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Denise Foley

News

AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 Irish Festival: A Day in Photos

Singer with Celtic Pride

Singer with Celtic Pride

Bouncy castles, Gaelic sports, Irish music and sausages on the grill–all under the pavilion at St. Michael’s Picnic Grove in Mont Clare, near Phoenixville: The AOH Notre Dame Div. 1 annual Irish festival was family friendly fun over three days.

We stopped by on Saturday and enjoyed Celtic Pride, some of the best shepherd’s pie we ever had, and watching a little hurling by the Glenside Gaelic Athletic Association. Oh, and we took photos too! Don’t we always?

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Arts

Theater Review: “The Toughest Boy in Philadelphia”

tough boy
By Brian Mengini

Spoiler alert: Local playwright Andrea Kennedy Hart’s, “The Toughest Boy in Philadelphia, ” is based on a true story of “Whistling” Jack McConnell. It follows the life of Florence Gray as she struggles with the void of her absentee mother as well as her own gender confusion. Her turmoil leads her to adopt a male persona, “Whistling” Jack McConnell, who joins the Irish mob and indeed becomes “the Toughest Boy in Philadelphia.”

At the start of the play, in Philadelphia’s Luna Theater, Tessie Belle played by Michelle Pauls, opens with dialogue dressed in a tux. You are then taken to Florence’s (KO DelMarcelle) childhood and her early troubles with boys and her tough guy/girl persona start to emerge. Her grandfather (played by Susan Giddings—both male and female parts of the play are performed by women), struggles to keep Florence happy and well adjusted and the rest of the world at bay. They eventually leave Ohio for greener pastures and a fresh start in Philadelphia. It is here where Florence really starts to identify more as a male.

As Jack, she meets and falls in love with Lettie, herself a male impersonator though for Lettie it’s about show business not gender confusion. As happened in real life, Jack is only found out when she is defending herself in a paternity suit.

Having all the roles played by women adds another layer of compassion and insight to this play, a tale of women’s rights, human rights, love, and acceptance. Director John Doyle’s production is captivating and often funny and the use of simple sets and costumes allows this compelling story to take center stage.

“The Toughest Boy in Philadelphia” will run through June 29. Tickets are $20 and available via ticketleap.

Sports

Ireland Vs. Costa Rica: World Class Soccer at PPL Park

The Delco Gaels proudly hold the tricolor on the field before the match.

The Delco Gaels proudly hold the tricolor on the field before the match.

By Brian Mengini

Last Saturday, June 6,  was a beautiful night for soccer at PPL Park, located along Chester’s waterfront- a perfect night to watch the Republic of Ireland take on the national team of Cost Rica in a friendly match leading up to the World Cup, which started this week. (Ireland will not be competing, but Costa Rica will go up against Uruguay tomorrow.)

The parking lot was full of diehard fans from both sides. The Costa Rica fans had tents and sounds systems set up in the lot and danced and cheered while the Irish fans had a bagpiper! Inside the stadium, color said it all. The green Irish shirts were well outnumbered by the red shirts of the Cost Rican fan base! The Delaware County Gaels, the largest youth GAA organization in the area, escorted the Irish onto the field and took part in the flag-bearing ceremonies at the opening of the match.

While the Irish team did score first, the Costa Rican team dominated the first half. he second half proved to be more dominated by the Irish, despite the Costa Rican team scoring on a penalty kick.
The match ended in a 1-1 tie but was a very lively game for both halves.
The fans of the Costa Rican team seemed to have been just as spirited and entertaining as the game itself. Between throwing beer and drinks onto the field and screaming and cursing at officials, their passion for the sport and their team was clear and culminated at the end of the match with one of their diehards running on the field waving his team shirt as a rally towel, only to be tackled to the ground by a member of security and consequently handcuffed and taken away.

Clearly, they love their sports as much as we do!

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

The names of all the workers are on this monument in West Laural Hill Cemetery, but only 7 bodies have been buried.

The names of all the workers are on this monument in West Laural Hill Cemetery, but only 7 bodies have been buried.

There are 50 more ghosts of Duffy’s Cut who need a proper burial and a fundraiser on Sunday at the Twentieth Century Club in Lansdowne will help bring them and the men who’ve kept their memory alive closer to peace.

A group from Philadelphia’s Irish community, including Irish Immigration Center Executive Director Siobhan Lyons, Irish Network Philadelphia President Bethanne Killian, Irish Memorial Board President Kathy McGee Burns, and musician Gerry Timlin, are helping spearhead the campaigh which starts with the musical fundraiser.

Along with Timlin, performers will include John Byrne, Paraic Keane, Rosaleen McGill, Gabriel Donohue, Marin Makins, Donie Carroll, Mary Malone, Den Vykopal and others. Makins and Donohue perform their version of the song, “Duffy’s Cut” on irishphiladelphia.com’s CD, “Ceili Drive: The Music of Irish Philadelphia.” The event, which includes food and drink and raffles, costs $25. Tickets are available online. Sponsorships are also available via the Duffy’s Cut website.

Sponsors include local law firms, a construction company, and organizations such as the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, the oldest Irish association in the US, founded in Philadelphia before the Declaration of Independence was signed.

Also on board as a major sponsor: the Irish American Business Chamber and Network. Bill McLaughlin, who founded the IABCN, explains why: “The Irish American Business Chamber & Network is dedicated to promoting business between Ireland and the United States. Our promotion can be elemental as introducing two people, or two companies, that plan to work together. We wholeheartedly support trade between the entire island of Ireland and this region, and we support the work of the Watson brothers, who honor the dead and forgotten Irish workers who came to American in the early 19th Century to find work, while fulfilling their American dream. A dream which became a nightmare all too quickly for them and their families, is finally being solemnly addressed by the Duffy’s Cut project, and the chamber is proud to help in this small way.”

Not only that, but there’s great food, drinks, and music—a great place to take Dad on Father’s Day.

That’s not all that’s going on this weekend. Buck County’s AOH divisions are holding an Irish Music Festival at Maennerchor Field in Doylestown on Saturday, with music (of course), food, and vendors.

And Philadelphia’s Bloomsday celebration has started. The annual event, which marks the day when James Joyce’s most famous fictional character, Leopold Bloom, began his stream of consciousness stroll around Dublin, is marked by pub quizzes (at Fergie’s on Saturday), exhibitions at the Rosenbach Museum (this one on Joyce and Shakespeare) and readings from the novel Ulysses at three locations on Monday, which is the official Bloomsday. There is also another exhibit opening Tuesday on Joyce’s other famous book, “The Dubliners,” which gave us the character Stephen Daedelus.

Continuing this week: “The Toughest Boy in Philadelphia,” a gender-bending play about an Irish mobster named Whistling Jack McConnell, at the Luna Theater.

On Thursday, the IACBN celebrates its 15th birthday with a celebration at The Fairmount Boathouse in Philadelphia with music, cocktails, food—and most important, opportunities to network with other members of the tribe. (They throw a great party—trust me!)

On Friday, join award-winning local group RUNA as they debut their latest CD, “Current Affairs,” which we review here.

And next Saturday, June 21, it’s worth it to take a little trip to York County. The 13th annual Penn-Mar Festival takes place at the Markets at Shrewsbury in Glen Rock and features some fantastic acts, including an Irish Philadelphia favorite, The Screaming Orphans, four Donegal girls whose harmonies are so tight you’ll think you’re listening to the Angelic Host. You know, if the Angelic Host sang traditional Irish music and Celtic rock. Also on the bill: The Elders, a Kansas City-based Celtic rock bad, along with the Celtic Martins, Irish Blessing (featuring our friend Cushla Scours), NUA, the Spalpeens, and more. The price to get in? $10. You can’t get all that fun for that little anywhere else.

Check out our calendar for all the details.

Music

CD Review: “Current Affairs” by RUNA

RUNA's latest

RUNA’s latest

When someone Irish-born describes something as “class,” they mean it’s brilliant, well done, magnificent and all of the other Thesauraus synonyms for “great.” I explain this so you know what I mean when I say that “Current Affairs,” the latest release from the Philadelphia-based Celtic band, RUNA, is class.

It’s the cap of an amazing year for this group, made up of vocalist Shannon Lambert-Ryan, her husband, Dublin-born guitarist Fionan de Barra, Canadian percussionist Cheryl Prashker, Galway native and multi-instrumentalist Dave Curley, and Kentucky-born fiddler, Maggie Estes White. In 2014, RUNA won top group and top traditional group in the Irish Music Awards and an Independent Music Award for Best Song in the World Traditional Category for “Amhrán Mhuighinse” from their last CD, “Somewhere Along the Road.”

They’re also booked at Celtic festivals from coast to coast and Canada, though with this CD, they could certainly diversify. Never afraid to color outside Celtic lines, RUNA could book folk and bluegrass festivals—maybe even the occasional jazz gathering–thanks to their artful blending of these seemingly contrasting musical influences on “Current Affairs.”

For an eclectic music lover like me, this is heaven. “Current Affairs” is like a warm, delicious stone soup, made with a little luscious bit of this and that from the group’s musical DNA. De Barra comes from a musical family and honed his skills busking in Dublin, later making his professional debut in “Riverdance,” the show that ushered in a renewed interest in Irish folk music. Lambert-Ryan learned to step dance at Philadelphia’s Irish Center, but is as at home with folk, classical, and musical theater as she is with Celtic music. Cheryl Prashker studied classical percussion at McGill University but she’s equally adept at everything from rock and roll to klezmer and jazz. Dave Curley is a traditionalist who also plays with the trad band, Slide Ireland. And RUNA’s latest killer fiddler—they appear to have a direct line to “killer fiddler” central—is Maggie Estes White, who brings her Kentucky bluegrass roots to the mix, which serves as a reminder that those roots also reach back to Celtic lands.

Also on “Current Affairs,” three Grammy award-winning guest artists: accordion player Jeff Taylor (Paul Simon, Elvis Costello) who has been a friend for years; Ron Block (Alison Krauss & Union Station), a multi-instrumentalist who plays alternative country, bluegrass, and writes gospel music; and Buddy Greene (Kentucky Thunder), who plays guitar, harmonica and, like Block, has his roots in gospel.

But you’ll also hear the spirit of Pete Seeger who died the night that RUNA recorded one of the songs he often sang, “The Banks Are Made of Marble,” by New York State apple farmer Les Rice who wrote the tune and lyrics in 1948, though it could serve as the theme song for the Occupy movement. There’s also a song, “Black River,” from Amos Lee, another Philadelphia musician, that has a touch of Negro spiritual about it, and one from English folk singer Kate Rusby, known as “the first lady of folkies” in the British Isles. Her lilting, lyrical song, “Who Will Sing Me Lullabies” seems to have been custom written for Lambert-Ryan’s classic folk soprano voice.

Lambert-Ryan and de Barra contribute an original song to the mix, “The Ruthless Wife,” loosely based on the story of Lambert-Ryan’s great-great grandfather, a Philadelphia cop who was killed in the line of duty just outside his beat near the Northern Liberties neighborhood. “We’ve taken liberties and poetic license with the story because there are too many details and it would go on forever,” said Lambert-Ryan when I spoke to her this week.

The basic story: Her great-great grandfather, James Allen Lambert, who was known as a ladies’ man, was separated from his wife and living with a young woman half his age named Rosie Gallagher. When Rosie found out he’d been killed, she was so distraught that she took poison, then thought better of it, and hired a cab to take her to Hahnemann Hospital where her lover’s body was taken. It was, alas, too late—for the both of them.

“When the city went to give me great-great grandmother his pension, she told them, ‘I don’t want that man’s pension,’” said Lambert-Ryan. “It’s a crazy story and we laughed about it for years. When Fionan and I decided to write a song for the CD, we were trying to come up with something and we looked at each other and said, ‘This is a really good story. We don’t have to look any further.’”

One of the things I’ve always loved about RUNA is their fearless reinterpretation of traditional tunes, like “The Hunter Set” on “Current Affairs,” which bursts with the step-lively influence of both Celtic and bluegrass, and “Henry Lee,” a traditional song in Ireland, Scotland, and Appalachia, which they’ve imbued with jazz and rock undertones.

It’s a fresh, exciting collection that sounds like nothing else you hear in the world of Celtic music. They’re real originals. They’re a a class act and this is a class CD.

RUNA will be debuting “Current Affairs” on Friday, June 20, at the Sellersville Theatre, 24 W Temple Ave, Sellersville. Tickets are available online.

How to Be Irish in Philly, News

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

These young performers, some of whom are going to the All-Irelands in Sligo, will be performing at the AOH Irish Festival in Mont Clare.

These young performers, some of whom are going to the All-Irelands in Sligo, will be performing at the AOH Irish Festival in Mont Clare.

AOH Notre Dame Division 1 in Bridgeport calls its annual 3-Day festival the region’s “best-kept secret.” Consider the secret out.

Held at Saint Michael’s Picnic Grove in Mont Clare, it features lots of music (including some of the remarkable local kids heading to the All-Irelands in Sligo this year), ceili dancing, Irish step dancers, kids’ activities, food, drink, and vendors. And it’s a bargain—a three-day pass only costs $15. Proceeds from the event go to AOH charities. It’s going to be a beautiful summer weekend—get out there. There’s information and a map on our calendar.

On Saturday, brush up on your Irish at the Satharn na nGael, an immersion in the Irish language at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street in Philadelphia. Seriously, slainte and pog ma thoin shouldn’t be the only Irish you know.

You can catch Timlin and Kane at Katherine Rooney’s in Wilmington on Saturday night. We’re going to head down there one of these weekends—we hear it’s a blast.

Also on Saturday night, The John Byrne Band is taking its Pogues show to the Ardmore Music Hall with their friends, No Irish Need Apply. And Jamison will be at Casey’s at 3rd and New York in North Wildwood.

On Sunday, harpist Ellen Tepper will play a concert at The Art of It, 315 York Road, Jenkintown, where you can also see her beautiful “stained glass” Celtic windows and whimsical sculpted dragons.

On Thursday, “The Toughest Boy in Philadelphia,” a play based on the true story of Whistling Jack McConnell, a local Irish mobster of the ‘20s who kept a strange secret, debuts at the Luna Theater.

In Camden on Thursday, the Riversharks celebrate Irish heritage night with music, dancing, and food. Check out our calendar for the password for discounted tickets.

Singer Oliver will be at McShea’s in Narberth on Thursday night.

On Friday, The Rosenbach Museum, which has an original, handwritten copy of James Joyce’s “Ulysses,” launches its Bloomsday celebration of the book with a dinner fundraiser at the Trinity Center for Urban Life in Philadelphia. Irish Ambassador Anne Anderson will attend.

Jamison will again be “downashore,” this time at Keenan’s in North Wildwood on Friday night.

You have until Saturday, June 14, to brush up on your Ulysses. Also part of the Bloomsday Festival (Bloomsday itself is Monday, June 16, the very day Leopold Bloom began his peregrinations around Dublin in “Ulysses”) is a pub quiz at Fergie’s Pub on Sansom Street. (Owner Fergus Carey is a Bloom aficionado and often a reader on Bloomsday.)

Also coming up: A musical fundraiser on Sunday, June 15, to raise money for the last excavation of the Duffy’s Cut area, where 50 more Irish immigrants are believed to be buried in a mass grave. It’s Father’s Day, so consider taking your dad for a delicious meal and some equally delicious music from the likes of John Byrne, Gabriel Donohue and Marian Makins, Paraic Keane, Gerry Timlin, and more.

History, Music, News

Taking the Final Step To Recover the Victims of Duffy’s Cut

The Watson brothers, Bill and Frank, show recovered bones to former Irish Ambassador Michael Collins and his wife, Marie.

The Watson brothers, Bill and Frank, show recovered bones to former Irish Ambassador Michael Collins and his wife, Marie.

Every day, Amtrak trains traveling the Keystone Corridor near Philadelphia’s Main Line rumble over the mass grave of 50 Irish immigrants who died—or were killed—while working on this stretch of rail line, the oldest in the system, known as Duffy’s Cut.

The men—from Donegal, Derry and Tyrone—and seven others had been brought to the United States by a man named Phillip Duffy to finish this wooded stretch of rail near Malvern in the fall of 1832. In less than two months, they were all dead, some as the result the cholera pandemic, others as the result of violence.

An Irish railway worker erected a small memorial to them, which was replaced by a stone enclosure in 2004. But their memory was shrouded in myth until 2009, more than 100 years after their deaths, when Immaculata history professor William Watson, his twin brother Frank, colleague John Ahtes, former student, Earl Schandlemeier, and a team of students discovered the first human bones—two skulls, six teeth, and 80 other bones. In all, the remains of seven bodies—six men and one woman—were recovered. Forensic testing suggested that some may not have died of cholera, but were killed, in all likelihood by local vigilantes fueled not only by anti-Catholic bigotry but fear that the workers would infect the rest of the community with cholera, which is normally transmitted through water and food.

Six of the seven recovered victims were re-buried in a 2012 ceremony in West Laurel Hill Cemetery in Bala Cynwyd. One, tentatively identified through a genetic dental anomaly as John Ruddy, a 19-year-old from the Inishowen Peninsula in Donegal, was buried in a cemetery plot in Ardara, on the west coast of Donegal, donated by Vincent Gallagher, president of the Commodore Barry Society of Philadelphia. The Watson brothers arranged for a Catholic burial, which they attended.

But 50 men remain unaccounted for. Except for the tracings on ground-penetrating radar scans that appear to show air rather than dirt in an area beneath the tracks which may indicate where the earth shifted as bodies decomposed. “We had planned to just have a memorial at the wall where the bodies were buried, but a number of people working on our behalf convinced Amtrak to let us dig for them,” says Dr. Bill Watson, who is eager, he says, “to end the story of Duffy’s Cut.”

The problem is that unearthing the long-dead Irish immigrants will be expensive. Not the work itself. An Irish immigrant named Joe Devoy, founder of ARA Construction in Lancaster (as well as the music venue Tellus 360) is donating the equipment and labor—roughly $30,000 worth—to do the earthmoving over the 40 days of the project. But Amtrak is charging upwards of $15,000 in fees, largely in labor costs for engineers to review the exhumation plans and monitor the work, which must be paid upfront before any work begins. Watson and his small nonprofit organization don’t have it.

That’s why a group from Philadelphia’s Irish community, including Irish Immigration Center Executive Director Siobhan Lyons, Irish Network Philadelphia President Bethanne Killian, Irish Memorial Board President Kathy McGee Burns, and musician Gerry Timlin, are launching a fundraising campaign, the centerpiece of which is a musical fundraiser on Sunday, June 15, at Twentieth Century Club84 S. Lansdowne Avenue in Lansdowne.

Along with Timlin, performers will include John Byrne, Paraic Keane, Rosaleen McGill, Gabriel Donohue, Marin Makins, Donie Carroll, Mary Malone, Den Vykopal and others. Makins and Donohue perform their version of the song, “Duffy’s Cut” on irishphiladelphia.com’s CD, “Ceili Drive: The Music of Irish Philadelphia.” The event, which includes food and drink and raffles, costs $25. Tickets are available online.  S

ponsorships are also available via the Duffy’s Cut website. Among the current sponsors: ARA Construction (Joe Devoy), Kris Higgins, The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, Bringhurst Funeral Home and West Laurel Cemetery, Wilbraham, Lawler, and Buba, The Irish Memorial, The Irish American Business Chamber and Network, the Philadelphia Ceili Group, The Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, Mid-Ulster Construction, Infrastructure Solution Services, Kathy McGee Burns, AOH Notre Dame Division and the Joseph E. Montgomery AOH Div. 65, www.irishphiladelphia.com, “Come West Along the Road” Irish radio show on AM Radio 800 WTMR, Lougros Point Landscaping, The Vincent Gallagher Radio Show on WTMR, Curragh LLC Newbridge Silerware, Magie O’Neill’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, Con Murphy’s Irish Pub, The Plough and the Stars, Tir Na Nog Bar and Grill, Conrad O’Brien, and Brian Mengini Photography.

Watson doesn’t know eactly why the 50 men were buried apart from their seven co-workers (who included a woman who tended to the men’s laundry). “The theory is that the bodies were moved in 1870 by a man named Patrick Doyle who was a railroad gang leader when they were found during an expansion of the tracks to accommodate locomotives and larger vehicles,” he explains.

Doyle may have put a fence near the graves, which was replaced in the early 1900s with a granite block enclosure by a mid-level railway official named Martin Clement. His superiors wouldn’t permit him to erect a plaque explaining the significance of the enclosure.

Clement eventually became president of the railroad. His assistant was the Watson brothers’ grandfather, who kept the file on the Duffy’s Cut incident which the two men discovered in 2002 when going through some family papers. It was only then that they realized that there had been 57 dead immigrants buried in and around Track Mile 59. Only seven were ever mentioned. Apparently, between the time Clement worked in the railroad’s middle management till he became its president, he had become convinced of the need to keep the matter secret.

“And of course we now know why—there were murders, and fingers would have pointed at the railroad,” says Watson. A diary kept by a local woman of the time mentioned the cholera epidemic, “but that disappeared,” says Watson. “Probably because it would have embarrassed the people who were leaders in the community.”

Janet Monge, a physical anthropologist and curator of the The University of Pennsylvania Museum, plans to examine the bones recovered from this second mass grave, just as she did the other seven, though Watson says she may not be able to be as accurate.

“We may not know as much about these bodies as we do the others because Janet thinks there may be a greater range of decomposition—they may have decomposed at a faster rate than the others,” he says. Watson is anxious to say goodbye to the Duffy’s Cut site, but not because he’s tired of being a history professor doing the work of archeologist. There’s more archeology in his future. Sleuthing has turned up several other nearby sites, including one in Spring City, where Irish immigrants were buried, victims of the same cholera epidemic—and possibly, anti-Catholic violence—as the Duffy’s Cut victims. “And we can’t go there until we’re finished with Duffy’s Cut,” says Watson.

News

Hall of Fame Seeking Nominations

DVIHF-logo
Do you know someone who has contributed to the preservation of Irish culture and tradition in the Delaware Valley?

Nominations for the 14th Annual Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame are being accepted now through June 24. The awardees will be honored at a dinner on November 9 at The Irish Center in Philadelphia.

Nominations must be in the form of a letter highlighting the nominee’s contributions and background and sent or emailed to:

Kathy McGee Burns
2291 Mulberry Lane
Lafayette Hill, Pa. 19444
215 872 1305
Mcgeeburns@aol.com