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Blackthorn’s St. Paddy’s Bash

John McGroary does his famous Chuck Berry move.

John McGroary does his famous Chuck Berry move. (Photo by Gwyneth MacArthur)

When Gwyneth asked whether she could lend her formidable skills (she didn’t use the word “formidable,” but we think it fits) to our St. Patrick’s Day effort, of course we said yes. We post just about all of our photos on Flickr, and Gwyneth is one of our contacts.

And so it happened that on St. Patrick’s Day, Gwyneth found herself with an assignment that could not, under any circumstances, be characterized as hardship duty. She had a ringside seat at the Blackthorn St. Patrick’s Day Party.

If you couldn’t be there, don’t worry. Gwyneth’s photos will put you there.

Food & Drink, News

St. Patrick’s Day at Dolan’s: A Family Tradition

Mama Dolan serves up the ham and cabbage.

Mama Dolan serves up the ham and cabbage.

It’s a bar. A big, rectangular wooden bar with barely enough room to fit drinkers two deep around it. On St. Patrick’s Day, Dolan’s Bar, in the little borough of Ridley Park, is so crowded that if someone at the front of the bar orders one of Momma D’s buck-fifty cabbage and ham platters, the waitress has to go out the back door and come in the front to deliver it.

Oh, and Momma D’s cabbage and ham platters are worth the outdoor trek. She cooks the cabbage and the potatoes on a layer of cabbage leaves and ham rind that turns the cabbage dark and sweet and the potatoes moist and smoky. The aroma alone is transporting.

This is the place where you want to spend St. Patrick’s Day. Founded in the mid-40s by Irish immigrant Patrick Dolan, the bar, which moved to the small town (population 7,200) in 1954, passed down to his son Pat (Poppa D), and five years ago to Pat’s son Pat (called P.J.), who honed his cooking skills in Kinsale, Ireland.

But it’s Momma D—Irma—who still reigns in the kitchen on St. Patrick’s Day. “I’ve been making my ham and cabbage for more than 30 years,” she says, loading a plate with a quarter head of cabbage, three potatoes, and two thick slices of ham in the bar kitchen, which is so small that one person is a crowd.

At one time, Irma recalls, the bar didn’t have a kitchen. “They had one next door and when someone wanted food we would call over on an intercom,” she chuckles. Because Dolan’s operates on a state restaurant license, by law, the bar has to have enough food on hand for 32 people, she says. In the early days, her father-in-law kept to the letter by stocking 32 cans of soup. Then Irma began to cook. On St. Paddy’s, she may go through two crates of cabbage, 50 pounds of potatoes and 70 pounds of ham.

“This is really what it’s all about,” says Ridley Park Mayor Hank Ebersole, who came into the bar decorated like parade float with a glittery green hat and green crepe paper taped to his jacket. “This is a bar. I mean, a bar-bar, where people come to drink and talk.”

Like Tom Benson and Tim France. Benson is a Ridley Park lifer who inherited Dolan’s from his father. “My Dad used to drink here, then I did,” he says. “In fact, my whole family drinks here.” Tim France, a Ridley Parker who now lives in Yardley, Bucks County, also has Dolan’s in his genes. “This is where my Dad drank too,” he says. “We look at Dolan’s as something like ‘Cheers,’” says Benson. “When you come in here day or night, you’ll know someone.”

In fact, every time the front door swung open, sending a blast of sunlight into the dark, smoky bar, a cheer went up as though Norm was showing up every few minutes.

Dolan’s isn’t one of those mass-produced Irish pubs with Harp on draft and quaint Celtic antiques to remind you of the last time you hoisted a few in County Clare. You want draft and you’d better like Bud. If it weren’t in the middle of the block on Sellers Avenue, you could describe it as the “corner tappy.” But there’s that unmistakable hospitality and good cheer that says “Ireland.” Even the employees show up on their days off—like bartender Jay Whaley, who anchored a corner of the bar with his beer and led the patrons in singing and clapping to whatever Irish music was playing. “He does Blackthorn great,” says Poppa D. “We have a party the Friday before Christmas. He leads the singing and you don’t want to hear it.”

“We call ourselves Dolan’s Tavernacle Choir,” laughs Irma.

Then there are the Bag Parties. “The rule is ‘no bag, no beer,’” says Irma. “You have to come in with a bag on your head or you won’t be served.”

At the end of basketball season, the aromas wafting from the bar kitchen are decidedly not Irish. “We have Polish Day the last day of basketball,” explains Irma. “We have halupkies, Polish kielbasa, PJ makes pierogies, and the patrons bring food too. It all started when a bunch of old men had a bet and the loser had to bring in Jewish rye bread and pickles and Polish food. And every year it just grew and grew and grew. We’ve probably been doing it for 20 years.”

Twenty years ago, many of Dolan’s patrons would have been toddling around with their sippy cups full of apple juice. There’s a healthy crop of young regulars who have their favorite seats at the bar. Like Joseph Patrick Quinn. “I’m here four days a week,” says Quinn, who lives in Glenolden. “Whether it’s June 1 or March 17, I’ll be here. This is my place.”

And Anthony Handley of Ridley, who, like many of the younger regulars, was keeping up a family tradition: Spending St. Patrick’s Day at Dolan’s. But this time it was with his dad, Allen. “We really love this place,” he says. “We don’t have to worry about drinking too much because we can walk home.”

“But if it gets too bad,” adds his father with a grin, “we can always call Mom.”

Join in the virtual shenanigans at http://groups.myspace.com/dolansbar

News, People

A Great Loss

Father Kevin Trautner

Father Kevin Trautner

The Reverend Kevin C. Trautner was so proud of being Irish, he didn’t like being called Father Trautner because it wasn’t an Irish name. “Call me Kevin,” he would say. Years ago, his Irish mother told him that she had named him for Kevin Barry, a Dublin medical student who became one of the early martyrs to the cause of Irish independence in 1920.

So it is excruciatingly ironic that Father Kevin, 57, pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Norristown and, for 30 years, chaplain of the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association of Philadelphia, will be laid to rest on St. Patrick’s Day, Saturday, March 17, 2007, after a funeral mass conducted by Philadelphia Cardinal Justin Rigali at Father Kevin’s parish church at 600 Hamilton Street.

“Last week he called me every day to go over details of the parade,” parade director Michael Bradley said Friday. “He gave me a big hug on Sunday night and told me I did a good job. And today, I’m carrying his coffin into church.”

Father Kevin, who was a jogger, died of a massive heart attack while in Valley Forge Park on Tuesday.

“He was a great guy, a great priest, and a lot of fun to be around,” said Bradley. “He loved being our chaplain. He used to say, ‘The only way to get rid of me is to put me over at Sts. Peter and Paul Cemetery. Every once in a while someone would say, ‘That can be arranged,’ and he would laugh. You could tease him and he would really laugh.”

Like about his cats. He had three and treated them like family. “During the Mass when he became pastor of St. Francis, he had them all in the front row in a box,” recalled Bradley. “I said, ‘I guess you couldn’t have had one in one row, and another in another row. You didn’t want to slight one so you put them all together up front.’ He made a face, then burst out laughing.”

He took being the shepherd of the St. Francis of Assisi parish seriously. Every year he held a blessing of animals at the church. In 2005, he led a parish-wide project to collect pet food and pet supplies for the Montgomery County SPCA and was able to deliver a van full to the facility in Norristown in memory of his late cat, Bridget, and in honor of St. Francis, patron saint of animals. When the rectory caught fire a few years ago, Father Kevin expressed his gratitude to the Norristown Fire Department, where he also served as chaplain, not just for saving the building, but for saving his cat.

“He was a very gentle, sincere man,” says Kathy McGee Burns, second vice president of the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association. “He was very affectionate. You felt that when he saw you he really liked you. He was just glad to see you. It’s a great loss to us.”

He also loved the kids of his parish. “He was really proud of those kids,” says Bradley.

“Wherever the children gathered, Father Trautner was there. He loved
his kids and was so proud of all that they did,” says a note on the parish website, where you can view a slide show of Father Kevin with his young parishioners.

On Friday morning, the guest book at www.philly.com was filling not only with condolences but with memories of a compassionate priest who always had time for whoever needed him. He would bring communion to the dying, comfort to the grieving, and even made time to bless sick pets. The entries also reveal a fun-loving man who loved his summers at the shore and dancing to the oldies.

“Father Kevin, When you were around, everyone was happy,” reads one from a member of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick. “We will miss your thoughtfulness, jubilant expressions and willingness for a good time.”

Said another: “I miss Father Kevin so much already… my heart is truly saddened. I first met Father about five years ago at the Lighthouse Point on a Thursday night listening to the Geator… He truly amazed me when I found out he was a priest… and dancing priest no less! One immediately sensed his warmth, kindness, loving way and what a sweet smile… We quickly became friends and I couldn’t wait till summer time came around so we could hang out, laugh, twist (he liked the twist) and just talk… How I will miss him so…”

Father Kevin was also the chaplain of the Norristown Police Department, Ancient Order of Hibernians of Norristown-Notre Dame Division, and the LAM Valley Forge Council of the Sons of Italy. He was affiliated with the Yacht Club of Stone Harbor, NJ, where he had a summer home. Son of the late Christopher R. and Eileen M. O’Donnell Trautner, he is survived by his brother, Eugene K. Trautner and his wife, Judith.

A parishioners’ mass will be said tonight, March 16, at the church. A funeral mass will be conducted by Cardinal Rigali on Saturday at 11 a.m. at St. Francis of Assisi, where friends can call from 9-10:30 a.m. Internment will follow at Sts. Peter and Paul Cemetery. Contributions can be made in Father Kevin’s memory to St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, 100 East Wynnewood Road, Wynnewood PA, 19096 or St. Francis of Assisi Church.

News

The Ceremony Goes On

Planting shamrocks in the cold, hard ground.

Planting shamrocks in the cold, hard ground.

Larry Mendte stood at the podium in an icy wind, and he managed to put a positive spin on the annual 5K to benefit the Philadelphia Irish Famine Memorial.

“In a way, everybody won,” he said, “because there was no 5K this morning.”

The Delaware Valley woke up to frozen roads and windshields, so it was a wonder any annual St. Patrick’s Day observances took place.

But the annual ceremony at the Philadelphia Irish Famine Memorial down at Front and Chestnut did go on, as scheduled, though it was much shorter than usual.

Take a look (and be glad you are inside and warm).

News

A Moment for Memories

The National Irish Famine Memorial—the imposing bronze tableau at Front and Chestnut—is four years old. For those of us who were there when they unveiled sculptor Glenna Goodacre’s tribute to the victims of An Gorta Mor (The Great Hunger), it seems like they only just lifted the heavy concealing drapes down at a riverside warehouse in Chester to the applause of Delaware Valley Irish-American dignitaries and the skirl of the pipes. Not long thereafter, workmen moved the statue to its current location, once again with great ceremony.

Yet we’ll gather once again Saturday morning to recall the millions who lost their lives to famine in Ireland or were forced to emigrate from their homeland. The commemoration also recognizes the accomplishments and contributions that the Irish have made to Philadelphia, to Pennsylvania and to our nation.

The hour-long ceremony begins at 10:30 a.m.

On hand will be:

Pennsylvania State Representative William F. Keller
Philadelphia Mayor John F. Street
James Donaghy, Deputy Managing Director, City of Philadelphia
CBS TV 3 anchor Larry Mendte
Irish Memorial Board Members
and members of the Irish-American community in Philadelphia, Timmy Kelly, Theresa Flanagan, McDade Irish Dancers.
Philadelphia Emerald Society Pipers, along with McDade Irish Dancers, will open the event. The ceremony will be followed by the annual tradition of planting shamrocks in a ceremonial planter and a wreath-laying at the monument.

The event will follow the Annual 5K Run to benefit the National Irish Memorial Maintenance Fund. Come early and watch the run. (It starts at 8:30 a.m.) Better yet, come out and run. For details, consult the race Web site.

News

You Saw The Parade … Now Look at the Pictures

Long parade, right?

Long parade, right?

Funny the people you run into at the parade.

Toward the end of the route, standing at curbside along the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, we bumped into Smokin’ Joe Frazier’s daughter Jackie.

Why was she at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade? Running for something, of course. But she insisted that there’s a bit of Irish in her.
“Dad always said we were mutts,” she explained.

Hey, one way or another, we all are. (And who are we to argue with Joe Frazier?)

Anyway, we’re just starting to post our photos (and soon, videos) of the parade. Here’s a bunch to start you off, with a promise of more to come.

And maybe you’ll run into someone cool.

News

Wilmington’s Irish Get Ready to Celebrate

Editor’s note: The 2007 parade was canceled due to inclement weather.

The first Wilmington St. Patrick’s Day parade, back in 1975, was little more than a couple of trucks, a few guys on horseback and a fella by the name of Pat Kelly on a green bike. The parade started at 12th and Market streets, up Delaware Avenue, and ended at Kelly’s Logan House.

“It was a catch-as-catch-can parade,” admits Eileen Claffey Sweeney, co-chair of the parade. “The following year we got a little more serious and we marched down King Street. We end at St. Patrick Catholic Church. It’s been there ever since.”

This St. Patrick’s Day will mark the 32th anniversary of the Wilmington parade—we’ll explain the imprecise math in a moment—sponsored by the Irish Culture Club of Delaware. With lots of bands, floats, and prancing herds of dancing children, the parade has come a long, long way from its humble origins. Anywhere from 4,000 to 7,000 folks line the street.

Eileen has seen most of it; she’s been on the committee for 30 years. In fact, at least four other members have been around for at least that long, including co-chair Patrick J. Kelly (the green bike-riding guy in the first parade and St. Patrick in most of the parades since); Annamay Claffey, the parade’s mistress of ceremonies; Len Bafundo and Mark Wirt (both he and Len are parade coordinators, responsible for parade marshals); and Ann Marie Corrigan Rizzo (treasurer of the parade committee and assistant to the emcee).

Even though they’ve not been around for quite that long, everyone else on the parade committee is a long-timer. Dignitary chair Alice Seaberg has been on the committee for close to 28 years. (Alice’s husband Harry came on board recently.) Jim Harkin has been around for 20 years; Carol Duffy and Donna Kelly, for 10.

“Once you do it, you’re signed up for life,” say Eileen. “That’s the way it is for a lot of groups, but the Irish especially.”

The parade actually had got its start on the sands of Rehoboth, she says. “It was in the summer of ‘75,” she says. “There were four guys from Wilmington (Pat Kelly among them) who got together on the beach at Rehoboth every summer. One day, one of them asked, hey, why don’t we do something for St. Patrick’s Day? And one of them said, hey, let’s have a parade. So they went in to the city to apply for a permit. They learned that they needed an organization to get a permit, so the Irish Culture Club was born in March of ‘76.”

The weather in March is unpredictable. Last year, for example, it was unseasonably warm. Virtually no one who lives in the Delaware Valley will forget the weekend of March 12-13, 1993. That was the weekend of the so-called “storm of the century.”

“It was a doozy,” recalls Eileen. “Earlier in the week, the forecast was predicting snow. So we had a meeting on the Wednesday before the parade, and we decided to cancel. I was in charge of calling the radio stations.”

And a good thing they decided not to march. “It ended up we had two feet of snow,” Eileen says.

For at least one member of the committee, though, this will be the 32st parade. Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of night could keep Patrick J. Kelly from his appointed rounds.

Or, put another way, as Eileen Sweeney explains: “Patrick Kelly is nuts.” Snow or not, Kelly decided to go downtown to 9th and King with his brother Joe in his van. “Patrick was in full St. Patrick regalia,” says Eileen. “He marched from 9th Street up to 11th and King. Our courthouse is right there. A Channel 6 reporter saw him coming down and she ran out and interviewed him.”

That wasn’t enough for Patrick, Eileen recalls. “He told the reporter, ‘If you wait another 10 minutes, there’s gonna be a leprechaun coming down the street.’ With that, Pat ran back to the van, changed into a leprechaun costume, then marched down.”

Other members were impressed—and a little put out. They told Kelly that they would have joined him, nuts or not, if they’d known. “We told him, ‘Pat, we will never forgive you.’ So Patrick has made our parade continuously.”

So if you ever wonder what kind of people would stick with something like a St. Patrick’s Day parade for three decades … well, now you know.

The parade kicks off at noon on Saturday, March 17. The parade starts at Fourth and King Streets, and continues on King to St. Patrick’s Church at 15th Street. An ecumenical service for world peace will follow at St. Patrick’s Church.

News

Who Took First?

Hon. James H.J. Tate Award
Group That Best Exemplified the Spirit of the Parade

2007 AOH / LAOH Division 51 Fishtown
2006 2nd Street Irish
2005 2nd Street Irish
2004 Flanagan Hanson Clan # 88
2003 Irish of Havertown
2002 AOH Div. 87

Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley Award
Outstanding Marching Group of Fraternal Organizations

2007 AOH / LAOH Division 25 
2006 O’Mahoney Association
2005 Mayo Association of Philadelphia
2004 AOH / LAOH Div 51 Phila. # 100
2003 AOH / LAOH Div. 51
2002 2nd St. Irish

George Costello Award
Organization with the Outstanding Float in the Parade

2007 Irish of Havertown 
2006 Cavan Society
2005 Irish of Havertown
2004 Cavan Society # 68
2003 Cavan Society
2002 Cavan Society

Hon. Vincent A. Carroll Award
Outstanding Musical Unit Excluding Grade School Bands

2007 Brewster (New York) High School Marching Band
2006 Allentown High School (NJ) Redbird Marching Band
2005 Allentown High School (NJ) Redbird Marching Band<
2004 Strabane Pipe Band from County Tyrone, Ireland # 19
2003 Phila. Police and Fire Pipe and Drum Band
2002 Cardinal Dougherty High School Alumni Band

Anthony J. Ryan Award
Outstanding Grade School Band

2007 Hartford (Connecticut) Magnet Middle School
2006 St. Aloysius Academy Band
2005 St. Aloysius Academy Band
2004 St. Aloysius # 42
2003 St. Monica’s School
2002 St. Monica’s School

Walter Garvin Award
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group

2007 Cummins School of Irish Dance
2006 Cara School of Irish Dance
2005 Cummins School of Irish Dance
2004 Coyle School of Irish Dance # 61
2003 Campbell Academy of Irish Dance # 101
2002 Mc Dade School of Irish Dance

Marie C. Burns Award
Outstanding Adult Dance Group

2007 Tara Gael Dancers
2006 Crossroads School of Irish Dancing
2005 Pride of Erin
2004 Tara Gael Dancers # 87
2003 Tara Gael Dancers (First year for this award)

Joseph E. Montgomery Award
Outstanding AOH and/or LAOH Divisions

2007 AOH / LAOH Division 39 Monsignor Thomas J. Rilley 
2006 AOH/LAOH Div. 87 (First year for this award)

Joseph J. “Banjo” McCoy Award
Outstanding Marching Group of Fraternal Organizations

2007 IBEW Local 98
2006 Cairdeas Irish Brigade (First year for this award)

James F. Cawley Parade Director’s Award
Outstanding Cooperating Organization

2007 Philadelphia Police Fire Pipes & Drum Band
2006 McDade School of Irish Dance (First year for this award)