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Charles McGlinchey |
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Brought up in a family of 4 brothers and 2 sisters money was scarce. However, despite his lack of education in a scholarly setting, Charles McGlinchey’s intellect wasn’t numbed in any shape or form. In his younger years no other language was spoken apart from Irish. However, as he grew older the need for the English language also grew. Never one to take the easy option, Charles taught himself to read English and subsequently learned how to read Irish in the same way. He stayed a bachelor all his long life as he never had enough money or property to offer a wife until it was too late. With his mother and father dying in the early 1900’s and his brothers and sisters having either emigrated to America or having died away from their native home, Charles could have lived a very lonely existence. But the warm, energetic way in which he spoke and his insatiable spirit for life reveals a man at ease with himself, a man never wallowing in self pity or begrudging happiness to anyone.
Charles McGlinchey has become a man of great historical importance. Seldom leaving his native townland, his commitment and interest in his locality served him an opportunity to fulfill his talent for observation. Charles McGlinchey and local schoolmaster of Gaddyduff National School struck up an intimate relationship which resulted in the book, ‘The Last of the Name’. An insightful account of the contemporary culture of McGlinchey’s generation was the outcome of this collaboration. The history and traditions of our ancestors are in danger of being forgotten but Charles McGlinchey united with the resourcefulness of Patrick Kavanagh and the credulity of Brian Friel have safeguarded our heritage for the time being.
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