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Hot, Steamy, Windy—But the Crowds Got All Irish at Penns Landing

Penn's Landing

We caught this little miss clambering on the Irish Memorial during the Mass that preceded the Irish Festival. Cute, but don't do it again! (Her parents spotted her and put a stop to it.)

When it comes to the annual Penns Landing Irish Festival, the crowds never let a little heat, wind, or even rain stop them. They load up on “Irish Ice”—what water ice is called this one day a year—and enjoy the day.

On Sunday, June 6, the crowds came. . . to hear Paddy’s Well, the Hooligans, Round Tower, and Blackthorn; see 11 Irish dance schools strut their stuff; and play “duck hunt” in one of the many fountains that dot the multilayer amphitheatre where the event is held each year.

As in previous years, the festival opened after a Mass, celebrated by Father Ed Brady of St. Isidore’s Parish in Quakertown, at the nearby Irish Memorial. This year’s Mass paid tribute to the recent Inspirational Irish Women awardees. Members of the committee that planned the May 23 event participated: Keira McDonagh and Emily Weideman were readers, Jocelyn McGillian, a mezzo-soprano, sang to the accompaniment of harper Ellen Tepper. Honoree Liz Kerr of LAOH 25 and her husband Pearse brought the gifts. Honoree Kathy McGee Burns, vice president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, participated in the raising of the flags over the Memorial park.

We were there and have photos from both events.

  • View the Mass at the Memorial.
  • View the Penns Landing Irish Festival.
  • View more of the Penns Landing Irish Festival
  • News

    What Do You Think of Our Web Site?

    A few weeks ago, we posted a survey on behalf of The Reynolds Journalism Institute at the Missouri School of Journalism. They’re doing some cool research (yes, research can be cool) on small community Web sites like irishphiladelphia.com.

    They want to know: What does irishphiladelphia.com mean to you? Do you like us? Do you trust us? Do we help build the community?

    They’ve gotten a few responses from you guys, but they’re looking for more. It would mean a lot to us if you could help them out. 

    Here’s the survey. It’ll take you less than 10 minutes:

    http://rjisurvey.irishphiladelphia.sgizmo.com/s3/

    News

    One Week To Go and the Fun Has Already Started

    The littlest dancers get some one-on-one coaching.

    The littlest dancers get some one-on-one coaching. (Click on photo to view slideshow.)

    It’s now less than a week before the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade and the last fundraiser was truly a “fun” raiser, as Parade Director Michael Bradley called it.

    Hundreds paid $25 to get into the event, which featured the popular local group, Blackthorn, a silent auction and a live auction with CBS3 personality Bob Kelly as auctioneer. Some items, like a baseball bat signed by Carlos Ruiz and an on-the-field photo session with the Philly Phanatic , went for hundreds of dollars. 

    The parade is set to march down the Benjamin Franklin Parkway on Sunday, March 14,  starting at noon. It will be televised live on the CWPhilly and rebroadcast on CWPhilly and CBS3 on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17.

    For the second year in a row, the parade organizers turned to fundraising to keep the parade afloat after the city, facing a budget crisis, began billing for services like police, port-a-potties, and clean-up, that the city had covered in previous years. 

    While the financial situation continues to be serious,  the fundraisers have been anything but. 

    News

    You Say Potatoes, We Say Poor Taste

    Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering  unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

    Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

    Did you hear the one about the major fast food chain that ran a TV ad offering unlimited fries and pancakes to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the end of the Irish famine?

    Not funny? A lot of people agree with you—among them, the national president of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, Seamus Boyle, who fired off an angry letter to Denny’s over last weekend, and Philadephia Rose of Tralee Centre Managing Director Sarah Conaghan who quickly organized a protest and a Facebook boycott campaign. They made it clear to the South Carolina-based fast food chain: No one in the Irish community was laughing about a promotion making fun of a time in human history that led to the deaths of more than 1 million people. The ad was pulled from the airwaves on Tuesday.

    But the protest wasn’t the Grand Slam it should have been.

    Those who contacted Denny’s got this response via email:

    “Denny’s has a history of using humor in its television advertising. It is certainly not the intention of the company to offend anyone or any group and we apologize if this spot has in any way. As a result of the feedback we have received from our customers the spot will no longer be on the air after Tuesday. We thank those who took the time to contact us.”

    It was signed, “Denny’s Call Center.”

    “It wasn’t even signed by a real person,” griped Conaghan, of Villanova, who called off her protest and turned it into a boycott of Denny’s on Facebook. So far, in less than a week, nearly 800 have joined the page. On it, one woman echoes many other protesters who wondered whether Denny’s would follow up with other offensive offers: “What’s next- Auschwitz Liberation pancake fest? Ethiopean Egg deal? References to any catastrophe- no matter how long ago is bad taste.”

    The agency responsible for the ad, Goodby Silverstein and Partners in San Francisco, doesn’t answer the phone or provide an opportunity to leave a message, says Conaghan. Her Facebook boycott page provides the agency’s number for supporters to call.

    Conaghan saw the ad while watching TV with her father, Tom, founder of the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia. “We were in shock,” she says. “My father grew up in Donegal, which was very hard hit, and he remembers walking with his father among the ruins of little cottages and fields where people had been evicted or died and his father could name family names. These were real people and there’s nothing humorous about it. Many of the survivors came to America so the history of the Great Hunger is linked forever to the history of Irish Americans.”

    In Ireland, it’s called An Gorta Mor, the Great Hunger, because it was a man-made famine, a point AOH National President Seamus Boyle made in his letter to Denny’s, which he shared with www.irishphiladelphia.com.

    “The ‘Potato Famine’, as it is sometimes called, was actually a forced hunger which took place in Ireland between 1845 and 1852, which killed over one and a half million of its people,” Boyle wrote. “This starvation. . . . was man made by the English absentee landlords who refused to let the Irish peasants eat anything other than the potato. This is well documented in history that while the Irish people starved for lack of one crop which happened to be their staple, the potato crop, meat, vegetables, corn and other foods were raised and harvested in Ireland and exported to England under guard to be sold for profit.”

    “You have the audacity to make fun of the these people who died of starvation much worse than any genocide ever recorded in history, so that you can sell your product on the back of our dead ancestors. I have already contacted our members throughout the United States where Denny’s has a franchise to be ready to mobilize when needed,” Boyle wrote.

    Like Conaghan, the AOH leader, a native of County Armagh who lives in northeast Philadelphia, isn’t satisfied with Denny’s apology. “It was a form letter that anyone could have put out,” he says. “It’s not appropriate. They got caught and they tried to get out of it.”

    Many are calling for Denny’s to make a contribution to an Irish cause, like the Hibernian Hunger Project, an AOH national program that started in Philadelphia to provide food to the needy. But Boyle disagrees. “A few years ago a beer company did something similar and offered the Irish money, but I think that was a buyout. Instead of giving it to us as an ‘apology,’ I would rather see Denny’s give $800,000 to Haiti relief because that’s where the money is really needed today,” he said.

    Arts, News, People

    A Big Day for the Sunday Irish Radio Programs

    Gerry Timlin: singer, guitarist, publican, and auctioneer.

    Gerry Timlin: singer, guitarist, publican, and auctioneer.

    Between phone-in pledges in the morning and a rollicking musical fundraiser in the afternoon at the Shanachie Irish Pub in Ambler, the Sunday Irish radio shows made more than $5,000. That will keep the Vince Gallagher Irish Hour and Come West Along the Road with Marianne MacDonald on the air at WTMR 800 AM“for a few more months,” MacDonald says.

    Among the all-star lineup at The Shanachie: Dublin-born singer-songwriter John Byrne, the Bogside Rogues, Gerry Timlin (co-owner of The Shanachie) and his musical partner Tom Kane, fiddler Mary Malone, the Malones (Luke Jardel and Fintan Malone) and the Vince Gallagher Band, with Gallagher, Pat Kildea and Patsy Ward.

    Timlin ran a rousing auction for a plethora of prizes, including a week’s stay at a County Clare cottage, a bike, and an autographed Flyers’ jersey, as well as concert tickets to some of the hottest tickets around, including Altan, Scythian, Eileen Ivers, and Dervish.

    News, People

    Pre-Parade Fun at CBS 3 Studios

    Knute Bonner gets a double hug from the McCafferty girls, Bridie and Peggy, at the CBS 3 pre-parade party.

    Knute Bonner gets a double hug from the McCafferty girls, Bridie and Peggy, at the CBS 3 pre-parade party.

    “This is the best party of the season,” said one of the attendees at this week’s St. Patrick’s Day Parade party at the studios of CBS3.

    And it’s not just the tables groaning with seafood that make it look like an “Under the Sea” theme event.

    There’s music, camaraderie, a chance to brush shoulders with the folks that bring us news, sports, weather, and traffic. The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade is televised live on CBS and repeated again on St. Patrick’s Day on CBS3 and sister station, CW Philly.

    You can see the fun and who was having it in our videos:

    News

    Fund-Raising in Full Swing

    Sean Harbison Jr. and his aunt Gina Hiller.

    Sean Harbison Jr. and his aunt Gina Hiller.

    They were very nearly spilling out onto St. Vincent Street on Sunday afternoon as a fund-raising party for the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade attracted a huge crowd to the Mayfair Community Center in the Northeast.

    This year’s grand marshal Seamus Boyle, national president of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, held court as his hard-working brothers and sisters at the Philadelphia County Board and AOH and LAOH Division 39 kept the whole thing rolling.

    Guests were well-fed and watered (or beered, depending on how you look at these things), and the stage was occupied by a hard-charging band. The party also featured the toe-tapping girls of the Celtic Flame Irish dance school.

    A few nights later, at the great little pub at 17th and the Parkway, Con Murphy’s, yet another fund-raising party took place. Guests noshed on hors d’oeuvres, chatted with friends and clapped to the music of Slainte.

    Yes, folks, the St. Patrick’s craziness is starting in style.

    News, People

    Two Local Women Named to Irish Echo’s “40 Under 40” List

    Sarah Conaghan and Siobhan Lyons.

    Sarah Conaghan and Siobhan Lyons.

    Sarah Conaghan, managing director of the Mid-Atlantic Rose of Tralee Centre, and Siobhan Lyons, executive director of the Irish Immigration Center of Greater Phildelphia, were named to the Irish Echo newspaper’s “40 under 40” list, which recognizes 40 people of Irish descent who, as publish Mairtin O’ Muilleoir describes them, are “high flyers who can taste, see, and shape the future.”

    Conaghan, 33, of Villanova, founded the Rose of Tralee Center in Philadelphia in 2002, which was the first year a Philadelphia contestant was represented in the international competition in Tralee, County Kerry, now in its 41st year. An outgrowth of Tralee’s traditional Carnival Queen, a town event, the Rose Festival is now broadcast on Irish TV every year. When Conaghan and her sisters would visit their Donegal grandmother every summer, she says, they would be glued to the TV, scoring the contestants on their hair and gowns. While other girls her age dreamt of being Miss America, Conaghan says she always wanted to be a Rose.

    She never became one, but today, she helps other young women achieve their dream. When she is not busy (very busy) working the Philadelphia and Mid-Atlantic Rose events (March 27 and June 26 this year), she is active in immigration reform activities (her father, Tom, is the founder of the Irish Immigration Center in Philadelphia), volunteers at the Commodore Barry Memorial Library at the Irish Center, serves on the Inspirational Irish Women Awards committee and is a member of the Donegal Association.

    Siobhan Lyons, 36, was born in Dublin, but led the peripatetic life of the daughter of an Irish diplomat, growing up Nairobi, London, Washington, DC, and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. She majored in Arabic at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London. She spent some time in the Irish diplomatic corps in the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs and, when her then-husband’s work took him to the US, she volunteered at variety of nonprofits. Prior to taking over the helm of the Irish Immigration Center last year, Lyons was director of communications and foundation for the World Affairs Council in Philadelphia.

    Since she became executive director of the Immigration Center, located in Upper Darby, Lyons has launched a community-wide survey of the needs of both immigrations and Irish-Americans alike with an eye to providing a greater range of services. Irish Consul General Niall Burgess spoke at a reception at the center marking the survey launch. She has also forged a new partnership between the center and the Drexel Law School to help provide regular confidential legal counseling services to Irish community members dealing with immigration issues and more. Every Saturday in March this year, the center is hosting workshops to help Irish immigrants to apply for citizenship and Irish-Americans get their Irish citizenship, available to anyone whose parents or grandparents were born in Ireland.

    In the past few years, Philadelphia has been represented on this prestigious annual list by Karen Boyce McCollum, associate director of corporate communications at Cephalon and well known Irish singer formerly with the band, Causeway, and Theresa Flanagan Murtagh, an attorney and former president of the Donegal Association who has her own band (The Theresa Flanagan Band).