GODBLESS you BOTH ALWAYS, two wonderful brothers singing and working together all there lives, May they both RIP FOREVER AND EVER AMEN ELIZABETH IRISH MYSELF AND PROUD OF MY IRISH ROOTS AND IRELAND. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
The daughter was entitled to her inheritance. Her father should have been wiser if he didn’t want to be responsible. Did he contribute to her upbringing? Was he a father to her?
True I sold two houses I owned for 40 years and never have I met or known I had so many relatives but none of them will see a penny of mine. Neighbours and kind folk will benefit from my life’s work. I’m old but not blind best wishes Ireland ☘️
I walked out of school and onto a farm the same day , ..straight on £10 a day , and the old farmer left his clock the same all year round , fried my head ...Happy Hard days , I learned more in a week on the farm than all my years in school 😘🏴
Lovely to see this film again, it was made over a number of years by my cousin Richard Fitzgerald when he'd come on holiday. Richard died 6th November 2019. RIP Dick
"""Many THANKS Jimmy for uploading this PRICELESS GEM-- on behalf of your cousin Richard-- R.I.P. of Brother's Paddy and Nicholas R.I.P. It was a real breath of fresh air of the Ireland- of yester-years. It took everyone on the film down memory lane to places in their Hearts of Loved ones past away-- R.I.P. Diá dháoibh Jimmy--- Béannácht -Léat.🙏🙏🇮🇪🇮🇪☘️☘️💚💚
Faces we'll never see again. As a kid in the seventies, spending glorious school summer holidays in the midlands, these were the characters I remember and treasure.
@@seanmaher7733 there's still some characters like to two brothers here in laois, but they are very thin on the ground, their just good genuine people,
My dog has honour loyalty and no betrayal he’s tiny yet he’d die for me, how many friends would show me such friendship. I’ve learned more from the nature of dogs than the betrayal of man.☘️✊
Endearing. As a 68 year old, I look back and think, none of us get it all, in one lifetime.....I don't think. Reminds me of a quote I once heard 'don't confuse comfort with happiness' ♥️🇨🇦
I'm a Dub with country blood in these Irish vains. I remembered men like them. My grandfather was like these men. The work they did would put anyone to shame, hard grafters. Time's are a changing ✌️☘️ 24:44
@@dormerhouse1 our street's, there's no Ye. All roads lead back to your towns. Ye send your worst up to Dublin for us to take care of. Ye/Us are all in the same boat, one in all in. 👊 ☘️
@@dormerhouse1Maybe you can’t take care of yourself no disrespect but where I live no person goes without. I’ve traveled the world I’ve known a decade in English prisons I’ve been and seen and returned to my people who treat me like I never left. The Irish will always keep there culture because they will die or kill for peace and fairness in this world billionaires own.☘️.
Their likes will never be seen again. Hard work was their companion in life. My father was cut from the same stone. One memory I have is of my father standing in a ditch dressed in oil skins, wellingtons and sou’wester with a hedge knife trimming the thorn hedge in a field in the pouring rain. Why ? Because it was lashing rain and there was little else he could do and he wasn’t going to let the rain stop him from doing a days work.
He was from Meath. Drumcondrath. I was first gen English. Went back home often, I remember my dad and his brothers playing cards untill the early hours.
A sad story , but what wonderful people , if the world was filled with gentlemen like that , how much better the world would be . RIP gentlemen you truly deserve the best .
Sweet memories of hard but better times..I will remember my mother’s people..their kindness and love will always remain in my heart..may they rest in peace.☘️
Its interesting to see the comments about the idyllic life. I am from this area and my grandfather would have been about 20yrs older than these lads. I see two men trapped by the obligation of keeping the family farm. People are seeing these fellas as a dead breed but i know countless men (mostly) still stuck farming, working just as hard and although the machinery and tech has changed, the 24/7 demands haven't. People see these fellas as happy go lucky and i just see two fellas resigned to the life they had to live. The frequent references to the mother tells me she would likely not have tolerated another woman on her patch. It's interesting to see how our backgrounds can colour our interpretation of this life.
Absolutely! Many of these mothers who kept their sons at home to work the farm and keep her secure, condemning her sons and daughters to a lonely life. Nothing romantic and virtuous there.
Wonderful people in this film. A happy, yet sad story too. Lord rest them all, and thanks to Richard for recording it so we can have it to look back on.
Time has moved on,but there are still characters like this in ireland today,2022 I know of a brother and sister in very similar circumstances, salt of the earth.
What Nicholas said is so true there will never be their like again, What wonderful grounded people they were, a lesson to everybody in this crazy must have world we now live in, the me me me gimmee gimmee society of mindless clones passing themselves off as people. Thank you for sharing such a lovely piece of our recent history i feel humbled just watching these brothers. They knew what mattered in life and they lived it. God bless them both. Andy. Scotland.
A fantastic film. The saddest part of the story is, the two brothers spent their days working together and nights they even slept in the same bed. Still the secret was kept. What a shame for all involved. 😢
When I was a young lad I remember my grandparents siblings being just like these men but all gone now my grandmother passed this year end of an era hard but earthly likeable people.
I had two bachelor uncles myself in Kilkenny. Hoeboys (if that's the correct spelling) as bachelor farmers were known locally. They were my Gods - my Heroes. As a lad coming over from London - they were beyond cool. There was zero rush on them - and they weren't even bothered about taking five minutes or so to even start a conversation. Looking back of course I hade very rose tinted glasses about their lives. As I got older I realised what a hard existence it was - so much hard work could be completely undone by the weather alone - how soul destroying that must have been. No wonder they were so obsessed with listening to the weather on their crackly old transistor radio
I am a Kilkenny Butler. Took my son over for the Butler Rally in London 2018 and went to Kilkenny to learn more about the ancestors. Michael Strahan is a Kilkenny Butler too.
We need a sequel to this film , I never tire of watching and listening to those to delightful brothers may these rest in peace in their heavenly home now .
Two great Irish men, old Ireland, and before them their parents even older and tougher times, and so it goes on/ or back. Today the Irish true Irish and Irish ways are dying out and we are a melting pot for Europe, If there was ever One Island Europe could or should have left alone it should have been Ireland. Let us in peace, come visit then go home. Our natural ways traditions , stories , even school has all changed. Ireland ways are being eroded and not by rising tides but buy Crooked Politicians / It is to get worse. God Bless these Brothers 🙏
The Irish had no choice but to leave Ireland, they worked hard and earned their living wherever they went..they didn’t expect handouts and free housing..most importantly they respected the host Country.
I know what you mean but it’s exactly the same everywhere now. Countries are losing their own/old traditions in favour of that ‘melting pot’ you mentioned. That and modern times - technology, shrinking world and the young not necessarily interested in the old preserves. That’s life I guess.
Its hard for non farming people to understand the work and the stress of farming, you can work like a dog and lose money. Nice to see him taking comfort from his dog at the end.
Very true work like a dog and finish up peniless city folk unfortunately do not have or wish to have an understanding of farming life and do not want not that farmers worry It is said when the legals see a farmer or country person coming they have made it money money money they still think milk is made in a factory I see this with my city cousins
As isolated as these brothers lived , i think they were better times , people had more time for each other. It was a sad film, but very enjoyable , as it brought back memories
Pure joy to watch, thanks for filming and posting. We will have been lucky in life to have known a Paddy and Nicholas. May they rest in peace in their heavenly bed sorting out our problems on earth
The prodigal daughter turning up after 50 years looking for inheritance, wasn't around to give a helping hand, typical, but at least Nicholas got a few easy years away from farming and he had no regrets, rip Paddy & Nicholas.
2 absolute gems god their generation were such pure hearted people ❤ I grew up around men like this and by god do I feel so blessed everyday that I did! BILL GATES has nothing on us lads cause those people and their likes are the true wealth of this world money can’t buy for any one billionaire in the world what we grew up with the likes of these people the best in humanity that was ever seen. They were such genuine caring kind hearted people never thought about themselves they didn’t know the ME! ❤️
An Ireland where an unborn baby was safe and guaranteed life, an Ireland where people cared for one another and there was friendship in communities. All gone forever.
An unborn baby was safe and guaranteed life? Did you not hear about the Magdalene Laundries and the mass Graves that babies were thrown into. You are just saying nonsensical words that make no sense.
A simple but moving story about ordinary people. I think deep down inside us all we know that these are the sort of people we should be admiring, instead of the phony and vacuous so called media made "celebrity's". Simple, ordinary, down to earth, everyday people just going about their normal life, doing the best that they can with the cards that life has dealt them. My heart goes out to Nicholas for the loss of his brother and life long companion Paddy, how hard it must have been for him in those first few weeks and months for him to carry on with his life, you can hear it in his voice when he talks about how Paddy was towards the end, and when he mentions how he just has to accept it and do his best to deal with it as he moves forward, so sad. As for Nicholas feeling betrayed in regards to Paddy's daughter, there could easily be several different scenarios to explain this, maybe it was only a very short term relationship that Paddy had with the mother long ago, or even a one night stand after which there was no more contact at all between the mother and Paddy, maybe the mother moved away to raise the child by herself, and the child was not even aware of who her father was until the death of Paddy when she was finally told the truth. Let us all give the daughter, and also Paddy himself, the benefit of the doubt on all of this, I very much doubt that he would have deliberately kept this from Nicholas if he had of known about it himself. Much respect to these two Irish gentlemen
Aiden that was a very sad but moving story of two men going about their daily lives in a time long since gone! You know I knew and I’m sure you did remember similar people in our area 🙏
@@michaelwalsh9145maybe his brother Paddy didn’t even know he had a daughter. The daughter would have been born in 1947. At that time in Ireland it was considered a huge shame for a young girl to get pregnant outside marriage. The girl who claimed to be Paddy’s daughter might only have been told who her father was when he died.
@@Peter-gi3re Only told when he died? Who told her? I’m fairly sure she knew who father was for a long time but didn’t want to know him but after he died she wanted his estate and went all out to get it. Whatever about that I was more referring how the op called it a simple story.
My lasting memory of the Comeragh's is being caught in a 'cattle stampede' while driving up an isolated country road. My now grown-up kids have never forgotten it.
Big respect to the auld brothers. I had the same situation with my Ma before she died. Out of character she wanted a strange wee chat with me when I was seventeen. I was allowed to know of her passing to a better live in death, but after the wee kiss on the forehead, I had to leave her in her bed and not look back. I kept my promise and at 3am that morning she passed in peace. I am now sixty years old and never forget the beauty of that moment. I will see her soon in Tir na nog. Blessings to all
These two brothers remind me of my Grandad Patrick Joseph Kinney who was Irish working on Farms mainly as the Horse man but was a General Handyworker. Too He turned his hand to whatever needed doing.
Oh,yes good old days,, I remember when I was younger there was two Brother,s 3mill,s up the road from me pat an Tom,,, farm,n all there lives ,, when work was hard,, but they where the only farmers around for miles and they had tractor,s,,an combin ,an plough,s all other farmer,s had pat,,Tom,, in all the time on hire as they had very little machine,s them self,s,,,, pat,,Tom are long gone now,, RIP,,, good old days,, this is Very good Video footage..👍👍👍
Deeply touching, a beautiful real truthful look into the Butler's lives over the years. A big thank you to them and to Richard for being the Creator of such a masterpiece. Generations to come will have a real insight into past lives. We look at photos and surmise what was going on in them but now we can see and hear Paddy and Nicholas saying their speak on the day! Thank you for creating and for sharing here, and Rest In Peace Richard
Loved this film . Real men. Im from England but connect more to these men than anything i see around me nowadays. Wonder does anyone know what age these brothers were.
The only benefit of the greedy woman turning up was that Nicholas sold up and enjoyed some time of relaxed retirement after a life time of hard work, may he and his brother be reunited in a better place...
if u worked on a farm all your life its very hard to retire ...........you have done nothing but work 7 days a week all your life since you were a boy of 10 or 11..........!
A very good watch. It took a very quick turn in the middle. With the brother dying. I was like wtf!?! But really interesting. They definitely do not make them like thst anymore.
i loved this documentary about those two lovey men. I knew they and their likes growing up in South Tipperary. I have recorded similar here in West Cork and captured some of the old ways, Ni bheidh a leithead aris ann,
A hard life ,but it had purpose and meaning ,unlike nowadays I'm second generation Irish born in the u.k.,in comparison I'd swap my lot for mid twentieth century Ireland in a heartbeat
yes they farmed a large farm by the standards of the day .......and trust me when you get past 55 it gets tougher by the year ..........esp when you have nobody coming on after you to give u a hand .......
My wife’s father lived with his brother in Carlow and her father met a young girl of 17 and she became pregnant ..my wife was then brought up by her mothers mother and the father just stayed with his brother until,they died ..my wife inherited their farm on a DNA test …it was common to see unmarried brothers living together in the past in Ireland..nice men..a dying breed
I'm now in clare I'm English last name O'shea we brought a very old derelict cottage restored her and live a more victorian small farm life learning irish traditions and trying to keep them ❤
This was the Ireland my parents knew growing up. They never could grasp America, but choose to raise their family there. We were children of 50's and 60's and values ans customs that my mom and dad tried to teach was a couple of generations past. Pity. we were born out of place in a strange and distant land.
If you were brought up in a Irish family, I guarantee, that if you went back home to Ireland every thing would feel familiar, and comfortable, my first name never sounds right until it's said with an Irish accent, when it is it makes me smile.
BOTH my parents were IRISH, we were born and grew up in England, back every year ti the Farm and Granny, 24, of us in the Cottage loved every minute, no toilet just paddy the horse, pigs, hens and helping Granny milk the cows at 5 IN the morning I now live in IRELAND, Co Roscommon i am where i should be Sending you love and STRENGTH from IRELAND xxx
@@rocky7173 I live in Oregon now, have for the last 30 years. I found my home and a beautiful wife, with two great kids that grew into fine adults. I plan on seeing Ireland one more time, good lord willing. My dad was from Castletown, Co Cork and mom from Mountmellick Co Laois. May they rest in peace.
Lord Rest Their Souls , Two of a kind ye'll not see again and an awful shame that Nicholas had to sell up everything , that woman had fifty years as he said to come forward and it was only for the greed of money that she did and just after Paddy had died aswell , it was ethically and morally wrong and she'll have no luck for it. But sure God Bless their Souls and at least now they are reunited with their loved ones in God's Heavenly Paradise where their is no pain or sorrow just Peace , Joy and Love...Amen + Slaínte to Paddy And Nicholas 🥃🥃💯🙏✝✝💛💛🕊☘☘☘🚜🐶😿🐄🐄🐈🐕
Loved this, reminds me of me parents from Kerry , same chirps and mannerisms , God Love them ! Now Ireland is importing the "lovely's "like the lad who murdered the homosexuals recently and you're labeled a Nazi if you question the replacement that is ongoing .
God love Paddy and Nicholas
May their Souls Rest In Peace ✝️
Amen
GODBLESS you BOTH ALWAYS, two wonderful brothers singing and working together all there lives, May they both RIP FOREVER AND EVER AMEN ELIZABETH IRISH MYSELF AND PROUD OF MY IRISH ROOTS AND IRELAND. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
This breaks my heart to watch this and see Eire today.
The old saying, where there is a will theres a relative. My heart sinks for modern day Ireland.
The daughter was entitled to her inheritance. Her father should have been wiser if he didn’t want to be responsible. Did he contribute to her upbringing? Was he a father to her?
True I sold two houses I owned for 40 years and never have I met or known I had so many relatives but none of them will see a penny of mine. Neighbours and kind folk will benefit from my life’s work. I’m old but not blind best wishes Ireland ☘️
Life was simple in those days...
Rest in peace.
it all started going downhill when the women started driving motorcars😉
I walked out of school and onto a farm the same day , ..straight on £10 a day , and the old farmer left his clock the same all year round , fried my head ...Happy Hard days , I learned more in a week on the farm than all my years in school 😘🏴
Lovely to see this film again, it was made over a number of years by my cousin Richard Fitzgerald when he'd come on holiday. Richard died 6th November 2019. RIP Dick
"""Many THANKS Jimmy for uploading this PRICELESS GEM-- on behalf of your cousin Richard-- R.I.P. of Brother's Paddy and Nicholas R.I.P. It was a real breath of fresh air of the Ireland- of yester-years. It took everyone on the film down memory lane to places in their Hearts of Loved ones past away-- R.I.P. Diá dháoibh Jimmy--- Béannácht -Léat.🙏🙏🇮🇪🇮🇪☘️☘️💚💚
He was raised by my dad's uncle, only found out an hour ago. What an interesting life Richard led. Loved watching the documentary again too.
Sorry for your loss and thank you for sharing this film. I grew up around people like the Butlers, sadly all gone now.
Sorry for your loss , I loved watching this video , thank you for sharing 👍
@@Fircuehal ruclips.net/video/onPR0E5WIAg/видео.html&ab_channel=JoeShmo
Faces we'll never see again. As a kid in the seventies, spending glorious school
summer holidays in the midlands, these were the characters I remember and treasure.
What part of the midlands sean
@@jamescornally6203 Laois, James.
@@seanmaher7733 what part of lovely laois Seán?
@@paulbergin6301 Abbeyleix, Paul.
@@seanmaher7733 there's still some characters like to two brothers here in laois, but they are very thin on the ground, their just good genuine people,
Dog the best companion never a truer word
🐕❤️
My dog has honour loyalty and no betrayal he’s tiny yet he’d die for me, how many friends would show me such friendship. I’ve learned more from the nature of dogs than the betrayal of man.☘️✊
Endearing.
As a 68 year old, I look back and think, none of us get it all, in one lifetime.....I don't think.
Reminds me of a quote I once heard 'don't confuse comfort with happiness'
♥️🇨🇦
Two good men, kind men. God bless them.
I'm a Dub with country blood in these Irish vains. I remembered men like them. My grandfather was like these men. The work they did would put anyone to shame, hard grafters. Time's are a changing ✌️☘️ 24:44
Isn’t it heartbreaking
@@dormerhouse1 our street's, there's no Ye. All roads lead back to your towns. Ye send your worst up to Dublin for us to take care of. Ye/Us are all in the same boat, one in all in. 👊 ☘️
@@deeppurple883Great comment my friend you say lots with few words.☘️
@@dormerhouse1Depends on your mindset I lost a decade in English prisons I am my brothers keeper, and he mine.☘️
@@dormerhouse1Maybe you can’t take care of yourself no disrespect but where I live no person goes without. I’ve traveled the world I’ve known a decade in English prisons I’ve been and seen and returned to my people who treat me like I never left. The Irish will always keep there culture because they will die or kill for peace and fairness in this world billionaires own.☘️.
Their likes will never be seen again. Hard work was their companion in life. My father was cut from the same stone. One memory I have is of my father standing in a ditch dressed in oil skins, wellingtons and sou’wester with a hedge knife trimming the thorn hedge in a field in the pouring rain. Why ? Because it was lashing rain and there was little else he could do and he wasn’t going to let the rain stop him from doing a days work.
❤
My father too, a worker and proud of being a responsible man....Dutch postwar immigrant
♥️🇨🇦
No time for sin there old hardworking Ireland gentlemen no old people left alone back then bless u guyes ❤❤❤❤
It was hard times. I miss my Dad, I love to hear the accent again. He was always in a suit , collar and tie. God Bless ,☘️
What accent did he have?
He was from Meath. Drumcondrath.
I was first gen English.
Went back home often, I remember my dad and his brothers playing cards untill the early hours.
Yes, no Carhartt clothes for them, LOL. Just like the classic bird hunters in New England.
And wellies x
A sad story , but what wonderful people , if the world was filled with gentlemen like that , how much better the world would be .
RIP gentlemen you truly deserve the best .
Sweet memories of hard but better times..I will remember my mother’s people..their kindness and love will always remain in my heart..may they rest in peace.☘️
Better times for sure..
Go back, walk in your mother's steps, learn the history, never forget ,☘️
Butler were and still are colonizers in Ireland and Butler is not Irish.
@@illyboulder2557 There is always one and you are it. Get a life.
Lovely men, Ireland will miss you guys.
Two wonderful & hard working brothers it was lovely listening to them god bless them
Man, I could watch this ALL DAY LONG. What a beautiful video! It reminds me of my grandfather, and others now long gone.
These brothers are the essence of Ireland , my dad was of same
☘
❤
💯
Mine too
Its interesting to see the comments about the idyllic life. I am from this area and my grandfather would have been about 20yrs older than these lads. I see two men trapped by the obligation of keeping the family farm. People are seeing these fellas as a dead breed but i know countless men (mostly) still stuck farming, working just as hard and although the machinery and tech has changed, the 24/7 demands haven't. People see these fellas as happy go lucky and i just see two fellas resigned to the life they had to live. The frequent references to the mother tells me she would likely not have tolerated another woman on her patch. It's interesting to see how our backgrounds can colour our interpretation of this life.
Absolutely! Many of these mothers who kept their sons at home to work the farm and keep her secure, condemning her sons and daughters to a lonely life. Nothing romantic and virtuous there.
Wonderful people in this film. A happy, yet sad story too. Lord rest them all, and thanks to Richard for recording it so we can have it to look back on.
Time has moved on,but there are still characters like this in ireland today,2022 I know of a brother and sister in very similar circumstances, salt of the earth.
How i long to see days like that again they were hard but happy
I could listen to the two brothers all day they bring back my old Ireland
RIP lads
Very happy to know that the surviving brother had a better few years before he died.Poignant.
What Nicholas said is so true there will never be their like again, What wonderful grounded people they were, a lesson to everybody in this crazy must have world we now live in, the me me me gimmee gimmee society of mindless clones passing themselves off as people. Thank you for sharing such a lovely piece of our recent history i feel humbled just watching these brothers. They knew what mattered in life and they lived it. God bless them both. Andy. Scotland.
Beautiful film two wonderful gentlemen, may they R.I.P ❤😢
What a brilliant 'slice of life' this was .. with a great ending that I didn't expect.
A fantastic film. The saddest part of the story is, the two brothers spent their days working together and nights they even slept in the same bed. Still the secret was kept. What a shame for all involved. 😢
When I was a young lad I remember my grandparents siblings being just like these men but all gone now my grandmother passed this year end of an era hard but earthly likeable people.
I had two bachelor uncles myself in Kilkenny. Hoeboys (if that's the correct spelling) as bachelor farmers were known locally. They were my Gods - my Heroes. As a lad coming over from London - they were beyond cool. There was zero rush on them - and they weren't even bothered about taking five minutes or so to even start a conversation. Looking back of course I hade very rose tinted glasses about their lives. As I got older I realised what a hard existence it was - so much hard work could be completely undone by the weather alone - how soul destroying that must have been.
No wonder they were so obsessed with listening to the weather on their crackly old transistor radio
What part of Kilkenny? If you dont mind saying.
@@johntheball A little place called Maudlin near Conahy
I am a Kilkenny Butler. Took my son over for the Butler Rally in London 2018 and went to Kilkenny to learn more about the ancestors. Michael Strahan is a Kilkenny Butler too.
Never tire of watching this video of these two delightful brothers of an Ireland of yesteryear , Happy times but mixed with a little sadness .
Wonderful, May they both Rest in Peace!
We need a sequel to this film , I never tire of watching and listening to those to delightful brothers may these rest in peace in their heavenly home now .
❤Rip in perfect peace ❤
Two great Irish men, old Ireland, and before them their parents even older and tougher times, and so it goes on/ or back. Today the Irish true Irish and Irish ways are dying out and we are a melting pot for Europe, If there was ever One Island Europe could or should have left alone it should have been Ireland. Let us in peace, come visit then go home. Our natural ways traditions , stories , even school has all changed. Ireland ways are being eroded and not by rising tides but buy Crooked Politicians / It is to get worse. God Bless these Brothers 🙏
But we're allowed everywhere but don't welcome anyone here, doesn't seem to fair
@ruthdubh your not forced to give up your identity, Ireland is a free country with a history of emigration
Absolutely correct 💚🇮🇪
The Irish had no choice but to leave Ireland, they worked hard and earned their living wherever they went..they didn’t expect handouts and free housing..most importantly they respected the host Country.
I know what you mean but it’s exactly the same everywhere now.
Countries are losing their own/old traditions in favour of that ‘melting pot’ you mentioned. That and modern times - technology, shrinking world and the young not necessarily interested in the old preserves. That’s life I guess.
Brilliant. A lovely and greaet story of great brothers. Brilliant and lovely guys.
Its hard for non farming people to understand the work and the stress of farming, you can work like a dog and lose money. Nice to see him taking comfort from his dog at the end.
Very true work like a dog and finish up peniless city folk unfortunately do not have or wish to have an understanding of farming life and do not want not that farmers worry It is said when the legals see a farmer or country person coming they have made it money money money they still think milk is made in a factory I see this with my city cousins
As isolated as these brothers lived , i think they were better times , people had more time for each other. It was a sad film, but very enjoyable , as it brought back memories
Lovely film of them both may they rest in peace
God bless ye and save ye lads!
‘“If a person walks nice and steady… he’ll stay going! 😎
Twould bring a tear to your eye a lovely simple life well lived .
Pure joy to watch, thanks for filming and posting. We will have been lucky in life to have known a Paddy and Nicholas. May they rest in peace in their heavenly bed sorting out our problems on earth
The prodigal daughter turning up after 50 years looking for inheritance, wasn't around to give a helping hand, typical, but at least Nicholas got a few easy years away from farming and he had no regrets, rip Paddy & Nicholas.
Always the way.grrr😢
Did her father ever acknowledge or support her in her childhood or mention her in his will?
@theodorajuskiw2957 when one dips one's wick one must pay for the oil. Besides,hadhhh
@theodorajuskiw2957 when one dips one's wick one must pay for the oil. Besides,hadhhh
@theodorajuskiw2957 when one dips one's wick one must pay for the oil Besides,hadhhh
Brilliant if only I could live like that when I was young
2 absolute gems god their generation were such pure hearted people ❤
I grew up around men like this and by god do I feel so blessed everyday that I did!
BILL GATES has nothing on us lads cause those people and their likes are the true wealth of this world money can’t buy for any one billionaire in the world what we grew up with the likes of these people the best in humanity that was ever seen.
They were such genuine caring kind hearted people never thought about themselves they didn’t know the ME! ❤️
@@Chromosome999 Well I admire your faith in human nature and your naiviety but the Ireland I remember was full of hidden demons .
An Ireland where an unborn baby was safe and guaranteed life, an Ireland where people cared for one another and there was friendship in communities. All gone forever.
An unborn baby was safe and guaranteed life?
Did you not hear about the Magdalene Laundries and the mass Graves that babies were thrown into. You are just saying nonsensical words that make no sense.
Amen
It’s not gone where I come from
@@johnhiggins779 it's not gone. It's only you have closed yourself off from it.😌
The unborn child might have been safe, but its Mother could have had her liberty taken away if she did not conform to social expectations.
A simple but moving story about ordinary people. I think deep down inside us all we know that these are the sort of people we should be admiring, instead of the phony and vacuous so called media made "celebrity's". Simple, ordinary, down to earth, everyday people just going about their normal life, doing the best that they can with the cards that life has dealt them.
My heart goes out to Nicholas for the loss of his brother and life long companion Paddy, how hard it must have been for him in those first few weeks and months for him to carry on with his life, you can hear it in his voice when he talks about how Paddy was towards the end, and when he mentions how he just has to accept it and do his best to deal with it as he moves forward, so sad.
As for Nicholas feeling betrayed in regards to Paddy's daughter, there could easily be several different scenarios to explain this, maybe it was only a very short term relationship that Paddy had with the mother long ago, or even a one night stand after which there was no more contact at all between the mother and Paddy, maybe the mother moved away to raise the child by herself, and the child was not even aware of who her father was until the death of Paddy when she was finally told the truth. Let us all give the daughter, and also Paddy himself, the benefit of the doubt on all of this, I very much doubt that he would have deliberately kept this from Nicholas if he had of known about it himself.
Much respect to these two Irish gentlemen
A simple story? Did you watch it? It’s far from simple, his brother kept a secret from him for 50 years.
Aiden that was a very sad but moving story of two men going about their daily lives in a time long since gone!
You know I knew and I’m sure you did remember similar people in our area 🙏
lmao ofcourse he didn't watch it. He just wanted to grind his axe against media made celebrities.@@michaelwalsh9145
@@michaelwalsh9145maybe his brother Paddy didn’t even know he had a daughter. The daughter would have been born in 1947. At that time in Ireland it was considered a huge shame for a young girl to get pregnant outside marriage. The girl who claimed to be Paddy’s daughter might only have been told who her father was when he died.
@@Peter-gi3re Only told when he died? Who told her? I’m fairly sure she knew who father was for a long time but didn’t want to know him but after he died she wanted his estate and went all out to get it. Whatever about that I was more referring how the op called it a simple story.
Beautiful. Such honesty,love and understanding.Real people with a story❤️
My lasting memory of the Comeragh's is being caught in a 'cattle stampede' while driving up an isolated country road. My now grown-up kids have never forgotten it.
Men er be ever men like them and they were jyst Beuitfull people may they both rip god got reo beuutful soles
Dear dear I remember ole lads like that when I was child bless them
What beautiful brothers, wish we had more tapes😊
A great story of honesty.
Wonderful production .
Beautiful spiritual life those lovely men are Saints God rest their gentle souls may the light of Heaven shine upon them🙏🏻❤️🌹🌹💙🌙🇮🇪
Big respect to the auld brothers. I had the same situation with my Ma before she died. Out of character she wanted a strange wee chat with me when I was seventeen. I was allowed to know of her passing to a better live in death, but after the wee kiss on the forehead, I had to leave her in her bed and not look back. I kept my promise and at 3am that morning she passed in peace. I am now sixty years old and never forget the beauty of that moment. I will see her soon in Tir na nog. Blessings to all
These two brothers remind me of my Grandad Patrick Joseph Kinney who was Irish working on Farms mainly as the Horse man but was a General Handyworker. Too He turned his hand to whatever needed doing.
Oh,yes good old days,, I remember when I was younger there was two Brother,s 3mill,s up the road from me pat an Tom,,, farm,n all there lives ,, when work was hard,, but they where the only farmers around for miles and they had tractor,s,,an combin ,an plough,s all other farmer,s had pat,,Tom,, in all the time on hire as they had very little machine,s them self,s,,,, pat,,Tom are long gone now,, RIP,,, good old days,, this is Very good Video footage..👍👍👍
Deeply touching, a beautiful real truthful look into the Butler's lives over the years. A big thank you to them and to Richard for being the Creator of such a masterpiece. Generations to come will have a real insight into past lives. We look at photos and surmise what was going on in them but now we can see and hear Paddy and Nicholas saying their speak on the day!
Thank you for creating and for sharing here, and Rest In Peace Richard
Lovely, hard working, God fearing, honest men.
They were related to me and I have great memories of them
Where are they buried?
A lovely story of two lovely men. Made me happy & sad, and memories of my childhood in Ireland. 💙💙
Love looking at old ways
Thank you whata beautiful film so lovely ❤
Beautiful
Absolutely beautiful.
lovely video, Reminds me of Westport Co Mayo in the 1940s/50s, All gone but not forgotten.
I don’t think Mayo has changed much from the 1940 ! Ye still can’t even kick ball!!
It's so nice to see two. Great Iris I would love to invite them both to come to the U S. But I think that it might be more than they could handle.
A wonderful story.
Lovely to have this, and if this is someone you are related to, you are blessed.
Loved this film . Real men. Im from England but connect more to these men than anything i see around me nowadays. Wonder does anyone know what age these brothers were.
The only benefit of the greedy woman turning up was that Nicholas sold up and enjoyed some time of relaxed retirement after a life time of hard work, may he and his brother be reunited in a better place...
if u worked on a farm all your life its very hard to retire ...........you have done nothing but work 7 days a week all your life since you were a boy of 10 or 11..........!
That’s right this is a wonderful account of 2brothers as close as they were fabulous
So wonderful
A very good watch. It took a very quick turn in the middle. With the brother dying. I was like wtf!?!
But really interesting. They definitely do not make them like thst anymore.
The pair of you rest in Peace
Where is there burial ground I love this story of these great gentle souls
Two honest old lads
Lovely to see brings back memories not all good different times
i loved this documentary about those two lovey men. I knew they and their likes growing up in South Tipperary. I have recorded similar here in West Cork and captured some of the old ways, Ni bheidh a leithead aris ann,
I was really saddened with their death. ,I was really going to invite them to my home in California it was a great. Video thou a sad ending
Irish logic, always makes sense to me , great film
Love them
And the dog
Two smashing fellas n all..
The old time and the new time buckled me, my mother said the same thing 😅
Beautiful film..x
A hard life ,but it had purpose and meaning ,unlike nowadays I'm second generation Irish born in the u.k.,in comparison I'd swap my lot for mid twentieth century Ireland in a heartbeat
Join me
Me to,, lieing on a farm is next to, traveling in a bowtop waggon,, peacefull lifes,
Life has what each makes of it! REALLY! The Irish dirge. You make your purpose and meaning as they did.
@@islanddweller3674 what is the Irish dirge?
Real story love them both ♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️💯
Lovely video! Didn't he look much happier when he sold the cattle and retired at last. He looked so much younger.
true i thought the same
yes they farmed a large farm by the standards of the day .......and trust me when you get past 55 it gets tougher by the year ..........esp when you have nobody coming on after you to give u a hand .......
@@georgedoorley5628 I can imagine. Seven days a week!
The interview is great pity we couldn't hear properly with the loud music
Love how they are farmers wearing waist coats and jackets on the farm!!
all that kit started out as sunday best and was worn out on the farm in the end ........nothing was thrown out ..........not like today ..........!
Bless them
My wife’s father lived with his brother in Carlow and her father met a young girl of 17 and she became pregnant ..my wife was then brought up by her mothers mother and the father just stayed with his brother until,they died ..my wife inherited their farm on a DNA test …it was common to see unmarried brothers living together in the past in Ireland..nice men..a dying breed
I'm now in clare I'm English last name O'shea we brought a very old derelict cottage restored her and live a more victorian small farm life learning irish traditions and trying to keep them ❤
This was the Ireland my parents knew growing up. They never could grasp America, but choose to raise their family there. We were children of 50's and 60's and values ans customs that my mom and dad tried to teach was a couple of generations past. Pity. we were born out of place in a strange and distant land.
If you were brought up in a Irish family, I guarantee, that if you went back home to Ireland every thing would feel familiar, and comfortable, my first name never sounds right until it's said with an Irish accent, when it is it makes me smile.
BOTH my parents were IRISH, we were born and grew up in England, back every year ti the Farm and Granny, 24, of us in the Cottage loved every minute, no toilet just paddy the horse, pigs, hens and helping Granny milk the cows at 5 IN the morning
I now live in IRELAND, Co Roscommon i am where i should be
Sending you love and STRENGTH from IRELAND xxx
@@rocky7173 I live in Oregon now, have for the last 30 years. I found my home and a beautiful wife, with two great kids that grew into fine adults. I plan on seeing Ireland one more time, good lord willing. My dad was from Castletown, Co Cork and mom from Mountmellick Co Laois. May they rest in peace.
Lord Rest Their Souls , Two of a kind ye'll not see again and an awful shame that Nicholas had to sell up everything , that woman had fifty years as he said to come forward and it was only for the greed of money that she did and just after Paddy had died aswell , it was ethically and morally wrong and she'll have no luck for it. But sure God Bless their Souls and at least now they are reunited with their loved ones in God's Heavenly Paradise where their is no pain or sorrow just Peace , Joy and Love...Amen + Slaínte to Paddy And Nicholas 🥃🥃💯🙏✝✝💛💛🕊☘☘☘🚜🐶😿🐄🐄🐈🐕
Loved this, reminds me of me parents from Kerry , same chirps and mannerisms , God Love them ! Now Ireland is importing the "lovely's "like the lad who murdered the homosexuals recently and you're labeled a Nazi if you question the replacement that is ongoing .
Yep.. tragic beyond tragic! 😢 🙏
When you look at the History and what the Irish suffered it breaks my heart. Have a read about Irish slave trade.
Ireland was Britain's first colony.
Same thing in the US. I like the term "lovelys."
ruclips.net/video/_2HqSB2Ccvs/видео.html. Sad to see Ireland changing so much and not all for the better
Filmed at a time when Ireland was Irish.
Not anymore
God bless Ireland 🇮🇪 from Wales 🏴
Wonderful men r.i.p
"Time wore it away". Amen brother.
Brilliant brother s a hard life but they always had a smile and at the end does he think of get married the dogs my best friend how true
The old boys are the best
The music was perfect. , especially "Buffalo Girls "
Two great old farmers, See ya up there men one day,