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Philly’s Firefighters and Cops Come to the Aid of a Brother

In times of need, firefighters rally around their brothers and sisters. “It seems like Hollywood in a way, but if you talk to firefighters, there’s really a unique bond between all of us,” says Anthony Dello Russo, a seven-year Philadelphia firefighter stationed at Ladder 16 in Kensington.

This Saturday, that camaraderie will be on full display as the city’s firefighters, together with their colleagues in blue, gather at Maggie’s Waterfront Cafe on North Delaware Avenue in the Northeast for the “Honoring Heroes Block Party.” Among the beneficiaries will be Ladder 16’s Patrick Nally, 25, who was injured in the five-alarm April 9 Kensington warehouse fire that claimed the lives of Lt. Robert Neary, 60, and firefighter Daniel Sweeney, 25, both of Ladder 10. All three firefighters will be honored. The event also benefits the Philadelphia Living Flame Memorial at Franklin Square, a monument erected in 1976, now undergoing redesign and rededication.

Dello Russo, who’s helping organize the early-summer event, was among those who responded to the blaze, on a night when he should have been off duty. “I was working for someone that night,” he recalls. “It had a profound impact on me.”

Of course, Dello Russo knows Nally well. And like the other firefighters at Ladder 16, Dello Russo knows Nally could use a little help. Nally suffered disabling injuries to his back and pelvis when the roof of an adjoining fire-damaged furniture store roof collapsed on him, Neary, Sweeney, and firefighter Francis Chaney.

“He’s only receiving 80 percent of his pay,” says Dello Russo says of Nally. “While he’s out, he doesn’t accrue any sick time or vacation time. He’s getting married in four weeks. The wedding is going to go on as planned, but they had to cancel their honeymoon. Pat owns a house right around the corner from me, so obviously he still has to pay his bills. There’s been a bit of a financial crunch.”

Since the fire, Dello Russo says, Nally is starting to get around better, but “there’s a limit to how far he can travel and how long he can stay up.” Fortunately, the young firefighter won’t have far to go to attend his own benefit. “Pat is staying with his parents, who live 50 yards from Maggie’s,” says Dello Russo. “He’s the guest of honor, and we want him to attend. That was paramount.”

Tickets for the benefit are on sale for $25 apiece, which covers the cost of admission, beer and food.There’s music, too, of course, including performances by the cover band Saturn, an excellent band comprised mostly of Philadelphia police officers, called District Blue, and the great Irish band Jamison.

Maggie’s is an indoor-outdoor venue, but the party is likely to spill over, so the 9200 and 9300 blocks of North Delaware Avenue will be blocked off for the day. There’s Fairmount Park land across the street as well.

An event of this size has the potential to disrupt local life, so organizers took it up with the Holmesburg Civic Association. They were fully supportive, Dello Russo says. “We were very appreciative of that.”

Several weeks have gone by since the blaze, and firefighters have mourned their loss during that time. The block party, Dello Russo says, has the potential to bring them together, along with members of the community at large.

“One of the big things we discussed and were emphatic about, is that it (the block party) is supposed to foster community,” sayd Dello Russo. “I know it’s primarily to help Pat out financially, but speaking for myself, it’s cathartic in a way, for civilians and uniform alike. It’s cool to come out and hang out with us. It’s cool when people appreciate what you do.”

Maggie’s is at 9242 North Delaware Avenue. You can pick up tickets at any one of four places:

  • Maggies
  • Philadelphia Fire Fighters & Paramedics Union Local 22, 5th and Willow Street
  • Engine 7, Ladder 10, Kensington and Castor Avenues
  • Ladder 16, Belgrade and Huntington Streets

Tickets also will be available at the door on the day of the event. The party goes on from 2 to 6 p.m.

News, People, Sports

Delco Gaels Compete in Ireland

The Delco Gaels Feile Team in Ireland this week.

The Delco Gaels’ boys team is in Ireland right now, competing in the Feile na nGael (Irish for Festival of the Gaels), an annual invitation-only tournament that brings as many as 25,000 children from 32 Gaelic Athletic Association countries to compete in Gaelic sports, like football, hurling, and camogie.
According to Dee Higgins of Lafayette Hill, whose son Ronan is on the team, the team beat a crew from Tallagh and were heading to Tipperary for more action at the end of the week.
Good luck to the local players!

News

The Irish Take Over Penn’s Landing

Luke Jardel of the Hooligans.

Luke Jardel of the Hooligans.

Picking up where they left off on March 17, Philly’s Irish celebrated their Irish-ness all day Sunday along the Delaware.

The day began, fittingly, with a celebration of faith—an open-air Mass on the grounds of the Irish Memorial down at Front and Chestnut.

Then the day got decidedly less secular, as hundreds of Irish, both of the genuine and wannabe variety, filled every square inch of Penn’s Landing’s Great Plaza. They came for the food and drink, for the vendors selling hats and t-shirts, and for a day chock full of great local Irish music pumped out from the festival stage by The Hooligans, Blackthorn, and Jamison Celtic Rock.

There was a big birthday bash, too, for former bar owner Emmett Ruane, who celebrated his 75th birthday at the festival. The Hooligans’s Luke Jardel led the crowd in singing “Happy Birthday,” and you could tell by the grin on his face that Emmett was happy indeed.

It was muggy—lots of kids wading in the “no wading” fountains—and it rained for a little bit, but nothing was going to slow this party down.

We captured many of the best moments of the day.

Check out the slide show above.

News, People

A Fundraiser That’s a Hole in One

Joan Waychunas sets up the sign for the Team Fiona 10th Tee Fundraiser.

Last year, Philadelphia’s trophy-winning Gaelic footballers, the Mairead Farrells, brought home their second national championship in a row. But the tournament, held in San Francisco, left them in the hole.

So this year, with the Gaelic championships in Philadelphia’s Pennypack Park over the Labor Day weekend, their annual fundraising golf tournament, held on Sunday, May 20, allowed them to play a little catch-up on last year’s bills since travel expenses will be minimal this year.

It also allowed them to do a good turn for a fellow footballer.

The tenth tee at the bucolic Edgmont Country Club in Delaware County was dedicated to Team Fiona—the name chosen by the group of friends and former teammates of Fiona Kealy who are determined to raise money to help the County Down native and mother of a toddler pay for her cancer treatment.

Team Fiona, which numbers 14 so far, will be competing in the Team Livestrong Challenge Philly race on August 17-19. There’s a 5K and an 10K walk/run, along with a bike ride up to 100 miles.

“Fiona and I were teammates on the old Emerald Eagles,” said Mairead Farrell’s coach, Angela Mohan. “That was back when we won four national championships in a row. When she was diagnosed with cancer last year, we knew we had to do something.”

Several dozen golfers came out for the yearly event. At the 10th tee, they were asked to bet on whether they’d be able to put their ball into a ring set up on the faraway green. All the losses were going to Team Fiona. And some of the wins too.

Team Fiona has also scheduled a fundraiser on June 22 at Paddy Rooney’s Pub, 449 West Chester Pike, in Havertown, featuring jewelry from Newbridge Silver, an Irish company with strong ties to the Philadelphia area.

The participants in the Saturday morning “Boot Camp” run by Mohan, who is a fitness trainer, are all contributing to Team Fiona too. Last year, “Angel’s Army,” as they called themselves, used money donated via the Boot Camp to buy toys and books for children at Nemours/Alfred I. DuPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, Delaware. “This year the money from the camp goes to Fiona,” said Mohan.

It’s only fitting, says Joan Waychunas, like Mohan, a native of Tyrone and a former footballer, who ran the 10th tee fundraiser. “If it was anybody else, Fiona would be doing the same thing,” she said.

View our photos from Sunday’s golf tournament.

News, People

Taking Their Next Step

St. Patrick's Day Parade Director Michael Bradley with two of the Rainbow Irish Dancers, Colleen, left, and Noreen, right.

The ladies were insistent. Michael Bradley, director of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, had to get up and learn an Irish step dance with them.

“You don’t want to see that,” joked Bradley, though he followed them half willingly to the dance floor, where, in the confusion, he managed to sneak away before the music started.

“That one,” he said, nodding toward one of the women, “told me when I came in that she was the best dancer.”

“That one” was Colleen O, one of the Rainbow Irish Step Dancers and a resident, like the rest of the troupe, of Divine Providence Village in Springfield, Delaware County, an Archdiocesan cottage-style residence for women with developmental disabilities.

Bradley, along with John Dougherty Sr. and Brian Stevenson, business agent for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (IBEW) Union Local 98, were at Divine Providence Village on Monday night on a very special errand. For their first appearance in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade in March, the Rainbow Irish Step Dancers won the newly created Mary Theresa Dougherty Award, which will be given each year to an organization “dedicated to serving the needs of God’s people in the community.”

The award is named for the mother of John Dougherty Jr., business manager of Local 98 and this year’s parade grand marshal. The senior Dougherty presented the troupe with their plaque.

Kathleen Madigan, a former nutritionist at Divine Providence, is the troupe’s dance instructor. “The day of the parade was amazing,” she said. “The families were following us along the parade route, but so were people we didn’t know. When I asked some of them why they were following is they said “we just wanted to be with you and cheer you on.’ They were clapping for us all along.”

Madigan never set out to form a dance troupe at Divine Providence. The women were the standouts in a class Madigan gave every other Saturday. When she saw their determination, talent, and joy as they danced “Shoe the Donkey” and “Bridge of Athlone,” she decided to turn a social activity into something more serious.

The young women have mastered several dances and are learning several more. “They know their steps,” says Madigan. “Sometimes their heads and their feet don’t always work together, but they remember the steps. I can hear them repeating the steps out loud.”

A few of the women appear to have been born for show biz. Two are avid line dancers who go out a couple of times a week. Another is a performer with the State Street Miracles in Media, a troupe that highlights the artistry of adults with developmental disabilities.

And then there’s Colleen. Born with Down syndrome, Colleen (“I’m Irish, you know”) has the comic timing of a professional stand-up. When Bradley announced to the women that they would be attending Irish Heritage Night at the Phillies on June 19 and dancing on the field, the women broke into applause and hugged each other. “I’m going to teach the Phillies to dance,” announced Colleen, who waited for the laughs before she smiled too.

Bradley was visibly moved by the event. “It means a lot to me. I had a brother who had Down syndrome,” he said. That’s one of the reasons why, for more than 20 years, Bradley has been the basketball coach at the nearby Cardinal Krol Center at Don Guanella Village, working with the developmentally disabled young men who live there. “This is the kind of thing that makes everything I do all year worthwhile.”

View our photo essay. 

News, Sports

Fight Club!

That's Chuck Cawley as "Twinkle Toes," a reference to his recent dance competition for the Delco Gaels.

It wasn’t your usual Saturday night at the Irish Center in Philadelphia. In the ballroom, under crystal chandeliers, where many brides and grooms danced their first dance as husband and wife, Irish dancers did the South Galway set, and traditional musicians performed, was a ring. A boxing ring.

And there was a night of boxing to go with it. The Young Irelands Gaelic Football Club’s “Fight Night” was a fundraiser for the footballers and a card that included more than a dozen local amateur fighters and more than a few comedians—you’ll see that in the photos taken by Eileen McElroy and Una Mullan.

Check out the photo essay Eileen and Una did for us. And check out Eileen’s wonderful time lapse video to see how the Irish Center’s ballroom was transformed into “Fight Club.” It’s amazing how fast people move when there’s Irish music involved.

View the photo essay here.

See Eileen’s video here or check it out at the top of the page.

News, People

Awards Time!

Thomas LaVelle, right, with Paul Phillips, as La Velle receives the first Paul Phillips Award honoring outstanding parade marshals.

The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day was more than a month ago but its spirit lingers on.

On Wednesday, April 18, prize winners picked up their awards at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia, where the presidency of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association passed from Kathy McGee Burns to Bob Gessler, founder of the Hibernian Hunger Project.

The Vince Gallagher Band and singer, Karen Boyce McCollum, provided the dancing music at the event, which was attended by members of the CBS3 parade coverage team who also handed out awards.

We were there and have lots of photos.

News, People

2012 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Chosen

Outgoing Rose of Tralee Beth Keely with 2012 Rose of Tralee Elizabeth Spellman.

A 27-year-old social worker from Havertown was crowned the 2012 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee at a gala on Sunday, April 1, at the Radnor Hotel in St. Davids.

Elizabeth Spellman, who works at St. Christopher’s Hospital for Children in Philadelphia, is a graduate of Merion Mercy Academy and The Catholic University of America. She joined a volunteer program called Amigos de Jesus, based in Malvern, PA, and after graduation spent two years teaching English and acting as social worker at an orphanage for boys in Honduras, where she learned Spanish. She traces her Irish roots to Mayo and Sligo.

Spellman will compete this summer at the International Rose of Tralee Festival in Tralee, County Kerry. The “Rose” is a popular competition, drawing young Irish women from around the world. It’s televised in Ireland. The Philadelphia Rose Centre celebrated its 10th birthday this year. Founded by Sarah and Karen Conaghan (Race), the center this year gave its Mary O’Connor Spirit Award, named for the original Rose of Tralee, to the center’s original Rose, Noreen Donahue-McAleer.

McAleer, who teaches third grade in the Abington School district, began Irish dancing at the age of three and competed worldwide, including at the Irish Dance World Competition in Galway when she was 17. She opened the Cummins School of Dance in 2001 when she earned her Irish dance degree (teagascoir Choimisiuin le Rinci Gaelacha, or TCRG).

The Glenside resident is married to Peter McAleer and they have one son, Pearse. Her nieces, Abigail Donohue and Saorla Meeagh were “Rosebuds” this year—the youngest group of girls that take part in the pageant.

The outgoing Rose, Beth Keely, gave a tearful farewell speech in which she recalled all the events of her year, including helping to grant the wish of a terminally ill teen in Ireland—to spend a day with the Rose of Tralee contestants.

CBS3 consumer reporter, Jim Donovan, reprised his emcee duties this year. Donovan, who appears at many local Irish events, greeted the crowd with his usual, “Hello, Irish people!”

We were there and took many, many pictures so you could pretend you were there too.