Friday, 17 January 2020

Touring Connemara in 1914 by rail and by charabanc

A pre-1924 MGWR Touring Car, or charabanc ("char-à-banc", usually in Ireland it is pronounced sharabang), en-route somewhere between Clifden and Westport, although the photo says Recess, suggesting that perhaps the touring party were being taken to the Recess Hotel, partially visible in the background, or to the Recess Railway Station. 

No white lines in the middle of the road back then, probably around 1914. It prompted me to write this little story. Sit back and enjoy. 



From 1895 to 1935 Galway city was connected to Clifden by the Midland Great Western Railway line. The MGWR had some 538 miles (866 km) of rail, linking Connacht to Leinster, with lines ending in Westport and Clifden, which towns were in turn, linked by touring car. This particular car in the photo connected the two train termini, Clifden and Westport, so rail passengers could go by train to one, or the other town, and then, connect to return home on the other train line, via a 'jaunt' on the charabanc 'touring car'.
Charabancs. Funny word eh! The name derives from the French, char à bancs or "carriage with wooden benches". It had 'benched seats' arranged in rows, looking forward, commonly used for large parties, whether as public conveyances or for excursions. It had a retractable canvas roof and the side windows were made of mica (a thin layer of quartz-like stone). The motorised touring car took over from the Bianconi horse-drawn carriages that had plied the roads of Ireland until the arrival of rail and eventually motorised horseless cars.

If you look closely, you will see that the touring car's registration plate number is 'IM 180'. For you young 'uns out there, car registrations in Ireland were done alphabetically by county. So Antrim was IA, Armagh IB, and eventually, Galway IM. Them when IM was all allocated, they want to AIM, then BIM, and so on to ZIM. Later on, maybe in the late 1960's Galway went to ZM, then AZM, BZM etc... until all that system was scrapped in the 1990's and we went to the current registrations of just G.
I happen to have access to the Irish Motor Directory for the year 1914 for cars and motor-cycles registered in Ireland. Nationwide (32 counties) in 1914 there were a total of 20,211 cars and 4,438 motor-cycles. Galway had only 189 cars and 163 motor-cycles registered in the county in 1914. Northern Ireland, Dublin and Cork had the bulk of all cars in the country.
If you look closely at the page below, you will see the entries for IM 179, IM 18o and IM 181. They are three char-a-bancs, and all three are registered to the Midland G. W. Railway in Broadstone (now Phibsboro in Dublin) where the registered office of the MGWR was located.
This page of car registrations from the Irish Motor Directory in Galway in 1914, showing IM 180 the charabanc owned by the MGWRy which is shown in the old photo at the top of this story. 
It's not often that I get to tie one piece of evidence to another..I'm actually kinda chuffed! 

The other car and motor cycle owners on this page are quite interesting including The Right Hon Lord Killannin of Spiddal, J. A. B. Trench of Clonfert, Harry Usher of Loughrea, Tom Cawley of Cawleys in Craughwell (motor-cycle), Maurice Sweeney of Loughrea, and James J. Ward of Eyre Square (the former two had garages and several cars). 

By far the most interesting car-owner listed on this page is the notorious land agent, landlord and Galway Sheriff, Mr. F. M. Shawe-Taylor of Castle Taylor, Ardrahan, (IM 165) who was killed in an IRA ambush on the way to Galway on the 3 of March 1920. The killing took place at Egans Pub in Cashla, near to Carnmore Cross. This in turn led to an increased RIC and military presence in the area, more and more unrest, shootings and reprisals which brought in the dreaded Black and Tans and Auxilliaries to the area, leading directly to the death of RIC constable Timothy Horan in an ambush at Castledaly, the Black and Tan shooting of innocent civilian Ellen Quinn at Kiltartan (1 November 1920), a pregnant mother of six and a tenant of Lady Gregory; murder by the Black and Tans in Galway of Fr. Michael Griffin (14 November 1920); killing of Tom Egan and the gruesome torture and murder of the two brothers from Beagh, Gort, Patrick and Harry Loughnane. In addition, there were numerous incidents of violence, many of which were recorded with horror by Lady Gregory in her journal, who remarked that "the country has gone wild since the killing of Frank Shawe-Taylor." I guess he had no luck with that car!

Anyway, I digress. Back to the Connemara Charabancs. I think it's likely that the three touring cars (IM 179, IM 18o and IM 181) were based in garages in Westport and Clifden, so as to meet all trains. The days of grand touring were upon us and the novelty of seeing the 'Wild West' of Ireland by train and charabanc must have been irresistible. The poster even mentions going to Achill, so the third car was likely based there. These posters were put up in railway stations and rail carriages all over Ireland and were no doubt, very effective marketing, long before the Irish Tourist Board started to promote Connemara. I love the 'Book of Kells' font and artwork on the poster.
It has to be appreciated however, that touring on such a vehicle through Connemara in 1914 would have been uncomfortable, cold, bumpy (imagine the roads), noisy, slow and sometimes dangerous, as the touring cars were quite high and when loaded with passengers, were apt to list too far on sharp bends and sometimes tipped over. 
The charabancs were phased out by the mid 1920's, though these saw service in Connemara right up until 'The Emergency' or WWII in 1939.

And now for the trivia piece of the story. I don't know if any Irish charabanc survived, but if I am not mistaken, the bench seats from one of these three charabancs ended up in Ryans Hotel in Cong, as part of the bar furniture. They were there fairly recently. They may still be there for all I know! This photo shows Ryans Hotel on the right, around 1910.


The Galway-Clifden railway line can be see paralleling the road, on the lake shore. (The lake is called Glendollagh) This is probably roughly where the 'Connemara Giant' statue sits, outside Joyce's Craft Shop in Recess in Connemara today. The car is travelling in the direction of Galway I think.
And that folks, is all she wrote. 

I hope you enjoyed this story which was prompted by my seeing the photo of the touring car by the lake on Whites Auctions pages. 

That's it...I'm off for a pint. Brian Nolan.

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