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Denise Foley

News, People

Aon Sceal?

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A local theater company that specializes in contemporary plays from Ireland and the UK, an Irish radio host, a local attorney and a state legislator with Irish ties were in the news in the past two weeks–and it was all good.

The Inis Nua Theatre Company, which brings contemporary Irish and UK plays to the stage in Philadelphia, won five awards at the annual Barrymore Awards for Excellence in Theater this week. Four awards went to the company’s musical, Midsummer, which took home honors in outstanding musical direction, outstanding lead actress in a musical (Liz Filios), outstanding direction of a musical (Kate Galvin) and outstanding overall production of a musical .

Inis Nua also won the June and Steve Wolfson Award for an evolving theater company which carries with it a $10,000 prize.

Tom Reing is artistic director for the 11-year-old theater company.

Marianne MacDonald, host of the popular Sunday morning Irish radio show, Come West Along the Road (noon, 800 AM), was the recipient of the Mayo President’s Award at the recent Mayo Ball at the Irish Center in Philadelphia. She also operates dance and musical tours to Ireland, Cape Breton, and other locales

Theresa Flanagan Murtagh, counsel for Murtagh Brothers Inc. in Newtown Square, was named to the Irish Legal 100, a list of top people of Irish descent in the legal profession by the Irish Voice newspaper. Murtagh is a graduate of the Villanova University School of Law and a former assistant district attorney in Delaware County.

Brendan Boyle of Philadelphia becomes the only son of Irish immigrants to serve in the US Congress. A state legislator from District 170 whose family has ties to Donegal and Sligo, Boyle was elected to Congress this week from the 13th District, which includes parts of eastern Montgomery County and northeast Philadelphia.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

The Hall of Fame Dinner is on Sunday night.

The Hall of Fame Dinner is on Sunday night.

This is one jumping weekend, Irish-wise. And the week is shaping up too.

We have the Delaware Valley Hall of Fame dinner on Sunday, honoring Jim McGill, former president of and moving force behind the Philadelphia Ceili Group; popular tavern owner Emmett Ruane who gave many local Irish musicians their start and, till his Emmett’s Place pub closed a few years ago, provided a dance floor for local ceili fans; and Bill and Frank Watson, twin brothers who brough the tragedy of Duffy’s Cut to light. This marks the first time that the Commodore John Barry Award will be given—and, appropriately, the winner is Commodore Barry himself, the Wexford-born father of the US Navy, a Revolutionary War hero, and a Philadelphian.
Tickets are not being sold at the door.

And for the rest of the weekend, let’s start from the top:

On Saturday, 11 AM is tee time for the Philadelphia Irish Golf Charities, which raises money for families in need. It takes place at Cobbs Creek Golf Course.

At 3 PM, catch Slainte—that Jamison’s Frank Daly and C. J. Mills—at Paddywhacks on Welsh Road in Philly.

At 6 PM, a little Celtic with a French flair—a Fest Noz, a traditional dance from Brittany, one of the seven Celtic nations—is happening at Sts. Simon and Jude Parish in Bethlehem.

And at 7 PM, the Jameson Sisters—Ellen Tepper on harp, Teresa Kane on everything else—will be performing their annual “Concert at the Castle,” at Fonthill, the concrete castle in Doylestown. Great ambiance, fabulous music.

At 9 PM, Jamison will be rocking out at Tir Na Nog in Philly, while the Broken Shillelaghs will be at Nipper’s Pub in Westville, NJ.

On Sunday morning, the Coyle School will be holding its feis at Sportsplex of PA in Feasterville.

At 2 PM on Sunday, Sister Marie Hubert Kealy of Immaculata College will be speaking on Celtic spirituality at the Riverton Library in Riverton, NJ.

At 4 PM, local musicians, including Bob Hurst of the Bogside Rogues, John O’Callaghan of Jamison, Joe Mullan and Pat Tohery of Celtic Connection, and the groups One Shot Paddy and the Shantys will be jamming at Ashburner Inn at 8400 Torresdale Avenue in Philadelphia, all to raise money for the AOH Freedom for All Ireland Christmas appeal, which helps many groups and individuals in Northern Ireland.

Also at 4 PM, Blackthorn is on stage at Spring Hill Manor in Ivyland also raising money, this time for Shamrock Reins, an equine therapy center in Pipersville for military veterans, first responders and their families. Read our story about the center.

At 5 PM, the Montgomery County AOH/LAOH will have its annual memorial mass at Sacred Heart Church in Swedesburg.

Well, that’s about all I can do in one weekend. But, wait, there’s more—the whole rest of the week!

On Tuesday, Galway Guild (Joe Magee’s band) will be playing the Smithville Irish Fest in Smithvill, NJ.

Also on Tuesday, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1300 Locust Street, in Philadelphia will offer a free program featuring many experts on 19th century Irish immigration. The focus will be on Philadelphia. My people came here in the 19th century—did yours?

More Tuesday doings: The Irish Pub is hosting a fundraiser to raise money for a statue of Babe Heffron—one of the Philadelphia vets who was part of the “band of brothers”—to be erected in the city. Appropriate for Veteran’s Day, a is he program at the AOH Notre Dame Div, 1 Hall in Swedesburg, featuring Montgomery County Sheriff Russell Bono and the Irish Thunder pipes and drums.

On Wednesday, the Battlefield Band will bring some Scottish folk music to the Sellersville Theater. You’ll be surprised—or maybe not—at how it sounds a lot like Irish folk music. Same people, different country.

On Thursday, this may be your last chance to catch Black 47 as they hit World Café Live in Philadelphia as part of their farewell tour.

On Friday, Dublin singer-songwriter Declan O’Rourke will be headlining at World Café with Robert Williams, a critically acclaimed writer and filmmaker who is also a musician and songwriter. And apparently an overachiever. I’ve heard lots of great things about Declan O’Rourke too. Since he’s in Philadelphia, he’s likely to perform his new song about Duffy’s Cut.

All-Ireland fiddler Dylan Foley will be joining fiddler Rose Conway Flanagan of Cherish the Ladies and flute-player Laura Byrne at a house concert on Saturday in Ambler. This was originally scheduled for the Irish Center. Check the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s website for more information.

As always, check out the calendar for all the details and any late-breaking events that are added during the week. We always try to update you on Facebook, so join our group there. There’s more than 4,500 of us!

News

Ireland’s New Minister for the Diaspora Visits Philadelphia

Irish Minister for the Diaspora, Jimmy Deenihan, talking to people at the Irish Center on Wednesday. Behind him: Immigration Center executive direct Siobhan Lyons.

Irish Minister for the Diaspora, Jimmy Deenihan, talking to people at the Irish Center on Wednesday. Behind him: Immigration Center executive direct Siobhan Lyons.

The latest donor to Philadelphia’s Irish Center fundraising campaign is the Irish government.

Minister for the Diaspora Jimmy Deenihan, an ex-Kerry footballer whose brand new cabinet post gives him responsibility over the some 70 million people of Irish descent living in every corner of the world, announced this week that the government was allocating $2.3 million to 37 Irish immigration centers across the US for their work in supporting vulnerable populations, including the elderly and the undocumented. That includes Philadelphia’s Irish Immigration Center, located in Upper Darby.

“But I was glad to see that there was a small grant in there of $12,000 for the Irish Center,” said the 62-year-old Fine Gael politician, who is a multiple All-Ireland Gaelic football winner, at a reception—like most Irish gatherings, with fresh baked scone and brown bread—in the center’s Fireside Room on Wednesday morning.

Later in the day, Deenihan met at Stotesbury Mansion near Rittenhouse Square in the city with leaders and members of many of the region’s Irish organizations, including the Irish American Business Chamber and Network, Irish Network-Philadelphia, and the Philadelphia Gaelic Athletic Association, which presented Deenihan with a Philly GAA jersey. He was accompanied by New York-based Irish Consul General Barbara Jones and Vice Consul Anna McGillicuddy.

Deenihan is doing a lap around the globe (he started in the United Arab Emirates, where some 10,000 Irish-born live) in advance of announcing a new “diaspora strategy,” a way to maintain a connection with those who trace all or part of their lineage back to the Emerald Isle. He said he expects to have an action plan in place by January.

If his remarks were any indication, at the top of the list will be immigration reform in the US, particularly as it relates to the estimated 50,000 undocumented Irish living and working in the US. Deenihan met with several local undocumented Irish immigrants in an upstairs room at Stotesbury on Wednesday afternoon, before visiting the Irish Memorial on Front Street.

“Now that the mid-term elections are over, I hope President Obama will look at the authority he has to bring about a fundamental change in immigration rules affecting the Irish,” said Deenihan, while speaking to the estimated 80 people at the Stotesbury event.

The 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act, which raised quotas for immigrants from countries such as Latin America and Asia who had been previously disadvantaged, followed the law of unintended consequences. The mission of Boston’s favorite Irish son, Senator Ted Kennedy, the new immigration policy reduced the number of legal immigrants from Ireland. Prior to 1965, about 70,000 were coming to the US; in the decade after, only about 10,000 were permitted to come.

Many countries rely on their diaspora for support—for money, for tourism, and in the case of Israel, said Deenihan, “their survival.” Ireland isn’t the first country to establish a minister for the diaspora, but he said, no other country has the strong connection Ireland has with the US.

“Nearly every family in Ireland has relatives here in America,” he said in his address at The Irish Center. “I have lots of relatives around here. I should have, I suppose, told them I was coming,” he added, to laughter.

“Our connection to you is so strong that though we’re part of Europe,” he said, “we look to support from here in the US.”

Later, I asked him privately about what specifically that connection meant to Ireland. “The diaspora has been very good to Ireland. The recent business investment in Ireland came because of our connection here,” Deenihan said. “But I’m not just looking at what the diaspora can do for us. I’m looking to give back to the diaspora.”

For one thing, he said, he wants to make it easier for Irish Americans to trace their roots. Fewer Americans than ever now identify as Irish, which can erode the link between the two countries and is something, he believes, that a little bit of family history searching could help mitigate. In recent years, the National Archives of Ireland has made both the 1901 and 1911 Census records for all 32 counties available online for free. “I’d like to make more records available,” he said.

As minister for culture, he presided over the development of the website, www.inspiring-ireland.ie, which gathers many of Ireland’s cultural assets under one virtual, searchable roof. For example, you can search by institution and see the portrait of famed playwright Lady Augusta Gregory that hangs in the National Gallery of Ireland or view a page from the transportation register of Cavan gaol (jail) that’s kept in the National Archives.

“I want to build on that site to make this kind of information readily and easily accessed,” he said. “If you give to people, they always give back.”

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News, People

New Help for Vets: Horse Therapists

Janet Brennan, Max Resnick, and therapy horse, Windy.

Janet Brennan, Max Resnick, and therapy horse, Windy.

Janet Brennan had never been around horses, couldn’t ride and, she admits sheepishly, “didn’t even know how to handle them,” when the Furlong woman bought her first animal, a quarter horse mare she named Irish, in 1998.

It didn’t make a lot of sense—she traveled the world all but four days of every month as a clinical research nurse in the pharmaceutical industry. But Irish fulfilled a long-buried yearning she’d had since she was a child. “I’ve always loved and been drawn to horses,” she says.

It wasn’t long after that another longing emerged—one that totally mystified her. “I kept thinking I wanted to get involved in equine therapy and I wasn’t really sure what it was,” says Brennan, who also spent six years as an ER nurse.

Equine therapy, often called equine-assisted therapy, is an unusual but well-studied treatment that uses horses to help treat a variety of conditions, from helping autistic children learn to connect to improving muscle tone in people with cerebral palsy.

“I feel it’s a calling, that I was being pulled in this direction,” said Brennan who last month, opened Shamrock Reins, an equine therapy center for military vets, first responders, and their families, on 22 acres in Pipersville, Bucks County. (“Shamrock” stands for “Special Horses Assisting with Miracles and Recovery Offering Comfort and Kindness,” but it also reflects Brennan’s Irish roots, also evident in the horses’ names: Irish, Dublin, Clancy Donegal, Paddy, Emerald. . . .)

And she had confirmation that she was being led by unseen forces to her second career the day the certified therapeutic riding instructor she’d hired called at the last minute and told her she wasn’t going to take the job. “I had 15 minutes of pure panic. Then, in the middle of that,” she says, “the phone rang.”

It was a man named Max Resnick, a 23-year Navy veteran, who heard through the director of another equine therapy program that Brennan was looking for someone. Like Brennan, Resnick loved horses from the time he was young. Growing up in New York City, he was glued to the family’s tiny black-and-white TV every morning incongruously watching the farm reports while other kids his age were being hypnotized by Tom & Jerry cartoons.

“I got my first opportunity to ride right before I became a teenager,’ says Resnick, and he continued to ride even after joining the Navy. “They don’t allow horses on a ship,” he jokes, so he begged and borrowed rides in every port of call, from Scotland to Guam. Once he retired, he got his certification from PATH, the Professional Association of Horsemanship, International, one of the largest organizations of its kind in the world. He was determined to make his second career one that involved the horses he’d loved all his life.

“I am 100 percent certain that God sent him to me,” says Brennan, a trim, red-haired woman with the calm easy manner of someone used to being around both patients and horses. “There’s no one better than a veteran to understand the problems of other veterans.”

The daughter of a Vietnam veteran, Brennan was drawn to the plight of today’s combat veterans, nearly 300,000 of whom have suffered a traumatic brain injury and a quarter of whom have “invisible wounds,” often debilitating psychological problems such as post-traumatic stress disorder. “There’s estimated to be as many as 24 suicides a day among combat vets,” she says.

Horses are uniquely suited as therapy animals for people with emotional issues. They’re the original empathetic listeners. “Horse are a mirror of your mind and your behavior,” says Brennan. “They sense your energy, your emotional state. If you’re anxious, they’ll be anxious. If you’re relaxed, they’ll relax.”

They are, in fact, like all prey animals, says Resnick. “Their survival depends on their ability to be alert to whatever might be a danger to them.”

For a combat vet who might be keeping sharp-edged feelings sheathed, hidden even from himself, “the horse becomes the therapist,” Resnick says, reflecting back what it senses from the hand that grooms her or the rider on her back. “When the vets start talking about the horse, it doesn’t take them long to realize they’re talking about themselves,” he says.

There are other benefits to working with horses. For one thing, they’re forgiving—and forgetful—if they’re treated with affection and kindness. “You do something that’s not what you should be doing and you have three seconds to tell them it’s okay, you didn’t mean it, and they forget it. Three seconds. They teach us how to live in the moment,” Resnick says with a smile.

There’s also a sense of mastery in being able to control and animal that outweighs you by at least 900 pounds, sometimes more. Horses can be scary, even if you’ve been trained for war. “My son who is six-feet tall, 250 pounds, and is a hand-to-hand combat instructor went with his wife to a stable near Fort Benning,” says Resnick, grinning as he tells the story. “He was in the paddock when one of the horses snorted. Mr. Able-To-Leap-Tall-Buildings was suddenly outside the paddock, not even sure how he got there. He told the woman at the barn, ‘That horse hates me.’ She said, ‘The horse just sneezed.’ They’re big animals, and if you don’t know anything they can be frightening.” He laughed.

As an RN who worked in clinical research, Brennan was interested in the scientific evidence behind equine-assisted therapy, particularly for combat vets with PTSD and traumatic brain injury. It wasn’t hard to find. In fact, a study reported in a recent issue of The Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development found that vets who started out deeply depressed and isolated—some hadn’t left their homes in a year or more–became more sociable as the result of working with horses and human equine therapists. Most of the vets told researchers they found the horse to be “intuitive,” “a good listener,” and “compassionate.” Many said that working with the horses helped them build trust with the humans in their lives. “I talk to people, I shake people’s hands,” one vet said. “When you’re with a horse, they give you kindness and compassion and love and they don’t expect anything,” another participant wrote.

Brennan, who with Resnick is now in the process of making the connections to bring vets and first responders and their families to the program, has talked to combat veterans herself, many of whom have been through similar programs. “Every single one says the same thing—once you get one, more will come. When they leave, they tell everyone they know. One of them told me, ‘you’d better have a lot of programs, because once we come, we won’t stop coming.’

“Our mission,” she says, “is to create life-changing experiences for people who’ve had their lives changed not in positive ways. If I can save someone from committing suicide, I’ve done what I’ve had to do.”

You can become involved in Shamrock Reins in many ways—as a participant (all of the programs are free); as a volunteer; and as a donor. The organization is a 501 (c)(3) charity, so all donations are tax deductible. Go to their website for more information.

On Sunday, Blackthorn is performing at a fundraiser for the organization at Spring Hill Manor in Ivyland.

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

St. Malachy's Church: Great venue for a Mick Moloney concert.

St. Malachy’s Church: Great venue for a Mick Moloney concert.

There is so much Irish fun this week it will make your head spin. I’m going to have to go out on Halloween as the kid from The Exorcist.

First, there’s an intercollegiate Irish dance festival at Villanova (we’re fighting over who gets to go out and take photos) on Saturday, starting at 9 AM at the Jake Nevin Field House on campus.

On Saturday evening, the Mayo Ball takes place for the 109th time at The Irish Center. I’ve seen photos of the ballroom and it’s already sparkling in Mayo red and green.

Also on Saturday evening, Blackthorn in coming out for its 13th year in a row to raise money for little Kayleigh Moran (who’s not so little anymore). Kayleigh has a rare metabolic disease and the fundraiser helps with her treatment costs. The festivities are at Cardinal O’Hara High School in Springfield.

For our friends in Wilmington, you get Timlin and Kane at Katherine Rooney’ Pub on Saturday night—great music, terrific comedy.

And The Broken Shillelaghs will be appearing at Tavern on the Edge in Gloucester City, NJ, just over one of those bridges from Philly.

On Sunday, an event many of us wait for—Mick Moloney and Friends will be at St. Malachy’s Church in North Philadelphia for their annual Irish Concert. If you’ve never been, Moloney has some talented friends and the church is a jewel of a place with great acoustics for concerts. The money raised goes to St. Malachy’s School, a remarkable institution with a great track record for its alums.

On Wednesday, the Irish Minister for the Diaspora (that’s us) Jimmy Deenihan will be visiting The Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, at 10 AM. All are invited.

On Wedneday evening, Dublin singer-songwriter Declan O’Rourke and Tyrone’s Mickey Coleman will be appearing at St. James Episcopal Church in Lancaster in a tribute to the dead of Duffy’s Cut, 57 Irish immigrants who died or were killed while working on the railroad in Malvern in 1832. Joe Devoy, himself an Irish immigrant and owner of Tellus360, a concert venue in Lancaster, will perform a spoken word piece about Duffy’s Cut. This is a WXPN and Tellus360 concert.

On Friday, November 7, Pearse Doherty, finance spokesperson for Sunn Fein and TD for Donegal South West, will be speaking at The Irish Center on current economic and other conditions in Ireland today.

Also on Friday night, Jamison will be performing at AOH 39 on Tulip Street in Philadelphia.

Next weekend, the Celtic Cultural Alliance in Bethlehem is sponsoring a Fest-Noz, a traditional dance gathering from Brittany, much like a ceili, at Sts. Simon and Jude Parish Hall in the city. Brittany is one of the “seven nations” that traces their roots back to Celtic culture.

Next Sunday, the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame will be honoring the Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Jim McGill, former publican and Irish cultural promoter Emmett Ruane, and Bill and Frank Watson, twin brothers who brought the tragedy of Duffy’s Cut to light. A special new award, The Barry Award, will be given posthumously to Commodore John Barry, born in Wexford, who lived in Philadelphia and fought valiantly in the Revolutionary War. He is considered the father of the US Navy.

For more information on these events and others, see our calendar. Tell it we sent you.

How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Hannah Griffin of Newtown Square is ready for Samhain--are you?

Hannah Griffin of Newtown Square is ready for Samhain–are you?

A Halloween-themed beef-and-beer, the first of several fundraisers for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, takes place this Saturday at St. Denis Church Hall in Havertown. Wear a costume—there are prizes!

And don’t forget, this week is also Samhain (pronounced sow-in, it’s Irish for Halloween). It’s traditional to eat barmbrack to celebrate this end-of-summer holiday. It’s also traditional to have plenty of candy on hand for the ghosts, ghouls, goblins, and Disney princesses who come to your house and yell, “Trick or treat!”

“A Night with Lady G,” featuring three plays by Irish playright Augusta, Lady Gregory continues this week at Plays and Players Theater in Philadelphia, as does “The Weir” by Conor McPherson in Jenkintown.

On Sunday, there’s a ceili at the Irish Center in Wilmington, a ballad session at Fergie’s in Philadelphia with John Byrne. You can ask John about his upcoming tour of Ireland—one you can join!

Irish language classes continue at Villanova on Monday.

Next Saturday is a biggie. There’s an Intercollegiate Irish Dance Festival at Villanova Field House, the 13th Annual Ceili for Kayleigh, a Blackthorn fundraiser for a young girl with a rare disease, and the 109th Mayo Ball will be held at the Irish Center.

And on Sunday, former Limerick and Philadelphia resident, musician Mick Moloney, will be bringing some talented friends to the city for a concert, an annual event to raise money for St. Malachy’s School in North Philadelphia. The event is held in the magnificent church, built more than a century ago by Irish immigrants.

News, People

Philadelphia City Council Honors Its Rose

Philadelphia City Councilman Bobby Henon and Rose of Tralee Maria Walsh

Philadelphia City Councilman Bobby Henon and Rose of Tralee Maria Walsh

The Philadelphia City Council on Thursday honored International Rose of Tralee, Maria Walsh of Philadelphia, with a proclamation congratulating her on bringing the Rose crown to the city.

The event occurred during the regular business meeting of the council on the fourth floor of City Hall. Walsh brought a cheering section with her, including Karen Conaghan Race of the Philadelphia Rose Center. Walsh, who was born in Boston, raised in Shrule, County Mayo, and now makes Philadelphia her home, was the first Philadelphian to become an International Rose since the center started a decade ago.

Since she was crowned in August, Walsh, who is studio manager at Anthropologie, a fashion brand headquartered in Philadelphia’s Navy Yard complex, has been shuttling back and forth between the US and Ireland. And on Friday, she was scheduled to leave for Calcutta, India. for a week-long stint with Hope Foundation, a nonprofit that works with vulnerable children and families.

Below you can see some of our photos from “Rose of Tralee Day” in Philadelphia this week.

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News, People

McKenna’s Irish Shop Is Saying Goodbye

Pat Durnin, outside McKenna's Irish Shop in Havertown

Pat Durnin, outside McKenna’s Irish Shop in Havertown

McKenna’s Irish Shop started in Anne Gallagher McKenna’s tiny living room more than 35 years ago, when neighbors would traipse in on Friday night to see the sweaters, mittens, scarves and vests Anne had knitted and place their orders.

“She’d clear off the dining room table and there’d be sweaters and scarves all over the table, the couch, hung up in the corners,” recalls her son-in-law, Pat Durnin, who with his wife, Nancy, eventually took Mrs. McKenna’s little business and ran it in Ardmore, in the current location on Darby Road in Havertown, and, for seven years, in Sea Isle City, NJ.

In the old days, customers would find Mrs. McKenna sitting at a table in the middle of her store, having a cup of tea and knitting. Many would sit down with her and share a cup. “At Christmas, you got a little shot of whiskey,” remembers Durnin with a smile.

But those were other times, before the heady economic days of the Celtic Tiger sent salaries and prices soaring in Ireland and altered the face of Ireland’s cottage industries. Anne Gallagher McKenna died two years ago. The store that bears her name will close by Christmas this year, the victim of what Durnin calls “a perfect storm” of economic forces that has reduced the number of Irish shops in the US from 500 to less than 200. Locally, the Glenside Irish Shop closed over a year ago and two other stores seem to be faltering, says Durnin.

“In Ireland, wages went up, the cost of goods went up, and the cottage industry fell. A lot of the older people [who made Irish goods] have died off,” said Durnin this week, as two women looked over the sweaters and jewelry in the five-room store with its homey fireplace and sunny windows. “It’s expensive to pay people to stay out of the workplace to knit sweaters. It took Mrs. McKenna 40 hours to knit a sweater—that’s a week’s wage.”

That’s the reason why a fine Aran sweater can now cost $300 or more. When Mrs. McKenna began her business, says Durnin, it was before the Internet and email and she would personally visit knitters all over Ireland, most of them homemakers who were “happy to make a few extra shillings for the family.” The cost of making the woolen goods wasn’t as high as it is today.

Then, in 2008, the world economy crashed. Suddenly there wasn’t any money for extras. Waterford Crystal—that fallback wedding gift—went into bankruptcy. Companies that made Irish goods “couldn’t afford to make it at home so they went offshore,” says Durnin. “People don’t want to buy something Irish that’s made in Indonesia.”

And people changed too. “The table top industry crashed,” says Durnin. “You couples aren’t buying 12- piece sets of Beleek china. Most of them don’t have dining rooms, unless they have McMansions, and even if they do, they don’t want to have to store it for the times when they use it. They pick out something that they’ll change every five or 10 years when they don’t like the pattern anymore.”

The store phone starts to ring and Durnin excuses himself to answer it. The call illustrates yet another pressure on McKenna’s and other Irish shops—the price of gold. The woman on the phone wants a St. Brigid’s Cross in gold as a gift for her niece, who is making her confirmation. He doesn’t carry them in stock, he tells her, a pained look spreading across his face. But yes, he can order one for her. He hangs up the phone. “Wait till she see the price,” he says, shaking his head.

Gold jewelry, particularly wedding ring sets, used to be a big part of the shop’s business. “There was a time when Irish wedding rings, like Claddaghs, were really hip and we sold so many of them, even to people who couldn’t even spell Ireland,” says Durnin. “Then, a popular ring set for both man and woman would cost $700. Today, a lady’s ring alone is $900. For the past three years, the price of gold has gone up and up to $2,000 an ounce at one point. “

Not only can’t many couples afford them, there’s a smaller profit for the retailers, says Durnin.

And the last “piece of the puzzle,” as Durnin puts it? Probably the Internet, where today you can get everything from groceries to a date for Saturday night.

“I understand that. We have two sons, 23 and 28, and the older one doesn’t know what the inside of a store looks like,” says Durnin, laughing ruefully. “I talked to a lot of people about it and the local community doesn’t really realize what happens when you you’re not supporting local businesses. Mom-and-pop stores are the lifeblood of a community,” he says.

For one thing, without them, downtowns become nothing more than strip malls of franchises selling Starbucks’ coffee, Subway sandwiches, and Hallmark gifts. Neighborliness, the personal touch—seeing a storeowner knitting while drinking her cuppa, for example—is part of the social fabric of a community, its charm. When the change comes, as it has to many communities across the US, that element of a town, unquantifiable for the purposes of a spread sheet, becomes lost forever.

Durnin and his wife didn’t make their decision overnight. “It took us a long time to come to this reality,” he says. “We really did this as a labor of love, but financially, it wasn’t going to be a good finish. We decided that we had to make this decision with our heads, not our hearts.”

He made the announcement earlier this week on Facebook. “I had to have a few cocktails after I hit send,” he admitted.

The store will remain open through the Christmas season and after that, Durnin says, he’ll be moving ahead with another plan—one that might keep McKenna’s corner as Irish as it is now. But it’s still in such an early stage he doesn’t want to talk about it. “We’re pretty excited about it,” he says. “I hope it works.”