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Kildinan Athletes of the Past to be Honoured

KILDINAN ATHLETES OF THE PAST TO BE HONOURED

 kildinan ac poster
A commemoration to unveil a monument in honour of the Kildinan AC team who won the National Junior Cross-Country title in 1943 will take place next Sunday evening, September 10, at 6.30pm. Organised by a small local committee, it will be held at The Pound, Kildinan, which is between Glenville and Rathcormac


Also on the night a 32-page booklet titled ‘Remembering Kildinan Athletics’ will be launched. This covers the history of the club which was in existence from 1938 to 1966. A lot of this research was done by former Grange athlete (and author) Gerry Murphy

One of this country’s greatest athletes, John Hartnett from Ballyhooly, started his career with Kildinan before joining the Grange club. There he would go on to win the International Junior Cross-Country title (the forerunner to the World Championships) in 1970 before embarking on an athletics scholarship to Villanova University where he would go on to break Ronnie Delany’s Irish mile record, amongst a host of other major achievements


Gerry Murphy covers Hartnett’s career from his earliest days and there is a touching anecdote of how the former Kildinan athlete never forgot his roots when - at the height of his fame - he presented Peadar Dorgan, the man who brought him by lorry to his first race, with a special gift

 

Saluting the heroic deeds of a rural athletics club in County Cork

This article, by John Arnold, appeared in The Echo, on Thursday September 7th 2023

kildinan ac commemoration

John Arnold, fourth from left, and the organising committee to recall Kildinan AC


The Kildinan Club was an amazing phenomenon. John Arnold and others  felt that the story of the club and those who ran for it, should not be forgotten

Saluting the heroic deeds of a rural athletics club in County Cork

MOSS Egan was what you’d call an ‘all-round sportsman’.

Reared on the family farm at Desert, Bartlemy, he lived with his parents, brother John and sister Eily in a beautiful old-world thatched house - built probably in the mid-1800s

Moss played hurling and football, was a brilliant athlete and loved sport involving dogs - he ‘followed the hounds’ even in his old age

As a teenager and young man, Gaelic games were at a low ebb in this parish with little playing activity. A club was restarted in Bartlemy in January, 1951, and Moss was one of the 39 present who paid 2/6 (half a crown) each to get things going - incidentally, only William ‘Bob’ O Regan survives from that group of '39

Over the next few years, a few tournaments were won but no League or Championship honours were garnered. Moss played on these teams and, in 1965, when the Bride Rovers Club was reformed, he was still lining out to ensure 15 players were on duty

He never had a problem with weight, he was wiry but strong, and physical farmwork meant stamina and strength were never a problem.

Running came easy to him and cross-country athletics was simply like an extension of daily chores on the ancestral acres

Moss lived close to the parishes of Castlelyons and Lisgoold. Kildinan was at the other end - on the ‘boundary’ with Glenville and Ballyhooley

In the 1880s and ’90s, the Bridestown townland in Kildinan was home to the Phibbs brothers, Con and Bill. They were superb athletes, winning Cork and National titles. Bill was a member of what has come to be called the GAA ‘American Invasion’

In September, 1888, a party of 25 hurlers, 18 track and field athletes and ten officials sailed from Cobh to the New World. The GAA party played exhibition games and took part in several major athletic contests. Bill Phibbs was one of the star competitors

The ‘Invasion Team’ spent six weeks in the States, but Phibbs and others stayed longer - some never returned

Bill did come back and, along with Con, was nationally known - their appearance at a sports meeting guaranteed a bumper crowd

Along the Bride Valley, the fame of the Phibbs brothers was well known

In 1938, the year before Bill died, Kildinan Athletic Club was formed. It was pre-war Ireland, life was simple, and in rural areas like Kildinan, young men often gathered at crossroads or in farmers’ fields of a Sunday afternoon for ‘davarsion’. Some hurled or played football or pulled the tug-o-war rope, and some ran

The Kildinan Club was an amazing phenomenon. Within 15 years, club athletes had captured county cross-country titles at novice, junior and senior. In 1942, a team from Kildinan reached the All-Ireland final in Santry in Dublin. They finished in seventh place

With a stronger team the following year, the club, only five years in existence, won the All-Ireland. The winning team consisted of captain George Gubbins, Danny Murphy, Dinny O’Driscoll, Pat Keohane, Pat Porter, Jimmy Buckley, Dick Barry, J. Purcell, Dan Murphy, Willie Rea, Pat Hourihan and Johnny Dorgan

In later years, I knew Dick Barry and Johnny Dorgan well. In his 95th year, I talked to Danny Murphy of Lackendarra about their great win and he recalled the details with amazing clarity

Dan Murphy, a native of Dripsey, but living near Ovens, told me he was approached to join the club in late 1942. “Little did I think that I’d be an All Ireland winner in a few months.”

It was a brilliant feat for the Kildinan club and it was backed up for nearly a decade with repeated cross-country and track and field successes

It was the Kildinan club that Moss Egan joined in 1948, and from 1949 to 1951 he won a glittering array of medals at county and provincial level. Years later he gave his neighbour and friend Christy Daly an insight into his athletic preparations over 70 years ago

Moss Egan said he never trained at home by day, “’twould be frowned on - too much work to do on the farm from dawn ’til dusk. But at ten o’clock at night, when they’d be all gone to bed, I’d go out in the field and run, run, run...!”

It might be a unique training regime but for Moss it worked. Just this week I got to see seven of his ‘big race’ medals - all won with Kildinan

Oh, sweet were the rambles

When Sundays came round

We all with our friends

Made our way to The Pound

These lines from a local song indicate the importance of ‘gathering places’ like the old rustic bridge, the old boreen and The Pound

Those Kildinan athletes that did ‘normal’ training did so in the Pond Field of the Lindsay family across the road from The Pound

It wasn’t just cross country runners who gathered here. The Pound was also famous for its dancing ‘stage’. Here on Sunday nights the crowds gathered to meet, to dance and to ‘court’. The memories of all those great days and great nights will come back to stay again on Sunday night. Once more the crowds will gather at The Pound

Last winter, a small group got together to commemorate the daring deeds of Kildinan athletes down the decades. The club was formed in 1938 and waned in 1952. It had brief renaissance in the mid 1960s when a young John Hartnett wore the green singlet of Kildinan AC.

It’s eight decades since the All-Ireland win and we felt that the story of the club and those who ran for it and saw after the running of it should not be forgotten

A committee was formed and a plan was worked out for fundraising to put in place a suitable commemorative sculpture

On Sunday evening next, half an hour after the Angelus, an unveiling ceremony will be held to which an open invitation is extended

Four members of that team of 80 years ago, Pat Porter, Willie Rea, J. Purcell and pat Hourihan remain a mystery to us still as we have no contact with any family members

Nevertheless, that tradition of which the Phibbs brothers were a major part, as were the 1943 team, Moss Egan and all who ever ran for Kildinan, will be proudly recalled and remembered

Kildinan is a unique place - partly in Cloyne Diocese and partly in the Diocese of Cork and Ross, and crossing parish boundaries too. It’s hard to imagine how a small group of men with great ambition came together and blazed such a successful trail in a short few years

Moss Egan was a humble countryman who loved sport, and so were all those donned the green of Kildinan down the years. They brought great success to the area, but most of all, huge happiness, enjoyment, fun, and a sense of local pride that will never be forgotten

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Cork Athletics County Board is a constituent member of Athletics Ireland. Cork Athletics is the governing body, administering athletics, track and field (T&F), cross-country (XC) and running in county Cork. The Board comprises elected representatives of constituent athletic clubs and running clubs. Cork County Board AAI organises Championship races and competition, including road, track & field (T&F) and Cross-country (XC), at junior, juvenile, senior and masters levels, and selects representation for the county. In addition, training and education is provided for coaches and officials. The Board also regulates the Athletics Ireland race/event permit (licence) process for county Cork.
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