IT's terrible the way it is now...!! I remember going into Moore street with me father as a young child in the late 80's and we were spoilt for choice with the fruit stalls because my Da's cousins were traders and there was a great atmosphere in Moore street. It will be a very sad day for Dublin if we lose the street traders...I mean we have lost enough of it already !! We need Moore street traders in Dublin...Its a part of our culture...!!
its a disgrace what happened my god they should hang there head in fucking shame ....you can never get the memories back ...well done to the Dublin woman and thank you for the all the wonderful times
Hi My Mother in Law owned Kelly s of Moore st her Daughter Dolores whom I married was so proud of this .I am Jewish but so proud to be long to this Heritage Dolores was a Beautiful person and my best friend she passed away Jan 10th 1997 it was a sad day for all
My granny was a dealer and aunt alice the browns of sampsons lane our family had holidays in dear old dublin every year all the dealers would make a great fuss of us when we arrived aunt alice sold outside shields's butchers next to maggie lynch what fabulous memories we have moore st was something else in it's hey day not the same anymore very sad!
I would love to know why the guards don't do a thing about the gangs of men standing around moore street drinking and basically intimidating people going about their business. I walked down moore street today and there was man having a roaring argument with himself. He frightened the life out of my young lad so much so that he ran to the other side of the road to get away from him. I have to say it really saddened and annoyed me to see it being allowed to go like this, shame on our guards for not doing their jobs.
ty so much for the documentary. Preserving part of our past is vital; once it is gone, it's gone. I have to credit Brendan O'Carroll's trilogy of books for my intrigue into the markets, as the main character Agnes Brown is a market seller and the whole theme is played out throughout the trilogy in great detail. Although fiction, it seems the details are pretty close. ty again. coming to Dublin in sept. and Moore st. is on my saturday itinerary.
Wow only ten years ago! Moore Street has completely changed since this was recorded. It littery looks like a slum now. A huge part of dublin culture has died.
I was a very good pal of Johns many years ago when he worked in the Market, I really could not believe it when I heard that he had moved on. Looking at him in this video he looks so well, a real good character . May He R.I.P..
Yes indeed, John was a gentleman. He loved the banter with all those he met in his day and all loved him. He much preferred working in Moore street to driving buses.
Come to Dublin and play 'Spot the Irishman/woman'- it's like looking for a needle in a haystack! We're a rare breed and minority in our own country thanks to corrupt sell-out politicians!
I love these snapshots of people's lives. Great video.
IT's terrible the way it is now...!! I remember going into Moore street with me father as a young child in the late 80's and we were spoilt for choice with the fruit stalls because my Da's cousins were traders and there was a great atmosphere in Moore street. It will be a very sad day for Dublin if we lose the street traders...I mean we have lost enough of it already !! We need Moore street traders in Dublin...Its a part of our culture...!!
what a wonderful story. I loved reading your fond memories; thanks for sharing.
its a disgrace what happened my god they should hang there head in fucking shame ....you can never get the memories back ...well done to the Dublin woman and thank you for the all the wonderful times
Hi My Mother in Law owned Kelly s of Moore st her Daughter Dolores whom I married was so proud of this .I am Jewish but so proud to be long to this Heritage Dolores was a Beautiful person and my best friend she passed away Jan 10th 1997 it was a sad day for all
My granny was a dealer and aunt alice the browns of sampsons lane our family had holidays in dear old dublin every year all the dealers would make a great fuss of us when we arrived aunt alice sold outside shields's butchers next to maggie lynch what fabulous memories we have moore st was something else in it's hey day not the same anymore very sad!
Moore St ma's for ever🙏
My nanny and granddad would be turning in the grave the way it’s gone
I would love to know why the guards don't do a thing about the gangs of men standing around moore street drinking and basically intimidating people going about their business. I walked down moore street today and there was man having a roaring argument with himself. He frightened the life out of my young lad so much so that he ran to the other side of the road to get away from him. I have to say it really saddened and annoyed me to see it being allowed to go like this, shame on our guards for not doing their jobs.
ty so much for the documentary. Preserving part of our past is vital; once it is gone, it's gone. I have to credit Brendan O'Carroll's trilogy of books for my intrigue into the markets, as the main character Agnes Brown is a market seller and the whole theme is played out throughout the trilogy in great detail. Although fiction, it seems the details are pretty close. ty again. coming to Dublin in sept. and Moore st. is on my saturday itinerary.
my mums cousin vera colgan worked on moore street all her life , R.I.P . VERA X
Fantastic piece! I love market and you know its all the same all around the world.
The beating heart of Dublin City is gone. The council needs to hang its head in same.
does anyone remember the woman with gigantic lip , bless her i remember her as a kid
Damien Daly - Yeah, I remember her from the 70s
Wow only ten years ago! Moore Street has completely changed since this was recorded. It littery looks like a slum now. A huge part of dublin culture has died.
Isn't diversity great...
Sold out from under us, like the very fish on their stalls.
Great to see you john draper- miss you.xxxx caroline
I was a very good pal of Johns many years ago when he worked in the Market, I really could not believe it when I heard that he had moved on. Looking at him in this video he looks so well, a real good character . May He R.I.P..
Yes indeed, John was a gentleman. He loved the banter with all those he met in his day and all loved him. He much preferred working in Moore street to driving buses.
Make the heart of dublin beat again come people
Moore street tradition is almost gone..
Foreigners taken over...
Patricia Bracken - They belong there
It will never be the same anymore changed completely- 👎
When I visit Irland...I don't want to see a melting pot of people I want to see Irish people and traditions...
Poor you, there's plenty of irish people here and its their own fault that traditions are lost.
You can thank the EU and spineless Irish politicians
Come to Dublin and play 'Spot the Irishman/woman'- it's like looking for a needle in a haystack! We're a rare breed and minority in our own country thanks to corrupt sell-out politicians!
@@Jen-lg4hp Bradford, UK, is the same, swamped.
I love moore street is better than before and now Moore street is gone...the Irish culture have been destroyed
come back market dealers
We don't need your help.
The tradition is lost.
nealy all me nannys side worked ther
moore street another victim of multi culti. From fruit veg and flowers to well you know.
to weaves an halal
It's great to see other cultures thriving
@@cahillgreg not at the cost of others
@@cahillgreg it isn't, the place has lost its character
Marmalade Marmalade I love Marmalade.
dreadful narration