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MIXED MESSAGES.

Using signs, advertisements and messages as the inspiration for observation and comment - enlightened and otherwise

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What Is It About Limerick Lawns?

25/3/2019

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Ghostsign: ​Limerick   -    Was:  ??? Many Lawn??   Now: O & F Café
Limerick Lane (off Little Catherine Street)
Photos Taken: 23/3/19
Google Streetview HERE  
Saturday was spent in Limerick where I spotted a few ghostsigns that will help my self-challenge of one ghostsign per day on twitter.
 
I spotted this on a gable on Limerick Lane, off Little Catherine Street and have been unable to read what it was. I have included all my photos below so would be delighted to hear of suggestions.
 
My guesses include:
Last Line:  ???AGOOS?
Second Last Line:  ??ANY LAWN
 
The rest remain a mystery

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​​​​​​Listing of Ghostsigns uploaded to site to date HERE
 
Map of Ghostsigns viewable HERE
​
Details of other collections of items in the public space HERE​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
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A Ghost of Itself

14/3/2019

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​​Does a sign qualify as a ghostsign if the name does not change?

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Cork City       - Was McSweeney (painted sign)      - Then McSweeney (plastic sign)

Douglas Road                      Photos taken:  25/01/16 & 27/02/19
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Today is Day 73 of 2019. I am 73 days through the filing and cataloguing of a number of groupings that I have been photographing for years.
 
Since January 1, I have been tweeting one postbox; one item of street art; one roadside death memorial; and, one ghostsign. The filing and recording is definitely improved but there are still 292 days to go.
 
At this stage, I fear that I will not have photographs for 365 ghostsigns in Cork city – presently at about 230. I may need to expand into some of the county towns to keep the run going for the year.
 
Last week, I spotted a painted sign on a shop on the Douglas Road. The remains of the previous plastic sign had been removed to reveal an old painted sign. Cue, delight at another ghostsign for the catalogue.
 
However, when I went to compare with an older photograph that I had, I noticed that the shop remained as McSweeney’s.
 
Some may argue that a true ghostsign is a sign for a previous company/organisation that remains or is revealed when a new business operates. That has merit.
 
It is an old sign for a business that had been hidden and now revealed, so as I am struggling to get 365 Cork ghostsigns, it is being counted as a ghostsign in these quarters.
 
The builders are obviously in attendance so I am unsure as to how much longer the ghost will be free.

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​​​​​Listing of Ghostsigns uploaded to site to date HERE
 
Map of Ghostsigns viewable HERE
​
Details of other collections of items in the public space HERE​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
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Archaeology Only 6 Inches Deep

10/3/2019

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​Pothole Reveals the Ghost of the old Blackrock Tram.

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​I received these two photographs this morning from KH. They are of a pothole on the Blackrock Road between Ashton School and the CRK0001A postbox a bit up the road. But this pothole proves to be a revelation.
 
As if I was not photographing enough groupings, I have recently started photographing some old railways tracks that remain visible – maybe not for long with the developments in Docklands. So when a railway track is revealed as a ghost from under the tarmac, it was a double win.
 
I travelled past on the way home from my Irish walk but the rain did not help my photographs. I will be back for more photos.
 
When tracks were revealed when they were doing the plaza works in Blackrock Village, it was decided to incorporate them into the development. I suspect that the Blackrock tram track will be recovered and not exposed as an item of archaeology.
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And There It Was – Gone

8/3/2019

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​This afternoon, I was driving past and it was gone. I drove down this morning and did not notice it gone. But, gone it is, now.
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2014.02.09
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2019.03.08
The moulded plaster sign for the Rockboro’ Stores has been there as long as I can remember. Rockboro Road being on the other side of the city, it was not an area I frequented often when young so I cannot ever remember a shop operating from the premises.
 
Earlier this week, I was suggesting that it would be a good idea if all planning applications were required to include a photographic record. Be it methods of construction, particular details, or just the social history of the number of separate shops that existed in the days before the giant supermarkets, it would be a trove for future generations.
 
By the time the wall is rerendered next week and then painted, another record of the local shop will not be available to the younger generations.
 
I will miss it – particularly the apostrophe which I presume nodded towards the absent ‘ugh’ as in Rockborough.

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2019.01.07
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2019.03.08
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What is the plural of ‘Staff’?

7/3/2019

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I also assumed that is was ‘Staff’.
 
If the staff of one office merged with the staff of another office, the combined were staff. There might be 99 staff working in a building. Marketing and sales staff might attend a conference. The constant being the word ‘staff’.

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​I never had the inclination to question this – until I was taken aback on St. Patrick’s Quay. I would definitely have written as ‘Health Services Staff Credit Union’ – it is not as if the nursing staff and the physio staff become ‘staffs’ when together, or is it.
 
Chambers Dictionary does have a plural of ‘Staffs’, as does Macmillan Dictionary. Merriman Webster does have ‘staffs’ as a plural for some uses but ‘staff’ as plural in sense of ‘three full-time staff’.
 
I still do not like the look or sound of ‘Health Services Staffs’. I cannot see myself using the plural form anytime soon.

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Chelsea – Down & Soon To Be Out

6/3/2019

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Mosaic tiling has been one of the (many) items in Cork that I have been photographing over the past few years. I will get around to grouping together and uploading to the website – but not today or tomorrow.
 
This afternoon I was lucky enough to spot a mosaic for the first time. Lucky as the builders had the door to the site open as I passed. Extra lucky in that they even brushed the mosaic for the photograph. Extremely lucky as the mosaic is not much longer for this world - a new floor will be poured in the coming weeks.
 
The bar closed down a good few years ago. The building was subject to a blog post in 2016. Prior to its closing, it was the home of the Cork Branch of the Chelsea Supporters Club – hence the mosaic.
 
With digital photographs now easy and cheap to store, it has got me thinking that it would be a good idea for all planning applications to include a complete photographic survey to retain a snapshot of what was and what is to be no more – an archaeological time capsule of sorts.

If you need distracting for a while, you could do worse that try to name the locations of some mosaics around Cork.
I have yet to photograph the floor of the Honan Chapel at U.C.C.
 
Any suggestions as to other mosaics that are missing would be welcome.

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Ghosts and Schools

5/3/2019

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This Friday sees the official launch of Enda O’Flaherty’s book – The Deserted School Houses of Ireland. On Friday at 6.00, I do hope to be at the Nano Nagle Centre.
 
When the reminder popped up on my computer, it prompted concentrating this week on school buildings on my daily update for Ghostsigns.
 
Since the first day of the year, in an effort to get my photographs of Roadside Death Memorials, Postboxes, Street Art and Ghostsigns organised, I have been tweeting one of each every day. Today is Day 64.
 
Last week’s tweets included the Cork Model School which has been repurposed as Circuit Courthouse.
 
Today’s tweet is a crest in a terrazzo floor. It greeted me most school mornings for six years of my life so it brought back some memories when I spotted through an open door a while back – neither good, nor bad, just memories.
 
The ghost most likely has much better, and much worse, memories, for others.
 
The building was originally the Vincentian School until the transfer in 1888 of seminarians to Farranferris. The Christian Brothers opened the school in 1888. I do not know the date of the terrazzo flooring which from recollection goes all the way up the stairs from MacCurtain Street to above Wellington Road entrance

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​Cork City
Was Christian Brothers College - Now Residential
Wellington Road
Photos Taken - 18/2/1
Patrick Street, 1872
‘….On the right of the photograph is Carmichael’s drapery store, which would later become Cash & Co. On the skyline in the centre of the photograph is the Scott residence in Sidney Place that would in 1885 become Government House, the residence of the general officer commanding the Cork Military district. To the left below it was the Vincentian Schools building in St Patrick’s Place, later the Christian Brothers College.’
​

CORK In Old Photographs – Tim Cadogan (2003 Gill & Macmillan Ltd)

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Thomas Murphy – Lest He Be Forgotten

2/3/2019

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​This is a confirmation year in our house, so the family attendance at religious induction has increased.
 
We are just back from St. Joseph’s Church in Mayfield. I am taking after the older men from my childhood. I stood at the back and read a few signs, plaques and stained glass commemorations.
 
This plaque was next to the exit door that we used but I did not notice anyone stopping to read and reflect on what happened 101 years ago today, when 29 or 27 crew of the Cork Steam Packet Company died when the S S Kenmare was torpedoed returning to Cork from Liverpool, including the son of Mr Murphy of Woodland View. Of the 29, only three bodies were recovered from the sea.
 
Century Ireland lists all who were aboard, many from Cork.
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