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“Like my dad, I love sailing, fishing, travelling,” says Harry today, “so, I was very happy growing up here. I was lucky too in that I didn’t need to get a job in the bank for security – I could become a marine engineer and just travel the world. So, I did, heading off in 1948.
Not that Harry didn’t have other interests. In 1959, he and Yvonne married in Christ Church, Delgany, moving to the secluded Coolagad and bringing up those two strapping lads.

When Harry met happy
henever GG finally manages to grow up, we just hope we can be like
Harry Acheson.
The man loves both company and peace & quiet, the great outdoors and a happy home, he loves sailing boats, walking the dogs, some fine food, some fine wine, and a fine woman…
Jaysus, the man has it sussed.

Billy Thompson, Derek Paine, John Fox, Bob Thompson, Terence Evans, Harry Acheson, Neville Spurling, Derek Ferns, Stan Paine.
Driving up to the Acheson hideaway up opposite Redford Cemetery, the minute you step into Coolagad – imagine Middle Earth meets Woodstock – it’s as though you’ve stepped into another world. This is a Greystones hideaway like no other. A 300-year-old house hidden behind tall trees and a wild garden. A place a child could happily get lost in for hours on end. A child like Yvonne, Harry’s wife of 57 years, who often vanishes off into her beloved garden for entire mornings, and sometimes even afternoons too, before finally emerging, proud and hungry, and sprinkled heavily with freshly-burrowed earth.

Rosi Miller, Jean Simmons, Erika Muller, unknown, Helga Muller & Harry Acheson.
Harry Acheson was born on Christmas Day, 1930, and the fact that he had to share his birthday with a much bigger boy all his life must have given him a fine sense of perspective and that wry sense of humour. “I never had a birthday party,” he smiles now, 86 years later, “and nowhere was open. Other kids used to have a good laugh about that.”
It’s perhaps telling too that Henry William Acheson – the nickname Harry would come later – spent his first six years in a place called Crazy Corner, County Westmeath.

At least it wasn’t Stranagalwilly in County Tyrone. Or Bastardstown in County Wexford. Who knows what effect that might have had on a young, impressionable mind.
It was when his father’s job with Bank Of Ireland saw him being transferred from Mullingar to College Green in Dublin that the six-year-old Harry and the rest of the family moved to Greystones, joining grandparents already here. Back in 1936, Greystones was a village where everyone knew everyone else, their cousin,their cat and their business, and with the sea on one side and the woods on the other, it was the ideal spot for a kid like Harry to grow up.

Harry with a pic of his pop
“Like my dad, I love sailing, fishing, travelling,” says Harry today, “so, I was very happy growing up here. I was lucky too in that I didn’t need to get a job in the bank for security – I could become a marine engineer and just travel the world. So, I did, heading off in 1948.
And it was an incredible life. Loving history, I was able to just let the ship take me wherever, and then go and explore the museums, the forts, the ruins… A wonderful time.”

The bould Gary
henever GG finally manages to grow up, we just hope we can be like
Harry Acheson.
And it was an incredible life. Loving history, I was able to just let the ship take me wherever, and then go and explore the museums, the forts, the ruins… A wonderful time.”
As I get ready to leave Coolagad, I ask Harry if Greystones changed much over those past 80 years. “Well, I now know more people in the graveyard than I do down the town,” he says, “but, thankfully, it still feels like the same Greystones that it always was. 
4 comments
My sincere condolences. Keeping your family in my thoughts and prayers…
I was so pleased to read your great memories of Greystones. I spent many August holidays visiting it. Harry’s pictures are great
My family had a connection to Greystones as Charlie Pennycook was my great uncle. He married Lena Archer in 1930 and they ran the Cafe Marina in the 1950s onwards . My parents were both from Inchicore Dublin.
I always knew that i would have the best fish and chips in Ireland there. I believe that he was a bit of a character and i have one picture of him as a young man in a Greystones show which I found in a book in Greystones library in 2012. For some reason I do not have many pictures of my Pennycook family.
i remember the double swings and the Merry-go-round nearby. The donkey rides along the front were another favourite.
After Charlie died we still went back to see Lena. The last time in the late 60s I think that she was living in a caravan.
I really appreciate all the work that you are doing to keep Greystones history alive. I currently do the same for the village I live in in near Cambridge.
Nice. Think the bould Pippins Parkinson might be entwined in your history somewhere – is the Marina Cafe the same one that she and her husband ran on Trafalgar Road, just around the corner from their family home and now B&B…?
You’ll find a bit more on this on the link.
And I’ll go check out your Cambridge page. See if there’s any feature ideas worth ripping off.
Cheers,
Paul
LINK: http://greystonesguide.ie/pippins-parkinsons-perfectly-pickled-pics/
Had a good chat with Erika yesterday and then googled and found your great website! At 82 my memory is fading but I think of you both as I knew you 52 years ago! Yvonne in Guides and Harry taking Helga and I hiking! I’m hoping for a brief trip “home” later this year so may come calling!