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Gerry and T eresa celebrate 30 years of ‘Diamond’ anniversary

This article is from page 2 of the 2011-05-24 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 2 JPG

THE family behind one of Ennis’ landmark pubs, the Diamond Bar, will celebrate 30 years in business next month. The Kelly family have been pulling pints at the O’Connell street premises since it opened in 1981.

Dad Gerry had been involved in the bar trade nearly all his life, working in pubs in O’Callaghan’s Mills, Clonmel and Portlaoise prior to working in Ennis. He said, “I worked in the Cloister in 1977. I took over the Diamond Bar in 1981. There have been a lot of changes up and down the years.”

Those changes have included renovations to the building, which were first carried out in 1987 and again in 2003. The Diamond may have changed since those early days but the one constant has been the presence behind the counter of the Kelly family – Gerry, wife Theresa, and children Claire, Ursula and Mark.

The family has many fond memories from over the years but for Gerry, Clare’s unforgettable All-Ireland hurling triumphs in 1995 and 1997 really stand out.

“1995 was the highlight. ‘95 and ‘97. The night Clare came back from Dublin with the Liam McCarthy cup, on the Monday night, the like of it will never be seen in the town again. The biggest problem that night was trying to keep people out of the place,” he recalled.

Indeed, the Diamond was the place to be on Monday nights after a big championship game when musician Kieran McDermott could often be heard belting out ‘The Banner Roar’.

Gerry himself was no stranger to sporting success due to his involvement in a number of horse racing syndicates. He said, “We did a lot of syndicates down the years – Gold Anchor was our first success, trained by Liam Brown. Then we had Wimbledon with Dermot Weld. Then we had the ‘God of Love’ with Ger Lyons. Now we have Steele’s Rock with Kieran Purcell. It has been a lucky pub for syndicates and long may it continue.”

Of the changes he has observed in the pub trade over the years, Gerry said that the combined effect of the smoking ban, tighter drink driving laws and the low-cost selling of alcohol in supermarkets have made it a difficult time for publicans.

Mark worked alongside his father in the bar after returning from college in 2003. He now runs two bars in Ennis, Faffa’s and Johnnos.

Like his father, Mark says it is a difficult time for the pub industry. But like all the family he is looking forward to next Friday when the Diamond’s 30-year anniversary will be marked with a series of celebrations at the pub from June 3-6.

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