The Corkman

Keeping the faith in Newmarket

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Margaret Clarke of the Rock Bar at New St, Newmarket - all of the pubs in the town have agreed to stay closed this Good Friday, keeping up the now bygone tradition -

ALL of the publicans in one rural town are going to keep their doors shut and remain closed for business this coming Good Friday.

Six publicans based in the north Cork town of Newmarket are coming together and deciding collective­ly that they will not open their doors in spite of the State lifting the 91-year old ban on publicans serving alcohol on Good Friday.

Publican John Scanlon of Scanlon’s Bar, Church Street, who first proposed the move in an initial chat with a colleague, said this week: “We have only two days off each year, Christmas Day and Good Friday, and we want to hold onto that. It is a day publicans want to spend with their families.”

According to the most recent census, Newmarket has a population of 976 and the move has received an overwhelmi­ngly positive response from pub customers in the town with one customer congratula­ting the publicans saying ‘well done Newmarket, keep up our traditions’.

Publican Joan Hourigan has been serving pints from the behind the counter at Hourigan’s Bar on Newmarket’s New Street for the past 50 years.

A mother of-nine, five of her children are involved in the business and Ms Hourigan said that she has always enjoyed a day out or decorating their shut pub on Good Friday, “and I don’t want to give that up,” she said.

Ms Hourigan said that the day off on Good Friday “is something that I cherish and a tradition I want to maintain”.

She said that religion is playing only “a small part” in her decision to remain closed.

“A lot of our customers would be older farmers and I wouldn’t think we would be particular­ly busy on Good Friday anyway. They have grown up with the tradition and I think they will see it out,” she said.

One of the other publicans in the village, Mick Hourigan, announced the move to his customers on his pub’s Facebook page and the response from customers has been universall­y positive. “There are 363 days a year when the pub is open and I think that it plenty. Soon they will want us to open on Christmas Day,” he said.

Mr Hourgian operates a bar and a night-club in the village, employing more than 20 people and he said: “I wouldn’t ask my staff to work on Good Friday. What is around on a Friday is not a lot.”

In his comments, Mr Scanlon said: “The day off every Good Friday is a day that publicans look forward to.”

Mr Scanlon admitted that the decision to close can only work when all publicans in the area decide to close. He said: “It would be different for city publicans who would be giving up a lot of revenues by staying shut on a Friday night, but I don’t think there would be a lot around here on Good Friday.”

Mr Scanlon said that there has been no negative feedback from customers and the response has been positive.

Mr Scanlon said: “It is going against the grain but, who knows? Other pubs around the country may follow.”

On the Facebook page of Mick Hourigan’s pub, one customer wrote: ‘It is great to see that old traditions matter to our country…well done to you and hopefully more will follow’.

Another wrote: ‘well done, Newmarket, keep up our traditions’ while one woman posted: ‘Well done to ye guys. Fair play. Our country needs to stand up for its traditions.

‘Very proud that it is Newmarket leading the way - ‘ we lead where others follow’.’

Earlier this year, President Michael D Higgins signed into law the amendment to the Intoxicati­ng Liquor Act that lifted the Good Friday pub ban that had been in place since 1927.

Independen­t senator, Gerald Craughwell was a co-sponsor of the bill that has resulted in the lifting of the ban. He said: “The bill was all about choice, especially for publicans, and I fully respect the decision by the publicans of Newmarket to stay closed on Good Friday. It is very interestin­g that they have come together to do this.”

Senator Craughwell said that he wasn’t approached by any vintners while the bill went through the Oireachtas.

In the wake of the Newmarket publicans’ move, a spokesman for the Vintners Federation of Ireland ( VFI) said: “Like all other days of the year -except Christmas Day - publicans can choose to open or remain closed on Good Friday. The decision is entirely their own to make”.

He said: “The removal of the ban on serving alcohol in licenced premises on Good Friday has received broad support from the pub sector particular­ly as many tourists visit Ireland during the Easter period.”

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 ??  ?? Ro ckchapel Defibrilla­tor Group cut the cake on their
10th anniversar­y. Photos by Sheila Fitzgerald.
Ro ckchapel Defibrilla­tor Group cut the cake on their 10th anniversar­y. Photos by Sheila Fitzgerald.

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