Author Topic: O'Dea Irish Bedding Factory  (Read 19456 times)

Offline Sinann

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Re: O'Dea Irish Bedding Factory
« Reply #36 on: Monday 17 February 20 22:08 GMT (UK) »
Just got to see inside the factory on the One Day in Ireland program, cool.

Offline aculhane

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Re: O'Dea Irish Bedding Factory
« Reply #37 on: Friday 29 January 21 07:04 GMT (UK) »
Hi
I think I can help you.  I knew Marie O' Dea who died on April 1st 1990 as far as I recall.  She was much younger than her siblings and boosted that she was sent away to "finishing school" in Belgium (i think there was a relation living there) as her parents were getting older when she was born. 

Yes, her mother was from Clare, who married O' Dea and she lived at Enniscouch and was buried in Rathkeale in St. Marys Cemetery. She was related to Lucy who was sorrowfully mourned, and remembered the windows in the church in  St James Church in Cappagh, You can see the church windows at http://limerickdioceseheritage.org/Cappagh/chCappagh.htm

There were also related to the high court judge Justice John Kenny (https://dib.cambridge.org/viewFullScreen.do?filename=a4502) and their family owned the O' Dearest mattress company.   Odearest manufacturing set up in Limerick city in the late 19th century but  by 1904 had  a new factory on Stafford Street (now Wolfe Tone Street) in Dublin.


Marie O' Dea married Patrick V Culhane  (march 27 1873- 2 April 1962) of Cappagh, and they lived in Cappagh and the farm is still owed by Culhanes.  He was much older than her.  Patrick V Culhane  was married Ettie Naughton (died Sep 5 1935) and he later remarried to Marie O’ Dea in the 1940s. They never had children.  She was a small women of probably 4' 10" tall  with a great sense of humor, who enjoyed the odd glass of whiskey or a baileys. On the death of PV Culhane, she bought a house on Crescent Ave, Limerick City. 

Headstones for the Culhane are available at
http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/limerick/photos/tombstones/1headstones/cappagh.txt
http://www.igp-web.com/IGPArchives/ire/limerick/photos/tombstones/limerick-cappagh/



Hope this helps in your research,




Offline aculhane

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Re: O'Dea Irish Bedding Factory
« Reply #38 on: Friday 29 January 21 07:05 GMT (UK) »
The Cahills, O'Dea and Culhane's connection are linked by Lucy Culhane.

From https://www.scribd.com/doc/121407745/Biographical-Dictionary-of-Lower-Connello

Cahill, Rev Edward (1868-1941)  son of Patrick Cahill and his wife, Lucy O Dea nee Culhane, was born in Callow, Cappagh, Co. Limerick, on 19 February, 1868.

and from
https://dib.cambridge.org/viewReadPage.do;jsessionid=C0502368A20F576815485D928BE297E1?articleId=a1364&searchClicked=clicked&searchBy=1&browsesearch=yes

Cahill, Edward (1868–1941), Jesuit, was born at Callow, Ballingrane, Co. Limerick, on 19 February 1868, son of Patrick Cahill, a farmer, and his wife, Lucy (née Culhane). One of a family of eight (he had three half-brothers, a half-sister, two full brothers, and a full sister), he was educated locally at the Jesuit-run Mungret College and then at St Patrick's College, Maynooth, from where, on completing three years of theological studies, he joined the Society of Jesus (10 November 1890). He was ordained priest in 1897 at the Jesuit church in Upper Gardiner Street, Dublin. From then until 1923 he was back at Mungret as master, prefect of studies, and rector, and finally as superior of the apostolic school attached to the secondary school. As rector he ‘had the opportunity to implement his ideas for the cultural and intellectual development of Irish youth along national lines’ (obituary, Ir. Independent). While at Mungret he wrote his first pamphlet, Rural secondary schools (1919).
In 1924 Cahill moved to the Jesuit house of studies at Milltown Park, Dublin, to become professor of church history and lecturer in sociology, and eventually (1935) spiritual director. There his influence grew as he contributed articles to the Irish Ecclesiastical Record (the catholic bishops’ monthly), the Jesuit-published Irish Monthly, and the popular Irish Messenger. He wrote a five-act play, The abbot of Mungret (1925), and two full-length books, Freemasonry and the anti-Christian movement (1929; 2nd ed., 1930) and The framework of a Christian state: an introduction to social science (1932). Several articles were republished as pamphlets: Ireland's peril (1930), The catholic social movement (1931), Capitalism and its alternatives (1936), Ireland as a catholic nation (1938), and Freemasonry (1944). The titles of these works are highly indicative of Cahill's interests and opinions. In October 1926 he and other Jesuits formed, for the purpose of establishing ‘the social reign of Christ in modern society’, a body they called the League of the Kingship of Christ (also known by the Irish form of its name, An Rioghacht). Cahill's pamphlet Ireland and the kingship of Christ (1928) is an apologia for that body.
In 1936, with Bulmer Hobson (qv) and Mrs Berthon Waters, Cahill formed a group to create public interest in banking, currency, and credit in accordance with his own views at a time when a government commission was inquiring into that subject. The group influenced a rural member of the commission, Peter O'Loghlen, whose minority report (which accused civil servants at the Department of Finance of being ‘hypnotised by British prestige and precedent’) it practically drafted. In September of the same year Cahill sent Éamon de Valera (qv), with whom he was very friendly, a submission outlining catholic principles on which he believed the new constitution being drawn up by the head of government ought to be based. Although a committee of five Jesuits (Cahill included) was set up by the Jesuit provincial to consider the constitution, Cahill presented a memorandum of his own to de Valera and wrote him three letters advocating a much stronger catholic ethos. It is argued that Cahill ‘may have been indirectly influential’ in the wording of article 44 referring to religion (Keogh). His initiatives were regarded with disquiet by his confrères.
A firm believer in farming as a vocation, Edward Cahill was associated with Muintir na Tíre, seeing it as the practice of the ‘corporatism’ recommended in the papal encyclical Quadragesimo anno (1931). He was also an enthusiast for the Irish language. He died 16 July 1941 at Milltown and was buried, with de Valera among his mourners, at Glasnevin cemetery.


Offline WSlater

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Re: O'Dea Irish Bedding Factory
« Reply #39 on: Wednesday 24 March 21 10:49 GMT (UK) »
O'Dea's - Odearest Mattress manufacturer was bought out by Kayfoam Woolfson in 1987.
Kayfoam in turn were bought out by FL Partners in 2007 see:
www.irishtimes.com/news/fl-acquires-kayfoam-woolfson-1.807433