BRAY IS ……..

Bray is a beautiful pale blue sky, its sunrise shimmering across the water

White cotton wool clouds moving slowly on a summers’ morning

It fills its lungs with freshness, salt air and lingering seaweed

It offers tranquillity, respite from the hustle and bustle of everyday life

 

If it were a car, it would be an old vintage, full of charm and old-world elegance

People would stop to look, admiring its solid beauty, life at a slower pace

But like an old deck chair, worn and faded by the sun, it has seen better days

 

It’s like an old oak tree, rooted deep in history, branches spreading out, pushing out

It’s the big bands and traditions of yesterday, reaching for the trends of today

It has its secrets, past and present, good and bad

Cloaked in coats of bygone glory and present day survival

Josephine Nolan

Good Neighbours

In 1978 we moved to Bray and bought a small terraced house in Ardee Street.  The original house had 3 rooms and a scullery with a back yard the size of the house itself.  Ardee Street was bleak in some ways, with no trees to offset the greyness .  Opposite our house was a coal yard and further down, standing back from the road, was Burna Fireplaces, which is still there.  They were mostly single storey terraced houses, with a few two storey houses at the top and bottom of the road.

Its saving grace was the People’s Park, stretching the length of the Dargle Road, from the Bridge at Castle Street (the town end) to Murphy’s Pub at far other.  It had been left to the people of Little Bray by the Brabazon family. The plaque still remains in the park. It is lined with beautiful old trees including Oak and Horse Chestnut, with an amazing view of the Sugar Loaf Mountains at the Murphy Pub end.

Its beauty is dazzling on a bright Spring day, and also in the Autumn, as the leaves turn every shade of brown and orange, leaving a carpet of multicoloured leaves on the path.  It has a children’s playground, changing rooms to facilitate the football matches played at weekends, along with various activities during the summer, like the dog show. Two of the local residents planted daffodil bulbs the length of the park, which spring up every year.  Years ago there were a multitude of flowers in the park, attended by a Park Keeper who lived in a large Tudor-style house on the grounds. It was demolished about 20 years ago when it fell into disrepair. Young and old alike enjoy this treasure in Little Bray.

Continue reading

Our Town

Once like a diamond on the coast

That people flocked to see,

Smart shops and buildings she could boast,

She showed them off with glee

 

But things were left to slip and slide,

They didn’t feel the breeze,

How could they not have seen the tide

Would bring her to her knees?

 

We love this town, we need it back,

We yearn for things to change,

We need the beauty, not the tack,

To make her shine again

 

We have to fight before she’s lost,

We have to make them see

She’ll loose her spirit – at what cost

To her, to you and me?

 

She’s like a princess in a dream,

Her skirt beneath the shore,

She cannot wait for miracles

Or she will be no more

 

Josephine Nolan

Surviving the Flood

In 1986 Little Bray was hit by Hurricane Charlie.  Myself and my three children, two daughters aged nine and eleven, and my six year old son, were enjoying a normal day. Our house was one of a single storey terrace.  Towards evening, a neighbour’s son, Jimmy, called to the door.  “You’d better lift carpets and anything you can up off the floor.  The river is very high.  Block the door with whatever you have”.

 

I thanked him, and proceeded to jam the bottom of the front door with towels.  There wasn’t a lot I could lift except chairs and the television.  The children went to bed and I settled down for the evening. The river broke is banks at around ten pm. I went to the children’s bedroom.  Our first sign that something was happening, was when our cat high-tailed it to the back bedroom. Water started to seep through the house. “You’d better get dressed” I told them, “and put on your coats”.  The girls were in bunk beds, and my son was in his bed by the window.  They got their clothes on and we waited. We were all sitting on the top bunk, along with the cat. I thought we might have to climb onto the extension roof.  The window was jammed, and I might have to break it. It was dark.  The water outside could be higher.

 

Suddenly, there was a bang and the water was already in the back bedroom, rising fast. Outside we could hear the wind roaring.  As we waited, a small piece of paper floated across the water.  It was like something torn from a school book or one of the children’s books.  On it were the words “the lady from the underwater city will look after you”.  “Don’t worry kids, Our Lady will look after us” I said, “but we’d better move up to the front room”.  The ceiling in the front of the house was higher. I carried Dylan, as myself and the girls waded through the water, one carrying the cat. “Frisky is digging his claws into my arm” Andrea said.  By this time, the water was almost up to my waist. It had come in slowly to begin with, and then just gushed in pushing the towels out of its path.  We all sat on a cupboard by the front window. The cat sprang to a ledge higher up.  At some stage the lights went out and we sat in the darkness.

 

We waited through the night.  At one stage, as it got lighter, we laughed as a few cartons of yogurt floated from the kitchen and went straight up the chimney.  The force of the water had opened the fridge door.  I kept watching the bricks on the fireplace, gauging the height of the water. By daybreak, it had begun to recede. It was a very long night.  By around nine o’clock the next morning, all that was left was thick watery muck.

 

I was told the next day the Civil Defence had brought a boat down to evacuate residents. We didn’t hear them.  I bought Wellingtons for the children. The nuns at Ravenswell had set up mattresses for those evacuated.

 

Everything had been destroyed, electrical equipment, carpets, and all my photographs including wedding photos. My eldest daughter’s new school books for her first year in Loretto had been ruined.  In the weeks that followed, we stayed with the children’s grandparents who lived on the Vevay Road.  The girls went to school while friends helped me disinfect and sweep though the house several times, piling furniture outside for the Council to take away. Thankfully the sun shone on the muck and the destruction.

 

Josephine Nolan

Mamuska Night

On the 24th of October2014, my fellow writers and I had a wonderful opportunity to read some pieces we had written in a creative writing workshop, facilitated by our lovely teacher Shirley. This time we took part during the “Mamuska Night” at the Mermaid Arts Center, Bray. The cinema was transformed to look like a cabaret, with tables, candles in the centre, and chairs.  A jazz band played live during the breaks. It was very entertaining and sometimes unusual.   The programme included exotic dancers and mime artists. Our group had a table reserved at the front.  When it was our turn, Pat read first, then Elis, then Ann and finally myself.  Here are some photographs taken by John O’Sullivan.

 

 

 

Mamuska Line-Up!!!!

Co-Hosts – Nick Bryson, Cindy Cummings

Houseband- Miles O’Bog Ensemble

Deirdre Griffin – Contemporary solo
Nadia Gativa – Tribal fusion/contemporary solo
Antje O’Toole – Performance concept contemporary solo

K.E.R.L./Rachel Sheil – Hip-Hop/Street (quartet)
Aleksandra Holesz – Contemporary solo
Ann-Marie Pharaon – Nubian (Egyptian) solo
Little Bray Writer Group – Poems

Liadain Herriott – Contemporary solo
Ciara McKeon – Performance Art solo
Tambourines- Traditional Italian music and dance from Puglia/Heel of Italy

Exhibition shows Bray through creative eyes – Bray People

Click the link below for news paper article

http://www.independent.ie/regionals/braypeople/entertainment/exhibition-shows-bray-through-creative-eyes-30486804.html

Click the link below for Radio Interview

http://youtu.be/Ry1K0d3k9F0

‘Bray Now and Then: Building Community Expression through Creative Writing’ is a poster exhibition at Signal Arts Centre by writers from Little Bray Family Resource and Development Centre opening on Tuesday, September 2.

‘Bray Now and Then: Building Community Expression through Creative Writing’ is a poster exhibition at Signal Arts Centre by writers from Little Bray Family Resource and Development Centre opening on Tuesday, September 2.

The group of nine, all of whom are resident in Bray, has had a six-month residency to explore, discuss and write in a creative response to their Bray environment. The work includes a wide variety of artistic responses to aspects of the town and its environs: short stories, poems, memories and flights of imagination.

All of the pieces are short and designed to be read in large poster format. On launch night, Thursday, September 4, a selection of pieces will be read by participants. All are welcome to the launch night which runs between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.

Bray-based writer, Shirley McClure, who co-ordinated the project, said: ‘We have all learned a lot about Bray in the process of researching and discussing this venture. We want to promote the idea that literature and culture are for all people, along with the idea that literature and art are changing forms, no longer just in books or art galleries.’

‘Bray Now and Then: Community Expression through Creative Writing’ has been supported by IPB Insurance through the IPB Youth and Community Fund and by Bray Credit Union and Little Bray Family Resource and Development Centre.

Exhibition Order of readings

Exhibition Opening Order of readings

  1. Bray is.. (group)
  2. Maria: Early Morning..
  3. Elis: My Twin Town
  4. Nicola: St Peter’s School
  5. Anne: Corpus Christi
  6. Pat: Bray as it was & now
  7. Caroline: Petrified
  8. Jo: Our Town
  9. Patricia: A Victoria Plum
  10. Barbara: My Dad’s Garden

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (1)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (2)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (3)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (4)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (5)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (6)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (7)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (8)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (9)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (10)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (11)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (12)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (13)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (14)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (15)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (16)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (17)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (18)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (19)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (20)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (21)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (22)

Exhibition Night 4 Sept 2014 (23)