Number Ten, Michael Street.
It's said to be the smallest street, not just in Ulster,
but in the whole of Ireland, for it is just one house
long - number ten.
But what happened to the others? Well there never were
any others. Laurence Rush , who has lived at
number ten for over thirty years, thinks his house was
the first one to be built, with the intention of building
from one to nine later, but it never happened.
Michael
Confused? It gets worse. The street is called "Michael
Street" or in Irish "Saint Michael Street" (Naoim meaning
Saint) So how come there's a saint in the Irish version
of the name? And who was Michael? Any your place
and miner out there have an answer?
|
|
|
 |
|
Michael Street name plate |
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Laurence Rush at the door of number ten
|
|
Correct address (probably) Laurence
stands at the door of his home, the correct postal
address of which is:- 10, Michael Street.
Or of course it could also be:- 10 sráid
naoim micil .
On the other hand it is also:- 10 Brook Street
- which is the street that runs along the bottom
of Laurence's garden.
But on the other hand Brook Street is also known
as Convent View so the address could also be:-
10 Convent View.
On various occasions Mr Rush has received letters
addressed to every one of these different, yet
correct, addresses for the same property. |
|
|
|
 |
|
Omagh's concrete trees |
|
Trees By the way, whilst we are
still in number ten's garden, just across the
road (Brook Street or Convent View - take your
pick) there are these delightful sculptured concrete
trees. They were originally in the grounds of
the local school but the dividing fence between
the school and the parochial house has since been
moved, so the Parish Priest is now the proud possessor
of these three trees. Laurence Rush tells me that
occasionally local children paint apples on them!
|
|
YOUR RESPONSES
Patrick - Feb '07
Michael Street, Omagh. Supposed to have been named after a
Michael who ran the nearby "First and Last Bar".
Yes, the first as you entered Omagh and the last as you left
it. Michael was friendly with a local councillor. Around this
time dual-language signs were being made for the council for
St. Patrick's Tce, St. Brigid's Tce., in the Gallows Hill
area of Omagh. These were properly Sraid Naoimh ... the Street
of Saint ...... and it is thought when the Michael Street
sign was being made that the Naoimh, (Saint) bit was included
anyway without the maker realising that he had canonised a
publican.
Pete - Sep '06
A small house from the outside, complicated inside. An intriguing
cellar, for hidden treasures. My first memory as a 6 year
old entering the house was that a life sized Jimmy Hendrix
poster was there, wild, crazy and absurd to a six year old,
in this weird house with a cellar! What was there? Who was
buried there? Then there was the flood, the bombings of the
local Barracks, the "It's my entry lawsuit" (an
adaptation of "The Field"). It has a life of its
own. Libbi loved it! In some ways we all did.
Mal - September '05
The grand street of the Rush houshold, many memories found
and lost over the expanse of many years. Even though the street
itself is small, the smallest in ireland many have claimed,
the course of its personal history is as large and colourful
as its owner. Plenty of high and lows, swings and roundabouts
and the carpet of my childhood. Viva St. Micheal street.
|