
‘We're Irish Catholics and we're that kind of family': The Gallaghers' boyhoods in Manchester
the Beatles
–
The Smiths
and
Oasis
– were almost entirely Manchester-Irish.
Smiths' guitarist
Johnny Marr
, whose parents were from Athy, Co Kildare, told The Irish Times some years ago: 'I've never described myself as British or English. I'm either
Mancunian or Mancunian Irish
– that is a culture and a nationality that is a thing unto itself.'
Oasis, too, come from a working-class Irish background. Along with the Gallagher brothers, original members Paul 'Guigsy' McGuigan, Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs and Tony McCarroll all have Irish roots.
The Gallaghers' father Tommy was from Duleek,
Co Meath
; their mother Peggy Sweeney from Charlestown,
Co Mayo
, a place synonymous with mass Irish emigration.
READ MORE
Peggy was one of 11 children and emigrated to Manchester at the age of 18 in 1961 sending back £1 a week to help her family. Many of the Sweeney family moved to Manchester – five of Peggy's sisters lived nearby.
Tommy Gallagher worked as a builder in Manchester and moonlighted as a country and western DJ at the Carousel Club. Big Tom MacBride of Big Tom and the Mainliners fame remembers attending the club and seeing
Noel
and
Liam
there. 'They were only skitters of gossons at the time.'
When the Gallagher brothers were young, their summers were spent in either Charlestown or Duleek. Noel Gallagher told Gay Byrne on the Late Late Show in 1996 that his mother used 'to drag us religiously by the earhole for six weeks because we had never seen the likes of nettles. We run around the fields throwing things at cows. She was determined to introduce us to Irish culture.'
[
Being the sons of emigrants helped Oasis
Opens in new window
]
It was a bit of a culture shock but 'we grew to love it and we still love it,' he added.
For their parents, the summers provided an antidote to the concrete jungle they grew up in.
Family portrait of the Gallagher family in the mid 1970's, from left to right Noel, Paul, Liam and mum Peggy Gallagher. Photograph: Dan Callister/ Liaison via Getty Images
Tommy Gallagher bought Noel his first guitar and brought him to Maine Road to see Manchester City, but Noel has no time for him.
Peggy later left Tommy and recalled years after: 'I left him a knife, a fork, and a spoon. And I think I left him too much.'
She and her children left the family home in Burnage for a council flat. She took several jobs to provide for her three boys, Noel, Liam and Paul and kept the family together saying in later years: 'We're Irish Catholics and we're that kind of family.'
Tommy became completely estranged from his family. In one notorious incident at the height of the band's fame in March 1996, he turned up at Dublin's Westbury Hotel where his sons were staying.
He arrived in the bar at 2am and ended up in a screaming match with Liam. Tommy had to be escorted off the premises.
Noel said of his father: 'As far as I'm concerned, I haven't got a father. He's not a father to me, y'know? I don't respect him in any way whatsoever.'
Oasis playing in New York in 1994. Photograph: Steve Eichner/ WireImage via Getty Images
Tommy would continue to pontificate on his estranged sons saying that reports of him being a bad father were exaggerated. He even held out hope of a public reconciliation with his sons, but it never came.
The question of Oasis'
links with Co Meath
came up, inevitably, at a press conference to announce their gig at Slane Castle in 2009. Noel Gallagher recalled that approximately 80 relatives turned up to the band's earlier Slane gig in 1995 when they played support to REM.
Both Tommy and Peggy Gallagher are still alive.
Peggy's family home, which she later used for holidays, was sold last year for €300,000. Locals said Mrs Gallagher was no longer able to come over to the house on her own and there was no one locally to look after her any more.
As a Manchester City fan, Noel was asked last year about the club's midfielder Phil Foden.
Noel Gallagher and Liam Gallagher at a photoshoot in a hotel in Tokyo, September 1994. Photograph: Koh Hasebe/ Shinko Music/ Getty Images
'Do you care how he plays for England in the Euros this summer?' asked the interviewer.
'I'm not an England fan, I'm Irish,' Gallagher replied. 'Good night!'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Extra.ie
3 minutes ago
- Extra.ie
PICTURE EXCLUSIVE: Noel Gallagher has rocked out of his hotel and is rollin' his way to Croke Park.
Rock n' Roll has officially started in Dublin as Oasis frontman Noel Gallagher has just left his hotel and has made his way to Croke Park ahead of tonight's first of back-to-back Irish gigs, can exclusively reveal. Manchester musician Noel, was flying solo as he departed five star Carton House Country Manor Hotel in Maynooth this afternoon. Dressed in his trademark casual garb, Noel was wearing a bright blue windbreaker, over a plain white teeshirt, dark grey skinny jeans, white trainers and a pair of blue shell sunnies. A chirpy Noel smiled and waved to the delight of Carton House staff, who escorted him to his waiting Ranger Rover and waved him off, as he made his way to Dublin City Centre. Noel Gallagher waving as he gets in a car to head to Croke Park. Pic: Michael Chester/@chesterpix And despite being a globally feted superstar Noel was decidedly down-to-earth as he hopped into a waiting blacked out Range Rover with just one driver as the pair zoomed out of the grounds of Carton House to make their way to Dublin City Centre: Over on the very far side of the capital, Noel's singer brother Liam, is still kicking back at the swanky Powerscourt Hotel and has not, as yet, departed the hotel for Croke Park. So with Noel on route and Liam not far behind him, Oasis mania has reached boiling point around Croke park and in Dublin City Centre, with fans of the band breaking out into impromptu renditions of the groups greatest hits, in beer gardens and boozers around town. Oasis are set to take to the stage in Croke Park tonight at 8.15 with the concert coming to an end at 10.45. As Oasis famously sang,'So Sally Can Wait' – Noel, in particular, is ensuring that fans won't be waiting much longer. Check out tomorrow's 'Irish Mail on Sunday' for more exclusive celebrity pix and backstage Oasis concert news.


Extra.ie
2 hours ago
- Extra.ie
Excitement at fever pitch ahead of Oasis Croke Park gigs
The hallowed ground of Croke Park will turn into a mass of heaving bodies clad in Adidas tracksuits and bucket hats as thousands of people descend on GAA Headquarters for the first of two Oasis gigs in Dublin this weekend. Packed buses and trains are making their way to Dublin from the four corners of Ireland as excitement builds to fever pitch, in what must surely be, the most anticipated gig of the decade. Concert-goers, some of whom have had their tickets for over a year, have been counting down the days until this weekend, planning time off work and saving hard to afford to buy some merchandise to remember this momentous occasion. Oasis fans Sean McAllister and Paddy Stewart Shanon arrive at Heuston Station for tonight's concert. Pic: Sasko Lazarov/© This is the Gallagher brothers' reunion gig after a drought of 16 years since they last performed. It seems after intervention from their Irish mum Peggy, the lads have been able to put their differences aside and bring their show back on the road. Former members of the group have also made a return for the reunion gigs with Andy Bell on bass, Gem Archer and Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs on guitars, and renowned drummer Joey Waronker bringing up the rear. The Manchester lads last played Ireland in 2009, when they headlined at Slane Castle, in Co Meath, performing there to over 80,000 fans, so this reunion gig has a lot riding on it for original fans of the band, and the new generation of bucket hat wearing music lovers. Oasis fans Mamush Grispen and Robbe Hendrick from Belgium in Temple Bar for tonight's concert. Pic: Sasko Lazarov/© If you are one of the lucky ones with your mitts on one of the golden tickets to either Saturday or Sunday's shows, then you need to know a few things in advance of arriving at Croker, in order to have the best experience possible. Gardaí are advising fans to follow their Oasis Concert Croke Park Traffic Managment Plan, and to take heed of signage in and around Croke Park, as roads will be closed all around the venue, and Gardaí and stewards will be in attendance, in order to keep everything running as smoothly as possible for concert goers and residents of the Croke Park area. The doors to the stadium will open at 5pm and the show gets underway at 6pm with support acts Richard Ashcroft (formerly of The Verve) and Cast, the Liverpool band led by John Power. Both artists are set to perform at both gigs this weekend. Oasis fans Oonagh Linnane with Andy Nugent and Catherine Doyle at Stephens Green before tonight's concert. Pic: Sasko Lazarov/© Following the lads' magnificent return to the stage in Wales earlier this summer, they then went on to play a homecoming gig in Manchester to stellar reviews – and then on to five nights at Wembley Stadium, followed by three at Murrayfield in Edinburgh. But the two Dublin gigs are sure to carry extra importance for Oasis due to their Irish roots, with both parents, Peggy and Thomas, hailing from the Emerald Isle.


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Legendary Irish band rumoured to take to stage alongside Oasis tonight during sold-out Croke Park gig
A LEGENDARY Irish folk band are rumoured to be appearing alongside Oasis on the Croke Park stage this evening. While Noel and Liam Gallagher prepare for their epic Irish comeback tonight at GAA HQ, rumours have been swirling that they might have a special guest... or guests. 3 Preparations to get Croke Park gig ready have been underway for days Credit: COLLECT 3 Rumours have been spreading about special guests who could join the brothers on stage Credit: Getty Images - Getty The two sold-out nights at Croke Park mark 16 years since the pair last played on Irish soil together in 2009. And with the European leg of their reunion tour becoming a smash hit, and them set to take on America later in the month, anticipation for how they will end this leg of the tour has been palpable. One Irish folk band, once admired by the pair have hinted they could be joining the Manchester boys on stage tonight at Croke Park. Legendary Irish folk band The Wolfe Tones could be joining the pair at GAA HQ later today. Brothers Noel and Liam were big fans of The Wolfe Tones growing up, crediting the rebel songs they sang as giving their own music an edge. The expectation for the special guests was a rumour started by Liam himself, when he was asked late last year if he would like The Wolfe Tones to open for Oasis in Croke Park. To which he replied: 'I'm up for it let's do it.' And although they aren't officially listed on the band's stage times or as an opening act, fans were still holding out hope they could appear during Oasis' set. Yesterday, just after Noel was spotted out and about around Maynooth ahead of their gigs tonight, The Wolfe Tones reignited speculation they could join them on stage. They took to X, writing: "Well lad, hope you're excited for Croker this weekend. Any idea what time our sound check is at? Welcome to the Emerald Isle." Oasis lights up Dublin sky The tweet sent fans of both bands into a frenzy as they shared their excitement at the idea of the lads joining Oasis on stage. Paul said: "Two of the best bands on the planet." Karen commented: "Hope you'll be there lads." Donna wrote: "Please please say this is really happening." Another fan insisted: "Make it happen!" This would mark the band coming out of retirement, as they embarked on a farewell tour last year, which culminated with two massive gigs in Thomond Park in Limerick. Speaking with The Sun, Brian Warfield revealed that he was up for the appearance and said that 'this is incredible news.' 'Tell Liam we'll be there. All we're waiting for now is the official invitation.'