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Jeff Meade

News

Bishop Joseph McFadden, Remembered

Michael Bradley and Bishop Joseph McFadden

Michael Bradley and Bishop Joseph McFadden

The night before he died, Bishop Joseph McFadden was talking to a friend about the Holy Thursday homily of Pope Francis, the one in which he encouraged priests to go “out of” themselves, to put their hearts and souls “on the line,” to reach out to their flocks like good shepherds, “shepherds living with the odor of sheep.”

At his funeral this week in Harrisburg, where the 65-year-old native Philadelphian headed the central Pennsylvania diocese, it was clear that he had long ago taken that message as his own personal mission. “He had only been in Harrisburg for three years and everybody in Harrisburg felt that they’d lost a family member,” said Bishop McFadden’s sister, Sister Jane McFadden, IHM, vice principal of St. Francis DeSales School in Philadelphia.

“That was Joe. If there was a sick person, someone who needed to be baptized or confirmed, he would go to the farthest end of the diocese, where people hadn’t seen bishops for years. He’d walk into the high school and when he’d see a group of kids he’d just say, “Hey, how are you? What are you doing?” He was there so much the principal gave him a key to the building! At his funeral, someone said, he never had an acquaintance, he had a friend.”

He had many friends—3,000 of them on Facebook alone. One of them was Philadelphia labor leader John Dougherty, business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 98, who had dinner with the bishop the night before he died of a massive heart attack on May 2. McFadden had been in the city attending a meeting of the Catholic Bishops of Pennsylvania.

“I know that people said he was a regular guy, but he wasn’t a regular guy he was a special guy,” said Dougherty. “When we were having dinner, he was telling me stories from Harrisburg, about how an Albanian gentleman had come to the rectory because he had plumbing problems and he helped him with them. Then the man came back with all the papers involving a mortgage problem because Bishop McFadden had helped him with his plumbing! That’s the kind of guy he was. He officiated at my mother’s funeral a few years ago. And as recently as a week ago he came to our scholarship dinner even though he had to postpone some confirmations. He told me, ‘I wouldn’t miss it.’”

As extraordinary as he was, he was also a “regular Joe,” says Michael Bradley, Philadelphia’s St. Patrick’s Day parade director who called Bishop McFadden “my best friend.”

“He used to come to my house at the shore and we would go fishing,” recalled Bradley. “He had an old t-shirt on with a hole in it, a crappy hat—he looked like a guy on vacation with his family. He was fun to be with and loved being with his family. ”

And he had a uncanny way with the fish. “He’d catch all the fish and I didn’t catch any!’ laughed Bradley. “We switched rods once and I still didn’t catch any. He had already caught 15 and he caught three more!”

But his real love was golf. “It was church first, family second, and golf third,” laughs his sister. “Basketball had to be fourth.”

It was basketball and a family tragedy that kept Joseph McFadden from, as his sister put it, “doing what he supposed to do:” become a priest, which he didn’t do till he was in his 30s.  “My mother used to say at the dinner table, ‘It would be wonderful to have a priest.,’ It’s every Irish mother’s dream. And we always thought he would be. He was always at church. . .even in high school he served Mass and that was unusual at that time.”

When Bishop McFadden was 18, his mother died suddenly of a massive heart attack. His older brother was in the service and his sister, Jane, who was a year older (“we were Irish twins”), a novice. “I think if my mother hadn’t died he might have gone into the seminary after high school. But he felt like he had to stay home with our younger sister, Ellen, and my Dad.” Two years later their father died of cancer, so Joe, then in college, had even more reason not to enter the priesthood—he had to look after Ellen.

He also had a drive to be a teacher—and basketball coach. After graduating from St. Joseph University with a degree in political science, he toyed briefly with the idea of entering St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, then decide to apply to West Catholic High School, his eye on coaching the basketball team.  (He had played varsity basketball at St. Thomas More High School and was on the freshman basketball team at St. Joseph’s.) But to be able to coach, he had to teach and the only job that was open was teaching general science. He took it. After a year, he gradually moved into National Problems—close to his major—and then, religion. Eventually he became director of athletics.

A visit to his sister Jane’s mission in Peru was a turning point—the poverty he witnessed made him begin to think about where he was going with his life. “It was after my sister, Ellen, married and he almost won a basketball championship he finally did what he was supposed to do,” said Sister Jane. He entered St. Charles in 1976 when he was 29, older than most of his classmates, graduating magna cum laude a few years later with a master of divinity degree.

After spending several years as secretary to the late Cardinal John Krol, McFadden was appointed first president of Cardinal O’Hara High School in Springfield, Delaware County, where there will be a Mass of Memorial on Wednesday, May 15, at 6:30 PM. (The high school is at 1701 S. Sproul Road in Springfield.) That’s where he and Michael Bradley first met. Bishop McFadden served as chaplain to the St. Patrick’s Day Parade for many years and was still listed as its chaplain emeritus.

“We became good friends back in the 80s, though, when he became bishop, we became even closer,” recalled Bradley. “We talked every week and we were supposed to get together soon. We were talking about taking a trip to Ireland in the fall. I don’t cry too much, but I cried when I heard he had died. He had that quality of looking at you when you were talking so that everybody thought he was their best friend. Well, he was mine. I feel like I lost my own father.”

He left many who knew him feeling the same way. He was the kind of man—gregarious. genuinely kind, and down-to-earth—who earned “a seat in first class on his way to heaven,” said John Dougherty. “But,” he added, “knowing Joe, he was no doubt sitting in the back with the rest of the people.”

Music

Anatomy of a Pipe Band

Click on the icons on the big photo, below.

Full disclosure: I’ve played drums in several area bagpipe bands for over a dozen years, so it’s probably no accident that our first interactive photo app is all about the old wheeze and squeeze—the Philadelphia Emerald Society Pipe Band, in particular.

Anyway, we found a neat new tool for making our images (we have thousands) a lot more fun than they already are, and we just had to give it a go.

It’ also the time of year where you’re likely to see pipe bands more often—in parades, of course, but also at area Highland games. This new app will answer most of the questions you might have about the instruments, uniforms, and history. It’ll also tell you where to see pipers this summer.

Look for more of these fun interactive pics in weeks to come.

News, People

Honoring the Memory of a Fallen Officer

Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums to perform.

Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums to perform.

Back on September 19, 2012, Irish Thunder Drum Major Pete Hand joined with other members of the band, and pipers from throughout the Delaware Valley, for a solemn occasion: to bid farewell to Plymouth Township Police Officer Brad Fox. Fox was gunned down by a hit-and-run suspect September 13, just shy of his 35th birthday.

Fox left behind his wife Lynsay, who at the time was expecting the family’s second child. On March 25, Bradley Michael Fox Jr. was born, the new younger brother to older sister Kadence.

Ever since the funeral, the band’s sponsoring Ancient Order of Hibernians division has wanted to find a way, not to mourn Brad Fox’s death, but to celebrate his life and honor his memory.

On Saturday afternoon and on into the night, they’re going to do just that with a “Celtic Salute” at the division’s hall in Swedesburg. Proceeds from the celebration will benefit Fox’s family.

AOH recognition of fallen officers is nothing new, says Hand.

“A few years ago, when police officers were killed in Philadelphia, we ran a fundraiser for the Fraternal Order of Police. Because Officer Fox was a local resident, we wanted to do something like that again. A lot of us wanted to do it right after the funeral, but the family asked us to stand down until well after the holidays. We chose a date in the spring, and the date was agreed upon with the family.”

Hand knows Brad Fox would have approved of a Celtic-themed celebration. “We know from his co-workers that he loved the bagpipes. Irish Thunder was the main organizer of the pipe bands at his funeral. We had 80 pipers and drummers. We’ll be playing for him again on Saturday.”

And a big event it will be. Along with Irish Thunder, many local Irish bands and musicians are donating their time and talent, including the Paul Moore Band, Belfast Connection, Oliver McElhone, No Irish Need Apply, Fisher and Maher, the John Forth Band, and more. The Coyle Dancers will also perform. Additional music will be presented by DJ Sean Givnish.

Much of the entertainment will take place in a big tent in the parking lot behind the Hibernians’ HQ at 342 Jefferson Street, with more music and fun in the AOH hall, and downstairs in the lounge. It’ll all go on, rain or shine, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Hand says the division wants to do what it can to ease the family’s pain. “We want them to have anything they need.”

Tickets are $30, which includes beer, wine, soda, and hot dishes.

To purchase tickets or make a donation, contact:

Division President Ron Trask
215-804-8323
or
rontrask@comcast.net

News, People

Remembering Bishop Joseph P. McFadden

Bishop Joseph McFadden

Bishop Joseph McFadden, chaplain emeritus of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, joined St. Thomas More alums in singing the school song.

Harrisburg Bishop Joseph P. McFadden, a well-known and loved member of Philadelphia’s Irish community before his upstate appointment in June 2010, has passed away. His death was announced today by the diocese. 

Bishop McFadden, who served as chaplain of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, died unexpectedly while attending a meeting of the Catholic Bishops of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

We interviewed Bishop McFadden not long after his installation. He could not have been more gracious and down-to-earth. We’re grateful to have known him.

Here is the interview.

An “average Joe” is about to helm the Harrisburg Diocese.

Of course, Philadelphia Auxiliary Bishop Joseph P. McFadden is really far from ordinary. In naming him this week to become the 10th bishop of Harrisburg, Pope Benedict XVI surely must have recognized Bishop McFadden’s solid record of accomplishment.

McFadden has been a priest for 29 years, but he was someone special right from the word go. After a brief stint as assistant pastor of Irish St. Laurence Parish in Highland Park, Delaware County, he become administrative secretary to then Cardinal Krol in 1982. Less than 10 years later, he was appointed honorary prelate to Pope John Paul II—as a monsignor.

He later served as president of Cardinal O’Hara High School, pastor of St. Joseph Parish in Downington and, in June 2004, auxiliary bishop under Cardinal Justin Rigali.

Not bad for a guy who grew up in St. Rose of Lima parish in West Philly, graduate of St. Thomas More, and high school basketball coach.

McFadden, contacted Friday just before he left to catch a flight to Rome, was characteristically humble when asked about his sure and steady rise. “For most priests the goal is to answer the call of God and to be of service to Jesus and the preaching of his gospel as a parish priest,” he said. “I don’t think a young man focuses on becoming a bishop. I didn’t. As bishop, a priest is still called to preach the gospel, but it means that you have responsibility of a larger flock, a larger group of people. when God gives you responsibility, you expect to have to answer to that responsiblilty. It’s one thing for an individual to open himself to the grace of God. It’s quite another thing to be responsible for shepherding other people in response to the same call.”

Throughout his rise to the top, Joseph McFadden apparently has not forgotten his humble roots, said Michael Bradley, director of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, who has known him for a long time—including McFadden’s more recent service as parade chaplain and chaplain emeritus.

“He (McFadden) was president of Cardinal O’Hara when I was athletic director at Broomall,” said Bradley. “We knew of each each other for a long time. He went to Tommy Moore, and my dad went there. But we became close in the ’90s.”

Over the years, Bradley could see how much McFadden loved the Philly parade. The future bishop would march every year with the group from O’Hara. In 2007, when chaplain Father Kevin Trautner died, Bradley named him chaplain. That first year, McFadden spent some time providing commentary in the CBS3 booth. “They raved about him,” said Bradley.

What has appealed most to Bradley about this well-connected prelate, who in his time has tackled some nettlesome issues—including the closing of Cardinal Dougherty and Northeast Catholic high schools—is how down-to-earth he is. “I’ve always felt that he is a regular guy who became a bishop,” said Bradley. “He has an ability, when you’re talking to him, to make you feel like he’s your best friend.”

Bradley, for one, is not happy to see this best friend go. While acknowledging that McFadden’s promotion to preside over the Harrisburg Diocese is a great honor, Bradley wishes the Vatican had looked inside the Harrisburg Diocese to “hire from within. He asked, “Why can’t they get their own good guy?”

Philly’s “good guy” understands that his local friends might miss him. At the same time, he hopes he’ll be able to maintain at least some of his ties to the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade while forging new ties with the Irish-Americans of Harrisburg. “I would like to hope I can,” he said. “I love the Philly parade.

My parents, as you know, were born in Ireland. I’m proud of my Irish heritage. the parade has been such a great experience the last several years. It really has become a wonderful event in Philadelphia.”

How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Officer Brad Fox

Officer Brad Fox

Plymouth Township Police Office Brad Fox, a decorated Marine Corps veteran, was ambushed and killed by an ex-convict he was pursuing in October 2012. In March 2013, his widow gave birth to his son, Bradley Michael. On Saturday, May 4, The AOH Notre Dame Division is hosting a benefit for the Fox family at their hall at 342 Jefferson St. in Swedesburg.

Music is being provided by the Paul Moore Band, Belfast Connection, Oliver, the John Forth Band, No Irish Need Apply, the Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums, and DJ Sean. The Coyle School of Irish Dance will also perform. Tickets, which cost $30, covers food, draft beer, speed rack and six hours of entertainment.

Also on Saturday, Timlin and Kane will be performing at St. James Gate at the Sands Casino in Bethlehem.

On Sunday, the Gloucester County AOH will hold a Hunger Strikers Memorial event to honor the 10 men who died in 1981, protesting their treatment in Maze Prison in Northern Ireland. There will be a Mass at St. Matthew’s Parish Hall and the pipes and drums of the Second Street Irish Society will perform. Afterwards, there is a meal at the division hall with live music provided by the Shantys.

On Thursday, catch Rosaleen McGill, Sean Earnest, and Bradford Upp doing Irish songs and tunes at Jack McShea’s, 34 E. Lancaster Avenue, in Ardmore.

Mark your calendars for the following week: The Galway Society Dinner Dance will be held at the Irish Center on Saturday and on Wednesday, May 15, it’s Irish Heritage Night at PPL Park in Chester where you can see the Philadelphia Union take on Robbie Keane and the defending MLS champions, the Los Angeles Galaxy.. Keane is the Irish National team captain and all-time leading scorer. There will be traditional Irish fare served, and Irish drink specials. Proceeds go to help support The Irish Memorial, which is celebrating 10 years as a Philadelphia landmark. For tickets, contact Greg Imming of the Philadelphia Union at 610-497-8933, or gimming@philadelphiaunion.com or Bob Gessler, 215-806-7298.

Dance, News

Sending Their Love To Jane

Colleen, Tessa, and Caroline Crossed

Colleen, Tessa, and Caroline Crossed

It was 2 PM on Sunday at the Marple Sports Center, the air was filled with slip jig tunes, and there were so many girls in their sparkling feis dresses you almost needed sunglasses indoors. But the most popular spot at the annual Four Provinces Feis, which drew 1,000 competitors from the east coast, wasn’t around the dance arenas. It was a table where kids could write a get-well card for Jane.

“Except for the really little ones,” said Marg King, who was overseeing the card-signing, all the dancers knew about 7-year-old Jane Richard, the little Irish dancer from Milton, MA, who lost a leg in the April 15 Boston Marathon bombing. Jane’s brother, Martin, 8, was killed in the blast as they stood at the finish line with their parents and another brother, who was uninjured. Their mother, Denise, was also hurt.

On Sunday, the dancers and their parents were buying so many of the Philadelphia Loves Boston t-shirts, hastily made up for the occasion, that there were no more small and medium sizes to be had. “They’re gone, sold out,” said King, obviously happy.

They were snapped up by people like Colleen Crossed of West Chester, whose two daughters, Tessa and Caroline, were competing. “I ran the Boston Marathon three times and remember it well,” Crossed said. “My kids were there at the finish line, just like those kids. It’s hard to imagine.” She shook her head. “But this is so nice,” she said, nodding toward the t-shirt table. “Really nice. You feel like you can do something.”

More than 100 individuals and organizations apparently feel the same way. They’ve signed on to support the “Philadelphia Loves Boston” campaign, founded by McDade Cara School of Irish Dance owner Sheila McGrory Sweeney, along with St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 98 business manager John Dougherty. The proceeds from the sale of the t-shirts will go to the Richard Family Fund, as will the entry fees from Sunday’s Charity Treble Reel Competition (which was won by McDade Cara dancers, wearing their Jane t-shirts).

“I sent out an email last week to everyone on my list and within 24 hours we had more than 100 respond to say they wanted to support this,” said Bradley, who hustled the t-shirts into production within 24 hours too.

One of the first to respond “in about 3 seconds.” said Bradley, was Ken Casey, front man for Boston’s premier Celtic rock band, the Dropkick Murphy’s, and founder of The Claddagh Fund, which raises money for under-funded nonprofits in Boston and Philadelphia, where the DKMs have a huge fan base. The band has already raised more than $100,000 for the Richard Family Fund, to help defray their medical costs. “He got back to me and said, we’’ll do whatever you need,” said Bradley.

While the t-shirts aren’t available by mail, you can pick yours up on June 2 at the Irish Festival at Penn’s Landing, where dancers from all the Irish dancing schools will be there to perform en masse as a tribute to Jane. You can also donate to the Richard Family Fund. Checks made out to the Richard Family Fund can be sent to PO Box 477, Paoli, PA 19301.

News, Sports

First Rule of Fight Night

Yes, Jackie "The Hammer" Daley won her match.

Yes, Jackie “The Hammer” Daley won her match.

The Irish Center ballroom turned into a boxing ring last Saturday night for the second annual Young Irelands Gaelic Football Club’s “Fight Night.” Except for the mirrored balls on the ceiling and the occasional glimpses of the Irish countryside backdrop on the stage, you would have sworn you were at Madison Square Garden.

There were 10 match-ups of male and female amateur boxers and while they pulled no punches–literally, as you could tell by the blood–the purpose was and remained entertainment.

The Young Irelands has been playing Gaelic football in the Philadelphia area for about 28 years.

Check out our photos above and pretend you were there!

News

Philadelphia Loves Jane

Logo for the Philadelphia Loves Boston campaign for the Richard Family.

Logo for the Philadelphia Loves Boston campaign for the Richard Family.

Across the country, the Irish dance community has come together to support 7-year-old Jane Richard, a budding Irish dancer, who lost her leg in the Boston Marathon bombing on April 15. Jane’s brother, Martin, 8, was one of three people killed in the blast which also injured her mother, Denise.

And, of course, Philadelphia is sending the love. Last week, the Cummins School of Irish Dance raised more than $8,500 for the Richard Family Fund at its Feis at the Beach in Wildwood, NJ. Local schools have also sent t-shirts to a group that calls itself “Wrapping Jane in Our Love,” which is turning those shirts into a quilt for Jane, who has been an Irish dance student at Clifden Academy in Milton, MA.

This week, Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley, along with Sheila Sweeney of the McDade-Cara School of Irish Dance in Delaware County and John Dougherty, business manager of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Local 98, sent out a joint email inviting other Irish organizations to join “Philadelphia Loves Boston,” an effort to raise money for the family who are facing crushing medical bills. Checks made out to the Richard Family Fund can be sent to PO Box 477, Paoli, PA 19301. The fund, started by family and friends of the Richards, has raised more than $300,000 so far.

The campaign will culminate with a dance event at the annual Penn’s Landing Irish Festival, which will be held on June 2 this year. One child from each of the region’s many schools will be on stage to dance for Jane and there will be specially designed t-shirts on sale, the proceeds of which will go to the fund.

“We sent the email out on Monday and we already have 100 people who’ve pledged their support,” says Sweeney. “We have four checks in the post office box already too. The Irish community in Philadelphia is really, really generous.”

McDade-Cara’s annual Four Provinces Feis, to be held this weekend at Marple Sports Arena, 611 Parkway Drive in Broomall, was already raising money for a victim of Hurricane Sandy, but, says Sweeney, they decided to donate all entry fees for the Charity Treble Reel to the Richard family. “Normally you have to register for the feis a month ahead of time, but we changed it so you can enter the Charity Treble Reel that day,” she says. “We have 10 groups so far, and more than 1,000 kids are entered altogether. We’ll also have donation buckets for those who want to donate.”

Jane Richard remains in the hospital in Boston, though her mother has been released. Her brother was buried this week in a private ceremony . In this amateur video, you can see Jane being ministered to by an off-duty fireman who was in a coffee shop at the time of the second blast, which struck the Richard family who were watching the race behind the barricades.

The story of the Richard family would have been touching whether or not Jane Richard was an Irish dancer, but Sweeney admits that connection brought it closer to home. “First as a mother,” she says, “and then as someone who teaches 100 students a week, it’s just so hard to fathom. When you look at these little girls, they’re so sweet, so innocent. I’m just happy to see all the Irish dance schools coming together for this cause.”