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Swinging by his small cottage right in the heart of Delgany yesterday, it didn’t take long before the man’s first-hand knowledge of the town came flooding forward. What
Turns out that’s the one thing this old-school couple miss – that old community spirit of neighbours calling on neighbours, to see how they’re keeping, to see if they need anything, or, sure,
“It’s a shame,” says Noel, “and more than a little shocking. There was a time when you just all lived together. You had your separate houses, and all that, but the village was like one big family.
It’s hard to do justice to the role Noel Belton – and his father, James, before him – played in the shaping of Delgany. This was back in the day when men were fishermen, or farmers, or labourers for hire.
The man…
f someone was ever going to play Noel Belton in a movie, the closest fit would have to be Lee Marvin.
If we had to go with someone still kicking and breathing, Harrison Ford would be the nearest thing Hollywood has to offer today.
The fact is, Noel Belton is pretty unique. Not that he’d ever see himself that way, but, the 86-year-old Delgany deity has lived his entire life in this small Wicklow village – and his mark is pretty much on everything.
There probably isn’t a square foot of land in and around Delgany that Noel Belton hasn’t either worked on or owned.
Home…
From converting an old cowshed into a home up on Blackberry Lane (for local gravedigger Shoveller Dixon, no less) to foolishly, merrily taking over the Horse & Hound for a few glorious years, Noel has been there, built that, drunk those. And then went to bed and did it all again the following day.
Swinging by his small cottage right in the heart of Delgany yesterday, it didn’t take long before the man’s first-hand knowledge of the town came flooding forward. What
this man doesn’t know about Delgany could be written on Shay Clear‘s bald patch. With a whitewash brush.
The little cottage we’re in now and its adjoined buildings were all once part of The Factory Square, with 18 employees living in 18 tiny homes as the La Touche estate had them making bonnets for the French market.
Across the road, there was the village green, a small triangular meeting spot for the locals, the adults playing cards and pitch’n’toss whilst the kids – including the young Noel Belton – would play marbles.
Also across the road, at the recently destroyed Style Bawn House, the young Noel and his sister played with the in-hiding Erksine Childers, the Irish nationalist who smuggled guns in his sailing yacht, Asgard, and wrote the influential novel, The Riddle Of The Sands.
And then there was the band hall on Blackberry Lane, currently under siege by the council as they bulldoze this beauty spot into oblivion, and once used by the local brass bands and assorted community groups, having been gifted to the town by the La Touches.
Noel & Hazel
The building known as Round The Bend, adjacent to the central graveyard, was also once a community centre, known as The Parish Rooms, where Mrs Keyes ran the library, and the billiard table came in for daily use.
And so the stories, and the characters, and the fond memories, continued as Noel and Hazel laughed and my brain swirled, trying to remember so many golden nuggets of local history.
For sale… JULY21
1 comment
Great photos..i grew up on Bellevue Hill (few doors up from Shay)..was there 30yrs.
Not sure the ‘loco’ word is necessary Paul..man earned his stripes after all thise ‘shrooms.