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DiscoPants
14/03/2007, 12:57 PM
Hi,

I'm doing my college thesis on dying professions in Ireland. I have a list of about 20 here and I need to whittle it down to about five. I'm sure,though, that I have left some trades/professions out so If anyone wants to give me a hand with some suggestions it would be greatly appreciated.

Here's some examples: farrier/blacksmith,chimneysweep, thatcher etc. The quirkier the better.

My final thesis will be five fairly substantial profiles/features/colour pieces and so obviously I would need to be able to make contact with these people for interviews etc. So if anyone knows of a friend,neighbour,family member or anyone for that matter that is holding out aginst the all-consuming Celtic Tiger let me know.

Don't mean to bore the good people of foot.ie, but anytime I've brought this up with friends it has always generated a good bit of interest and discussion.

And no; for the purposes of this thesis I will not - just yet at least - consider an Irish footballer as a dying profession. ;)

Any suggestions or help would be much appreciated.
Nice one.
Brian.

paul_oshea
14/03/2007, 1:14 PM
stonemasons? i mean for walls and finishes, there cant be that many left.....proper ones like

Lim till i die
14/03/2007, 1:22 PM
Upholsterer - My dads trade

Harness Maker - My grandads trade

EDIT - Sorry, didn't read the whole thing :o

My poor deceased granda would have a job doing an interview and my da currently works seven days a week due to dying nature of said job :o

DiscoPants
14/03/2007, 1:32 PM
Upholsterer - My dads trade

Harness Maker - My grandads trade

EDIT - Sorry, didn't read the whole thing :o

My poor deceased granda would have a job doing an interview and my da currently works seven days a week due to dying nature of said job :o

Don't worry if you cant put me in contact or anything, just generating ideas at the moment. Hadn't thought of any of those to be honest.

Nice one.

Erstwhile Bóz
14/03/2007, 1:39 PM
Don't know anybody off-hand, but as part of your research you could contact RTÉ and see if they could give you access to that series from the '80s, Hands. It was repeated recently on RTÉ 2 and was absolutely brilliant. Weavers and carPENTers from the country, stained-glass makers and cobbles-layers from ould Dublin. Some of them might be still around, actually.

DiscoPants
14/03/2007, 2:17 PM
Don't know anybody off-hand, but as part of your research you could contact RTÉ and see if they could give you access to that series from the '80s, Hands. It was repeated recently on RTÉ 2 and was absolutely brilliant. Weavers and carPENTers from the country, stained-glass makers and cobbles-layers from ould Dublin. Some of them might be still around, actually.

I saw that series and it was brilliant. I had forgotten the name of it actually and I just might give RTE a shout. The one thing is that my subjects still need to be practising their trade and I have a feeling a lot of those guys have either passed away or they are not involved in their chosen professions anymore. These are exactly the type of people I am after, though - the last bastions of a bygone era.

Thanks.
Brian

jebus
14/03/2007, 2:22 PM
Ask a publician near you, one that owns a small 'old man' bar how long these type of bars will be around for, and they'll all tell you they will be gone within the next 10-20 years, to be replaced by superpubs. Its my family's business and its been known in the trade for a while that small pubs are on the way out, in fact most pub owners I know have no intention of passing it on to their children (our pub is an example) as their isn't enough profit in running this type of establishment anymore. And do you know who I blame for this....

You Ireland....Ffuuucccckkkkk You! ;)

Roadend
14/03/2007, 2:29 PM
stonemasons? i mean for walls and finishes, there cant be that many left.....proper ones like

They are still around, but secretive with their special handshakes and whatnot...

hoops1
14/03/2007, 2:40 PM
Undertakers:D

Neish
14/03/2007, 2:42 PM
Efficient Ireland Managers
Efficient FAI Bosses

NY Hoop
14/03/2007, 2:44 PM
Coopers.

KOH

OwlsFan
14/03/2007, 2:58 PM
Home delivery milkmen (staggering home at 5 in the morning to be greeted by the milkman) and breadmen (oh the lovely smell from those vans).

WeAreRovers
14/03/2007, 3:00 PM
I saw that series and it was brilliant. I had forgotten the name of it actually and I just might give RTE a shout. The one thing is that my subjects still need to be practising their trade and I have a feeling a lot of those guys have either passed away or they are not involved in their chosen professions anymore. These are exactly the type of people I am after, though - the last bastions of a bygone era.

Thanks.
Brian

http://www.rte.ie/laweb/sales/sales_edu.html

KOH

drummerboy
14/03/2007, 3:27 PM
Compositors (they used to put type together for printing)

pete
14/03/2007, 3:31 PM
Go to any say Car Insurance web site & look for quote on sample vehicle. The list of professions seems to have last updated in 1930. Hundreds of thousands of people work in IT but feck all options beyond Manager & Engineer.

:rolleyes:

anto1208
14/03/2007, 3:35 PM
Cobblers
Electronic repair shops
the guy with the cart collecting the dead bodies from the plague
hangman
knights / dragon slayer
jestors

Lionel Ritchie
14/03/2007, 3:38 PM
Thatchers (no not that b1tch)

There's apparently only four full time thatchers left on the island.

Someone mentioned Glass artists (as in stained glass). I used work in this area and it's thriving. Not to say it's expanding now but there's plenty of work in it. All the "superpubs" Jebus referred to love it as it thinks it makes them ...well I believe the word they'd use is sophisticated. But because it's a pub it's going into -it'll get damaged so ching ching ching for the glass artists.

BTW -not that I don't have a degree of sympathy for the position these little pubs Jebus refers to find themselves in but if ever there was an industry in Ireland where there's room for rationalisition/contraction/whatever -it's the pub trade.

DiscoPants
14/03/2007, 5:24 PM
Cobblers
Electronic repair shops
the guy with the cart collecting the dead bodies from the plague
hangman
knights / dragon slayer
jestors

You don't have a contact number for the guy with the cart and the dead bodies by any chance, or does he use e-mail?

Seriously though, thanks for the input and keep 'em coming if you can think of any more.

Sheridan
14/03/2007, 5:42 PM
My family were cobblers (some would say they still are.)

There are no manned lighthouses left in Ireland, so add lighthouse keepers to the list. Fascinating profession.

Jerry The Saint
14/03/2007, 6:06 PM
Coopers.


By trade I was a cooper. Lost out to redun-dan-cy though...:(

Sheridan
14/03/2007, 6:07 PM
Racist.

Marked Man
14/03/2007, 6:50 PM
Racist.

Plenty of those still left, no?

BohsPartisan
16/03/2007, 10:14 AM
Estate Agents

blobbyblob
16/03/2007, 2:25 PM
There are no manned lighthouses left in Ireland, so add lighthouse keepers to the list. Fascinating profession.

Yeah - me cousin was the last man to leave a Irish lighthouse. Was talking to him the other night. His whole family were associated with it at one stage.

Im sure there was a documentary on it.

Lionel Ritchie
17/03/2007, 7:15 PM
Yeah - me cousin was the last man to leave a Irish lighthouse. Was talking to him the other night. His whole family were associated with it at one stage.

Im sure there was a documentary on it.

Wouldn't have thought there'd be much call for lighthouses, lighthouse keepers or any such in Kilkenny:confused:

:D

pineapple stu
17/03/2007, 7:25 PM
Doesn't fit with the note about providing people for interview but in Tim Severin's The Brendan Voyage, he tracks down one of the few remaining curragh makers in Ireland (this was back in the mid 70s) to build him a boat, and comments a fair bit on the traditional means of the work and how it'd died off in recent years.

Also a superb book well worth reading in any event.

holidaysong
18/03/2007, 11:06 PM
Wouldn't have thought there'd be much call for lighthouses, lighthouse keepers or any such in Kilkenny:confused:

:D

Could have done with a lighthouse at the game the other night. The state of the floodlights. Could hardly see the other end of the pitch.

SligoBrewer
19/03/2007, 12:29 AM
Could have done with a lighthouse at the game the other night. The state of the floodlights. Could hardly see the other end of the pitch.

at least they can hold a game at night:o

SÓC
19/03/2007, 2:08 AM
Some may laugh...but Barristers. Wont be a seperate profession in 20 years in the manner it is today

DiscoPants
19/03/2007, 11:48 AM
Doesn't fit with the note about providing people for interview but in Tim Severin's The Brendan Voyage, he tracks down one of the few remaining curragh makers in Ireland (this was back in the mid 70s) to build him a boat, and comments a fair bit on the traditional means of the work and how it'd died off in recent years.

Also a superb book well worth reading in any event.

Nice one pineapple. I've been trying to contact a guy recently that still makes currachs down in Cork.

I have that book on a shelf at home somewhere, I'll have to root it out.

gilberto_eire
19/03/2007, 1:09 PM
travel agents and auctioneers the internet are killing those off!.. specailly the travel agents

Colm55
22/03/2007, 11:05 AM
Hi,

I'm doing my college thesis on dying professions in Ireland. I have a list of about 20 here and I need to whittle it down to about five. I'm sure,though, that I have left some trades/professions out so If anyone wants to give me a hand with some suggestions it would be greatly appreciated.

Here's some examples: farrier/blacksmith,chimneysweep, thatcher etc. The quirkier the better.

My final thesis will be five fairly substantial profiles/features/colour pieces and so obviously I would need to be able to make contact with these people for interviews etc. So if anyone knows of a friend,neighbour,family member or anyone for that matter that is holding out aginst the all-consuming Celtic Tiger let me know.

Don't mean to bore the good people of foot.ie, but anytime I've brought this up with friends it has always generated a good bit of interest and discussion.

And no; for the purposes of this thesis I will not - just yet at least - consider an Irish footballer as a dying profession. ;)

Any suggestions or help would be much appreciated.
Nice one.
Brian.

My fathers a watchmaker, thats a dying trade of all trades. i'll pm you his contact info, i'm sure he'll give you a dig out if needed..

the 12 th man
22/03/2007, 11:16 AM
Candle makers,
Cutlers (knife sharpeners etc).

First
22/03/2007, 12:25 PM
Fishermen , more being killed as dying away , but you catch my drift ....Boom Boom

strangeirish
22/03/2007, 12:53 PM
Fishermen , more being killed as dying away , but you catch my drift ....Boom Boom
Did you have a whale of a time finding that stat trawling through the internets(As Dubya would say)? Don't be coddin' yerself as I leave you to flounder on the scales of justice.

sparkey
27/03/2007, 11:52 AM
Saw Doctors, (not the group, unfortunately), but people who re-tip and re-sharpen saw blades. Still a lot of call for this trade for fixing blades in timber saw mills and stone cutting factories, but very few saw doctors around anymore unfortunately.

OneRedArmy
27/03/2007, 10:19 PM
Anything associated with the clothing industry eg seamstresses, stitchers, weavers etc.

Particularly in the North this industry has gone from being one of the top private sector employers to close to zero in the space of 15 years.