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Support Team “Ratty Shoes”

About six years ago, Patty Byrd worked with a young woman with multiple sclerosis. “She had such a great attitude–she was so funny about everything, even though she had to take a cocktail of medications just to function,” says Byrd, a banking officer for BSC Services in Philadelphia. “Her disease was so unpredictable. She was planning her niece’s First Holy Communion party—she was devoted to her—and the day of the event her bowels and bladder stopped working. But she never lost her great attitude.”

Then, it seemed, everywhere Byrd went, she saw posters and pamphlets for the MS Society’s Challenge Walk. “It was 50 miles in three days and I thought to myself, ‘Oh, I don’t know about that. Oh, no!’ I was still smoking and about 60 lbs heavier than I am now. But I decided to tell people I was going to do it so I would be obligated. But they all said, ‘Are you nuts?’ Maybe, I said, but I’m going to do it.”

And she did it. It took a lot of training (and some weight loss), but Byrd not only walked the 50 miles that year, she’s walked it every year since, picking up other brave strollers on the way. “My second year I had a hodgepodge team with no name. Then the third year, something happened. It was a chilly day in spring. I was about to go out walking and I put on my shoes and realized they had no insoles. I thought to myself, ‘These are ratty shoes.’”

If you’re a fan of the popular local Irish group, Blackthorn, (Byrd calls herself “an addict) you can probably guess what happened next. “Ratty Shoes” is the name of the group’s 2001 CD and a catchy paean to the magical powers of comfortable old “ratty shoes” that can take you anywhere you want to go. And what CD was Byrd listening to when she made the observation about her own sneakers?

Of course, it was fate. And it prompted Byrd to shoot off an email to the group, asking if she could use the name for her walking team. “They said sure, and they even donated merchandise for raffles,” says Bryd. “Then, last year, (lead singer) Mike Boyce kind of realized, ‘Hey, they’re not going away,’ so the group has really gotten behind us in a big way.”

On Wednesday, July 11, when the band performs at the Pennypack Park Bandshell, Welsh Road and Rowland Avenue in Philadelphia, they’ll be selling raffle tickets to help raise money for the team (each person needs to come up with $1,500 in pledges to participate in the walking event). They’ll be selling them at every performance till August 11, when a drawing will be held at The Bolero Resort in Wildwood, where the band is performing. The prize: A complete package (accomodations, food, and tickets) for four to attend Blackthorn’s (huge) part of Wildwood’s Irish Weekend, September 21-23, at The Bolero. They’re also donating $2 from every sale of Blackthorn merchandise from July 11 to August 11 (buying a CD or a t-shirt will automatically get you a raffle ticket, which is also available without a merch purchase for $2 each). For more information and a schedule of band appearances, go to www.irishthing.com.

You may also run into band members on Sunday, July 15, when Team Ratty Shoes holds an MS Benefit at Brittingham’s, 640 E. Germantown Avenue, Lafayette Hill, featuring a host of performers including Random Blonde, Raymond McGroary, Allison Barber, and, possibly, Paul Moore, the co-author (with Blackthorn’s John and Mike Boyce) of “Ratty Shoes,” co-founder of the group, and currently with the band, Paddy’s Well.

Doors open at noon and the Irish frivolity goes on till 4 (Oliver McElhone appears on stage at 5, so you might want to stay). And it’s all in a good cause.

“We have a great team,” says Byrd. They are Tom Wyatt of Duncannon, PA; Christopher Burden of Warminster, whose wife, Michele, has MS; Leslie Bell Moll of Pottstown and Lorraine Porcellini of Philadelphia, who both work for WXPN Radio. “But it’s more than the walkers, our team includes and army of other people who support us, like Blackthorn,” says Byrd.

They’re living proof that there is some magic in those old “ratty shoes.”

News

Penn’s Landing Irish Festival, 2007

Dancing in the sun.

Dancing in the sun.

It was 84 degrees in the shade at Penn’s Landing—what little shade there is. The sun hammered down on all the happy Irish people in their floppy hats and slick with sweat and Celtic-strength sunblock. Sean Fleming was on stage, the drums and bass pounding, people clapping, cute little kids prancing like ponies in front of the big stage, pleasure boats bobbing like bathtub toys out on the Delaware.

In other words, it was a lot like June in Donegal or Sligo—well, it was like June in Donegal or Sligo will be after about 200 years of global warming.

It was Sunday, a perfect day, even better than the day before, and even though the event was winding down, the waterfront venue was still jammed with Irish-Americans, and lots of other people who might have been Indian, Italian, Japanese—anything but Irish. No matter. For this letter-perfect celebration of Irish culture, anyone who shared in the fun along the Delaware could claim to be as Irish as they wanted to be.

There were certainly plenty of ways to get into the spirit of things—from the cold beer to the lemon and cherry Irish Ice to the goofy shamrock hats and “Irish Princess” babydoll tees for sale 

And, of yes, there was music, and plenty of it: Blackthorn, Sean Fleming, 7 Nations, the Bogside Rogues, and so much more.

The whole shebang was hosted by Finnigan’s Wake and the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Association, and sponsored by PECO and Penn’s Landing Corporation.

Wanna see how much fun we had? Check out the photos.

News

Gather Ye Rosebuds

On June 22, first grade teacher Christine Frawley of Yardley will hand over her tiara and sash to a new “Rose of Tralee” who will compete with Roses from Ireland to Australia at the popular international festival held every year in Tralee, County, Kerry Ireland. It’s one of the most-watched shows on Irish television and draws big-name celebrity guests. In Philadelphia, the Rose is selected at a dinner-dance in the Grand Ballroom of the Hyatt Penn’s Landing, this year on Friday, June 22.

But the Rose candidates don’t meet for the first time in their ball gowns. On Sunday, June 3, they met at a tea given in their honor at the Glen Mills home of Tom and Mary Conaghan. Tom Conaghan is executive director of the Irish Immigration and Pastoral Center in Upper Darby, the nonprofit organization that helps Irish immigrants with housing, employment and immigration issues and sponsors the Rose of Tralee pageant. The Rose of Tralee Selection Ball is the IAPC’s sole annual fundraiser.

This year, the organizers have added a little extra zip to the pageant: the Rosebuds, girls 13 and under who will attend to the Rose candidates during the ceremony. “This is something they’ve done in other cities and we decided to add it this year,” says Rose candidate coordinator Karen Conaghan.

Cuteness and beauty–it should be an unbeatable combination.

The 6th Annual Philadelphia Rose of Tralee Selection Ball will be held on Friday, June 22, at the Hyatt Penn’s Landing. Cocktails start at 7 PM, dinner and dancing at 8 PM. Music will be provided by the Andy Cooney Band.

Tickets are $100 and include dinner and open bar all night. They must be purchased in advance. To order yours, call 610-789-6355.

News

Hot Fun at the AOH Festival in Mont Clare

Reilly Ann and Poppy

Reilly Ann and Poppy

The first person I ran into at the Ancient Order of Hibernians Irish Festival along in St. Michael Park in Mont Clare was an old friend, Verne Leedom, former pipe major for Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums.

Possibly the very next person I ran into was Verne’s granddaughter Reilly Ann.

Not long after that, I bumped into Sean Leedom, Verne’s son, near the horseshoe pits.

I was beginning to think that everybody at the festival on Saturday was a member of the Leedom family.

Not true, though. A hundred or so sun-shy Celts hunkered down in the shade of the picnic pavilion or browsed for Irish jewelry, hats, bumper stickers and other Hibernian tchochkes in the vendors’ tents. Most of the festival-goers, it turned out, actually belonged to other families.

That was the coolest part of an otherwise sweltering day—that so many families turned out for a day along the banks of the Schuylkill, just across the river from Phoenixville. From where I sat—at a picnic table, munching a sausage-and-pepper sandwich on a crusty Conshohocken roll and sipping an ice-cold Coke—it looked like they were having a great time.

Earlier in the day, Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums had performed, and Oliver McElhone as well. By the time I arrived, at mid-afternoon, Fisher and Maher were tearing up the place with a performance of Irish traditional music that was as hot as the day.

Emma Hanson Not long after they left the stage, Burning Bridget Cleary—two fiddlers and a guitarist from the Lehigh Valley—jacked up the energy level even more. (They’d confessed to having consumed large cups of iced coffee before arriving on the Festival grounds. But I heard them at the Valley Forge Scottish-Irish Festival in February. If that performance was any indication, coffee has nothing to do with it. They chug along just fine on their own inexhaustible energy source.)

A little later on, a bevy of Coyle school dancers also entertained the crowd with some high stepping to match their spirits.

For those who weren’t up for high-octane Irish music or dance, there was plenty of lazy summertime slacking off to do. The horseshoe pit, for example, was a pretty popular destination. So were the picnic tables nestled among a nearby stand of trees, where people nursed icy beers and quietly chatted.

Irish weather? No. But still, a great start to the summer for Philadelphia’s Irish.

News, People

Philadelphia Says Goodbye to the Irish Ambassador

Chamber president Bill McLaughlin, left, Irish Ambassador Noel Fahy, and Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali at the farewell luncheon for the ambassador at the Union League.

Chamber president Bill McLaughlin, left, Irish Ambassador Noel Fahy, and Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali at the farewell luncheon for the ambassador at the Union League.

One thing he discovered about Americans in his five years as Irish ambassador to the United States, Noel Fahy told a group of Philadelphia business leaders last week, is that they’re doers, not whiners.

“In Europe, we see a problem and say, oh my, that’s a very big problem,” he told the delighted crowd at the Union League in Philadelphia. “Americans see a problem and they genuinely try to solve it.

“I know that America has been criticized about Iraq, but beyond that criticism, we still look at all the contributions the United States has made to the world, to Ireland.”

Technically, the luncheon given in his honor was a farewell party from the Irish-American Chamber and Business Network, a non-profit membership organization in Philadelphia that promotes the development of economic, commercial, financial and educational relationships between the United States and Ireland. Fahy was recently named Ireland’s ambassador to the Vatican. But in his goodbye speech, Fahy waxed more patriotic than many Americans about the place that was his home for half a decade.

“The US role in the new shared government in Northern Ireland was crucial,” he said. In fact, former US Senator George Mitchell received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1999 for the pivotal role he played in convincing Protestant and Catholic leaders to sign what is known as The Good Friday Accord, which paved the way for peace in the war-ravaged North.

“The US government and private American groups have contributed nearly $1 billion for reconciliation projects in Northern Ireland. President Clinton was there when we needed him, and in the run up to the final stages in March, President Bush did make some phone calls,” said Fahy.

As a parting gift, Chamber President Bill McLaughlin gave Fahy a bound copy of the manuscript of James Joyce’s “Ulysses” from the Rosenbach Museum in Philadelphia, which houses an original. Accepting the two-book set, Fahy joked, “I don’t know if I’ll have time in the Vatican to enjoy ‘Ulysses’ for the second time.”

News

Mayos Get Spring Off to a Good Start

Michael Gallagher plays on.

Michael Gallagher plays on.

They told jokes. They sang “Lady of Knock” and “Danny Boy” and, for reasons having nothing to do with Mayo or Ireland, “My Way” and “On the Way to Cape May.” And they danced—oh, how they danced.

Sister James Anne Feerick, I.H.M., the association’s chaplain, was all alone out on the floor as she danced to “The Boys of Blue Hill” played on accordion by Michael Gallagher. Before too long, though, several members were up on their feet and giving Sister a run for her money.

Mostly, though, members of the Mayo Association of Philadelphia just tucked into their luncheon and caught up on the craic as they gathered on Sunday at C.J. McGee’s in Springfield, Delaware County, for their annual Spring Social.
Running the whole shindig was Maureen Brett Saxon.

Along with all the merry-making, the group took time to recognize past president Frank Cantwell with the Mayo crystal tulip bowl. Michael J. Bradley Jr. was honored with the “Cutting Edge” award for his work as chair of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee.

The event was noteworthy, too, for its first annual Mayo Academy Awards, a strictly tongue-in-cheek version of the annual Hollywood love feast.

Here’s who won what:

Best Vocals

  • Rosaleen Megonegal
  • Tommy Moffit

Best Music

  • John Durkin
  • Michael Gallagher
  • James Feerick
  • Patricia Sweeney

Best Narration (for the association’s 100th-anniversary CD)

  • Frank Cantwell

Production (for the same)

  • Sean McMenamin
  • Joe Boyle

Director (also for the history CD)

  • Sister James Anne

Check out our party pics.

News

Cavan Society Gets Set to Celebrate Its 100th Anniversary

A century is a big deal, so the people of Philadelphia’s Cavan Society are planning a big bash.

The Cavan Society 100th Anniversary Dinner is planned for May 20 at the Philadelphia Irish Center (Commodore Barry Club), 6815 Emlen St., in the Mount Airy section of Philadelphia.

The observance begins at 3 p.m. with a commemorative Mass at the Irish Center. The social part of the evening follows at 4, with a cocktail party. Dinner is served at 5.

Providing the night’s entertainment is the Theresa Flanagan Band.

Admission is $50. For tickets, call Tom Farrelly at (610) 527-2406.

No tickets will be sold at the door.

For additional info, visit the Cavan Society Web site.

If you’re from Delaware County and you need a ride, you can catch a bus at 2:15 from St. Denis Church, Eagle Road and St. Denis Lane in Havertown. Space is limited. Call Rosie at (610) 623-1410.

News

Still Friendly After All These Years

President Russell W. Wylie presents the Presidential Medal posthumously for Thomas O. Peterman, to Susan Peterman, his widow. At right is Todd R. Peterman, his son.

President Russell W. Wylie presents the Presidential Medal posthumously for Thomas O. Peterman, to Susan Peterman, his widow. At right is Todd R. Peterman, his son.

How old is the Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick? Well, the group organized in Philadelphia in 1771. George Washington was an honorary member. This was the group’s 236th annual banquet.

Is that old enough for you?

The Friendly Sons—officially, “The Society of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick for the Relief of Emigrants From Ireland”—celebrated in lavish style at Villanova’s Montrose Mansion.
The night featured performances by the University Glee Club, the McDade School dancers and the Philadelphia Emerald Society Pipe Band. The United States Navy Villanova University Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps presented the colors.

Larry Mendte, the CBS3 anchor, must have a clone walking around somewhere because he managed to attend every Irish event known to humankind on St. Patrick’s Day, including this one. He served as emcee.

The emotional highlight of the evening was the posthumous presentation of the society’s Presidential Medal to Thomas O. Peterman, the group’s former treasurer.

Peterman, who died of leukemia in December, also was active in many other local Irish causes, including the Philadelphia Irish Famine Memorial. He attended the University of Pennsylvania and the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis and was a Naval Reserve veteran. Accepting the award from president Russell W. Wylie was Peterman’s widow, Susan Brown Peterman and his son Todd R. Peterman, the new treasurer of the society.

Wylie noted that Peterman was proud of his involvement in the Friendly Sons. In a group with such deep roots in U.S. and Philadelphia Irish-American culture, it’s easy to see why.