Built in 1824, Blarney
Woollen Mills was originally known as Mahony's Mills and provided valuable
employment to the people of Blarney and surrounding areas. It was a water
powered mill and it produced tweeds and woollens for the home and export
markets.
In 1928, a boy of 13, like most of his
friends in Blarney, began to work at Blarney Woollen Mills. His name was
Christy Kelleher.
Young Christy began work at the mill as an
apprentice machinist and worked there for 22 years. He became a supervisor with
responsibility for the day to day running and maintenance of the heavy
industrial machinery. He was always very proud of the fact that during the war
years when machine parts were not available, he improvised so well that 'his'
machines never stopped.
In 1951 Christy left to work with an
insurance company in the city so that he could better provide for his family,
But he was never a man to stand still and always had a little business going on
the side. All of his seven children were encouraged to help him run his various
ventures. He purchased the local cinema and turned it into a dance hall at
weekends. He ran a hackney service and also had a 'vegetable round'.
In 1967 he started a small souvenir shop in
Blarney which he and some friends built as he did not have enough money to buy
a property. (This 'thatched cottage on wheels' is on display in the grounds of
the mill today.)
Meanwhile, business at the Old Mill had
started to decline and it finally wound down production and closed its doors in
1973. The huge stone buildings became bare and empty and the machines were
dismantled and removed. Five hundred people lost their jobs. For two years the
great mill lay silent and derelict. Nobody wanted it. Christy visited the site
many times and slowly the germ of an idea began to grow - he would buy the
buildings he had worked in as a boy and turn the mill into a visitor
centre!
He 'did a deal' with the auctioneers and
placed a deposit on the Mill only to discover that the financial institutions
did not share his enthusiasm. His request for funds were refused. What a
dilemma! The family agreed that drastic steps were necessary and between them
raised the funds to purchase the Mill and later persuaded the banks to provide
the working capital. Christy Kelleher was now the proud owner of the Woollen
Mills where he had started his working life. One of the first things he did was
to remove the big iron gate which stood between the mill and the main road. All
the employees of the Old Mills had only been allowed to enter through a side
gate, and Christy was determined that the ordinary people would now be able to
go through the main entrance.
The souvenir business from the thatched
cottage was transferred into the Mill and the remainder converted into an hotel
which was appropriately called Christy's.
The fact that the business prospered is a
testament to Christy's dogged enthusiasm and entrepreneurial spirit. He was
always there, with a kind word for everyone, welcoming the visitors and
encouraging the staff. Nowadays more than one million visitors pass through
these old stone buildings each year.
Christy Kelleher, this great man of vision,
died in 1991 aged 76. He left behind him a thriving family company which still
retains that Blarney spirit that made it all possible in the first place.
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