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News, People

Four New Irish Hall of Fame Inductees Selected

The owner of a famed Irish tap room where many local Irish musicians got their start, a Donegal native who headed the Philadelphia Ceili Group, the Donegal Association and is on the board of the newest Gaelic sports club, and twin brothers who took up the cause of 57 Irish immigrants who died 178 years ago while working on the Pennsylvania Railroad in Montgomery County, have been named to the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame.

The Hall of Fame board chose the four winners—Emmett Ruane, Jim McGill, and William and Frank Watson—on Tuesday night and established a new award named for Commodore John Barry, USN, the Wexford-born father of the American Navy. Barry and the other four will be honored at a dinner on November 9 at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia.

Emmett Ruane

Emmett Ruane

Emmett Ruane is the former owner of Emmett’s Place, a tiny taproom in Northeast Philadelphia that, on the weekends, was “packed to the gills” with lovers of Irish music. It was like “the Northeast’s answer to cheers, where everybody knows your name,” said radio host Marianne MacDonald, who was one of the many dancers who frequented Emmett’s before it closed in 2008.

There were often so many dancers at the tiny pub, “we would dance out on the sidewalk,” wrote Ed Quigley in his nomination letter.

Every musician of a certain age played at Emmett’s Place at one time or another—as did many of the younger ones. “Emmett would always take a chance on a young Irish band– he booked everyone young and old,” said Bill Donohue, Jr. of The Shantys in his nomination letter. “Every Irish musician in Philadelphia cut their musical teeth at his taproom.”

“For those of us from Ireland, he gave us a home away from home,” said musician Patsy Ward, who also wrote a nominating letter for Ruane.

Cathy Moffit, whose father, Tommy, was a regular at Emmett’s, said that Ruane also had a behind-the-scenes life. “Emmett has been very generous to those in time of need and humble about his many hidden acts of kindness,” she wrote.

Jim McGill with daughter Rosaleen and wife, Mickey.

Jim McGill with daughter Rosaleen and wife, Mickey.

Jim McGill was born in Ardara, County Donegal, and emigrated to the US in 1958 at the age of 17. He served as president—sometimes more than once—of the Donegal Association and the Philadelphia Ceili Group (where he has been a member for 50 years and was the youngest president ever). According to his youngest daughter, Rosaleen, he “has made the Irish Center his home away from home.” He is a shareholder in the club.

“People from all aspects of Irish heritage and culture know him as a friendly, humorous and friendly smile that will answer any Irish related question or can direct you to the person who can,” she wrote in her nominating letter. “My dad has influenced me greatly. . .He has shown me how unique and diverse Irish culture is, and instilled the drive to share its beauty with the world,” wrote Rosaleen, who, like her father, is a singer and sits on the board of the Philadelphia Ceili Group.

McGill, who played Gaelic football himself (and was one of the players in the movie, “The Molly Maguires,” starring Sean Connery which was filmed in Pennsylvania) is vice chairman of the Glenside Gaelic Club, the newest youth league in the Philadelphia area.

Bill and Frank Watson

Bill and Frank Watson

William Watson, a history professor at Immaculata University, and his twin brother, the Rev. Frank Watson, are being honored for their dogged pursuit of the truth in the death of 57 Irish immigrant railroad workers in 1832 whose mass grave the Watsons and their volunteer archeologists—mainly Immaculata students– discovered in 2002. While sorting through their grandfather’s papers, Frank Watson discovered documents from the Pennsylvania Railroad detailing the deaths and burial of the 56 men and one woman during a cholera epidemic.

The subsequent dig uncovered artifacts such as a Derry pipe stem and bowl engraved with a harp flag and, in 2009, the first body was recovered, believed to be that of 19-year-old John Ruddy of Inishowen, County Donegal. The Watsons raised money to bury Ruddy’s remains in Donegal, in a plot donated by Irish Center President Vincent Gallagher. Six other bodies recovered from the grave—some exhibiting evidence of violence—were buried in a plot donated by West Laurel Hill Cemetery.

The Watsons are now working toward recovering the other 50 bodies which are buried near the tracks at the Duffy’s Cut area of Malvern. Money raised at a recent fundraiser will go toward the exhumation and the completion of DNA testing.

News

Bristol Celtic Day 2014

Sean and Nicole Palmetto

Sean and Nicole Palmetto

It’s a small festival as festivals go, but this one gets bigger every year.

Celtic Day’s home is on the Bristol Borough waterfront, including the historic wharf.

Philadelphia Police and Fire Pipe Band opened the day’s festivities, which went on to include bands like No Irish Need Apply, and local Irish dancers.

Small as it is, this festival’s vendors somehow manage to offer a much different line of Celtic-themed tchochkes from what we’ve seen elsewhere. Admittedly, you’d be stretching the definition of “Celtic” a bit for some of the items on display, but nobody seemed to notice or mind. All told, great variety.

One very sentimental vendor for me: Mignoni’s Jeweler’s, where I bought my then-girlfriend (now wife) a silver Claddagh ring—which she still wears.

It helped that the day was warm and breezy, not a cloud in sight, pleasure boats plying the Delaware. Jut a great, friendly day in the borough.

 

 

Music, News, People

RUNA Debuts Its New CD–and a Surprise

Karen and Jim: She said yes!

Karen and Jim: She said yes!

RUNA, winner of the top Irish group in the Irish Music Awards last year, debuted its brand new CD, “Current Affairs,” on Friday, June 20, at the Sellersville Theatre. Gene Shay, the grand old man of Philly folk, introduced the group along with opening act, singer-songwriter Michael Braunfeld.

And one audience member used the occasion—with the collusion of the group—to propose. Karen said yes to Jim!

We were there and caught it all on camera!

 

News

The Irish Center in Crisis

The Commodore John Barry Center, familiarly known as The Irish Center

The Commodore John Barry Center, familiarly known as The Irish Center

It’s the place where, since 1958, Philadelphia’s Irish community has gathered to talk, laugh, eat, drink, sing, dance, celebrate and mourn. Located in the Mt. Airy section of the city, and known officially as the Commodore Barry Club, the Irish Center–the heart of all things Irish for over 50 years–is now in imminent danger of having its doors shut forever.

The Irish Center has weathered its share of financial emergencies in the past.

But this financial crisis is different.

At the crux of the recent crisis is a recent change in tax rates by the city. The building at 6815 Emlen Street was just re-assessed at $1.2 million, which means an annual tax bill of $16,000. Added to that expense are annual regulatory and insurance fees of $7,000, monthly utilities of $4,000, and upkeep and maintenance costs–including $25,000 to purchase up-to-code appliances in the kitchen. “It’s been years of struggling with the routine maintenance costs, but these new costs go beyond the cushion we’ve relied on in the past,” Irish Center Board Member Sean McMenamin explained. “The city regulations require we upgrade the hood in the kitchen to stainless steel. We applied for a variance, and our kitchen certificate is good for two years. By then, we have to have the new hood in place.”

All of this means an immediate need to raise $50,000 in the next few months in order to keep the Irish Center doors open, and an ultimate goal of raising $100,000 as part of a two-year plan. Without this money, the Center will be gone by the end of the year, and the Irish community will have lost its home.

And a big home the Irish Center is. It’s home to an impressive and ever-expanding historic library; to an incredible array of Irish musicians and dancers; to Gaelic sports fans; to one of the city’s leading folk societies, the Philadelphia Ceili Group; to many county Societies; and to the Philadelphia Emerald Society Band. And that’s just to name just a few.

The Irish Center is both past and future to the Philadelphia Irish community, and this summer is all about celebrating the memories and guaranteeing it will continue and flourish well beyond 2014.

To do that, the Irish Center needs the help and donations of everyone who has ever celebrated their culture or embraced their heritage, so that generations to come can have the same opportunity.

Here’s how you can help save a beloved institution:

  • Donate money immediately via PayPal, you can visit the Irish Center web page at www.theirishcenter.com. Click on the “Donate” button on the left side of the page. Donations can also be made by check, made out to “The Society of Commodore John Barry, Inc” and sent to 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, PA, 19119.

  • Keep on the lookout for a GoFundMe crowdfunding campaign. It’s launching on July 15. Details to follow.

  • Toddle on over to Maloney’s Pub in Ardmore on Saturday, July 19, for a big fund-raiser.

  • Mark your calendars now for The Gathering, a celebratory day at The Irish Center on September 28, featuring many more ways to give.

While this fundraising is immediate and paramount to the current and continued survival of the Irish Center, plans are already under way for the direction that the Center will take beyond the two-year plan. The ultimate goal is to evolve the Irish Center into an Irish Arts and Cultural Center. This will allow the Center to become a non-profit organization, and thrive as a showcase for the history and heritage of the Irish in Philadelphia.

The Commodore Barry Center has always been about the people who gather there, but now this beautiful and historical building needs those people to save it so it can continue on for future generations to also call it home.

“The survival of the Irish Center is based on how we structure ourselves in the next two years. We need this money to keep the Irish Center afloat and the community together as we develop the Irish Center into an Irish Arts and Cultural Center,” Sean said. “When you hear the story of the struggle to keep this place open, you know how much people must love it.”

 

 

Music, News, People

Duffy’s Cut Fundraiser a Huge Success

The Duffy’s Cut Fundraiser on Sunday in Lansdowne not only hit its goal of $15,000 to pay for fees related to retrieving the last 50 bodies of Irish immigrants who died while working on the railroad in 1832, it exceeded it—by at least double that.

“We’ll be able to do the work and finish up the DNA testing,” said the Rev. Frank Watson who, with his brother, Bill, a history professor at Immaculata University in Malvern first brought to light the hidden graves of the 57 immigrants who died during a cholera epidemic.

Frank and Bill Watson

Frank and Bill Watson

Their work revealed that at least some of those 57 had likely been murdered, probably by a vigilante group worried that they would spread the disease through the wider community. Seven bodies have already been recovered; six were interred at West Laurel Hill Cemetery and the seventh, tentatively identified (via a dental anomaly) as John Ruddy, was buried in a donated plot in Ardara, County Donegal, last year. Ruddy came as a teenager from Inishowen Peninsula in Donegal to work on the railroad.

For more information about this phase of the Duffy’s Cut Project, click here.

A diverse group of individuals and organizations planned and sponsored the event at the Twentieth Century Club on Sunday afternoon. One sponsor was Kris Higgins, a former nun and a public school teacher, who donated $10,000 in the memory of her partner, Mary Pat Bradley, who died last year of ovarian cancer. When asked why, she responded simply, “Because I can. I’m no Lewis Katz [the late philanthropist] but I can do something.”

Other donors included The Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, Bringhurst Funeral Home and West Laurel Hill Cemetery, Wilbraham, Lawler & Buba, The Irish Memorial, Kathy McGee Burns, Peter Burns on behalf of his children, the Delaware Valley Irish Hall of Fame, Infrastructure Solutions Services, Chris Flanagan and Brian McGarrity of Mid-Ulster Construction, the International Union of Operating Engineers Local 542, the Irish American Business Chamber and Network, the Philadelphia Ceili Group, the Ladies Ancient Order of Hiberians, Trinity Div. 4, Vince Gallagher of Loughros Point Landscaping and the Vince Gallagher Radio Hour, Marianne MacDonald’s “Come West Along the Road” radio show, Ann Baiada, AOH Notre Dame Div.1, Simple Clean, Curragh LLC Newbridge Silverware, Brian Mengini Photography, The Plough and the Stars, Maggie O’Neill’s Irish Pub and Restaurant, Con Murphy’s Irish Pub, Twentieth Century Club, Conrad Obrien, and Tir na Nog Bar & Grill.

Check out the photos below.

[flickr_set id=”72157645237654863″]

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?

[flickr_set id=”72157645182053033″]

Music, News

Penn’s Landing Irish Festival 2014

Butterfly girl

Butterfly girl

You didn’t have to be Irish to enjoy the Penn’s Landing Irish Festival.

As usual, the festival down by the river drew a diverse crowd, lots of people who were all too happy to be Irish for a day.

And they picked a good day, sunny skies against the scenic backdrop of the Delaware, with pleasure boats bouncing on the rippling water. And also providing visible proof that not all men are hearty sailors, and should definitely wear shirts.

Many of the city’s top Irish bands filled the Great Plaza with music all day.

And, hey, if you wanted to dance, who was going to stop you?

Vendors sold everything from T-shirts to wedding rings, and if you wanted a cheesesteak, a pretzel, an ice cream, or a brew, it wasn’t too hard to find them.

The day started, as it always does, with an outdoor Mass on the grounds of the Irish Memorial at Front and Chestnut.

We captured the day’s festivities with a pretty hefty photo essay.

[flickr_set id=”72157644955505311″]

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.