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How I Was Irish in Philadelphia On St. Patrick’s Day

Hope your St. Patrick's Day was as joyous as hers.

I thought I was doing good until I heard about one group of friends who had vowed to party from dawn to dawn on St. Patrick’s Day—and did it. By that measure, my St. Paddy’s day was for wimps. Here’s how it went:

8 AM: Got to the Plough and the Stars on Second Street for Philadelphia Judge Jimmy Lynn’s annual St. Patrick’s Day breakfast. I got no breakfast but snapped a lot of pictures, met a lot of politicians and judges, and ran into an old friend I hadn’t seen in 30 years—Joe Grace, who is running for Philadelphia City Council.

10 AM: Hopped on a bus with a bunch of local AOHers to go to City Hall where Councilwoman Joan Krajewski (she’s half Irish) read a proclamation denouncing Spencer Gifts for their “derogatory” St. Patrick’s Day merchandise (got to see some examples—and we can’t show them here). Met up with the two rugby teams who are playing the Donnybrook Cup on Saturday—the USA Tomahawks and the Irish Wolfhounds of the International Rugby League, who were being honored by city council.

11 AM: The bus dropped us back at the Plough where we walked the block to Penns Landing for the annual wreath-laying and flag-raising ceremonies at the Irish Memorial, which was framed by a robin’s egg blue sky.

12 PM: I’m in FDR Park at Broad and Pattinson where the Irish Wolfhounds semi-pro rugby team is supposed to practice. The field is sopping but these are tough guys—imagine American football without helmets and padding—so they make do. It’s only a practice, but blood is drawn.

2 PM: They’re cleaning up the remains of lunch at the St. Patrick’s Day Party at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy (I help—I haven’t had anything to eat all day), so I hear a little music (from the Vince Gallagher Band) and enjoy a little camaraderie with the homies.

Now, I would have had dinner and listened to music (the McGillians) at the Glenside Pub had it been possible to wedge my way in there at 6:30 PM, but it would have taken a miracle to have parted those revelers who were spilling out on to the sidewalk. So my husband and I did the smart thing—we went to a Jewish restaurant. We had no trouble finding a seat, then noticed that. . .everyone was wearing green. So it’s true—on St. Patrick’s Day, everyone is Irish.

Of course, I took photos wherever I went and here they are.

 

 

News

Philadelphia Parade Video Highlights

The map of Ireland

Wherever there’s a mummer strutting up the Parkway, we’ll be there. Wherever there’s a jig playing so kids in curly wigs can dance, we’ll be there. We’ll be everywhere—everywhere you look.

We were there at the beginning of the 2011 Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade when the Emerald pipers marched past playing “Minstrel Boy” at 16th and JFK, and we were there at the end when the beer truck rolled by. (We’ve always thought that was a happy ending.)

It’s hard to take a parade that goes on for a few hours and boil it all down to its shamrocky essence. That didn’t stop us from trying. Oh, sure, the people at CBS3 showed the whole thing. But they’ve got, you know, cameras and helicopters and stuff.

Anyway, we did the best we could to capture as many of you as we could. We hope this all looks as fun for you as it was for us.

News

How to Be Irish on the Web

At this time of year, a lot of us are celebrating our Irishness in the real world by doing perfectly insane things like tossing back Guinnesses at 8 o’clock in the morning or dying our hair green. And maybe we should let that be a lesson to us all: on St. Patrick’s Day, the real world can be a scary place.

Permit me, then, to suggest a less frightening alternative. If you want to honor your Hibernian roots but avoid the green beer, the sloppy amateur drunks and the annual ceremonial mauling of “Danny Boy,” consider a visit to the virtual world. If you want to unleash your inner Paddy … yep, there’s an app for that.

Here’s a random selection of Irish-themed Web sites to start you on your way.

Ice Cream Ireland
It’s equal parts mouth-watering recipes and small-town Ireland news. icecreamireland.com is easily one of the most appealing Irish Web sites.

Kieran Murphy is the editor. He’s also a director of Murphy’s Ice Cream in Dingle, County Kerry.
Murphy is an engaging writer, and he writes often and on a wide range of subjects. Most of his posts celebrate food, especially ice cream, chocolate and other treats. But he’s also a one-man chamber of commerce, extolling the virtues of everyday life in Ireland’s scenic southwest. A recent sampler of stories: a recipe for a cool, minty St. Patrick’s Day milkshake, a dispatch from an ice cream convention (sign me up), and an unashamedly promotional piece boosting the Dingle Walking Festival.

Murphy is also a very good food stylist. He frequently illustrates his recipes―and icecreamireland.com is a treasure trove of mouthwatering recipes―with eye-popping photography so good, you can almost taste the berry tarts.

Give it a taste.

The Daily Spud
Here’s another superb (and superbly silly) food blog from Ireland―or, as the author notes, “the spiritual home of the potato.” Silly this site may be, but there’s nothing half-baked about the Daily Spud.

Like icecreamireland.com, the Daily Spud shares recipes―and not surprisingly, many are recipes for potatoes. Visit this site, and you can learn to prepare the otherwise pedestrian potato in seemingly endless iterations―for example, Colcannon potato cakes, savoury potato crepes, and potato empanadas.

But there’s much more than meets the eye about this Spud. You’ll find many recipes in which the potato does not occupy center stage―like Thai-style curry with straw mushrooms, smoked salmon with Connemara whiskey, and roasted aubergine soup.

The Spud is endlessly entertaining as well, turning cute little phrases like this one: Ooh, bacon & eggs, me favourite. Rashers ahoy!

Irish Central
Irish Central presents a national and, at times, global look at Irish and Irish-American news. The site covers a range of issues, from the plight of the undocumented Irish to Justin Bieber’s fervent hope to one day perform a duet with U2. (Fat chance, we hope.)

Irishsayings.com
It’s not the most extensive Web site about the Irish language, but it has two big things going for it. First, it offers phonetic spellings of Irish words and phrases. A language Web site―any language Web site―is not particularly useful unless it provides a guide to pronunciation. Second, and even better, irishsayings.com offers sound files, so you can also hear the words and phrases. So the next time you want to employ that always useful Irish phrase, Póg mo thóin, you’ll know exactly where to go.

ClareFM
One of my close friends in the Irish traditional music community tipped me off to this one.

Clare FM is a very popular local radio station in Ireland’s West. You can listen live at any time, or tune into the station’s many podcasts. You never know what you might hear. It could be John Ryan’s show featuring music, news and local info. (Including traffic reports. You expect half of them to involve sheep.) Or you might dial up John Cooke’s news and current affairs program Morning Focus. (Regular features include a segment on bird watching.)

The site also features the always entertaining Community Diary. Among the recent community announcements: News of a supervised St. Patrick’s youth disco in the Auburn Lodge hotel, organized by Clare Camogie Board. (Camogie is the women’s version of hurling―one of the most vicious and entertaining sports on the planet.)

But what really lured me to Clare FM was its traditional Irish music programming. It’s among the truest and the best, featuring the show “The West Wind,” presenting Irish music from the source―much of it live. The presenters really know their stuff, and they often bring otherwise unheralded local Irish musicians into the studio for up close and personal interviews. They broadcast live from major Irish music events, like the Willie Clancy Festival and the Ennis Trad Festival. The station maintains a robust archive of the trad shows, in case you missed something.

The Leprechaun Watch
It’s a not-so-scientific study of the Irish supernatural, and you can take part in it.

In the Glen of Cloongallon in Tipperary, the folks at irelandseye.com have set up a webcam in a hidden location. The camera is focused on a section of the field very near an ancient fairy ring.

You can log onto the site at any time and see what’s happening in this enchanted area. If you have a sharp eye, you just might spot a leprechaun. Maybe a fairy or (saints preserve us) a banshee.

Also on the site, you can view a video panorama of the Glen, send an e-card, or even print out a certificate identifying yourself as a genuine leprechaun watcher.

Help! The Faerie Folk Hid My Ancestors
This is the genealogy blog of local former prosecutor and veteran family history rooter-outer Deborah Large Fox. It’s one of Family Tree Magazine’s Top 40 Genealogy Blogs of 2011.

Fox really knows where the bodies are buried. Want to know the best online sources for searching out your Irish ancestors? Looking for the latest update on the release of the 1926 Irish Census? Crave instant access to photos of headstones from the Toomna Graveyard? Fox offers this, and much, much more.

Fox is also a popular lecturer on a variety of topics relating to Irish genealogy, featuring valuable tips for both beginners and more advanced searchers. (For example: How to Use the U.S. Census as a GPS/Genealogical Positioning System). There’s a page on the site listing her topics.

Fox is also a very good friend of irishphiladelphia.com. (Read our interview.)

Of course, there’s always irishphiladelphia.com to guide you in your quest for Quaker City Irishness. (Full disclosure: Whorishly self-promotional message.) So limber up your mouse finger, and get surfing.

News, People

Philadelphia Goes Green

The kids from St. Denis School in Havertown showed their spirit. They were a sea of green.

It didn’t rain, it was brisk but not bone-chilling cold, and there was even an occasional glimmer of sun. If you were in Philadelphia on Sunday, March 13, for the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, you couldn’t help but think that it was a good day to be Irish.

I had a different vantage point for this year’s parade. I was in it as a member of the St. Patrick’s Ring of Honor, a group traditionally chosen by the president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association. This year, that’s Kathy McGee Burns.

It’s the first time I’ve marched (unless you count walking alongside from beginning to end taking pictures) so it gave me plenty of time to check out the crowds and take pictures of the smiling faces and the inventive ways people expressed their Irishness. One woman had a necklace with faux potatoes and a fake cabbage hanging around her neck and was wearing pointy-toed leprechaun shoes. Note to parade organizers: There should be an award given by the marchers for wildest costume in the crowd every year. Let’s make it retroactive and track this woman down.

If I ever march again, I absolutely want to be in the line of march before a group of nuns. We had the Sisters of Mercy behind us, celebrating their 150th year in Philadelphia. We Ring people were feeling the love when people cheered as we passed by, but once we heard, “Look, it’s Sister Christine!” and “Hi, Sister Marian!” we knew the only thing we were getting from the crowd were polite but perplexed smiles. We could almost see the “Who the heck are they anyway?” thought balloons above their heads. But at least they smiled—and all the kids waved.

We had three photographers out there–Jeff Meade, Gwyneth MacArthur and me–and while we didn’t catch all 200 organizations walking JFK and the Parkway, we did pretty well, we think, in capturing the spirit of the day in all those waves and smiles. Hope you think so too. Here’s what we saw:

Jeff’s set.

Gwyneth’s set.

Denise’s set.

Here are the parade winners as chosen by the panel of judges:

Hon. James H.J. Tate Award
(Founded 1980, this was named the Enright Award Prior to 1986)
Sponsored by: Michael Bradley & Mike Driscoll
Group that Best Exemplified the Spirit of the Parade

2011 Sisters of Mercy

Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley Award (Founded 1980)
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
Sponsored by: AOH Division 39, Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley

2011 Cairdeas Irish Brigade

George Costello Award (Founded 1980)
Organization with the Outstanding Float in the Parade
Sponsored by: The Irish Society

2011 Cavan Society

Hon. Vincent A. Carroll Award (Founded 1980)
Outstanding Musical Unit Excluding Grade School Bands:
Sponsored by: John Dougherty Local 98

2011 Philadelphia Police & Fire, Pipes & Drum Band

Anthony J. Ryan Award (Founded 1990)
Outstanding Grade School Band
Sponsored by: The Ryan Family

2011 Hartford Magnet Middle School Marching Band

Walter Garvin Award (Founded 1993)
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group
Sponsored by: Walter Garvin Jr.

2011 Cummins School of Irish Dance

Marie C. Burns Award (Founded 2003)
Outstanding Adult Dance Group
Sponsored by: Philadelphia Emerald Society

2011 Crossroads School of Irish Dancing

Joseph E. Montgomery Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding AOH and/or LAOH Divisions
Sponsored by: AOH Div. 65 Joseph E. Montgomery

2011 AOH & LAOH Division 51 Fishtown

Joseph J. “Banjo” McCoy Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
Sponsored by: Schuylkill Irish Society

2011 St. James Alumni Association Choir

James F. Cawley Parade Director’s Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding Organization selected by the Parade Director.
Sponsored by: AOH Division 87 Port Richmond

2011 2nd Street Irish Society

Father Kevin C. Trautner Award (Founded 2008)
Outstanding School or Religious Organization that displays their Irish Heritage while promoting Christian Values
Sponsored by: Kathy McGee Burns

2011 St. Denis School

Maureen McDade McGrory Award (Founded 2008)
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group Exemplifying the Spirit of Irish Culture through Traditional Dance.
Sponsored by:  McDade School of Irish Dance

2011 Christina Ryan Kilcoyne School of Irish Dance

James P. “Jim” Kilgallen Award (Founded 2011)
Outstanding organization that best exemplifies the preservation of Irish-American unity through charitable endeavors to assist those less fortunate at home and abroad.
Sponsored by:  Michael Bradley

2011 AOH Division 1 Dennis Kelly      (First year for this award)

News

How They Celebrated in Delco

Walking tall in Springfield.

Walking tall in Springfield.

In this most Irish of Pennsylvania counties–make that, counties anywhere–they really know how to celebrate St. Patrick’s Day. Their parade is one of the great old hometown traditions, and the people come out for it in very respectable numbers.

If you were there, then maybe you’ll see yourself in this photo essay by Bob Fogarty. If you weren’t there, here’s what you missed.

News

Festive Fayette Street

Now, this is a man who knows how to celebrate St. Patrick's Day.

Now, this is a man who knows how to celebrate St. Patrick's Day.

Pipers, mummers, scouts, cheerleaders, AOHers, firefighters … everybody gets into the act at the Conshy parade.

The 2011 parade stepped off under partly cloudy skies and cool temperatures, but by the end the sun was shining and the crowds were lining up at Scoops ice cream stand on Fayette Street.

Here are our pics.

News

A Day of Celebration

The parade comes Sunday, but Thursday’s moveable feast of pre-parade celebrations and observances got Philadelphia’s irish off to a head start.

Standing in the chill rain on the west side of City Hall, the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick paid tribute to the Irish who served in the Revolutionary War.  The Friendly Sons have been around since 1771, so who better?  

Mayor Michael O’Nutter, as he likes to call himself in March, joined the Friendly Sons for the ceremony, and then the whole crowd and then some moved inside (where it was warmer, drier and brighter) to hear the mayor’s proclamation of March as Irish month. (And thanks to the Timoney Dancers for entertainment.)

Finally, at noon, an even bigger crowd (a much bigger crowd) assembled in the ballroom at the Doubletree Hotel for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Association’s annual luncheon. Highlights of the lunch: the formal introduction of Sister James Anne Feerick as the 2011 parade grand marshal, and the sahsing of the Ring of Honor. This year, it was all women. (See related story.)

You can check out our slideshow, above, or to find out who was in all those photos, go to the photo essay.

News, People

Surrounded By Women

Kathy McGee Burns with Grand Marshall Sister James Anne Feerick

By Kathy McGee Burns

Being the President of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade is pretty neat and it comes with some great perks. One of them is choosing a Ring of Honor. This consists of extraordinary individuals who have achieved by their dedication to, and continuance of Irish traditions. I thought long and hard about this responsibility and found eight amazing women who fill the bill.

It is quite a thrill for me to have the President of Mount Saint Joseph Academy (my Alma Mater) in the Ring of Honor. Sister Kathleen Brabson, SSJ, has held this position since 2005. Although born in New York, she thinks of herself as a local woman having gone to Seven Dolors, Cecilian Academy, Chestnut Hill College (BS) and Villanova University (M.A. in Theology).Sr. Kathleen did venture away for continuing education classes to Fordham University and Boston College. Mt. St. Joseph is 153 years old, and in that time has instructed the daughters of immigrants (many of them Irish). The Irish have a great love of education. Although the Sisters of St. Joseph were founded in France, most of the nuns that taught me had Irish last names. Sr. Kathleen Brabson’s roots are Co.Cork (she thinks) via her mother, Audrey nee Burke. She traveled to Ireland and was enchanted by the experience and found the people to be welcoming and comfortable in their own shoes. She loved the antiquity of the countryside. One of her best days was spent at the cliffs of Slieve League, a tall mountain, 2000 feet, located on the side of a jutting peninsula in Co. Donegal. It was a misty day and the clouds clung closely to the mountaintop, as if Heaven and Earth were meeting. It was a lovely, spiritual experience. Sr. Kathleen is very approachable, affable and an invaluable asset to Mt. St. Joseph. She is also very gracious (a trait she learned from her mother), thoughtful and people-centered.

Bernadette Browne, giving, humble and tenacious, is one of seven sisters and one brother. Her parents, gone but forever loved, were Danny (Ballybofey, Co. Donegal) and Philomena nee Monaghan ( Co.Down). Bernadette has set her sights on filling the shoes of her father, which she really doesn’t need to do because she has big shoes of her own. She has a Bachelors Degree from the University of Pennsylvania and a Masters in Engineering from Penn State. An entrepreneur, she is the founder and CEO of Office Infinity. Bernadette is a doer: 2nd VP of the Donegal Assn; Board Member of Hall of Fame, Commodore Barry Club, Philadelphia Donegal Gaelic Football team and the go-to person if you need a job done or a donation given. Of course, her favorite song is “ Danny Boy”.

The Brehon Society is a Philadelphia-based professional association of law among people of Irish ancestry. Brehon Law is ancient. Some say it goes back to the Bronze Age. According to Michael Ragan in his treatise, Brehon Law,”Woman stood emancipated and eligible for the professions, rank and fame.” Philadelphia Court of Common Please President Judge Pamela Pryor Dembe is the Past President (2002-2004). She said that when they first formed the Brehons, in 1976, one of their purposes was to address the lack of the Irish being selected to serve as judges. Well, 35 years later, Judge Dembe is pleased that many of their student members are women and “We now have a hefty cadre of Irish women judges in the area.” Judge Dembe is a graduate of Temple University, School of Law. She has roots in Mayo and Tyrone. She is married to David Dembe, a Law Professor, avid sailor and retired lawyer. She has 4 grown children: Cecily, Eli, Aaron and Alison. She sees herself as outgoing, energetic and decisive…maybe even bossy! But after all, one doesn’t become President Judge by being demure! Retired Judge Ed Bradley says that, “Judge Dembe is an outstanding jurist, noted for her sound judicial temperament and extensive knowledge of the Law. Pamela Dembe loves many things Irish: music, literature, knitting and of course, the Law. Most of all, she loves visiting Ireland.

Denise Foley, funny, caring and kind (oh, so kind) is not only my good friend but is probably one of the most entertaining people I know. She is the daughter of Thomas (whose roots are Massachusetts via Newfoundland via Wexford or Waterford) and Grace Heary (with roots in Inishowen, County Donegal). Denise was always inquisitive and asked many questions of her relatives, “Where do we come from?” Her Aunt Grace would reply indignantly, “It doesn’t matter! We’re Americans now.” Denise, in her youthful wisdom, started writing things down and when she got a computer, she started looking things up. Denise, equipped with a B.S. in Journalism from Temple University, is one of the founding editors, with Jeff Meade, of www.irishphiladelphia.com. This is a hyperlocal website designed to bring the Philadelphia region every tidbit of Irish news, views and to-do’s. Denise does this with sincerity, wit and directness. Not an event goes by without Denise’s imprimatur. Married to Ed Rogan, they have a son, Patrick, age 24.

Elizabeth Kerr is a young woman with an old soul. She is inspirational, unsinkable and lilting. Liz is a Political Activist dedicated to the cause of a United Ireland. In her days at Cardinal Dougherty, she invited Pearse Kerr (an ex-political prisoner in Belfast) to be her history project. Guess who she’s married to? Her family roots are in Galway. Liz never stops growing! She has a B.A. from the University of St. Francis, an RN from Philadelphia Community College and is presently working on a master’s degree in English from Arcadia. One of her friends said that Liz has a wonderful heart. How apropos, because she is a nurse on the heart transplant team at Temple. Liz is one of the founding members of LAOH Bridig McCroary, Div.25.and their officer for “Freedom for all Ireland”. The Kerrs have two children, Dana and Brendan, and they lost a son, Patrick, at age 15, to a skateboarding accident. They turned tragedy into triumph by starting a college scholarship fund for skateboarders, and dedicated a safe environment for youth called Patrick Kerr Skate Park. Do you think all of this is why Liz Kerr is “unsinkable”?

Eileen Lavin is the founder of Tara Gael, an adult Irish dance group. Tara Gael represents the kings and queens of Ireland, and that is exactly how Eileen sees her dancers. And they are that….having won the Marie Burns Award for 5 out of 8 years. Dancing came late for Eileen. When she was a senior at Cardinal Dougherty High School, her father begged her to at least take one class. She took that class with the Master, Ed Reavey, at Emmett’s Place, and one class turned into a lifelong commitment. She shared this love with her husband, Al, who passed away last year. She taught him how to dance and they did so, side by side, for 18 years of marriage. Eileen’s roots are Mayo and Donegal. She loves being around the Irish because they are an open, happy and warm group of people that she easily identifies with. Eileen, is herself a beautiful woman in many ways; patient, loving and understanding.

In Dublin, 1827, Catherine McAuley opened a refuge to provide shelter and to educate the young, rural women who came from all parts of Ireland. She later became the first Sister of Mercy. In 1861, this Order of Nuns, came to Philadelphia to establish the same kind of protection to working girls. They also offered visitation to the sick and comfort to prison inmates. This year, the Sisters of Mercy will celebrate 150 years of service to Education, Charity and Health Care. Sr. Christine McCann is the President of the Sisters of Mercy Mid-Atlantic Com-
munity. Sr. Christine says that she and her fellow sisters stand on the shoulders of those pioneer women who served an immigrant population. Sr. Christine family is from Tyrone and Antrim. She feels the sense of History and Story: the connection between her role here in America and that of Sr. McAuley in Ireland. Sr. Kathleen Lyons, Director of Senior Services, says Sr. Christine is a great inspiration to her and the 1,026 women that she guides. She provides leadership, insight, and commitment to the mission of the Sisters of Mercy..to serve God’s people. “A woman of great faith and action, Sister Christine McCann is a true daughter of Catherine McAuley”.

Honorable Kelly Wall, Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County, is a dedicated, driven and no-nonsense Judge. Okay, nepotism prevails in this choice because Kelly is my daughter but it is totally justifiable. Kelly put herself through college by bits and pieces, mostly going at night while working days. She finally decided to follow her heart’s desire: finishing her last year at Temple University, she left for Indiana University, School of Law, where she graduated Magna Cum Laude. Kelly became a Partner at Miller, Turetsky and practiced family law, but once again, her heart told her she needed to set her goals on a Judgeship. She carefully persevered through the steps which would get her to the courthouse: Supervisor of Whitemarsh Twp, Board Member of Northwest Human Services, Solicitor for Children and Youth, etc. Well, she got elected thanks to her persistence and the help of her eight brothers and sisters. Can you imagine the thrill of robing your daughter? Kelly Wall has a 13-year-old son, Liam. She is a member of the Donegal Association and a Brehon.

“A joyful heart is the normal result of a heart burning with love. She gives most who gives with joy.” Mother Teresa

Joy is what I see when I look upon the lovely, lithesome face of Sister James Anne…Joy for God, Joy for family and Joy for us. On March 13, a this beautiful woman will lead the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade as Grand Marshal.

Sister James Anne Feerick, daughter of Jim and Anne (nee Caulfield)  and Sister to five brothers is no stranger to the parade. She has amazing memories of it since she was seven years old. The Feericks always participated in this event. As members of Transfiguration Parish (West Philadelphia) buses were available to take families to Broad Street. Her Dad and brothers would march with the Holy Name Society; she would dance with the Sean Lavery Dancers and Mom would watch from the sidewalk. They would even watch the New York Parade and on special years, actually go there with a side trip to Rockefeller Center.

Music was an on going joy to Sister James Anne. She was a violinist in West Catholic High School’s orchestra and even appeared on the Will Regan Hour with her brothers; Jim on piano and Mike and Sister on violins.

On Sundays the Feericks would visit their Grandparents in Camden. They had a Victrola  and they would listen to the likes of Ruthie Morrison and John McCormick.

Dance was another love in her life. When Sr. James Anne, a member of the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, first started teaching, she took a course aimed at helping students with poor coordination. The recommendation was dancing. She immediately started a class in Irish dance.

One of her proudest accomplishments is her role of Chaplain to the Mayo Association. I recently attended the unveiling of the statue of Our Lady of Knock.It had been commissioned in Ireland and now sits in a lovely custom-built niche.The entire piece stands about 8 feet tall and Our Lady stands in front of a beautifully painted scene of a church, children, Sts. John and Joseph and the Lamb of God. It is a spectacular piece of art as well as a Spiritual icon. Sr. James was aglow with the presentation of the service. As chaplain she welcomed Our Lady with song, prayer and community. All of us who were present at the Irish Center will long remember the spirituality of that day.

Rosaleen Megonegal, President of the Mayo Association looks on Sr. James Anne as a true friend. “Her caring and loving words bring a deep and spiritual awareness to our members. Nothing is too much for her to handle and despite her busy schedule, she is willing to help. Sr. James Anne, truly an inspirational woman.”

Michael Bradley, the Parade Director, says, “She has never sought the limelight. Sister James Anne sets a great example for us to follow. She is kind, caring and a treasure to the Irish community.”

Fr. John Flanagan, her past student (1st grade) and now President of Roman Catholic High School, was one of the many who nominated her for Grand Marshal. “Sister James Anne’s example, work ethic, faith filled life and her genuine Saintly life speaks volumes about leading a life of Joy and service to God and his people.” He also said the Sr. James has provided him personally with the spiritual strength, prayers and example to sustain his life as a priest.

As for me, I will be humbled to share my first year as President of this great parade with a woman of her faith, stature and dignity.