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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

News

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Blackthorn whoops up the crowd at Penn's Landing. Photo by Gwyneth MacArthur

Blackthorn whoops up the crowd at Penn’s Landing. Photo by Gwyneth MacArthur

The annual Penn’s Landing Irish Festival kicks off the month of June. What a nice start—with Blackthorn, the Hooligans, and Jamison on stage, kids’ activities in the kids’ tent, Irish dancers, Irish food and beer, vendors, and some nice weather. And it’s free!

A Mass will be celebrated before the festival at the Irish Memorial at Front and Chestnut Streets.

And it’s not the only Irish festival happening this coming week. AOH Notre Dame Div.1 is holding its Irish festival starting on Friday, June 6, at St. Michael’s PicnicGrove in Mont Clare. It’s not free, but it’s a bargain—only $15 for a three-day pass. Celtic Spirit, the Paul Moore Band, the McGillians, and Tom McHugh will be providing the music (for listening and dancing), and of course there will be food, drinks, and vendors. All proceeds from the three-day event go to support AOH charities, like the Hibernian Hunger Project, which helps provide food for the needy.

If your Irish is limited to “Slainte!” you may want to pick up a few more useful words, which you do at the full immersion Irish language event, Satharn na Gael, which is being held on Saturday, June 7, at the Philadelphia Irish Center. Lunch and dinner are included in the $45 fee. Go to the Daltai na Gaelige (students of the Irish language) website for more information and to register. There will be a session in the evening. http://www.daltai.com/events/732/

And no, I didn’t forget rugby. (I can hear all the grumbling from the scrum crowd out there.) The 2014 Collegiate Rugby Championships are being held at PPL Park in Chester on Saturday, May 31. Go out, cheer, but save some energy for this week’s Irish festivals.

Check our calendar for details on these events and others coming up.

News

Ireland: A Great Place to Grow Your Company

Jane Kealy of Bank of Ireland describes the Irish mortgage market.

Jane Kealy of Bank of Ireland describes the Irish mortgage market.

If you’re ready to expand your business globally or looking for a smart investment, now may be the time to get in on the ground floor of the new Ireland—the elevator is going up.

That was the message from all five guest speakers at the Irish American Business Chamber and Network’s “Invest in Ireland: An Insider’s Perspective” breakfast workshop on Wednesday at the Union League in Philadelphia.

It wasn’t news to the nearly 70 people at the event that was co-sponsored by the Bank of Ireland which has its US branch in Stamford, CT. Ireland watchers know that the island, once the poster child for a wrecked economy, has been named “the best country to do business” by Forbes magazine and one of the top 10 in the World Bank Group’s list.

Through a punishing mix of taxes and austerity, the country was able to pay back its bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union (the first in the Eurozone) and reduce its significant budget deficit, the result in part of a dramatic loss of tax revenue when its thriving housing market went belly-up.

“We’re still standing after all the knocks we’ve suffered over the past few years,” said Michael Crowley, senior economist in the economic research unit of the Bank of Ireland Global Markets.

Standing and climbing. “Our GDP [gross domestic product, the market value of the goods and services a country produces] per head is still significantly higher than it was in the 1990s,” said Crowley. “We’ve seen a fall in unemployment. . .and are expecting gains in that area. Foreign direct investment is still up significantly.”

During the “Celtic Tiger” boom, Crowley said, business costs and wages rose so that the country was no longer competitive. “We were out of line with our trading partners,” he said. “Since then we’ve had wage freezes and wage cuts and an improvement in productivity.”

And, perhaps most important, by lowering its budget deficit, Ireland borrowing costs, which had reached double digits, are down to about 2 ½ percent.

Many American companies, particularly those in the tech industry, already call Ireland their home away from home, including Microsoft, Ebay, Cisco, Amazon, Dropbox, PayPal, and Facebook, thanks to Ireland’s business-friendly tax structure. In fact, said Gerry Moan, managing general partner of Smart Invest, a burgeoning venture capital firm with offices in Philadelphia and County Meath, nine oout of 10 tech companies use Ireland as their gateway to the rest of the world. As do eight out of 10 online game firms and 50 percent of all worldwide financial companies.

Besides the attractive taxes, what lures these companies to Ireland is the fact that it’s”the only English speaking country in the Eurozone,” he said, and the first stop in Europe from the US. Ireland’s population is also young and well-educated. “We have the highest proportion of science and engineering graduates in the world,” he said, as he clicked through slide after slide featuring iconic images of Ireland, from shamrocks to the Titanic Museum in Belfast. “It’s not just the gorgeous scenery.”

Another big advantage to consider doing business on Irish soil: There are financial incentives for startups and their success rate is enviable, said Moan. “Seventy-eight percent have survived and thrived over the five year monitoring period.”

His company will help bridge a funding gap that exists for companies that want to grow their business in Europe, the only negative in an otherwise rosy picture for new companies. “When you want to expand, the next round of funding is tougher to get,” he said. “My company will be focusing on that.”

The next step—finding property to buy or rent, either as a company or an individual—poses some stumbling blocks, said Marian Finnegan, chief economist with the SherryFitzgerald Group, the largest real estate company in Ireland.

“The Irish recovery depends on what part of Ireland you’re standing in,” said Finnegan.

The Dublin residential market has rebounded, though property availability is tight which is driving up prices. Rural areas, places like Sligo, Waterford, Wexford, Leitrim, and Donegal, have not seen the same kind of recovery. There is also a dearth of large spaces—2,000 square feet and up—in Dublin and other urban areas which is also driving up prices for commercial spaces.

On the other hand, there’s been upward movement in the mortgage market, said Jane Kealy, senior manager in the mortgage business at Bank of Ireland, spurred mainly by “first-time buyers and movers,” many of whom have found that purchasing a house makes more economic sense—even on a monthly basis–than renting.

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News, People

A New Brewery Comes to Town

Tim Patton and Christina Burris at St. Benjamin's Brewery.

Tim Patton and Christina Burris at St. Benjamin’s Brewery.

There are an estimated 1.2 million homebrewers in the US, collectively producing more than 2 million barrels of beer a year. Most of them are content to cook up small batches in the basement to drink or share with friends.

Philadelphians Tim Patton and Christina Burris are not among them.

The two friends, dedicated homebrewers who met at a beer event several years ago, are a few weeks away from opening their own craft brewery, called St. Benjamin Brewery—after Philly’s best known beer lover–in what was, in the early 20th century, Finkenhauer Brewery on Fifth Street near Germantown and Cecil B. Moore Avenues in South Kensington.

With savings from an internet startup he founded with a college and a little crowdfunding, Patton bought the building which had been a German brewery more than once and, at various times, a sewing factory and a warehouse. Today, the heavily graffiti-ed neighborhood (not the usual tagging—it has the feel of at least a couple of years of art school), is on the same hipster path as Northern Liberties, which is just a few blocks away. Adjacent factories have been converted into luxury lofts and the sidewalk traffic is decidedly young professional.

Patton and Burris funneled some of their seed money into a complete utility retrofit. “Nothing was up to code,” says Patton, originally from Boothwyn, who left a job as a software engineer to become a brewmeister. (Burris, a native Texan, is an architectural conservator.)

A few weeks ago, there were four shiny stainless beer vats inside the building waiting to be readied for the first batch of beer, made from recipes Patton and Burris painstakingly developed over the last couple of years. “We haven’t used anyone else’s recipes since 2010,” says Burris.

In fact, they’ve been distributing their own brews for years—for free—just to test those recipes. The law restricts homebrewers to 200 gallons and year, and Patton estimates they hit that. “We’ve been giving it away at public events in the city which has gotten us a lot of good feedback,” says Patton.

They’ve settled on a few key beers, including an IPA, the Transcontinental—an amber beer that’s historically Californian–and the Liaison, a lavender saison, a French/Belgian-style beer made with lavender. And there’s no call for drinkers of Guinness or Bud Light to snort. “Everything with a Belgian influence is going to be good,” says Christina, laughing.

To keep close tabs on consumer preferences, Patton and Burris decided to buy a delivery truck and cart kegs to local bars themselves. “We’re making the kind of beer we enjoy,” says Burris, “but if we find that one particular beer takes off, we’ll know right away and we can focus on that.”

There won’t be any bottles right away, but down the line there will be growlers for sale and, ultimately, a brew pub, right where last century’s brewers stabled their cart horses.

Patton and Burris have no designs on becoming the next Anheuser Busch, with worldwide distribution. They think the key to their success will be to be in place when their chosen neighborhood takes off. “There’s a lot of new things come and we want to be part of it,” says Patton.

News, People

Rest in Peace, Wee Oscar

Oscar Knox wearing his Phillies hat when he was in Philadelphia.

Oscar Knox wearing his Phillies hat when he was in Philadelphia.

Wee Oscar Knox, the little Belfast boy who captivated Philadelphia’s Irish community when he came to Children’s Hospital for cancer treatment, died on Thursday.

On Friday, his family—father Stephen and mother Leona—tweeted: “Our beautiful, amazing and much loved son Oscar James Knox gained his angel wings yesterday afternoon. Sleep tight little man.”

His family had launched the Oscar Knox Appeal to raise money for his treatment for both neuroblastoma, an aggressive cancer affecting children, and Jacobsen’s Syndrome, a rare genetic condition that can affect motor skills and cause heart defects.

A fundraiser at Tir na Nog in Philadelphia in December 2012 raised $27,000 and a bake sale at Sacred Heart Parish in Havertown netted $8,000 for the Knox family. Unfortunately, during “Wee” Oscar’s stay at CHOP in October 2012, where he was to undergo immunotherapy for the cancer, doctors found that he had developed yet another potentially deadly problem, pulmonary hypertension, which made the cancer treatment impossible.

The Knoxes returned to Northern Ireland, but with the love and friendship of the Irish and Irish-Americans who live in the Philadelphia region and adopted them and their two children as their own.

In the past month, the Knoxes let supporters know that all of Oscar’s treatments were suspended and that the focus was going to be on pain relief, an indication that the five-year-old who loved wearing superhero costumes was near death.

The family has established another fund to raise money in Oscar’s name for the Northern Ireland Children’s Hospice and the Haematology Unit at The Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children through the JustGiving website.

 

News, People, Photo Essays

A Kid-Friendly Fundraiser for Kids

Kids pose for fun photos at the fundraiser.

Kids pose for fun photos at the fundraiser.

At a fundraiser last Sunday in Philadelphia for Amigos de Jesus Orphanage in Honduras, Meg Ryan was manning the table packed with brochures about the orphanage and artwork by the kids–and she came from Boston to do it.

That isn’t as far as she’ll go to help out the orphanage in the Santa Barbara region of this impoverished Central American country. In fact, the St. Anselm’s College graduate is just back from an 18-month stint there where she taught preschool, helped in the office, and found a new path in life. She’s planning to enroll in nursing school, “practice my Spanish and save money for more trips.”

Instead of looking for a job after college, Ryan, who grew up on Cape Cod, decided to volunteer at Amigos de Jesus, which was cofounded by a local Catholic priest, Father Dennis O’Donnell, the past rector at Malvern Retreat House, and Anthony and Christine Granese. “I did a lot of service in high school and really loved it,” she said. “After college, I wanted to do service, something that wasn’t all about me.”

That’s also what drew Aisling Travers, a 21-year-old Malvern resident and student at West Chester University, to Amigos de Jesus. Last year, she spent a week working with the children, most of whom aren’t orphans, but come from poor families who can’t care for them. Travers planned Sunday’s fundraiser, held at St. Declan’s Well Pub in Philadelphia, which is co-owned by her uncle, Aidan Travers.

Travers is returning in June and bringing her sister, Ciara, and boyfriend, Joe Smith to spend another week at the place where, she says, she left her heart.

View our photos of the fundraiser.

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Music, News, People

Fleadh Winners Are Sligo-Bound

The Sligo-bound six: Bottom, Emily and Livia Safko and Haley Richardson; top, Alanna Griffin, Keegan Loesel, and Alexander Weir

The Sligo-bound six: Bottom, Emily and Livia Safko and Haley Richardson; top, Alanna Griffin, Keegan Loesel, and Alexander Weir

Eight young traditional Irish musicians from the Philadelphia are have qualified to compete in Sligo, Ireland, in August at the Fleadh Cheoil na nEireann—the All-Ireland music championships.

Two world champions from last year’s Fleadh in Derry, fiddler Haley Richardson of Pittsgrove, NJ, who was the under-12 fiddle champion, harpist Emily Safko of Medford, NJ, who placed first in under-12 in harp,  will be returning to compete against dozens of other qualifiers from around Ireland and the world August 11-17.  They earned their berths at the recent Mid-Atlantic Fleadh in Parsipanny, NJ, sponsored by the Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann, an organization that supports Irish music, dance and culture worldwide.

Richardson placed first in under 12 fiddle, under 12 fiddle slow airs, and under 15 trio with two other solo qualifiers, Keegan Loesel and Alexander Weir. Emily placed 1st in both Under 15 Harp and Harp Slow Airs and her sister, Livia, placed first in under 12 concertina and second in under 12 fiddle slow airs.

Also Sligo-bound are Keegan Loesel, 14, of Kennett Square, who plays uillean pipes and whistles and walked away with a first in Under 15 Whistle slow airs, third in Under 15 Whistle, first in Under 15 uilleann pipes slow airs, second in under 15 uilleannn Pipes, first in under 15 duet with fiddler Alexander Weir, and first in Under 15 Trio with Haley Richardson & Alex Weir; Alexander Weir, 15, of West Chester, who brought home a  first in under 15 fiddle slow airs, first in under 15 duet with Keegan Loesel, and first in under 15 trio with Loesel and Richardson; and Alanna Griffin, 18, who also fiddle and concertina, placed second in under 18 concertina.

There will be a fundraising brunch on May 18 at  Molly Maguire’s Pub, 202 East Lancaster Avenue, in Downingtown to help defray the traveling costs of the “Sligo-bound Six,” as they’re calling themselves, with a concert and session. Plans are also underway for two other fundraisers, one in Sewell, NJ, and the other in Philadelphia.

Three other local harpists also won places in their divisions—Caroline Bouvier, 8, of Merchantville, NJ, placed third in the under 12s in her first year of competing; Kerry White, 16, of Vorhees, placed third in the 15-18 age group; and Katherine Highet, 27, placed second in the over 18 group.

The three are students of Kathy DeAngelo who, with her husband, Dennis Gormley, was inducted in the Mid-Atlantic Comhaltas division’s Hall of Fame  during the Fleadh. DeAngelo and Gormley have worked with the other qualifiers in The Next Generation, a program they started with Chris Brennan-Hagy to foster the skills of youngsters interested in performing Irish music. The group meets every second Sunday of the month at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

“The Hall of Fame event was amazing,” said  DeAngelo this week. “We were so surprised and thrilled to see such a large turnout of friends, family, and supporters from the South Jersey and Philadelphia area.”

When they performed, they made sure it was Philly style. DeAngelo explains:

“We  first played a set of reels that we learned from the playing of Ed McDermott [a Leitrim-born Irish traditional musician who settled in New York and later, New Jersey; De Angelo was his student]. Next we had several members of the Next Generation (Alanna Griffin, Mike Glennan, Patrick Glennan) and our friend Bob Glennan join us for a set of jigs composed by Junior Crehan, in a nod to our late friend Liz Crehan Anderson who was a founding member of the Delaware Valley Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eirann.

“For our third number, we had more Next Gen musicians (Kerry White and Alex Weir) join us and we acknowledged Kevin McGillian in the audience, another Hall of Famer from the Philadelphia area. We launched into a set of reels we taught the youngsters that we learned from Kevin, and which they performed on the “Ceili Drive” CD by irishphiladelphia.com, the Travers and Tinker’s Daughter set. It was awesome,” she said.

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