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Jeff Meade

News

A Fleadh to Remember

Kicking their heels at the Philly Fleadh

Kicking their heels at the Philly Fleadh

It’s over, but if you were there, you’re probably already planning for next year.

The inaugural Philadelphia Fleadh down at Pennypack Park in the Northeast brought together some of the finest Irish musical talent the city has to offer, including the likes of Jamison, the Bogside Rogues, the John Byrne Band. There wasn’t a moment the whole day when the park was not awash in jigs and reels.

If you wanted dancing, there was plenty of that, too. And food. And drink. And more food. And more drink …

We captured the action in photos.

Check them out!

People

Catching Up on GAA Action

Happy time

Happy time

Two big Philly GAA football matches last Sunday down at Cardinal Dougherty.

First up, St. Pats Donegal came out and played strongly to top Tyrone 0-11 to 0-2.

The second game was closer, with the Young Irelands over the Kevin Barrys, 3-11 to 1-14. Our pal Gwyneth MacArthur, who has a real knack for capturing GAA action, was on the sidelines, and she caught all of the action, on and off the field.

If you’ve not seen Gaelic Athletic Association sports, we recommend it highly. You could watch the Phillies’ relievers squander yet another lead, or you could watch a bunch of crazy guys playing all out in a sport that makes major league baseball look like tai chi.

From the Philly GAA, here’s what’s on at Dougherty this Sunday:

  • 6/30/2013 12:00pm Division 1 St. Patrick’s v. Kevin Barry’s Tyrone (Out Of Town Ref) Pat Na Toraidhe
  • 6/30/2013 1.30pm Hurling Na Toraidhe v. Allentown Young Irelands TBD
  • 6/30/2013 3.00pm Junior B Young Ireland v. Kevin Barry’s Allentown TBD
  • 6/30/2013 4.00pm Division 1 Tyrone V. Young Irelands Kevin Barry’s (Out Of Town Ref)

We recommend that you keep up to date on the Philly GAA Facebook page.

Arts, Music

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

No Irish Need Apply

No Irish Need Apply

If you’re looking to indulge your Irishness, then Sunday could be a big day for you.

First up, the 16th Annual Celtic Day in Bristol’s Lions Park, at the foot of friendly Mill Street. It’s always a great crowd, and for good reason. Lots of music, featuring No Irish Need Apply and the Hooligans—and both of those bands are always a party. The Fitzpatrick School of Irish Dance will also be on their toes throughout the day. It’s a sure bet the pipes will be calling, too, as the Philadelphia Police and Fire Pipes and Drums will be on the march.

As with most festivals, you can count on great food and drink, vendors, and plenty of kid-friendly activities. Pack an umbrella on the off-chance, but, hey … we’re Irish. A little rain won’t dampen our spirits. The fun runs from 1 to 8 p.m.

Members of the South Jersey Irish Society are hosting their picnic at the CYO-Yardville Branch, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. You dance the day away under a covered pavilion. The pool will be open until 5, and you can roast your own hot dogs in one of the many charcoal grills. Play mini-golf with the kids, or send them off to the game room.

As for the rest of the week, hey, did we miss the memo? Are you all going to be in Wildwood this week? Well, hey, if you’re down there working on your burn, drop into Casey’s, 301 New York Avenue in North Wildwood, on Saturday night for Jamison Celtic Rock. Take our word for it … you’ll have a great time.

Also a fun time …

Slainte at Keenan’s, 113 Old New Jersey Avenue, North Wildwood, from 3 to 7 p.m. Saturday. You’ll see familiar faces, Frank Day & CJ Mills of Jamison Celtic Rock.

The Broken Shillelaghs at Lazy Lanigan’s, 139 Egg Harbor Road, in Sewell, N.J. The tunes start at 9.

The rest of the week, you can always count on plenty of opportunities to hear Irish music, with traditional Irish music sessions all over the place.

We know it’s a few weeks out, but we also wanted to remind you about the Graeme Park Celtic Weekend in Horsham, July 20 and 21. Lots of music, including the Glengarry Bhoys, Seamus Kennedy and our local piping pals, Irish Thunder. Mark your calendar.

Want to know more? Check the calendar for details. It’s small, but mighty.

News

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Music, People

“I Can Rewind If I Get It Wrong”

Mike Concannon

Mike Concannon

It started out with his business, Round Tower Travel, which specialized in trips to Ireland. Mike Concannon had been running ads on The Irish Hours radio show on WVCH 740 AM, hosted by the legendary Will Regan.

When Regan passed away in 1995, Concannon placed a call to the station to find out about his ad, and when it might start running again. The answer: As soon as we get a new host. Without hesitating, Concannon asked: How about me?

The station owners met him at Cawley’s on West Chester Pike for an interview, at the end of which they told him, “get a show together on cassette tape, and we’ll see from there.”

As anyone who listens to Irish radio in the Delaware Valley knows, Mike Concannon got the job. “Since ’95, that was it. I’ve been doing it ever since.”

Concannon has a compact studio setup in the basement of his Delco home, an old-fashioned brick of a microphone dangling on a boom over the countertop of a corner bar, stacks of CDs and cassette tapes sharing space with bottles of Jameson and other Irish libations. The walls are festooned with Eagles regalia. A piraña-type fish, about the size of a saucer, is the lone occupant of a large aquarium off to the side. There used to be other fish in the tank, Concannon says, but they didn’t last long.

In the early days, it took hours to put the two-hour show together, splicing cassette tapes over the course of four or five hours. The recordings were then dropped off at the station for play on Saturday. For the past three months, Concannon has been recording electronically and emailing the show in. It now takes exactly as long as the show to produce. Pre-recording hives him an advantage over  Regan’s live broadcast. “I can rewind if I get it wrong.”

Sitting on a stool behind the bar and wearing a tweed Irish cap, Concannon seems just as thrilled doing the show as he did way back at the beginning. “Mostly I do it because I love Irish music, and now I’m hooked on it,” he says. “It’s a nice way to get in touch with your Irish roots.”

We interviewed Concannon recently. You can watch the video, above.

 

History

Irish Kensington Erupts: The Philadelphia Nativist Riots of 1844

Kenneth W. Milano, and his new book, "The Philadelphia Nativist Riots"

Kenneth W. Milano, and his new book, “The Philadelphia Nativist Riots”

It’s no secret that the 18th and 19th century Irish Catholic immigrants to the United States weren’t welcomed with open arms, but the specifics of just how badly they were treated in the City of Brotherly Love may surprise you.

In Kenneth Milano’s new book, “The Philadelphia Nativist Riots,”  he documents one of the darker, and lesser-known, periods in Philadelphia history. At his book launch at St. Michael’s Church on North Second Street Thursday evening, Milano gave a two-hour talk to a rapt crowd of over 100 people. His chronicle reveals the events of May 6th through May 8, 1844, when the neighborhood of Kensington was at the epicenter of violent unrest between the recently formed Nativist Party and the increasing number of Irish Catholic immigrants in the area.

As Milano tells it, Kensington was ripe for just such an explosion.

“With all the Catholic communities forming here, the opposite side of the coin, the Protestants, were also organizing. They saw the immigration of the Irish Catholics as detrimental…this was before the potato famine.

“In 1837 the Native American Association was founded in Germantown [this was the first inception of what would become the Nativist Party and was also known as the American Republicans and eventually the Know-Nothings]…also in 1837 you had a very severe downturn in the economy—and like anytime you have a downturn in the economy, you want to point fingers at people and blame them for your troubles…This anger played out into the 1840’s.

“The American Republican Party was founded in 1843, and some of the points they argued were that the Irish Catholics were but country people…they were not educated, they didn’t understand democracy or what being a Republic meant.”

With the 1838 change to Pennsylvania law that allowed all white men 21 years of age and over to vote, and the ability to become a U.S. citizen after living in America for 5 years, the power to create change in government was shifting. Kensington was an “old district,” settled in the 1730’s and boasting a large number of families claiming relatives who had fought in the American Revolution. They didn’t want to see their power diminished by the voting choices of these new, non-native born Americans.

“So, you had the economic problems upsetting folks, you had the suffrage problem…and then the big issue was the King James Bible. In the 1830’s, Harrisburg passed a law that said the King James Bible was a required textbook to read in the public schools. And Catholics in Philadelphia were not so happy about reading a Protestant bible. This created a controversy, and the dissent stirred up the feelings among the Nativists.”

It was a meeting of the Nativists on Monday, May 3, 1844 that set the stage for the riots that followed. Milano writes a well-researched, carefully detailed account of the days of chaos and violence that week. He compares “the violence against the Irish Catholics perpetrated during the Kensington Riots of 1844” to “those actions taken by Ireland’s County Armagh’s ‘Peep of Day Boys’ in 1795 at the Battle of the Diamond…[where] the Peep of Day Boys attacked Irish Catholic homes at the ‘peep of day,’ broke open the doors of their homes, smashed anything and everything of value, tossed it out into the street and, in many cases, burnt the houses.”

He notes that the names of the Nativists who were killed or injured were easy to come by, but after all his research, he was unable to locate anything near a complete list of the Irish Catholics who were victims of the violence. Historical records indicate that there were 23 or 24 people total killed, but “the casualties are low estimates, particularly for the Irish wounded, as Philadelphia officials and newspapers at that time were not keeping track of Irish Catholics wounded, nor were the Irish reporting them…Days after the riots ended, authorities were still pulling bodies from burned Irish Catholic homes. Many of the wounded Irish did not seek help from the authorities or local hospitals.”

It’s a fascinating and disturbing account of one of our nation’s early struggles with immigration, the notion of religious freedom, and the idea that all people are created equal.

Kenneth W. Milano has written several other books on the history of local Philadelphia, including “The Hidden History of Kensington and Fishtown.” For more information, or to order “The Philadelphia Nativist Riots,” visit Kenneth’s website.  The setting of the book launch, at St. Michael’s Church, was particularly fitting as St. Michael’s was one of the Catholic Churches completely destroyed during the riots. It was rebuilt in 1847, and stands today as a proud landmark in its Philly neighborhood. For more information, go to St. Michael’s website.

 

News

Is Immigration Reform on the Brink?

Ciaran Staunton addresses a group at the Irish Center.

Ciaran Staunton addresses a group at the Irish Center.

She came here from Northern Ireland nearly 20 years ago just to visit her sister, and fell in love with America. And when she fell in love with the man who became her husband, a man from Belfast and, like her, here illegally, she found herself committed to a life in the shadows.

They now have children, American born, who can only see their Irish grandparents when they can come to the States. Because they’re “undocumented,” she and her husband can go back to Ireland, but they’d never be able to return to the US, the place they now call home.

“I haven’t been home to Ireland in 16 years,” she said. “When my husband’s mother died, he couldn’t even go to her funeral.”

For the 50,000 Irish in the US illegally, the story is much the same. But the new bipartisan immigration reform bill now before the US Senate could rewrite the ending, said Ciaran Staunton, president of the Irish Lobby for Immigration Reform, which has been on the stump since 2005 to bring undocumented Irish out of the shadows and open their path to citizenship of the country where they live, raise their children, and pay taxes.

Staunton was in Philadelphia on Wednesday night at a meeting called by the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association, many of whose members are Irish born and depend on Irish players to fill out their rosters during summer’s 8 weeks of play on the fields of Cardinal Dougherty High School. In an impassioned speech sprinkled with Irish, he urged those who attended—about 50 people, including the woman from Northern Ireland—to call Pennsylvania’s GOP Senator Pat Toomey to urge him to vote yes on Senate Bill 744. (“Clearly his people dropped the ‘W’ when they came to America,” joked Staunton about the Rhode Island-born Toomey’s Irish forbears, referring to an alternate spelling of the name that may either be traced to a town in Galway or to the word in Irish meaning hill or burial mound.)

S 744 would legalize undocumented immigrants and establish 10,000 E visas, renewable work visas, for people from Ireland, both the republic and Northern Ireland. It needs 60 votes to pass the Senate, and though it has bipartisan support, including that of some prominent conservative Republicans including Marco Rubio, John McCain, and Lindsey Graham, passage is far from guaranteed, said Staunton. And its passage by the dog’s breakfast of personalities in the House is doubtful, though a major victory in the Senate could sway House members, some political observers are saying. Staunton said to send a strong message to the House, the bill’s chief supporter, NY Senator Charles Shumer, wants it to pass with more than 70 votes, not just the bare minimum.

Still, this week House Speaker John Boehner called the bill “laughable.”

On Wednesday night, no one was laughing. Even Staunton admitted it’s not a great bill. “It’s grand bargain and no one loves it,” he said. But it’s the only thing on the table right now.

Staunton recalled with some bitterness the quid pro quo act of the Bush Administration to give the Australians 10,000 E visas a year, limited to those with a college degree, for their military support in Afghanistan and Iraq and as a result of the Australia-United States Free Trade Agreement. “Yet they didn’t build roads, they didn’t build churches, and they didn’t build the democracy of America,” said Staunton.

The degree limitation is “a bit elitist as far as I’m concerned,” he said, noting that many of the Irish who come to the US are skilled “trades people.” At a New York fundraiser recently, he said, he was in a room of Irish-born millionaires “and none of them would be fit to come here under the Australian visas.”

One major stumbling block to passage of the bill is the insistence by some legislators that legalizing undocumented workers be linked to the protection of the border. Staunton said this brought him into rare agreement with NY Congressman Peter King who pointed out that there are already 11 million undocumented immigrants “inside our borders, and we need to know who they are.”

Immigration reform has some other strange bedfellows as well, including the US Chamber of Commerce, the labor unions, and the Catholic Bishops, though the church hierarchy has stopped short of Staunton’s wish that “they issue a statement from every pulpit.” And most political observers point out that the only reason there is an immigration reform bill on the table—albeit a shaky table—is the resounding support President Barack Obama received in his second term election from Latinos and other ethnic groups who have become alienated from the GOP in part because of its hard line stance on immigration.

The struggle will be difficult, but don’t count the bill down yet if supporters are willing to flood Toomey’s office with calls, said Jeff Dempsey, an aide to State Rep. Brendan Boyle, the son of Irish immigrants who is running for Congress in the 13th district, which includes Northeast Philadelphia and Montgomery County. (Boyle remains in Harrisburg to finish work on the state budget.)

You may think you’re “not effective,” Dempsey said. “But I’ve been on the other end of the phone” after a grassroots calling campaign and legislators take it very seriously. They understand “this is a groundswell, this is a constituency that we have to answer to,” he said.

The woman from Northern Ireland is hopeful, but still, when her parents called her, excited about the latest immigration reform push, “I told them not to get their hopes up,” she said. “They got excited when this came up a few years ago and all our great hopes fell. If this doesn’t work, it could be years before it comes up again.”

You can reach Senator Pat Toomey’s office at 215-241-1090 in Philadelphia or 610-434-1444 in Allentown.

View photos from the meeting here.

Travel

Magical Musical Tour

Loop Head, County Clare

Loop Head, County Clare

If you can’t sit still when you hear Irish music, you may want to contact Marianne MacDonald. There are still a few seats left on her “Back to the West” tour to Ireland October 25-November 2 which, along with all the usual places, will take you to Loop Head in County Clare, voted the best vacation spot in Ireland by The Irish Times. It has spectacular rocky cliffs overlooking the sea, small pretty villages, a light house, and even a castellated turret built (in Kilhaba) so that Victorian ladies could enjoy the sea view. You can even do some dolphin watching.

But it’s the music that MacDonald, host of the WTMR-800 AM radio show, “Come West Along the Road,” focuses on—so much so that she’s bringing topnotch Galway singer and multi-instrumentalist Gabriel Donohue, who toured for three years with the Chieftains, as “our on-board entertainer,” says MacDonald, laughing.

In this 15th year of her tours, the New Jersey native will be traveling with a small group to “my three favorite areas in Ireland,” which includes Galway, Dingle, and Ennis. She promises “music day and night.”

“In my last trip we lined up Elle Marie O’Dwyer and she’s now really big in Ireland,” says MacDonald. “We’re going to have Don Stiffe at least one night, possibly two, and Noreen Lynch, who is very big in Ennis.”

The group may be meeting up with Kevin Crawford of Lunasa, and will be treated to a demonstration of sean nos, or old-time Irish dancing. There’s even a class available.

Accommodations at four-star hotels, breakfast every day, and four dinners are included in the land package for $1,889; airfare is $700 RT if you fly with the group.
You only have until next month to sign up. Contact Marianne at rinceseit@msn.com or Johanna at Mayfair Travel, 877-338-8181.