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How to Be Irish in Philly, People

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Two wild and crazy guys.

Two wild and crazy guys.

Happy Mother’s Day to all you Irish moms out there! If you’re looking for a nice Irish evening, think about heading over to the Coatesville Cultural Center to hear two top Irish musicians, Seamus Begley (button accordion) and Oisin MacDiarmada (fiddle), in this very intimate setting.

That is, if you’re not tuckered out from the Galway Society Dinner Dance, which is being held on Saturday at the Irish Center.

Or the hurling open day earlier on Satruday at Northeast High School in Philadelphia—held by Na Toraidhe Hurling club. Members of the team will be on-hand to give demonstrations and explain the sport, which is a little like hockey and lacrosse. They’ll provide the equipment and food!

On Wednesday, it’s Irish Heritage Night with the Philadelphia Union as they take on  Robbie Keane ( Irish National Team Captain/All Time Leading Scorer) and the defending MLS champions, The Los Angeles Galaxy.
Traditional Irish Fare will be available along with Irish Drink Specials. A portion of all ticket sales will go towards maintaining The Irish Memorial of Philadelphia.

On Thursday, the American Ireland Fund is holding its young leaders event at the Franklin Institute, with cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and Blackthorn playing live.

On Friday, Scythian heads our way from DC to play a second benefit in Philadelphia this year for the Little Sisters of the Poor and St. Francis Xavier Church. Sponsored by the Grays Ferry Boxing Club and a number of other local businesses, you can enjoy a concert, plus $2 premium beers and pizza by the slice.

And it’s Irish Heritage Night at the Phillies! You can see the Phils take on the Cincinnati Reds starting at 7:05 PM. The event is almost sold out, but you can contact Jerry O’Connor at the Phillies at joconnor@phillies.com or 215-218-5667. Tell him you are part of the Irish Heritage Night for a $4 discount.
Coming up next week: A Play, A Pie and a Pint at Fergie’s Pub (1214 Sansom Street, Philadelphia). The play is “Too Much of Nothing,” in which two lovable misfits meet in a Dublin café and consider life, language and The Little Book of Calm starring Adam Rzepka and James Stover. On Tuesday May 21 and Thursday, May 23, you can enjoy the play and traditional meat and veggie pies and a pint (of beer and soda), all for just $15. It’s an Inis Nua Theatre production.

News, People

Honoring the Memory of a Fallen Officer

Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums to perform.

Irish Thunder Pipes and Drums to perform.

Back on September 19, 2012, Irish Thunder Drum Major Pete Hand joined with other members of the band, and pipers from throughout the Delaware Valley, for a solemn occasion: to bid farewell to Plymouth Township Police Officer Brad Fox. Fox was gunned down by a hit-and-run suspect September 13, just shy of his 35th birthday.

Fox left behind his wife Lynsay, who at the time was expecting the family’s second child. On March 25, Bradley Michael Fox Jr. was born, the new younger brother to older sister Kadence.

Ever since the funeral, the band’s sponsoring Ancient Order of Hibernians division has wanted to find a way, not to mourn Brad Fox’s death, but to celebrate his life and honor his memory.

On Saturday afternoon and on into the night, they’re going to do just that with a “Celtic Salute” at the division’s hall in Swedesburg. Proceeds from the celebration will benefit Fox’s family.

AOH recognition of fallen officers is nothing new, says Hand.

“A few years ago, when police officers were killed in Philadelphia, we ran a fundraiser for the Fraternal Order of Police. Because Officer Fox was a local resident, we wanted to do something like that again. A lot of us wanted to do it right after the funeral, but the family asked us to stand down until well after the holidays. We chose a date in the spring, and the date was agreed upon with the family.”

Hand knows Brad Fox would have approved of a Celtic-themed celebration. “We know from his co-workers that he loved the bagpipes. Irish Thunder was the main organizer of the pipe bands at his funeral. We had 80 pipers and drummers. We’ll be playing for him again on Saturday.”

And a big event it will be. Along with Irish Thunder, many local Irish bands and musicians are donating their time and talent, including the Paul Moore Band, Belfast Connection, Oliver McElhone, No Irish Need Apply, Fisher and Maher, the John Forth Band, and more. The Coyle Dancers will also perform. Additional music will be presented by DJ Sean Givnish.

Much of the entertainment will take place in a big tent in the parking lot behind the Hibernians’ HQ at 342 Jefferson Street, with more music and fun in the AOH hall, and downstairs in the lounge. It’ll all go on, rain or shine, from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m.

Hand says the division wants to do what it can to ease the family’s pain. “We want them to have anything they need.”

Tickets are $30, which includes beer, wine, soda, and hot dishes.

To purchase tickets or make a donation, contact:

Division President Ron Trask
215-804-8323
or
rontrask@comcast.net

News, People

Remembering Bishop Joseph P. McFadden

Bishop Joseph McFadden

Bishop Joseph McFadden, chaplain emeritus of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, joined St. Thomas More alums in singing the school song.

Harrisburg Bishop Joseph P. McFadden, a well-known and loved member of Philadelphia’s Irish community before his upstate appointment in June 2010, has passed away. His death was announced today by the diocese. 

Bishop McFadden, who served as chaplain of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, died unexpectedly while attending a meeting of the Catholic Bishops of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

We interviewed Bishop McFadden not long after his installation. He could not have been more gracious and down-to-earth. We’re grateful to have known him.

Here is the interview.

An “average Joe” is about to helm the Harrisburg Diocese.

Of course, Philadelphia Auxiliary Bishop Joseph P. McFadden is really far from ordinary. In naming him this week to become the 10th bishop of Harrisburg, Pope Benedict XVI surely must have recognized Bishop McFadden’s solid record of accomplishment.

McFadden has been a priest for 29 years, but he was someone special right from the word go. After a brief stint as assistant pastor of Irish St. Laurence Parish in Highland Park, Delaware County, he become administrative secretary to then Cardinal Krol in 1982. Less than 10 years later, he was appointed honorary prelate to Pope John Paul II—as a monsignor.

He later served as president of Cardinal O’Hara High School, pastor of St. Joseph Parish in Downington and, in June 2004, auxiliary bishop under Cardinal Justin Rigali.

Not bad for a guy who grew up in St. Rose of Lima parish in West Philly, graduate of St. Thomas More, and high school basketball coach.

McFadden, contacted Friday just before he left to catch a flight to Rome, was characteristically humble when asked about his sure and steady rise. “For most priests the goal is to answer the call of God and to be of service to Jesus and the preaching of his gospel as a parish priest,” he said. “I don’t think a young man focuses on becoming a bishop. I didn’t. As bishop, a priest is still called to preach the gospel, but it means that you have responsibility of a larger flock, a larger group of people. when God gives you responsibility, you expect to have to answer to that responsiblilty. It’s one thing for an individual to open himself to the grace of God. It’s quite another thing to be responsible for shepherding other people in response to the same call.”

Throughout his rise to the top, Joseph McFadden apparently has not forgotten his humble roots, said Michael Bradley, director of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade, who has known him for a long time—including McFadden’s more recent service as parade chaplain and chaplain emeritus.

“He (McFadden) was president of Cardinal O’Hara when I was athletic director at Broomall,” said Bradley. “We knew of each each other for a long time. He went to Tommy Moore, and my dad went there. But we became close in the ’90s.”

Over the years, Bradley could see how much McFadden loved the Philly parade. The future bishop would march every year with the group from O’Hara. In 2007, when chaplain Father Kevin Trautner died, Bradley named him chaplain. That first year, McFadden spent some time providing commentary in the CBS3 booth. “They raved about him,” said Bradley.

What has appealed most to Bradley about this well-connected prelate, who in his time has tackled some nettlesome issues—including the closing of Cardinal Dougherty and Northeast Catholic high schools—is how down-to-earth he is. “I’ve always felt that he is a regular guy who became a bishop,” said Bradley. “He has an ability, when you’re talking to him, to make you feel like he’s your best friend.”

Bradley, for one, is not happy to see this best friend go. While acknowledging that McFadden’s promotion to preside over the Harrisburg Diocese is a great honor, Bradley wishes the Vatican had looked inside the Harrisburg Diocese to “hire from within. He asked, “Why can’t they get their own good guy?”

Philly’s “good guy” understands that his local friends might miss him. At the same time, he hopes he’ll be able to maintain at least some of his ties to the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade while forging new ties with the Irish-Americans of Harrisburg. “I would like to hope I can,” he said. “I love the Philly parade.

My parents, as you know, were born in Ireland. I’m proud of my Irish heritage. the parade has been such a great experience the last several years. It really has become a wonderful event in Philadelphia.”

News, People

They Bopped Till They Dropped

Someone needed a nap!

Someone needed a nap!

 

 

If you didn’t make it to the Derry Social on Sunday, you can see what fun you missed in our photos of the event, which featured music, dancing, face-painting, raffles, food, drink, and a chance to buy Newbridge jewelry. Photos by Gwyneth MacArthur.

News, People

Fight Night, Part 2

Jackie Daley Photo by Eileen McElroy

Jackie Daley
Photo by Eileen McElroy

Jackie Daley grew up in an athletic family from Delaware County. She played hoops at Haverford High School which earned her a basketball scholarship to Kutztown University. She was the goalie for the Mairead Farrell’s Senior Ladies Gaelic Football Club.

But none of that really prepared Daley for the boxing ring she’s about to enter on April 27. That job has fallen to her uncle, Richard Sand, an ex-boxer. Daley is one of 24 amateur fighters on the card for Fight Night II, the fundraiser for the Young Ireland’s Gaelic Football Club, which is being held at the Irish Center in Philadelphia.

When the center’s ballroom is magically transformed into something resembling Madison Square Garden for the second year in a row (you can see that happen in this time lapse video by Eileen McElroy), Daley will be squaring off against Jess “The Hurricane” Carbin. Daley doesn’t know her. “She’s one of the Irish guys’ fiancés and I hear she’s feisty and competitive out of her mind, so it will be a good fight,” said Daley, 28, a fast-talking, one-liner machine and radiologic technologist who will be boxing under the name Jackie “The Hammer” Daley.

It will be Daley’s first fight. Ever. Hard to believe, but she never even threw an elbow in hoops or clothes-lined a footballer. “I mean, I never hit another person in my life,” she says. “I’m six feet tall, so people tend to not mess with me. I’ve never had the opportunity till now. I mean, if it was about jump shots I’d be all over it. Hook shots, not so much.”

Fight Night is the result of some out-of-the-box thinking about fundraising, says Trish Coyle Daly (no relation), who does publicity for the 28-year-old football club. “We did the usual beef-and-beers for years and we wanted to do something different,” says Daly, who has strong family connections to the YIs: Her brother, Luke, plays; her dad, Luke, was a manager; and she met her husband, Anthony, when he came from Ireland one summer to play football for the club.

Though last year’s novice event was successful, Daly says she expects this one to blow the roof off. “The hype for this year is out of control,” she says. “A lot of people didn’t go last year because they weren’t sure what kind of night it would be. People weren’t sure whether there was going to be fighting amongst the crowd and it would turn into a rowdy night. But it was a great evening, pure entertainment. People weren’t even getting up for food or to go to the bathroom. They didn’t move from their seats.”

(There were plenty of laughs, as you can see from our photo essay by Eileen McElroy.)

Many of the boxers are training at Andy Carr’s Gym in Upper Darby. Because she travels around the country for work, Jackie Daley turned to her uncle for pointers. “If nothing else, it’s a reason to get my butt back in shape,” she laughs.

She may not have all the moves down, says Daley, but she’s definitely bringing game. “I kinda like see red when I’m in the game zone,” she explains. “I’m kinda unstoppable in my own opinion. Right now I’m having a blast, but the second I get in the ring it’s all over.”

She lets that sink in before she bursts into laughter. “I mean, look,” she says. “I’m not trying to break my nose. My face is too pretty for that!”

Tickets for Fight Night II are $40 each and won’t be sold at the door. Get more information on the event at the Young Irelands gfc Facebook page.

Here’s the evening’s lineup:
Kramer V. Jason Radden
Dan Cardell V. Mike Bohannon
Maryellen McCarry V. Abby Block
James Madden V. Pete Avon
Barry Quinn V. Pat Gray
Jess Carbin V. Jackie Daly
Owen Cummings V. Tom Coyle
Ryan Corbett V. Andrew Marinelli
Leslie Stevenson V. Darren McGee
Steven Covington V C.J. O’Brien
Joe Roan V. Jim McElhone
Eamon O’Hara V. Mark Fisher

Music, People

The Philadelphia Ceili Group’s Singers’ Session Welcomes Their Donegal Guests

The McGill Family Singers

The McGill Family Singers

The Singer’s Session hosted by the Philadelphia Ceili Group the first Wednesday of every month generally has a featured singer, but this month’s guests were a little bit extra special; they came all the way from Ardara, County Donegal, to do the honors.

Bernie McGill and daughters Mairead and Aine were in Boston last week where Aine competed in the World Irish Dancing Championships. But a trip to the States wouldn’t be complete without a stop in Philadelphia to visit the McGill cousins, and since they all share a love of music, an appearance at the Singers’ Session was a natural way to cap off the week.

And they brought the crowds with them. Terry Kane, who runs the session, noted, “This is the first time we’ve had more than 30 people here.”

But probably not the last. Although the Singers’ Session takes the summers off, there are two more to go this spring:  May 1st and June 5th. May’s featured singer isn’t set yet, but Karen Boyce McCollum is scheduled for June, and that’s another evening of singing not to be missed.

So if you have a love for singing Irish songs (in English or in Irish), come on out to the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. All levels of singers are welcome. You can find more information on the Philadelphia Ceili Group website.

And to listen to a few songs from Bernie, Mairead and Aine McGill, with a little help from their Philadelphia relatives and friends, check out our videos:  “There Were Roses” and “Gleanntain Ghlas’ Ghaoth Dobhair.”

People

A Tribute to a Man Who “Made Everyone Feel Important”

The late Charlie Dunlop

The late Charlie Dunlop

“People will forget what you said. People will forget what you did.
But people will never forget how you made them feel.” – Maya Angelou

It says a lot about a man when the people he ran into at the convenience store where he bought his coffee every morning turn up at his viewing to pay their respects.

That was Charlie Dunlop.

Dunlop, a native of Donagmore, County Tyrone who lived in Havertown, died of a sudden heart attack on November 28, 2011, at the age of 45, leaving behind a wife, Nancy, a son, “wee Charlie,” now 7, and hundreds of people who could say, as one did, “Charlie Dunlop always made you feel important.”

“There are a lot of things you don’t remember, but one thing stuck in my mind, and that was meeting people I didn’t know at Charlie’s viewing who told me, ‘Oh, we know Charlie from the Wawa,’” says Nancy. “That was where he got his coffee every morning. We didn’t have a coffee maker and I said, well maybe we should get one, and Charlie said no, it was his thing to go to Wawa every morning and say hi to everyone, so we never got one. That’s the way he was, he was always laughing and telling stories, just pleasant to be around. After Charlie had passed, I had someone say to me that they thought he was so special because when you spoke to him you had all of his attention. He made everyone feel important.”

Even the customers of his electrical contracting business who flooded Nancy Dunlop’s mailbox with cards and letters, who cried with her on the phone. “They all said that he wasn’t just their electrician, he was their friend,” she recalls. “I’ve kept all those notes from my son so he could see how much people loved his father.”

Last Saturday, March 30, some of the people who loved Charlie Dunlop—there were 500 of them—paid $100 a ticket to attend a banquet to raise money to continue the work he did in the community. The opening ceremonies included everything that Charlie loved: family, GAA sports, Irish culture and music, and a united Ireland. Representatives from each of Ireland’s 32 counties carried their county’s flag into the ballroom of the Springfield Country Club along with jerseys from each of the county GAA teams. Charlie Dunlop was instrumental in founding the Tyrone Gaelic Football Club in Philadelphia which, after a hiatus of a few years, is being resurrected this year. His son was presented with a jersey from the St. Patrick’s GAA in County Tyrone which his grandfather brought with him from Ireland. It was the only jersey they had left and, ironically, it carried Charlie’s old number.

His old band mates from Clan Ceoil, John “Lefty” Kelly and Pat Kildea, played, as did Blackthorn. But the tunes that brought many to tears came from Bridget Reilly, playing Charlie’s favorite tunes, including “The Lonesome Boatman,” a slow air composed by Finbar Furey, on the tin whistle. That was Charlie’s instrument.

His friends originally started The Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund as a scholarship fund for young Charlie. “But I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” says Nancy. “Charlie would have wanted to help other people and selfishly, I wanted people to remember him—people forget so quickly—so I wanted something in his name that would continue what he did.”

What he did: Sandy-haired, “cuddly”—“He would say a little cuddly, he wouldn’t say chubby or anything,” laughs Nancy—with a perpetual grin and impish twinkle in his blue eyes, Charlie Dunlop was, by all accounts, the first one to lend a helping hand when it was needed.

“Charlie always helped, he’d always given to everything, every cause, when he was asked—and most of the time no one had to ask,” says Nancy, who was “fixed up” with Charlie by her mother when Nancy was bartending at the family tavern, McFadden’s, in Upper Darby, and Charlie was their electrician. (“She said I had to meet this buy because he was so cute and I said, ‘Mom, if you like him I’m not going to,’ but she loved him to death and thought there was nobody better. She was right,” Nancy laughs.)

“He sponsored people here, he hired young Irish and trained them,” Nancy says. “He was genuine and kind, very friendly—he would have talked to anybody, honestly—made friends very easily and never wanted anything in return. He cared about people.”

Need someone to talk to at 2 in the morning? “Charlie was a 2 AM friend,” said Patricia Crossan, who met Charlie Dunlop when they were both new immigrants 25 years ago. “And after you finished talking to him you’d think everything would be fine because Charlie told you everything would be fine.”

Need a ticket back home to Ireland to see an ailing relative? It was Charlie Dunlop who wrote out a check without blinking. “We all think we would like to be like that, but when it came down to writing out a check for $1,300 most people would balk. Not Charlie,” says Jake Quinn, a contractor from Huntington Valley, who also grew up in Donaghmore. Though Jake is closer in age to Charlie’s dad, Sean, the two became very close friends, bonding over their mutual loves, including Gaelic football and, having both experienced “the Troubles” firsthand, the dream of a united Ireland.

“Most people remember Charlie for the incredible generosity he had with his time and his treasure,” says Quinn. “And you would have never heard anything like, ‘this man owes me this’and this man owes me that.’ That wasn’t Charlie.”

You apparently didn’t have to know Charlie for long before you succumbed to his personal gravitational pull. After his death, new friends from the marina on the Eastern Shore of Maryland where Charlie and Nancy kept their boat sought out Charlie’s parents in Ireland, Sean and Ann, to express their condolences. “They’d really only known him a few months but here were these people, ringing our house and telling us about the son we had,” says Sean, who, with his wife, flew to the US last week to participate in the memorial event. “But that was typical. Everyone who came to the viewing said he did this, or he did that. It was very, very comforting for us. I can tell you that if a father wanted a good son, we got him. He was good to everyone he met.”

Those same new Eastern Shore friends also held a memorial in which they set green, white, and yellow lanterns afloat on the Chesapeake, says Jake Quinn. “There was a beautiful little ceremony on the beach and the people there told me that until Charlie came, they really didn’t know each other, but they all gravitated toward Charlie because he was so much fun, so they got to know each other.”

By its very name, a memorial is meant to keep a memory alive. In Charlie Dunlop’s case, the Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund is designed to keep a spirit alive. For as long as it lasts, Charlie Dunlop will still be lending a hand. “It will be an emergency fund, if something happens to someone like what happened to us, someone needs an emergency flight home, when something goes wrong,” says Nancy. “It’s actually perfect. It’s something Charlie would have absolutely wanted to be involved in.”

News, People

A Tribute to a Man Who “Made Everyone Feel Important”

The late Charlie Dunlop.

The late Charlie Dunlop.

“People will forget what you said. People will forget what you did.

But people will never forget how you made them feel.” – Maya Angelou

It says a lot about a man when the people he ran into at the convenience store where he bought his coffee every morning turn up at his viewing to pay their respects.

That was Charlie Dunlop.

Dunlop, a native of Donagmore, County Tyrone who lived in Havertown, died of a sudden heart attack on November 28, 2011, at the age of 45, leaving behind a wife, Nancy, a son, “wee Charlie,” now 7, and hundreds of people who could say, as one did, “Charlie Dunlop always made you feel important.”

“There are a lot of things you don’t remember, but one thing stuck in my mind, and that was meeting people I didn’t know at Charlie’s viewing who told me, ‘Oh, we know Charlie from the Wawa,’” says Nancy. “That was where he got his coffee every morning. We didn’t have a coffee maker and I said, well maybe we should get one, and Charlie said no, it was his thing to go to Wawa every morning and say hi to everyone, so we never got one. That’s the way he was, he was always laughing and telling stories, just pleasant to be around. After Charlie had passed, I had someone say to me that they thought he was so special because when you spoke to him you had all of his attention. He made everyone feel important.”

Even the customers of his electrical contracting business who flooded Nancy Dunlop’s mailbox with cards and letters, who cried with her on the phone. “They all said that he wasn’t just their electrician, he was their friend,” she recalls. “I’ve kept all those notes from my son so he could see how much people loved his father.”

Last Saturday, March 30, some of the people who loved Charlie Dunlop—there were 500 of them—paid $100 a ticket to attend a banquet to raise money to continue the work he did in the community. The opening ceremonies included everything that Charlie loved: family, GAA sports, Irish culture and music, and a united Ireland. Representatives from each of Ireland’s 32 counties carried their county’s flag into the ballroom of the Springfield Country Club along with jerseys from each of the county GAA teams. Charlie Dunlop was instrumental in founding the Tyrone Gaelic Football Club in Philadelphia which, after a hiatus of a few years, is being resurrected this year. His son was presented with a jersey from the St. Patrick’s GAA in County Tyrone which his grandfather brought with him from Ireland. It was the only jersey they had left and, ironically, it carried Charlie’s old number.

His old band mates from Clan Ceoil, John “Lefty” Kelly and Pat Kildea, played, as did Blackthorn. But the tunes that brought many to tears came from Bridget Reilly, playing Charlie’s favorite tunes, including “The Lonesome Boatman,” a slow air composed by Finbar Furey, on the tin whistle. That was Charlie’s instrument.

His friends originally started The Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund as a scholarship fund for young Charlie. “But I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” says Nancy. “Charlie would have wanted to help other people and selfishly, I wanted people to remember him—people forget so quickly—so I wanted something in his name that would continue what he did.”

What he did: Sandy-haired, “cuddly”—“He would say a little cuddly, he wouldn’t say chubby or anything,” laughs Nancy—with a perpetual grin and impish twinkle in his blue eyes, Charlie Dunlop was, by all accounts, the first one to lend a helping hand when it was needed.

“Charlie always helped, he’d always given to everything, every cause, when he was asked—and most of the time no one had to ask,” says Nancy, who was “fixed up” with Charlie by her mother when Nancy was bartending at the family tavern, McFadden’s, in Upper Darby, and Charlie was their electrician. (“She said I had to meet this buy because he was so cute and I said, ‘Mom, if you like him I’m not going to,’ but she loved him to death and thought there was nobody better. She was right,” Nancy laughs.)

“He sponsored people here, he hired young Irish and trained them,” Nancy says. “He was genuine and kind, very friendly—he would have talked to anybody, honestly—made friends very easily and never wanted anything in return. He cared about people.”

Need someone to talk to at 2 in the morning? “Charlie was a 2 AM friend,” said Patricia Crossan, who met Charlie Dunlop when they were both new immigrants 25 years ago. “And after you finished talking to him you’d think everything would be fine because Charlie told you everything would be fine.”

Need a ticket back home to Ireland to see an ailing relative? It was Charlie Dunlop who wrote out a check without blinking. “We all think we would like to be like that, but when it came down to writing out a check for $1,300 most people would balk. Not Charlie,” says Jake Quinn, a contractor from Huntington Valley, who also grew up in Donaghmore. Though Jake is closer in age to Charlie’s dad, Sean, the two became very close friends, bonding over their mutual loves, including Gaelic football and, having both experienced “the Troubles” firsthand, the dream of a united Ireland.

“Most people remember Charlie for the incredible generosity he had with his time and his treasure,” says Quinn. “And you would have never heard anything like, ‘this man owes me this’and this man owes me that.’ That wasn’t Charlie.”

You apparently didn’t have to know Charlie for long before you succumbed to his personal gravitational pull. After his death, new friends from the marina on the Eastern Shore of Maryland where Charlie and Nancy kept their boat sought out Charlie’s parents in Ireland, Sean and Ann, to express their condolences. “They’d really only known him a few months but here were these people, ringing our house and telling us about the son we had,” says Sean, who, with his wife, flew to the US last week to participate in the memorial event. “But that was typical. Everyone who came to the viewing said he did this, or he did that. It was very, very comforting for us. I can tell you that if a father wanted a good son, we got him. He was good to everyone he met.”

Those same new Eastern Shore friends also held a memorial in which they set green, white, and yellow lanterns afloat on the Chesapeake, says Jake Quinn. “There was a beautiful little ceremony on the beach and the people there told me that until Charlie came, they really didn’t know each other, but they all gravitated toward Charlie because he was so much fun, so they got to know each other.”

By its very name, a memorial is meant to keep a memory alive. In Charlie Dunlop’s case, the Charlie Dunlop Memorial Fund is designed to keep a spirit alive. For as long as it lasts, Charlie Dunlop will still be lending a hand. “It will be an emergency fund, if something happens to someone like what happened to us, someone needs an emergency flight home, when something goes wrong,” says Nancy. “It’s actually perfect. It’s something Charlie would have absolutely wanted to be involved in.”