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How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Irish piper Paddy Keenan will be in town next Friday.

Irish piper Paddy Keenan will be in town next Friday.

This Saturday, lost loved ones will be remembered and honored at the annual Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund banquet at Springfield Country Club. The event raises money for the fund that continues the work of the late Delco and County Tyrone electrician in providing financial support for community members in need.

Easter is a time of memorial for those in the Irish community—specifically, remembering the Easter Rising of 1916 when a group of Irish republicans mounted an armed insurrection against the British in Dublin. The Gloucester County AOH will hold an Easter Monday flag raising at the Red Bank Battlefield in National Park, NJ, starting at 11 AM, followed by Mass and a luncheon at the AOH hall on 200 Columbia Boulevard. The event is open to all. (Mark your calendars for Sunday, April 27, for the annual Easter Rising Ceremonies honoring Irish republican heroes Luke Dillon and Joseph McGarrity at Holy Cross Cemetery in Yeadon, where they’re buried.)

On Wednesday, the Derry Brigade will be playing at the AOH Div. 61 Hall at Rhawn and Frankford Streets in Philadelphia.

Grab your whistles, flutes, and uillean pipes if you got ‘em for April 25-26 workshops with the legendary piper Paddy Keenan, who will also be performing in concert at the Irish Center in Philadelphia, thanks to the Philadelphia Ceili Group.

People

Philadelphia’s New Rose of Tralee Selected

Maria Walsh, the 2014 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee

Maria Walsh, the 2014 Philadelphia Rose of Tralee

 

For the first time, the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee has more than Irish roots—she has an Irish accent.

Maria Walsh, who was born in Boston and moved to Shrule, County Mayo, with her family when she was 7, was selected on Friday, April 11, at the Radnor Hotel to represent the City of Brotherly Love in the 2014 regional finals in Tralee in May. If she makes the cut there, Walsh will compete with Roses from around the world at the annual Rose of Tralee Festival in August, one of the most-watched events on Irish television.

“I wish my parents could have been here,” said Walsh after accepting her crown.

Reverse immigration is apparently a family trait. Her mother, Noreen, was also born in Boston, but grew up in Leitir More in Connemara. Her father, Vincent is from County Mayo. Walsh has three far-flung siblings who live in Perth, Los Angeles, and Galway.

A journalism and visual media graduate of Griffith College in Dublin, Walsh is studio manager for Anthropologie Group at the Navy Yard in Philadelphia, where she’s lived since 2010. She’s a serious Gaelic football fan and has played with the local Notre Dames Gaelic Football Club. When the night’s emcee, CBS3 reporter Jim Donovan, asked her “if you could have any superpower, what would it be?”  Walsh said she’d like the power to guarantee that Mayo would bring home the Sam Maguire Cup this year. (For those not savvy about Gaelic football, that’s roughly equivalent to winning the Stanley Cup.) That drew applause and cheers from members of the Mayo Society in attendance.

Walsh succeeds Brittney Killion, a congressional aide, who said her year at Philly’s Rose “brought light into our family’s life” after a “year of loss,” including the death of her uncle and godfather. The high-energy, exuberant Killion, who can belt out a song like a Broadway star, recalled Tralee locals telling her “how wild my Philly family is and what good craic [fun] they are.”

The winner of the Mary O’Connor Spirit Award was 21-year-old West Chester University student Aisling Travers. The daughter of Seamus and Marie Travers of Counties Donegal and Leitrim, Travers was honored for her charity work. As a high school student, she founded a program to involve her fellow students in volunteering at A.I DuPont and Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia. That grew out of a program, Kid2Kid, she founded to raise money for Beaumont Children’s Hospital and which was able to turn over $20,000 to the Irish hospital. She also founded “Pencils for Peace,” an organization that works with local middle school students to provide children in Afghanistan and Ethiopia with school supplies.

When a friend, Carmel Bradley, was diagnosed with breast cancer, Travers became part of “Carmel’s Crew,” a group of women who walked the 3-day, 60-mile Susan G. Komen walk for the cure. She also hosted an afternoon tea to raise money for the event.

Travers volunteers as a fundraiser with the McDade-Cara School of Irish Dance and the Delaware County Gaelic Football Club. Most recently, she traveled to Honduras to work with children at the Amigos de Jesus children’s home.

The Rose of Tralee Center added two new awards this year: Fiona Brogan who, like Walsh, plays Gaelic football, and is an Irish step dancer, was named 2014 Junior Rose; and Olivia Hilpl received the first Rose Gifford Award for best dressed woman at the event. Rose Gifford, 99, the first Mary O’Connor Spirit Award winner, personally gave the award to Hilpl, founder of the Rince Ri School of Irish Dance.

 

People

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Not soccer, Gaelic football!

Not soccer, Gaelic football!

If you’ve given up on the Phillies already, why not try some Gaelic sports? The University Gaelic Football and Hurling Tournament is in Philadelphia on Saturday. Hosted by St. Joseph’s University Gaelic Football Club, the match between a dozen or so college-level Gaelic footballers and hurlers will take place at Monsignor Bonner High School, 403 N. Lansdowne Avenue in Drexel Hill, starting at 1 PM and going till sundown.

If you’ve never been up close and personal with Gaelic football and hurling, we can promise you an action-packed day.

Then on Sunday, head over to Bishop McDevitt High School in Wyncote for an open house with the Glenside Gaelic Athletic Association, the latest club for youngsters interested in football, hurling, and camogie (the ladies’ version of hurling). It’s a way for kids to have fun, get exercise, and help carry on Irish culture in America.

On Saturday night, Jamison provides the music for the AOH Black Jack Kehoe Div. 4’s annual fundraiser at the Regal Banquet Hall in Prospect Park. All proceeds benefit AOH charities, such as the Hibernian Hunger Project, which provides food to the needy.

On Sunday, the Derry Society is holding its annual spring social at the Irish Center. There will be music (The Shantys and the Derry Brigade), a DJ playing music for the kids—the social is always very kid-centric. Of course, there’s food and Irish dancers.

On Monday, the Teetotallers—the extraordinary fiddler Martin Hayes, multi-instrumentalist Kevin Crawford (Lunasa) and guitarist John Doyle—will be performing at Ware Recital Hall in the Swope Building on the West Chester University campus. These are world-class Irish musicians (and Kevin Crawford is really funny).

On Wednesday, the individuals and groups that won awards in the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade will be honored at an event at Finnigan’s Wake, 3rd and Spring Garden Streets in Philadelphia. The $25 price includes a buffet dinner, beverages and entertainment. And you don’t have to be an award winner to attend. The CBS3 parade team often shows up.

On Thursday, the Irish Pub at 20th and Walnut Streets in Philadephia is holding its annual Gathering of Heroes to benefit the Marine Corps-Law Enforcement Foundation, founded in 1995 to provide support for children of Marines and federal law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty or under exceptional circumstances. This year, four Medal of Honor recipients will be in attendance, all veterans of the Vietnam War. There will be opportunities to meet and talk to these men—two Navy Seal veterans, one Army vet, and a Marine—who will also sign autographs and pose for photos.

Also on Thursday night, there will be a free screening of the documentary “Embrace the Brutality: A Continental Divide Adventure,” by local film maker Shane O’Donnell at the McSwiney Club in Jenkintown. The film, about a group of hikers who hit the trail from Mexico to Monday, features the music of local group RUNA, the John Byrne Band, Rorey Carroll, and others.

And a real treat for you Saw Doctors and Water Boys lovers—you know who you are. Leo Moran of the Saw Doctors and Anthony Thistlethwaite of The Water Boys will be performing together on stage at the Tin Angel on Second Street in Philadelphia on Friday night. Opening for them, half of the John Byrne Band: John Byrne and Maura Dwyer. (We don’t know where Rob Shaffer is, but Andy Keenan is touring with Amos Lee.) To get reserved seating at the concert at this tiny venue, you need to make a reservation for dinner at Serrano, the restaurant downstairs. And you have to eat there—they only honor reservations for actual diners. (You folks who made reservations and didn’t show up for dinner—shame on you!)

It’s not too late to get tickets for the annual Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fundraiser, slated for next Saturday, April 19. Named for a beloved Delaware County man with roots in Tyrone, the Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund carries on the work of the man who died too young—offering a helping hand to those in crisis. Look for more information on this event and others on our calendar.

People

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Saorla Meenagh, wearing her Rose of Tralee face paint.

Saorla Meenagh, wearing her Rose of Tralee face paint.

Tickets were going fast for the Gerry Timlin solo show at Act II Playhouse in Ambler on Saturday. Better call now.

If you happen to be in North Wildwood, the Shantys will be playing at the Anglesea Pub. We happen to know that there will be an influx of Irish folk in Wildwood this weekend for the Cummins School of Irish Dance Feis at the Beach.

On Sunday, see a documentary exploring the controversial case of 10 people shot by British soldiers in West Belfast in 1971 including a Catholic priest and a mother of eight. Relatives and victims will be able to answer your questions in a Skype session after the showing. The event is free at The Irish Center.

The Coyle School of Irish Dance is sending some of its best dancers to the world championships in London this year. They’re holding a fundraiser on Sunday April 6, between 5 and 8 PM, at The Irish Pub, 1123 Walnut Street in Philadelphia. Bartenders for the evening will be world contenders Moira Cahill, a former Philadelphia Mary from Dungloe, and Padraig Glenn. Your $30 covers a delicious meal and open bar. Kids are only $10.

On Friday, one of the classiest events of the year, the Philadelphia Rose of Traleen Selection and dinner will take place at The Radnor Hotel. CBS3’s consumer reporter Jim Donovan will be the emcee (he’s very funny) and a brand new Rose will be chosen to compete in Ireland next summer. The current Philly Rose is congressional aide Brittany Killion.

On Saturday, April 12, about a dozen East Coast university-based Gaelic football and hurling teams will converge on Msgr. Bonner High School in Drexel Hill for a day of competition. We’d say all in fun, but we’ve seen Gaelic football and hurling—it’s serious.

And if you like what you see, the Glenside Gaelic Athletic Association is holding an open house for youngsters and their parents interested in Gaelic sports at Bishop McDevitt High School in Wyncote on Sunday, April 13.

Save some time that day to attend the Derry Society’s Spring Social at The Irish Center, featuring music by the Derry Brigade, the Cummins School of Irish Dance, and Bill Donohue Jr. will be playing DJ for the kids to compete in musical games. There’s face painting, food, and raffles. And you don’t have to be from Derry to come. It’s a great day out for the kids.

People

Social Media Reunites Cousins

The descendants of Patrick Murphy look at special photos at the Irish Center.

The descendants of Patrick Murphy look at special photos at the Irish Center.

Constructing an Irish family tree poses particular challenges. First, there’s the dearth of written records. Not only were the most fruitful life events—birth, marriage, death—not recorded until 1864, many of those records were lost to fire during Ireland’s 1922 Civil War and to other calamities (including being pulped to support war effort in World War I).

And in many Irish-American families, roots run deep and wide. Siblings were separated, by oceans or land, as they sought new opportunities. For some, contact became sporadic and eventually faded to black. The prejudice the new immigrants encountered in America propelled them to quickly shed their Irishness and with their self-imposed rapid Americanization, family histories were lost in the silence. For modern family historians, those roots remain hidden from view, sometimes forever, sometimes until some fate intervenes.

In the 21st century, fate uses social media: You suddenly come across photos of your great grandparents on flickr.com or read familiar names in a post on a genealogy page on Facebook that you stumbled upon.

It was social media that finally brought the roots of Marianne MacDonald’s mother’s family, the Murphys of Tuosist, Collorus Point, County Kerry, to the surface, and a couple of weeks ago, she gathered about a dozen long-lost cousins from Florida, Tennessee, New York, and North Jersey at the Commodore Barry Club (The Irish Center) in Philadelphia where they shared their separate “bits and pieces” of family history.

Including letters from the girls their Great-Aunt Peggie met when she lived for a time in Ireland with an aunt, after the death of her mother. And photos of the Murphy headstones in Tuosist, some barely legible, that cousin Ellen Dyal of Jacksonville, Florida, took when she was in Ireland last year.

It was when Dyal was preparing for her trip, her second, that she came across a Facebook page dedicated to Tuosist, the parish on the scenic Beara Peninsula where the Murphy clan lived. There, she saw Marianne MacDonald’s post seeking information about her grandmother, Julia, Peggie Murphy’s sister. And the sister of Dyal’s grandfather, Patrick.

“I read it and thought, oh my God, my sister had just given me a piece of paper with a lot of the family names and Julia’s name was on it,” says Dyal. “I realized that she was the sister of my grandfather, Patrick Murphy. I tried to message Marianne and Facebook told me it would cost me $1 to send a message to her since I didn’t know her and I decided to pay the dollar. Five minutes later I heard from her. ‘Oh my God, we’re cousins!’”

The two got on the phone and talked for an hour and a half. MacDonald, a special education teacher from Mantua, NJ, who hosts the “Come West Along the Road” Irish radio hour every Sunday on WTMR, 80 FM, was able to hook Dyal up with people in Tuosist she met during her many trips back who knew the Murphy family. That included the postmistress, Maureen O’ Sullivan, who helped Dyal find the family home, a large, rambling house on secluded wooded point that had been vacant for many years before being turned into a holiday home. “She even remembered my grandfather going back every year,” says Dyal.

During her last trip, MacDonald says, she spent two hours talking to O’Sullivan whose prodigious memory turned up another cousin, Ed Murphy of Monmouth County, NJ, who attended the Philadelphia reunion. “She said to me, there was another Murphy here a couple of years ago and she pulled out a big ledger, and there was his address and phone number, so I called him.”

It turned out that their paths had likely crossed before. “We started talking and realized that we had been at the same Irish events at the same time,” says MacDonald, laughing. They just don’t remember meeting.

That wasn’t the only coincidence these Murphy descendants uncovered. When MacDonald was looking for her grandmother on the 1930 US Census, she discovered that Dyal’s grandfather, Patrick Murphy, was rooming with her grandparents in New York. And Ellen found a letter from her grandfather, written after MacDonald’s grandmother’s death, saying, Julia, had been his “favorite sister.”

The family lost touch for many reasons. For one, there were 10 children scattered all over, some across the country, others in Ireland and England. There’s no information on two of the siblings at all. Dyal’s mother married a man named Shapiro and was, for a time, ostracized by the family for marrying out of the Catholic faith. Her grandfather, Patrick Murphy, had only daughters, so their Murphy line was subsumed by other family names.

Not all the Murphys could make the Philadelphia reunion, including Kevin, whom MacDonald met via email several years ago after he saw her photos from Collarus Point on flickr.com, a photo storage site.

But they’re planning another one. “We were all so thrilled to meet each other—it was the best thing eve,” says MacDonald, “so we’re thinking of going to Ireland next spring. Ellen is in touch with the cousins in England, so they may come.”

In Irish genealogy circles, that’s what’s known as a sublimely happy ending.

See our photos of the Murphy Family Reunion.

People

Grab Your Blankets! The Fleadh is Coming Back!

Fun and family friendly!

Fun and family friendly!

File this piece of advice from Frank Daly away to pull out any time you’re thinking of throwing a big music event: “Never rent a park.”

Not that Pennypack Park isn’t a great venue for an Irish music festival. Daly and partner C.J. Mills rolled out their first one there last year, the very successful Philadelphia Fleadh, in a niche of this rambling, 1300-acre green space in northeast Philadelphia. Best friends, partners in American Paddy’s Productions , and members of the band, Jamison, Daly and Mills are putting the finishing touches on their second festival—scheduled for Saturday, May 3—and Daly says it was an easier sell to the Fairmount Park Commission this year.

“They weren’t difficult to deal with last year, but they weren’t inviting,” says Daly. “Frankly, they heard Irish event and they thought debauchery, port-a-potties, people fighting.”

In other words, not exactly like folks letting out of Sunday Mass. “They were there last year watching, and I think they have a much different idea,” says Daly. In fact, it’s a little more like folks letting out of Sunday Mass, only with bands, beer, and bouncy castles.

“We had 2,700 people attend last year and they were a great group of people. It was very family friendly,” he says. And the Fairmount Park Commission was impressed. “They say me and CJ out there the next day at 5 AM picking up trash,” he laughs. “They saw we weren’t throwing a giant drunkfest there.”

This year, expect more of the same—along with Irish beer. “That was the only complaint we got,” says Daly. “We didn’t have Irish beer. Well this year there’s Guinness, Smithwicks, and Harp.”

And an appealing mix of both traditional and Celtic rock acts, including some of Philly’s finest: the Paul Moore Band, Jamison, the John Byrne Band, Buring Bridget Cleary, the Hooligans, Raymond and Mickey Coleman, the Birmingham Six, the Jameson Sisters, the Broken Shillelaghs, Killen-Clark, The Ladeens, and Seamus Kennedy. This year’s import are the Mahones, a punk rock Celtic band from Canada. Last year, it was the Young Dubliners.

Instead of a DJ tent, says Daly, this year’s festival will include an acoustic tent with music sessions and workshops for those who want to perfect their tunes and a ceili dance at 1 and 3 PM where instructors will show you the steps to the Gay Gordon and Siege of Ennis so you can join in the fun.

Festival Food and Maggie’s on the Waterfront will be feeding the crowds and there are 10 vendors selling everything from kilts to t-shirts. And this year there’s a bonus—an open feis (pronounced “fesh,” it’s an Irish step dance competition) hosted by Celtic Flame School of Irish Dance that’s also free. “You don’t have to buy a ticket to the festival to go to the feis,” Daly says.

Philadelphia Fleadh is one of three Irish-themed events American Paddy’s Productions mounts every year, including American Celtic Christmas during the holidays and Paddypalooza, a tented Celtic rock party around St. Patrick’s Day.

Next year, they’ll be adding a fourth—Sober St. Patrick’s Day, a family-friendly, alcohol-free program that got its start in New York and has been enormously successful (as in, sold-out) in New York, Casper, Wyoming, Richmond, Virginia and Belfast, Northern Ireland.

“It came about because of my friendship with Katherine Ball-Weir who is involved in the local branch of Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann [an Irish organization supporting Irish music and culture among Irish people]. We met when I was doing marketing for Kildare’s pubs and we worked on bringing big name Irish traditional musicians to West Chester University who would then play at the session in the pub.”

Ball-Weir, whose teenaged son, Alexander, is a fiddler and a member of The Ladeens, managed to secure the rights to the name from the New York organization and she, Daly, and Mills are planning the event for 2015, on Philadelphia parade day.

“We’re looking for a spot—and we’re definitely not renting a public park,” laughs Daly. “They told us when we rented the park they’ve only rented out Fairmount Park two times. One was for “Made in America,” and the other was the Philadelphia Fleadh. So me and Jay-Z,” he deadpans, “are almost exactly the same.”

You can order tickets for the Fleadh by clicking on the Fleadh ad on our pages, or by going to their website.

People

Mother-Daughter Tea Leads Up to the Rose of Tralee Selection

2013 Philadelphia Rose, Brittany Killion, singing "Rose of Tralee."

2013 Philadelphia Rose, Brittany Killion, singing “Rose of Tralee.”

On April 11 at the Radnor Hotel, 27-year-old Congressional caseworker Brittany Killion will be giving up her crown as the Philadelphia Rose of Tralee. The Rose of Tralee is one of Ireland’s oldest festivals, celebrating Irish culture, heritage, and the beauty and talent of young women of Irish descent. Thousands flock to Kerry in August for the festival and even more watch it on television.

So last Saturday’s Rose of Tralee Mother-Daughter Tea in Radnor was bittersweet—like the song, “Rose of Tralee,” Killion of Glen Mills sang to the dozens of young women—the little Rosebuds and tween and teen Rose Petals and some of this year’s Rose candidates—who attended the event.

The Rose of Tralee Selection will be held at the hotel on Friday, April 11, starting at 7 PM, with CBS3’s consumer reporter Jim Donovan repeating his role as master of ceremonies. The judging panel will be chaired by David Brennan, GM of the Wayne Hotel. He will be joined by the 2007 Philadelphia Rose, Colleen Gallagher and the President of the Glenside GAA Club, Brendan Gallagher.

The Mary O’Connor Spirit Award, which honors Irish and Irish American women who have made contributions to the community, will be presented to Aisling Travers, a college student who has traveled to Honduras with Amigos de Jesus to work with children and who, while still a student at Great Valley High School, started a program called Kid to Kid which recruited more than 150 student volunteers to work in the Child Life Center at Nemours/Alfred I. Dupont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, DE.

Here are some photos from the Mother-Daughter Tea. You can also click on the slideshow at the top of the page.

You can win a $100 gift certificate by posting a photo of your favorite Irish eyes on Facebook or Twitter with the hashtag #2014IrishEyes.

People

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

A St. Baldrick's celebration--like this one with the Second Street Irish Society--involves serious hair loss--for a good cause.

A St. Baldrick’s celebration–like this one with the Second Street Irish Society–involves serious hair loss–for a good cause.

This Saturday morning, Archbishop Charles Chaput will celebrate the 17th annual cultural heritage Mass at the Cathedral Basilica of Sts. Peter and Paul in Philadelphia. Members of the Irish community are invited to attend along with other ethnic groups served by the Philadelphia Archdiocese.

On Saturday afternoon, the Theresa Flanagan Band will perform at a fundraiser for St. Lucy School for the Blind at the Holy Innocents School Hall in Philadelphia.

The Shantys will be on stage at Molly Maguire’s in Lansdale on Saturday night.

Then on Sunday, the Broken Shillelaghs will be providing the music as the Collingswood Firefighters for a Cure will be having their heads shaved as part of the St. Baldrick’s Fundraiser for Pediatric Cancer at Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood.

The Derry Brigade will be at the Anglesea Pub in North Wildwood, NJ on Friday, April 4, followed by the Shantys on Saturday.

Also on Saturday, April 5, spend an evening with Gerry Timlin. The popular singer and storyteller will be at Act II Playhouse in Ambler.

On April 6, view the documentary, “The Ballymurphy Massacre,” about a controversial case of 10 people by British soldiers in West Belfast in 1971, with a Q&A following with some of the victims who will be answering questions via Skype.

Look for more details on our calendar.