The hall – before Cuala ‘threw its hat into the ring’
Cartlann Digiteach Cuala likes attics. And if there’s one thing we like even more – it’s people who rummage in attics and bring newly discovered material to our attention.
This author has yet to write their bio.
Meanwhile lets just say that we are proud Cartlann Digiteach Cuala contributed a whooping 58 entries.
Cartlann Digiteach Cuala likes attics. And if there’s one thing we like even more – it’s people who rummage in attics and bring newly discovered material to our attention.
1985, is remembered fondly by Cuala Camogie as the year when they won the Senior B Championship and League Double.
Adult Hurler Luke Brennan has made a very special piece of art to celebrate Cuala’s outstanding season on the field. A limited number of copies are now on sale.
These guys must surely be bursting with pride at the fortunes on the field of their descendants in Cuala. Meet the Cuala Casements Coiste of ’69
The Cuala Monthly (“Top for Sport”) was produced in 1971 /72 by the Cuala Casements Youth Committee. It makes for fantastic reading today if only to show how much things have changed and how much has stayed the same
The Cuala Casements U13s played in the South City League in 1964. Can you name them?
We would like to thank Ogie Ryan for giving us this copy of the 1981 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship Semi Final Programme/Team Sheet. It is now digitally preserved for posterity in the Cuala Digital Archive. The 1981 Dublin Senior Hurling Championship Semi Finals were played in Croke Park which was unusual in itself. […]
The Festive Season is upon us and there will be many sports documentaries and chances to look back at some great Hurling and Football games of 2014 but how about a chance to look back at the memorable 1989 Final that saw Cuala beat Vincents to claim their maiden senior hurling championship.
It hardly seems that long ago but this year marks the fortieth anniversary of Cuala’s most successful Féile campaign. This is the one and only (so far!) Cuala team to ever win the Dublin Féile. In 1974, the lads went on to represent Dublin in the National Féile which was held in Limerick that year
Cartlann Digiteach Cuala is mindful of the great support Cuala and its ancestral clubs received from local schools. All the more so when some of those schools, like CBS Eblana in Dún Laoghaire is no longer with us. So we were thrilled when Joe McCann showed us a copy of “St Michaels CBS 1856 – 1992” a souvenir publication to mark the closing of that great institution in 1992