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A Look Back at the 2008 Phoenixville Celtic Street Fair

Brian Boru drum major shows off his natty chapeau.

Brian Boru drum major shows off his natty chapeau.

Phoenixville went to the dogs this past Saturday.

It also went to the pipers and drummers, didgeridoo players, Irish dancers, merchants of meat pies and purveyors of claddagh rings, soft-sculpture Guinness hats and plastic Claymores.

The 2nd annual Celtic Street Fair brought ’em all out to this little town along the banks of the Schuylkill. And on a somewhat cool and cloudy day, this wonderfully old-fashioned town (a real town, not a bedroom berg with a superhighway running up the middle of it) with its quaint shops and the smell of fish and chips and the skirl of the pipes in the air could almost make you feel like you were somewhere else. Somewhere like, oh, Ennis or Ballynahinch or Westport or any old Irish market town you care to think of.

We’ve assembled a neat little pile of photos from the day.

News

Does Delaware County Need Its Own Irish Center?

To Denis Hickie it all makes sense. There are more Irish in Delaware County (where they’re 25% of the population) than in Philadelphia (13.6%, the second largest ethnic group in the city behind African-Americans). The drive to the Philadelphia Irish Center from his home in Upper Darby takes 45 minutes.

Then there are the steps. No doubt about that—the steps to the Irish Center are steep and daunting. The Center, also known as the Commodore Barry Club, sits atop a hill in the Mt. Airy section of the city, and those stairs can be punishing to old knees. “Some of the older people can’t make it up,” says Hickie. Even the ones who still love to set dance can’t make the drive, then the climb, he says.

So he wants Delco to have its own Irish center “with rooms for meetings, dancing, music, and the rest. I’ve talking to a lot of people in Delco who say they’d like to have an Irish center in their backyard.” On Sunday, May 11, at 2:30 PM, he’s holding a meeting at J.D. McGillicuddy’s on West Chester Pike in Upper Darby to see if there are enough like-minded people to establish an Irish Center of Delaware County. The meeting will not only be his way to judge interest, but he hopes people will bring ideas for what they’d like to see in a center—and even where in Delco they’d like it to be located.

Hickie doesn’t believe that a separate organization in Delco will compete with Philadelphia’s Irish Center, which turned 50 this year. “This will be catering to the people who don’t go to Philadelphia anyway,” he says.

News, People

Celebrate the New Mary

Michelle Mack, center, with Britney Lough, right, the 2006 Mary from Dungloe.

Michelle Mack, center, with Britney Lough, right, the 2006 Mary from Dungloe.

On Sunday, May 18, Michelle Mack will be crowned the 2008 Mary from Dungloe by the Philadelphia Donegal Society. She succeeds Meghan McGough, the 2007 Mary. The ceremony will take place at the Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center), Carpenter and Emlen Streets, in Philadelphia. This event, which starts at 5 PM, is open to the public and dinner will be available for purchase.

Michelle has an undergraduate degree from Arcadia University in Sociology. She will be enrolled in the Masters of General Education Program at Holy Family University in the fall of 2008. Michelle is currently working at Holy Family University as Assistant Director of Residence Life.

Michelle will travel to Dungloe, Ireland in August to compete in an
international contest with other young women between the ages of 18 and 25 who are of Irish decent.

Michelle is an avid Irish dancer and enjoys Irish music and culture. She’s also a big fan of Blackthorn, and has been a member of the Donegal Association and active with the Mary from Dungloe competition for several years.

Anyone interested in participating in the 2009 Philadelphia Mary from Dungloe contest can get more information at www.philadonegal.com.

News

Camden Catholic Gets Jersey’s Irish Jumping

Mike O'Callaghan, banging the drum loudly.

Mike O'Callaghan, banging the drum loudly.

For the longest time, Jacob Griess was the only one on the dance floor. But he’s a toddler, and toddlers have no inhibitions.

But then Blackthorn took to the stage at the first Camden Catholic Irish Festival, and Jacob soon had plenty of company.

It was billed as a HUGE (all caps) Irish Festival, and,with more than 400 South Jersey Irish on hand, the description was apt.

Like most Irish festivals, it featured performances by Irish dancers and pipers, booths stocked with Irish hoodies and hats and such, and big steaming plates of ham and cabbage.

Of course, the big draw was Blackthorn. And even though it was a litle chilly in the big tent out behind the gym, the band soon hotted things up.

It was all music to the ears of Dennis “Archie” Archible, president of the school alumni association, class of ’74.

“This is going to be an annual event,” he said. “We have over 400 here today. We’re hoping to grow to over 1,000.”

Most if the revelers at Camden Catholic on Saturday are alumni, Archible said. A number of alumni also donated to the cause, he added, including beer and food. “It’s nice,” he said, “when it’s home-grown.”

The festival came together pretty quickly. Archible said it was first discussed following the school’s 120th anniversary in October. But the basic idea for the festival, he said, “has been inside my head for a long time.”

Proceeds of the event will help pay for bleachers and for improvements to the football field. As with most Catholic schools, tuition does not pay all of the school’s bills. Archible had no doubt that his fellow alumni would rise to the challenge. “We’re the oldest Catholic high school in South Jersey,” he said, “and the tradition is tremendous.”

News

Remembering Joe McGarrity and the Martyrs of 1916

Patricia Bonner and Patty Loomer.

Patricia Bonner and Patty Loomer.

The Easter Rising ended—after one bloody, tumultuous week—more than 90 years ago. The heroes of the failed insurrection are long dead. Ireland is a prosperous republic, a leader on the world stage, thanks to their vision and sacrifice. (Thanks, too, to the disastrous miscalculation on the part of the British government in turning those courageous but flawed human beings into martyrs.)

Northern Ireland, the scene of so much heartache for much of the 20th century, is not without its troubles—but now, perhaps, with a small “t.” Still, Ulster appears to be “set for a new course,” as Northern Ireland Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness put it in a recent visit to the White House with First Minister Ian Paisley.

A casual observer of history might wonder, then, why so many people—members of Irish Northern Aid, Clan na Gael, the Ancient Order of Hibernians—are still bothering to commemorate that abortive, long-ago rising.

We’re standing at the Holy Cross Cemetery gravesite of Joe McGarrity, the one-time Philadelphia wine and spirits merchant, leader of Clan na Gael, and one of the one of the world’s great physical-force republicans. McGarrity, who came to the U.S. from County Tyrone in 1892, died in 1940. And still, here we are in this sprawling Delaware County burial ground, and we’re listening to Tom Conaghan, executive director of the Irish Cultural & Heritage House of Pennsylvania, read from the Proclamation of Independence, crafted by Padraig Pearse, leader of the 1916 rising. The words of that brief address, read out by Pearse himself from the steps of the Dublin GPO, still hold tremendous power:

Irishmen And Irishwomen: In the name of God and of the dead generations from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us, summons her children to her flag and strikes for her freedom.

So, why? Why dredge up that abortive, long-ago rising and all those troubled dead generations, now that Martin McGuinness and Ian Paisley are singing “Kumbaya” at the White House?

Patty Loomer, a member of most of the organizations toting banners on that cool, drizzly Sunday afternoon, offered a few remarks during the ceremony. With her interest in history, organizer Pat Bonner tapped her to review the life of Joe McGarrity. This was her third time. To her, one big reason to march every year to Joe McGarrity’s final resting place is the man himself.

“He borrowed money to get the ship to New York,” she recalls. “He had to borrow maney from a guy on the ship so he could get from New York to his aunt’s house in Philadelphia. Whatever he did, he was very determined.”

The other reason is simple remembrance of Pearse and all the others who took such monumental risks for Ireland. Loomer says: “It’s a commemoration. It’s a reminder of all the people who sacrificed so much.”   

We have photos from the day.

News

Up The Tyrones!

With his master's degree in international relations from Northeastern, mild-mannered John Nolan is—just perhaps—overqualified for his job as manager of the Philadelphia Irish Center. But could there be anyone better?

With his master's degree in international relations from Northeastern, mild-mannered John Nolan is—just perhaps—overqualified for his job as manager of the Philadelphia Irish Center. But could there be anyone better?

With his master’s degree in international relations from Northeastern, mild-mannered John Nolan is—just perhaps—overqualified for his job as manager of the Philadelphia Irish Center. But could there be anyone better?

The members of the Tyrone Society of Philadelphia don’t think so. Not that they’re alone. John has lots of fans. (Including us.) But the Tyrones, at their recent ball to celebrate the organization’s 99th anniversary, conferred upon John the 2008 Red Hand Distinguished Service Award. (The Red Hand is an ancient Ulster heraldic symbol.)

The society’s Geraldine Trainor brought John and his wife Mary to the Irish Center stage and praised him for his “quiet, gentle unassuming way.” She noted also his family ties to Ireland. John is the youngest of five children born to Dan (the son of immigrants from Wicklow and Kildare) and Bridie (from Clare) Nolan of Bethlehem. John and Mary would go on to raise six of their own.

John attended Bethlehem Catholic, went on to attend LaSalle College as a political major and attended Northeastern for his master’s. He met Mary while he was working for the federal government in Washington.

After they moved to Mount Airy, Mary joined the Mayo Association (her father is from the county) and John occasionally tended bar. In 1993, he accepted the position as acting manager of the center.

It was never just an act, of course. He’s the real deal, and it didn’t take long for the Irish Center folks to realize it.

Fifteen years later, John says he still finds it hard to believe his good fortune. 

Nattily attired in a tux with a bright red bow tie, John unfolded a well-worn piece of paper with his remarks written on it and recalled thinking of the Irish Center gig as temporary. “I figured I could handle it for a while,” he told his audience. “I didn’t realize that, in accepting this job, Mary and I would be getting quite an education.”

He noted that his father’s people lost touch with Ireland, so there were gaps in his knowledge.

Hanging out on a quiet evening and chatting with some of the regulars did a lot to fill in the gaps. “Some of the best nights here were the nights when there weren’t a lot of people around,” he says.

Being on hand for many of the lectures and concerts and meeting the many celebrities who rolled through from time to time also did much to advance his Irish education. “I learned firsthand about the (1981 H-Block) hunger strike from Brendan Hurson (brother of hunger striker Martin Hurson, the sixth Republican to die in the strike),” he said. “It wasn’t just something you read about. I learned about these things, not from television, not from a book, but from the people who lived through it. I met (Irish republican politicians) Pat Doherty, Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams.  And it wouldn’t have happened without the Irish Center.”

Like any good employee, he praised his boss Vince Gallagher and made note of all the improvements, overseen by Vince, that have transformed the Irish Center over the past several years. The Irish Center is quite the showplace now, he said, but even when it wasn’t, there was always something quite special about it. “It’s the one place in Philadelphia where everyone from Ireland feels welcome,” he said.

And one of the reasons for that, although he’s too humble to say it, is John himself.

Along with celebrating John, the Tyrones spent the evening celebrating something else pretty special: just being from Tyrone.

News

A St. Patrick’s Day Present for the Philadelphia Irish Memorial

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter joins in the wreath-laying ceremony at the Philadelphia Irish Memorial.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter joins in the wreath-laying ceremony at the Philadelphia Irish Memorial.

Last year, it snowed. This year, it was windy and vaguely arctic. However, the sun shone brightly as local irish, the great and the small, gathered to remember the Irish ancestors who overcame overwhelming odds and endured endless hardships to settle here in Philadelphia.

And the board members of the Irish Memorial, local dignitaries and just average Irish-American citizens gathered at the monument down at Penn’s Landing on a brisk St. Patrick’s Day morning had one other thing to warm their hearts: a three-year, $60,000 donation from the Board of City Trusts.

John J. Egan, chairman of the City Trusts board, said he got the idea from Irish Memorial board member Kathy McGee Burns over lunch one day. “You just can’t say no to that woman,” he told the crowd.

Irish Memorial Board President John F. Donovan note that “it was he fastest $60,000 we ever made.” The funds will be used to improve lighting and general maintenance and upkeep of the monument and its grounds, he said.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter—on that day going by the unwieldy moniker of “Michael O’Nutterman”—seemed genuinely delighted to attend the ceremony and take part in the wreath-laying. This is a man who apparently loves being mayor, and all the little ceremonies that go with the job.

And here’s another thing Mayor O’Nutterman said he loves: “We always love a generous contribution.” But he quickly added: “Just be sure to cash that check as soon as possible.”

No worries there, we’re sure.

Take a look at our photos from that day:

News

We Celebrate St. Paddy’s Day

We don’t know how you celebrated St. Paddy’s Day, but our day ranged from the green beads/silly green hat/green beer experience to the richly moving remembrance of our courageous forebears whose struggles are carved in stone at the Irish Memorial in Philadelphia. From the wild Shamrockery of local group Blackthorn, to the old world fiddling of Danny Meehan of Donegal. From an Italian cook’s version of corned beef and cabbage (yum) to an Irish take on the traditional meal (your choice of beef, ham, or turkey, plus the cabbage).

However you did it, we hope you had as good a time as we did. Check out our photos:

An added treat: Celtic group Dervish appeared the Friday before St. Paddy’s Day at the Sellersville Theater. Photographer Gwyneth MacArthur was there. Here’s what she saw: