Mt. Pleasant News
March 17, 1955
HAS SHILLELAGH OVER 150 YEARS OLD
In Old Erin on St. Patrick's Day or any day,
the men who wore the green were kept in line with a Shillelagh, sometimes
spelled shillalah or shillelah. Anyone who has ever seen an Irish Shillelagh or
cudjel or as we might have called it a billy club, knows quite definitely that
he would not want to be conked over the head with it.
On the island known for its famous oaks, they were made
of oak or other sturdy roots and ornately carved.
Glen Dunlavy of this city has a real honest-to-goodness
Irish shillelagh which has been in the family on the American side of the
Atlantic Ocean for more than 150 years. It was given to Mr. Dunlavy by his
cousin, Mrs. Edith Beeler of Cherryvale, Kans. Her great great grandfather
brought it to this country from Ireland.
The decorative shillelagh, heirloom of the Dunlavy
family, is thought to have been carved from sturdy crabapple roots. |