Dance nights and beach days: Tony's photos provide a glimpse of Kerry in the 1950s and '60s

The late Tony Fitzmaurice, left, took thousands of images of Kerry in previous decades, including this unhappy child on a Santa visit, and two men chatting at a dance in Asdee. Picture: Kerry Writers’ Museum.
All of life’s carnival is on display in a collection of photographs recently acquired by the Kerry Writers’ Museum. Tony Fitzmaurice passed away in 2019 aged 87. Little did the wider world – including some close relatives – know of the archive he built up over half a century taking photos of his homeplace, Ballybunion, and the people of north Kerry. His photos from the 1950s in particular evoke the world of the Brooklyn film starring Saoirse Ronan, a time when cigarette-smoking was de rigueur.
Kathy Reynolds, neé Kathy Fitzmaurice, left Ballybunion as a 13-year-old in the 1960s, emigrating to London. Her father was Fitzmaurice’s guardian. She is a photographer, as is her English husband. They called to Fitzmaurice’s house shortly after his death. Fitzmaurice’s widow, Madeline, had asked them to do something with the photos and negatives that were stored in her late husband’s office at the back of the house and in their loft.