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In the Footsteps of St. Finbarre (Part 95) - By Following the Truth E-mail
Written by Kieran McCarthy   
Thursday, 06 December 2007
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In the Footsteps of St. Finbarre (Part 95) - By Following the Truth
Page 2
The motto on the William’s Family Crest is Ensuivant La Verité or translated ‘By Following the Truth’. That title I have chosen for this article reflects the search for not just information but also the truth concerning the life of Bill Williams, the owner of a provisions store and garage in Lower Dripsey. In my own attempts to find sources, people, text and artefacts, to flesh out the character of the man, I encountered a number of research problems, many sociological but all well grounded in the realm of history.

In terms of Bill, the more I researched the man’s past the more I could see that his story is on the borders of remembering and forgetting and also history versus physically encountering the event. In other words, I seemed to encounter the very point where the past is no longer remembered or memory begins to fail and history sets in.  So the following is a reconstruction based on a number of interviews with local people in Lower Dripsey. There are those who actually remember and who met the man. There is also those who don’t remember Bill but who have an interest in recovering their local heritage and who before my arrival gleamed their own information of Bill, which they kindly shared with me.

The Williams shop was another icon in Lower Dripsey. The shop had two very large windows in front with a double wooden door between them. It was a long room with a mahogany counter running the full length of the room, one at the left and one at the right side. At the back of the shop, there was a wrought iron spiral staircase up to Bill Williams’ office. Bill’s sister Fanny helped out regularly in the shop. His other sister Lily Williams was much older than Bill and looked after the domestic products within the shop, pots and pans, rolls of material etc. Lily often went to near Staigue Fort near Waterville, Co. Kerry for a break. She booked seats in the postal van for their transport. There was a small hotel where she always stayed.

Local woman Margaret Baker recalls of the Williams shop:
“I remember going down to Williams’ Shop in Lower Dripsey as a young child. They sold everything- shoe leather, wool, sewing material, groceries, oil, petrol, meat and fish. If they hadn’t an item in stock it would be ordered from Cork City. The haberdashery was on the right side of the shop with a copper measuring tape running at the inner edge of the counter for measuring cloth and ribbons. This was where they kept ladies nylons, socks, handkerchiefs and all kinds of knick-knacks. And they had a small wood stove in the centre by the wall. On the other counter at the back end they had a large meat slicer that was always spotlessly clean and shining and well serviced. Bill was the only one allowed to use or clean it for security reasons. In the centre of that counter they had a huge metal scoop for weighing flour. The flour was put into the scoop and the appropriate heavy metal weights were put on the platform to weight it.

Further on there was a shining scale for weighing tea, sugar and sweets. The weight was displayed at both sides for staff and customer to see. Next to the scales stood tall shining glass jars holding: bulls eyes, lozenges, glassy mints, fruit drops and liquorice all sorts. They had a back room where a large cupboard was kept to store meat and perishable products. It had a screen covering each end to protect the food. There was no electricity at that time.

At Christmas time the shop was decorated and one of the big windows in front had a real pig’s head decorated with an apple in its mouth. At night wooden shutters were put on both windows. Inside the other window Bill very often sat on a high stool behind a partition doing the ‘books’ and from time to time peered out over his glasses to provide help or information. My brothers and I all served our time there learning to order, weigh and label food and other merchandise and, of course serving customers. We did this on Saturdays and summer holidays.



 
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