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Marathoner Tom McGrath Headed On His Way to Annapolis

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Tom McGrath


New York pub owner, footballer and marathoner Tom McGrath is heading our way this Sunday. The 61-year-old Irish immigrant from Fermanagh is running 250 miles to Annapolis, MD, to raise awareness of and money for a memorial to Commodore John Barry, father of the American Navy, at the Naval Academy.

The AOH (McGrath is a member), The Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center) in Philadelphia, and other organizations have raised nearly $200,000 to erect a memorial at the main pedestrian gate at the Annapolis facility honoring this son of Wexford and Philadelphia, who was the first to capture a British war vessel on the high seas during the Revolutionary War.

The memorial will eventually be a circular plaza with a bas-relief of Barry’s bust on an eight-foot high granite slab, and bronze plaques engraved with his commission from General George Washington and a short biography.

McGrath’s journey will take him to AOH Div. 1 in Bristol Borough at noon on Sunday. From there he will run on State Road south and will cross the bridge to Philadelphia at State Road and Grant Avenue. A piper and members of the board of the Commodore Barry Club will be there to meet him.

From there, McGrath will run down down Fitler Street to the Delaware River and the Delaware River Yacht Club, where he’ll stop to meet with the officers of the Delaware River Navy and others. He’ll run past the Glen Foerd mansion, then to Grant Avenue west to Frankford Avenue. He’ll head south on Frankford to Rhawn St., then to the hall of AOH 39 in Tacony where there will be a reception and fundraiser.

Runners are invited to jog alongside McGrath at any point in his run.

On Monday, McGrath will visit the Irish Memorial at Front and Chestnut, old St. Mary’s Church on Fourth Street where Barry is buried, and the Barry statue behind Independence Hall. He’ll run across the Ben Frankling Bridge, south to Bridgeport, then cross the river again over the Commodore Barry Bridge before heading south to Annapolis.

Arts, News, People

Setting Art to Music

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Judy Brennan, John Brennan, and L.E. McCullough, playing among the art.

About a month ago, fiddler Bette Conway, who is also a geologist, metalsmith, and jewelry maker, decided to add a fifth simultaneous job to her resume: gallery owner.

She’s co-owner of Water Elemental Crafts and Fine Art in the Dresher Arcade, 319 W. Main Street in Lansdale.

And the show she’s mounted for her first attempt is also an exercise in multi-tasking. “Music & Art: Artists what are Musicians,” which runs through August 26, features works by fiddlers, guitarists, balladeers, harpists and pianists who, when they’re not making beautiful music are making beautiful things.

Like Philadelphia’s John Brennan, fiddler, guitarist and teacher, who is also a metalsmith and jewelry designer who creates timelessly classic necklaces and earrings using silver, chrome, and gemstones. And harpist Ellen Tepper, whose clay dragons—made and fired using kitchen utensils and a regular oven—prowl the gallery shelves and guard her glass Celtic knot windows. And Pat Egan, originally from Tipperary, a professional guitarist and singer late of the critically acclaimed group, Chulrua, whose photographs capture Ireland, the musician’s life, and the natural world around him.

“This was the first time I was putting a show together and this seemed so natural,” said Conway, at the gallery opening last week on Lansdale’s First Friday. And not only were the artists’ work under the lights, so were they.

Along with featuring their art, Conway wanted to feature their music. So there were Brennan with his sister, Judy, flutist E.L. McCullough of Woodbridge, NJ, pianist and artist Donna Long of Baltimore, MD, and bodhran player George Fairchild from the Lehigh Valley, playing tunes as visitors sipped wine and perused the art.

There will be three more live concerts at the gallery. On July 28 you can see the old time music band, “Hobo Pie,” featuring Ray Frick, a ceramic artist, as well as Barbara Johnson, Carl Baron, and others. On Friday, August 3, there’s an open Irish music session featuring harpist Tepper and Iris Nevins, a jewelry maker whose work, on display at the gallery, recalls ancient designs.

On August 4, Wildwood, NJ radio personality Rick Rock will host a singer/songwriter night with local singers Eugenia Brennan, Teri Rambo, and others.

Other musician-artists represented in the gallery are:

Linda Hickman, who is a silversmith and jewelry maker who plays flute and tin whistle in the New York area and has performed with Celtic Thunder as well as at the White House.

Paul Tooley, a watercolor artist, who is an old-time fiddler.

Lillie Hardy Morris, a painter who also does mixed media collage, is also an Irish fiddler.

We’re going to be getting up close and personal with some of these and other Irish artisans in the Philadelphia area in the coming months. Stay tuned.

Check out our photos from the show opening.

July 13, 2012 by
Dance, News, People

Cummins Dancers Bring Home the Medals

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Some of the Cummins' School medalists.

Maggie Priole, 10, from Glenside, was ranked first in north America for her age in the treble jig round, earning two perfect 100’s from 2 of the three judges at the North American Irish Dance Championship, held July 3-7, in Chicago. Maggie, who is a student at the Cummins School in Philadelphia, placed fourth overall in North America . She attends 3 three-hour classes a week, plus 2-3 private lessons a week, and has a private strength-training session geared towards Irish dancers each week, proving that winning takes work. Congrats, Maggie!

Maggie Priole of Glenside who ranked first in North America in the treble jig.

Other Cummins School dancers also came back with medals. Mairin McDonnell age 10 from Jenkintown came in 25th. Mairin also competed in February at the all Ireland champs in Dublin. Ellie Lynch, 9, from Oreland was franked in 35th place. Katie Donnelly, 16 from, Manayunk came in 56th place. This is the first year Katie qualified for North American competition. She also received a medal at the All Ireland’s in February.

The Cummins School is located at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy.

Editors’ note: How did your dancers do? Email us with the information at denise.foley@comcast.net and we’ll let everyone know. Pictures welcome!

July 12, 2012 by
News, People

The Irish Risk for Tay-Sachs Disease

Cathy and Jeff Mitchell with a photo of their late son, Harrison, who had Tay-Sachs.

When Cathy Mitchell’s son, Harrison, was diagnosed with Tay-Sachs disease, she and her husband, Jeff, were devastated–and more than a little confused.

“I thought Tay Sachs was a Jewish disease,” says Cathy. The Mitchells, who live in Langhorne, then learned that this deadly inherited disease, which cripples and kills, is common among people of Irish descent. As many as 1 in 50 Irish Americans is a carrier.

Children can only inherit the disease when both parents carry the trait; with every pregnancy, a couple runs a 25 percent chance of having a child with Tay Sachs and a 50 percent chance of having one who is a carrier but doesn’t have the disease. Cathy and Jeff Mitchell are both carriers.

“I didn’t even know I was Irish,” said Jeff Mitchell, who, with his wife and another couple–Aaron and Kathryn Harney of Downingtown—manned an information booth on Tay Sachs at the recent Irish Festival on Penn’s Landing. Mitchell hadn’t been close to his father’s side of the family and only learned after Harrison was diagnosed that his grandfather was Irish.

Like other children with Tay-Sachs, Harrison seemed like a perfectly normal baby when he was born. But at six months, he began showing troubling symptoms. “Harrison didn’t sit up. His muscle tone was weak,” says Jeff, a shop foreman at a truck equipment company. “When you would pick him up he would fall over. He startled to loud noises. He rolled over once and then never rolled over again.”

When Harrison seemed to have trouble seeing toys in front of him, the Mitchells took him to their pediatrician who, says Jeff Mitchell, “kept pushing it off on the fact that Harrison was born a month early,” implying he was experiencing normal developmental delays. Eventually, the Mitchells took their baby to a pediatric opthamologist who saw a cherry-red spot on his retina, a physical marker of Tay-Sachs.

The disease is a particularly cruel one. New parents come home with an infant who appears to be healthy and normal, but is lacking an important enzyme, hexosaminidase (Hex-A), that helps clear out fatty protein and other substances from the tissues and nerve cells of the brain. That regular housecleaning allows the infant to develop vision, hearing, movement, and other vital functions. For a few months, the Tay-Sachs babies grow and develop as babies do—cooing, reaching for toys, smiling, laughing, turning over.

But as those proteins build up in the tissues and nerve cells, a relentless deterioration of physical and mental abilities begins. Children lose their sight and hearing. Their muscles atrophy and they become paralyzed. Eventually, they’re unable to swallow, and they develop seizures and dementia. Most children born with Tay-Sachs die by the time they’re five. “They just slowly fade away,” says Jeff.

In 2010, Harrison Mitchell died just shy of his sixth birthday.

Kathryn and Aaron Harney of Downingtown, with their son, Nathan, who has Tay-Sachs.

Unfortunately, most doctors don’t encourage any but their Jewish patients—particularly Ashkenazi Jews–to be tested for Tay-Sachs. They also may not recognize the symptoms when they see them in children like Harrison. Like the Mitchells, Kathryn and Aaron Harney saw doctor after doctor before their son, Nathan, now 18 months old, was diagnosed—again, by a pediatric opthamologist. “A lot of doctors looked and us and said, ‘Well, you’re first-time parents. . . .,” says Kathryn Harney, Nathan slouching on her lap, his hazel eyes wandering, unfocused.

Like the Mitchells, they Harneys didn’t know that Tay-Sachs is common among the Irish. After they were tested, Aaron Harney learned that he carries a strain common among French Canadians. “I didn’t realize I had French Canadian ancestors,” he says. Tay-Sachs is even more common in French Canadians and Cajuns than in the Irish—an estimated 1 in 27 carry the trait, the same as Ashkenazi Jews. Nathan also has a rare form of Tay-Sachs that more often occurs in older children. “That gives us some hope that he might survive longer,” says Kathryn.

There’s no cure for Tay-Sachs, but it can be prevented with genetic screening. The National Tay-Sachs & Allied Diseases Association of the Delaware Valley offers free Tay-Sachs screening to anyone over the age of 18. Researchers at Einstein Medical Center’s Genetics Division in Philadelphia are now conducting a study to determine an accurate carrier rate for Tay-Sachs disease in the Irish and to identify the most common gene changes in this demographic. If you qualify for the research project (you must have at least three Irish grandparents), you will be screened for free and also get genetic counseling to explain your results and discuss your options.

For more information about Tay-Sachs disease carrier screening or to participate in this study, contact Amybeth Weaver, MS, CGC at irish@tay-sachs.org or call 215-887-0877. You can also go to the website and download a brochure that explains the Irish connection to Tay-Sachs.

Eight weeks after Harrison died, the Mitchells went to their first information session to help spread the word about the disease and especially to let others know that the Irish are among the most vulnerable populations. Last March, they manned a stand at the Bucks County St. Patrick’s Day Parade in Levittown (they serve on the parade committee) where they sold T-shirts, hats, and souvenirs to raise money for the parade—and passed out Tay-Sachs pamphlets for free.

“It’s important to us to raise awareness about Tay-Sachs,” says Cathy. “We need to get the word out there that it affects everybody.”

July 2, 2012 by
News

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

If you haven't seen GAA sports, do!

If you haven't seen GAA sports, do!

Better late than never!

Your usual trusty HTBI guide Denise Foley is enjoying a well-deserved rest, which leaves the task of filling you in on all things Irish and Philly during the upcoming holiday week up to me.

As seems to be the case every time Denise hits the road, most of the coming week is a bit on the light side. Maybe everyone’s at the shore.

But there is one big exception: Sunday.

Let’s start with the Project Children Benefit in Kildare’s in Manayunk, Sunday from noon to 3. We’ve been there, of course, and it’s a great venue in one of Philly’s funkiest neighborhoods. Hard to think of a better place for the fund-raiser. Project Children helps contribute to peace in Northern Ireland in its own small but significant way, bringing Protestant and Catholic kids from that often troubled area of the world to the United States for summer vacations. Price of admission is $20 for adults, and $10 for kids. (Kids under 10 get in for free.) There’s going to be a great buffet, plenty of draft beers to keep you cool, and Irish tuneage by Frank Daly of Jamison and friends. Irish dancers, too, of course, and fun for the kiddies, including face-painting.

More details here.

Sunday being a bright, beautiful sun-filled day in the summer, there is, of course, more to do on Sunday. Starting at 2 the same day, there’s Irish football and hurling at cardinal Dougherty High School field. If you haven’t seen these uniquely Irish sports, find time sometime this summer to take in an afternoon of games. (Bring plenty of sunblock. There aren’t many trees.)

And if you love Irish music, Sunday is a day full of traditional Irish music sessions at local bars. See our calendar for all the details. It’s a pretty good bet there will be a session near you.

See you next week.

June 30, 2012 by
News

A Day to Honor Heroes

Kelly Mosca and Pat Nally

Kelly Mosca and Pat Nally

Philadelphia firefighter Pat Nally and his fiancee Kelly Mosca sat on folding chairs in a small, unobtrusive corner of a big tent, just outside of Maggie’s Waterfront Cafe. They were just two out of close to 2,000 happy guests who shelled out 25 bucks a pop to gain entry to last week’s “Honoring Heroes Block Party” at Maggie’s, in the city’s Holmesburg neighborhood.

They could easily have blended into the background. Not much chance of that, though. Nally, who was badly injured in the April 9 Kensington warehouse fire that took the lives of comrades Lt. Robert Neary and firefighter Daniel Sweeney, was the center of attention for much of the afternoon. Friends, probably including a lot he didn’t know he had, stopped by in an unending stream  to shake his hand, wish him well, and thank him for his service.

Nally, still wearing a cast on his injured leg and getting around on crutches, looked a bit dazed by all of the attention, which, he conceded, was “very overwhelming.” Half of the day’s proceeds went to offset some of the financial challenges that have come Nally’s way since the fire and subsequent building collapse, and he was very thankful for that. But he was quick to divert attention away from himself. “It’s a tremendous outpouring of support,” he said. “Sweeney and Neary … they deserve it.”

Nally acknowledged his rehabilitation was going very well. “Physically, everything is on the up and up. I still have three to six months of recovery,” he said. “It’ll be two to three months before I can put weight on my foot.” Emotionally, though, things might take a little more time, as Nally continues to cope with memories of that fateful moment on April 9, when a wall came tumbling down and changed his whole life. “I think about about it everyday.”

Still, Nally had little doubt what he wanted to do as soon as his body and mind had healed: return to the Philadelphia Fire Department. “If it’s up to me, I’ll be back,” he said. “A hundred per cent, for sure. I can’t wait to get back.”

We have photos from our afternoon at Maggies. The slide show is up top. To see the photos with captions, click here.

June 30, 2012 by
News

It’s Celtic Day Sunday in Bristol

Irish fun down by the river

Irish fun down by the river

Dave McGlynn was born and raised in Bristol Borough. As a kid, he remembers a longtime Irish section of the riverside town, known as “the Kettle.”

“The majority of the Irish who settled here helped build the Delaware Canal, which runs from Bristol to Easton. Most of it was dug by the Irish,” says McGlynn. Their neighborhood was called “the Kettle,” he says, because of all the Irish households where tea kettles were ever on the boil.

Today, Bristol Borough still boasts a vibrant Irish-American population—23.6 percent of the riverside town, according to 2009 Census figures. (The Italians are not far behind, at 22.6 percent.)

So it’s a good bet that Bristol’s 16th Celtic Festival would be a big draw, no matter what. The fact that it also pulls in Irish from throughout the Delaware pretty much guarantees a big turnout.

This year’s festival is on Sunday, from 1 to 8 p.m. in Lions Park, at the foot of friendly Mill Street, along the banks of the Delaware.

If you haven’t been before … go. The venue is among the most lovely of all the region’s Celtic-themes festivals. (Of which there are many.)

This year’s festival features nonstop music and dance, says organizer McGlynn, starting with Belfast Connection at 1, followed by the Celtic Martins family band, and the Fitzpatrick Irish Dancers. The fabulous Barley Boys close out the festivities with a concert from 6 to 8 p.m. Bring your dancing shoes.

There’s plenty of food and drink, of course, and many vendor tables … just in case you’ve worn out your Claddagh ring.

The day will be dedicated to the memory of longtime festival volunteer Bridget King.

“She was from Ireland,” says McGlynn. “She took care of all our merchandise vendors for years, then she came into bad health, and she past away this year. A good old-fashioned Irish woman, she was. You didn’t mess with Bridget. We called her the ‘Iron Lady’ of Celtic Day.”

Members of the Celtic Heritage Foundation have a lot to proud of. To find out why, pack up the car and spend the day along the river.

June 22, 2012 by
News, Sports

Phillies Irish Heritage Night 2012

Johnny Doc and the Phillie Phanatic, who wears the green all the time.

Johnny Doc and the Phillie Phanatic, who wears the green all the time.

Let’s start with this welcome bit of news: The Phillies beat the Rockies 7-2.

On a steamy summer night when Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums, Philadelphia’s Mary From Dungloe Meghan Davis, Irish tenor Paul Byrom, and dozens of Irish dancers started the ball rolling in the pregame festivities, you can only attribute the Phillies’ unusual good fortune that night to the luck of the Irish.

(Maybe the fact that 2012 St. Patrick’s Day grand marshal and labor leader John “Johnny Doc” Dougherty tossed the first pitch had something to do with the Fightins’ good kharma, too.)

Would that it could be Phillies Irish Heritage Night every game through the end of the season. And the post-season, of course.

Sadly, it is only Irish Heritage night at Citizens Bank Park once a season. But we made the most of it. Check out our photos to see how much fun we had!

June 22, 2012 by