I hope his death will revitalise peoples memories of all the good he brought to Ireland through his leadership and vision. Historians giving a balanced view will show that the tribunal side of his life was very small.
Two garda officers protected the entrance to the Abbeville estate, questioning visitors dropping off supplies or flowers, before allowing them to proceed down the long leafy avenue.
At the gateway, a solitary bouquet of flowers forlornly sat across from a box of empty coffee cups and empty sandwich wrappers discarded by the waiting media.
A middle-aged woman had stopped off in a car earlier to leave the flowers before rushing off again. Along the busy road in one of the few remaining rural areas of Dublin gardaí had placed bright yellow traffic cones to prevent cars from parking outside the grounds of the house.
What's NicknamedBob's? I'd be interested in taking a look at another FReeper's work! You can FReepmail me so we don't end up hijacking the thread...
That can't be good. I was hoping for a regime change in Libya...
Hijack it all you want - it's only Charley Haughey!! ;)
I_T won't mind - he's Undead, like me. (And he's right, Haughey wasn't cute when he was younger, either, but he's not as awful as Clintoon, at least in a photo.)
I'll FReepmail you about NicknamedBob's novel :-).
Thanks!
That one of her better pictures...
He's better looking than Bubba??
I think so, but no accounting for taste.
True!!
Say what you will about him, but he made an impression! Personally a very corrupt individual, political fortunes mixed. He did, finally, bring in the necessary economic reforms in the late 80s, and he did help lay the groundwork for progress in the six counties, two giant issues in Irish political life. However, the planning and corruption scandals and so on are a huge black mark. He did give us the word GUBU though!
He was a semi dictator, he would have overthrown Irish democracy if he got a chance.
Anyway, I believe it was Garrett Fitzgerald who start the ecomonic reforms when he privatised Irish Sugar.
All Haughey done was add entry barriers into the market, remember Cablelink and the TV deflector controversy?
Not to mention he was able to intimidate politicians with his 'open ballot' strategy.. amongst other things...
That is strange... seeing as he supplied them with arms...
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