How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Wearing her team on her cheek.

Wearing her team on her cheek.

Irish music and real estate dominate this week’s events in Irish Philadelphia.

Dine and dance on Saturday night at the Irish Center with the Galway Society, holding it’s annual dinner dance featuring the music of the Vince Gallagher Band.

Also on Saturday, Timlin and Kane are performing at Catherine Rooney’s in Wilmington.

On Monday, learn why investing in Irish property is a good business move at a special workshop at The Union League in Philadelphia, sponsored by the Irish American Business Chamber and Network. Pretty sure they’re not going to be talking about thatched cottages, but you never know.

Get your reserves in asap for Irish harper Maire Ni Chathasaigh and English acoustic guitarist Chris Newman who will be doing a house concert on Wednesady in Center City at the home of musicians Gabriel Donohue and Marian Makins. It’s their livingroom, so seats are limited.

The Celtic Tenors will be in nearby Millville, NJ on Thursday at the Levoy Theater.

On Friday, take yourself out to the ballgame. It’s Irish Heritage Night at the Phillies, with lots of Irish musicians and dancers to enliven the evening.

Two local groups are debuting some new material from upcoming albums this week. On Friday, Burning Bridget Cleary will be performing at Steel City Coffee House, a cozy venue in Phoenixville. Then on Saturday, The John Byrne Band will be at another cozy venue, the Tin Angel on Second Street in Philadelphia, playing songs and tunes fresh from the recording studio. Expect a new CD from them come September.

On Sunday, May 18, join the Donegal Association at a fundraiser at the Irish Center to help St. Columba’s Church in Glenswilly, County Donegal, make some much needed repairs. It’s not seen quite as much these days, but it’s been traditional for Irish immigrants to maintain ties with their home parish and to help in fundraising efforts. This is your chance to experience that.

And to all you Irish mammies out there, Happy Mother’s Day!

Music

Celtic Thunder’s Emmet Cahill Coming to The Irish Center

Emmet Cahill, going solo.

Emmet Cahill, going solo.

One of the things that happens when you join a popular music group already in progress is that you inherit their fans. In the case of Celtic Thunder, you inherit the “Thunderheads,” as they’re called, admirers so devoted they’ll travel to other countries and continents at great expense to see their “boys” perform.

That’s what happened to Emmet Cahill when he was chosen to join the theatrical Irish singing group in 2010 at the age of 20. The adulation was an eye-opener. “When I first walked on stage and heard the cheering I was looking around for who they were cheering for,” he admits.

How did he cope?

“Oh it was awful, absolutely terrible, I’m still recovering from the emotional scars,” laughs Cahill, now the ripe old age of 24 and launching his first American tour of his solo career which will bring him to Philadelphia’s Irish Center on Wednesday, May 27. “Of course, it was absolutely brilliant!”

He’s talking by phone from his family home in Mullingar, County Westmeath, where he’s preparing his set list for the tour. “There’s sheet music all over,” he says. “You caught me in mid-destruction, as my mam likes to call it.”

Celtic Thunder was started in 2007 by producer Sharon Browne and musical director Phil Coulter, an experiment to see if five different voices from men of different ages (from 14 to 44 at one point) would meld. They melded just fine. The group has released 11 albums, appeared on countless PBS specials, and was Billboard’s top world album artist for three years.

Over the years, members have come and gone. Paul Byrom, Damien McGinty, and George Donaldson are probably the best known of the former singing mates who’ve moved on to solo careers. Sadly, Donaldson, who performed frequently in Philadelphia, died suddenly last year of a heart attack at the age of 46. Cahill had left the group by the time of Donaldson’s death, but he rejoined them for a tribute tour to the man they called “Big George” in Australia last year and was on the group’s most recent fan cruise in November.

Cahill grew up in a musical family—his father is a music teacher and both parents sing. He started piano when he was four and his mother had him in voice training at the age of seven. “When I was 12 I was still a boy soprano and I won a music scholarship to high school,” he says. “I also took up guitar and violin as well. I was quite busy as you can imagine.”

He always had his sights set on a solo career in music. In 2010, he was at the Royal Irish Academy of Music studying opera and theater where he was awarded the John McCormack Bursary for the most promising young tenor, named the most promising young singer at the Academy, and was a multiple prize winner at the National Feis Ceoil singing competition.

Then to his own surprise he found himself auditioning for Celtic Thunder. “I knew nothing about Celtic Thunder and I didn’t even want to do it but my Dad pushed me into it,” says Cahill. He thinks the fact that he really didn’t know what he was getting into—and was reluctant to even do it—curbed any audition stress he might have felt that would have affected his performance. They grabbed him up. “I guess those are the ones you get, the ones you don’t care about,” he says, laughing. “It helps when you walk in and you’re easy going.”

Though someone as musically gifted as Cahill might be dreaming of the rock star life, the 24-year-old was classically trained and raised on old recordings of famed Irish tenor John McCormack, who was also from Westmeath, operatically trained and enormously popular in both Europe and the US in the early 20th century.

So there are plenty of McCormack songs among the sheet music Cahill is using to build his set list. “I like to think I’m following in his footsteps,” says Cahill. “He made a career in America singing Irish songs. He was so well-loved in the States. So I’m going to be singing some of the songs he made famous during my tour.”

Songs like “I Hear You Calling,” and “Macushla” – don’t worry if you don’t think you know them. You’ve probably heard them and can even download McCormack’s versions from iTunes to refresh your memory.

“I’ll be doing Irish favorites, like ‘I’ll Take You Home, Kathleen,’ and I’m known for singing the likes of ‘Danny Boy.’ In Celtic Thunder, it was my big solo song,” he says.

Expect some Rogers and Hammerstein, some gospel music (when he’s home he’s the cantor at Mullingar Cathedral) and, when he picks up the guitar, some old folk tunes. “I do modern songs as well,” he adds. “I want there to be something for everyone, from grandparents to kids.”

While he’s inherited a tight fan base from Celtic Thunder, his goal for his US tour is to introduce himself to Thunder fans and others who may not know that he’s also a good storyteller (“I have no trouble getting up telling embarrassing stories about myself and my childhood. Most of them are fresh in the memory,” he quips, giving himself a jab about his age.) and to create new fans—Emmet Cahill fans. He hopes the smaller venues for his US tour will let fans get to know him, up close and personal.

“I’m really looking forward meeting people and letting them get to see me up close. I know from my Celtic Thunder experience, especially from the cruises, that that’s something people are interested in. They ask me, ‘Emmet, what do you do when you’re off?’ They’re sometimes more interested in that than the songs I’m singing. When I’m up on stage, I want people to feel that they know me, that I’m a guy they could go have a beer with.”

And, he says, that’s not out of the question. “There’s no barrier. If you walk up to me in the street to have a chat and ask me how it’s going I’ll tell you if it’s good or going crap,” he laughs. “I think people see me as a young fella from Ireland singing songs and having a bit of craic.”

Which, of course, is what he is. And enjoying every second of it. “What other job gives you the opportunity to bring happiness to people?” he says. “I want to do that as long as possible.”

Catch Emmet Cahill at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, Philadelphia, PA 19119, on Wednesday, May 27, at 7;30 PM. Order tickets here. 

News, People

“I Lost My Dance Partner”

Ed and Mary Reavy as most usually saw them.

Ed and Mary Reavy as most usually saw them.

A group of Irish musicians, led by 87-year-old Tyrone native Kevin McGillian and his sons John and Jimmy, were playing dance music at the front of St. Kevin’s Church in Springfield on Tuesday morning, as hundreds filed in to pay their last respects to Ed Reavy Jr.

Dance music at a funeral? Ed Reavy would have loved it. In fact, he would have been up there in front of the church, kicking up his heels with his wife, Mary. And it wouldn’t have been the first time the Reavys danced in the aisle of church, as Father John McNamee noted in his homily during the Mass of Christian Burial for the 89-year-old Reavy, who was known as a teacher of ceili dance teachers in the Philadelphia area.

The former pastor of St. Malachy’s Church in North Philadelphia, which was built by Irish immigrants, recalled one November Sunday at the annual fundraising concert in the church organized by famed Irish musician and folklorist Mick Moloney. Something—the sound or the lights—wasn’t working.

“So I got up in the pulpit and announced that the show wasn’t going to start on time, but it might make the time pass if Ed and Mary Reavy got up and danced for us,” recalled the priest. “Mary poked Ed in his side and they got up and danced in the aisle till the concert began. That took a lot of courage.”

Ed Reavy Jr. died last week after a long illness. He was confined to wheelchair, living at the Broomall Presbyterian Village; he hadn’t danced for years. But in the minds and memories of those who came to say goodbye to him, he was still dancing and would forever be. To each person who came to touch her hand or wrap their arms around her, Mary Reavy said tearfully, “I lost my dance partner.”

Many recalled the tap shoes he wore. “He wore those clip shoes up the aisle at his son’s wedding,” said longtime friend Jim McNicholas whose wife and Ed’s first wife were cousins. “All you could hear as he walked was clip, clip, clip.”

And they remembered his stories. His father, the late Cavan-born fiddler Ed Reavy, considered one of the greatest composers of Irish traditional music in the 20th century, was known for his prodigious memory for tunes. One melody would remind him of another and it seemed he could go all night, fiddling the songs of his homeland and the ones he wrote that reminded him of home. His son told stories the same way, in a chain, as one reminded him of another and another.

When her daughter, Caitlin Finley, was a young fiddler, said Denys Everingham, “Ed took an interest in her as he did all the young musicians he liked to encourage. He would talk to her about all her musical mentors at the time. He told her stories about how he used to sit on the stairway of their house and listen to them playing downstairs with his father. She gave him a CD of friend who was an All-Ireland fiddler—he really knew a good fiddler when he heard one—and he commented on how good his slow airs were. Then he told her about a pretty famous fiddler he knew. ‘He couldn’t do a slow air to save his life,’ he told her. That really made us laugh. He had several copies of his father’s tunes left and he gave one to Caitlin. He did so much to promote the music and the culture. He really touched a lot of people.”

He’s credited with helping revive ceili dancing, a form of Irish country dancing, in the Delaware Valley in the 1970s, when Irish music regained a foothold in the region’s Irish community. The dances were staple stuff at Reavy house parties and at the many dance halls in Philadelphia where the Irish would gather, like 69th Street and Connelly’s on Broad Street. Many of the people who teach it today learned from Reavy. And dance was brought Ed, then a widower, together with Mary McGoff, who took lessons from him and became his wife.

“I really remember his dancing,” said Lorraine McDade Kelly, whose late sister, Maureen, founded the McDade School of Irish Dance in Delaware County. “He would kick his heels up really high.” She smiled at the memory. “I got to know him because my dad, Jimmy McDade, was a musician who played with his father. And I would see him at the nursing home. On or around St. Patrick’s Day, Irish musicians would show up to play for him and the other residents. Once he gave me a photo of my Dad that he found, and he was such a story teller, he could tell me the whole story of where it was and what was going on when it was taken.”

The Reavys, particularly Ed’s brother Joe, dedicated their lives to keep their father’s music and name alive. Reavy compositions were being passed from musician to musician and in some cases, attributed to other composers or “anonymous.” In the 1960s, Joe Reavy began transcribing and annotating their father’s tunes from the elder Reavy’s homemade 78s and that remarkable memory. Joe produced the first Ed Reavy songbook in 1980.

The last of Ed Jr.’s 17 visits to Ireland came in 2010 when, with Mary, he was the guest of honor at a tribute concert to his father at the Fleadh Choeil in County Cavan where the first annual Ed Reavy Sr. Traditional Music Festival will be held October 15-18 this year in Cootehill and Cavan Town. (See below for some photos from that event, graciously provided to us by the Ed Reavy Festival committee.The other photos are from our archives.)

On May 15, Mick Moloney, who first recorded Ed Reavy Sr. in the 1970s, will be speaking at a special program at the Cavan County Museum on “Ed Reavy: His Music, His Legacy” to kick off the festival.

Bill McKenty—always “Brother Bill” to Reavy—met the man who became his close friend of more than 20 years when McKenty, a ground water scientist by training, was playing in a session at The Bards pub in Philadelphia in the early 1990s. “A gentleman sits next to me and says, ‘that’s good soundin’ flute playing,’’ recalls McKenty. “I said thanks and went up to get a glass of water and someone says, ‘You know who that is, don’t you? That’s Ed Reavy.’ So when I went back I played one of his father’s tunes.”

They started chatting and, as often happened to Ed Reavy, the shared love of music created a friendship. “We started trading music, becoming friends. I did a website for him,” said McKenty. “He’s of that generation where a computer is not appropriate in a home, so he put it in the closet and had a little chair there. We got him a dial-up internet account, and soon he was surfing, burning CDs, having a lot of fun.”

In recent years, Reavy also struck up a friendship with a 15-year-old dancer and fiddler from Tennessee, says McKenty. “His father’s music connected him to this young lady. Somehow she got his number at the nursing home and over the last two to two-and-a-half years they developed a special friendship over the phone. She was so sweet to him, but they never met. But he hooked her up with all kinds of people to help her with her playing, the Brian Conways, Eileen Ivers and Tony DeMarcos of the world. She was devastated when she learned he had died.”

The other memory McKenty cherishes of his friend was the relationship Reavy had with Mary. Reavy’s daughter, Erin Reavy Fredericks, in her eulogy, read by her step-sister’s husband, James Dale, acknowledged the strong bond between her father and her stepmother.

“I know he hung on as long as he did because of your special love,” she wrote in the tribute to her father, who she recalled as a loving father “who showed up to Girl Scout meeting before that was acceptable, tied my shoes, taught me to ride a bike, throw a ball and recognize a good deal at a garage sale.”

“Talk about a marriage,” said McKenty. “That was one where you reach for the stars and they got it. Did you see his poem?”

In the booklet handed out at the funeral Mass was a poem Reavy wrote for Mary called “Rock,” that begins, “I will never forget the first time I saw you, just as I cannot forget when I knew I did not want to go through life without you.”

It ends, presciently, “I have greed of your time and your space within by being in dread of the spectre of life without you so, I entreat that I be taken before your time need I beg the fairness of this could I manage sanity without my Rock.”

“That’s the way he was,” says McKenty. “Vociferously in love with her. It was puppy love, all that and more. I wish I had that. I’ll miss him greatly.”

Along with his wife, Mary, Ed Reavy Jr. is survived by his son, Edward P. Reavy (the late Linda) and his daughter, Erin Fredericks (Michael); his brothers Joseph and George (Pat) and sister, Eileen Carr. He is also survived by his grandchildren Thomas and Cara Fredericks and Colleen Reavy Karpinski (Mark) and Kevin Reavy; his great-grandchildren Emma and Alexander Karpinski; his step-grandchildren Lauren Ashley, Gavin, Brian, Austin and Dalton Coigne and Matthew, Maureen, Patrick and Maeve Dale and his step-great-grandchildren Catherine, Cailin, Patrick and Caroline Ashley.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that contributions be made in his memory to the Wounded Warrior Project, PO Box 758517, Topeka, KS. 66675

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

You'll kick up your heels at the Philly Fleadh this Saturday.

You’ll kick up your heels at the Philly Fleadh this Saturday.

Are you feeling the excitement? I am. There are two great music events this weekend. I think we should mash them together and call them the Irish Woodstock, but without all the rain, mud, and bad acid.

On Saturday, it’s the Philadelphia Fleadh (pronounced “flah”—in Irish, many letters are silent) which was moved two weeks ago from its original Pennypack Park location to Cherokee Festival Grounds, 1 Declaration Drive, in Bensalem.

Jamison Celtic Rock’s Frank Daly and CJ Mills, who make up the production company American Paddy’s Productions, have brought in a stellar lineup of performers, incuding the Mahones. They’re an Irish punk band from Canada that’s been around for two decades and have some serious awards under their belts (Best Punk Album for “The Black Irish” from the Independent Music Awards) and even some cinema cred (if you saw the Academy Award-winning movie “The Fighter” with Mark Wahlberg, you heard them in the climactic fight scene). Even if you think you don’t like punk rock, you’re probably going to enjoy it with a little Irish seasoning. Trust me.

Also on the bill, our own homegrown (well, via Dubin) John Byrne Band; Raymond Coleman (stolen from Tyrone); the wickedly funny and musically talented Seamus Kennedy; the high-energy Kilmaine Saints; two bands that never seem to take a break, The Broken Shillelaghs and the Birmingham Six; Killen-Clark (wait till you hear Kim Killen sing—she’ll give you goosebumps); Jamison Celtic Rock, of course; and a host of trad performers including All-Ireland winner Alex Weir with accordion player Mikey McComiskey.

Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann, a worldwide organization dedicated to promoting Irish music and culture, will be hosting a ceili at 1 and 3 PM so you’ll get your chance to do some traditional Irish dancing. (Never done it before? Ask them to do the Siege of Ennis—even I can do that one.)

And to complete the Irish experience, there will be a feis (pronounced “fesh”—in Irish, sometimes letters are also missing)which is a competition of Irish stepdancers. It’s open to all dancers.

There are also vendors selling both merchandise, food, soft drinks, and beer.

Tickets are $30 at the door. For more information, go to the Fleadh site.  To see last year’s fun, look at the photos below.

By the way, May 2 has been designated “Mayo Day,” so if you see someone from Mayo, give them a big hug and a kiss.

Part two of the Irish Woodstock is on Sunday at Marty Magee’s Pub in Prospect Park. Musicians including John Byrne, Galway Guild, Mary Malone and Den Vykopal, Paraic Keane, Vince Gallagher and Robbie Furlong, Diarmuid MacSuibhne, Mike Fahy, Scott McClatchy and more will be playing everything from folk to rock to trad to raise money for the Sunday Irish radio shows on WTMR 800AM.  Listen here on Sunday from 11 AM to 1 PM. Radio host Marianne MacDonald is queen of the raffle baskets so there will lots of great prizes, guaranteed. A recent on-air fundraiser brought in more than $10,000 for the shows which the hosts, including Vince Gallagher, pay for themselves. (Nah, nobody’s getting rich promoting Irish culture except maybe Bono.)

If neither of these events piques your interest (so, what are you doing reading this?), you might be intrigued by Belfast-born Keith Getty, a Christian singer-songwriter, who will be performing at a free luncheon at Proclamation Presbyterian Church in Bryn Mawr on Saturday, May 2, from noon to 2 PM. One lucky attendee will win two tickets to see Keith and wife Kristyn’s debut at the Kimmel Center’s Verizon Hall (yes, they can fill it) as part of their “Joy: a Christmas Tour” this year.

Also on Sunday, there’s a beef-and-beer fundraiser at the Philadelphia Ballroom in Philadelphia for John Sweeney, a physical therapist who traces his ancestry to Tyrone and Donegal, and who is struggling to regain his mobility after life-altering spinal surgery. The proceeds will help ease the financial burden of his ongoing rehabilitation.

Do a good thing on Sunday. There’s an Irish Tay-Sachs screening at 3 PM at the Haverford YMCA in Havertown. Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia is conducting a study on the prevalence of genetic markers for this deadly disease that strikes babies in people of Jewish, French Canadian, and Irish descent. There have been three cases of Tay-Sachs in the Philadelphia area, all children born to parents of Irish heritage who carry the gene. I got tested. It doesn’t hurt and it could help others avoid the heartache of losing a child little by little to this terrible disease.

On Tuesday, there’s a special Irish tribute to Philadelphia Councilman Bobby Henon (he’s Johnny-on-the-spot for many Irish wants and needs in the city) at the FOP Lodge #5 in Northeast Philadelphia. There will be food, drinks, and entertainment. Someone needs to play some Mummers’ music that evening. I saw him strut with St. Patrick’s Day Parade Director Michael Bradley at the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick dinner-dance this year, and he is quite the dancer.

On Wednesday, genealogist Frank Southcott (a specialist in Chester County history) will be conducting a workshop on searching for your Irish ancestors at the Bethlehem Public Library between 6:30 and 8 PM.

Then, on Thursday, bingo! The Young Ireland Gaelic Football Club is sponsoring a night of bingo to help raise money for the club. Prizes are co-ed so guys, don’t be afraid. You won’t be playing for purses. It’s at the Highland Park Firehouse in Upper Darby.

Check our calendar for more details and check back during the week for late-breaking events. We’re adding to the calendar just about every day.

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How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

That's camogie.

That’s camogie.

It’s a sporting weekend in Irish Philadelphia. On Saturday, there’s a beef-and-beer fundraiser at Daly’s Pub in Philadelphia for the Shamrocks Youth Camogie Team. Camogie is the feminine side of the Irish sport of hurling and there hasn’t been a camogie team in Philly in recent memory. You can see some of our photos from the camogie finals at the National GAA Championship games in Philadelphia a few years ago at the bottom of this page.

On Sunday, the Glenside Gaelic Club is opening its 2015 season at the Bishop McDevitt High School grounds.

For you music lovers in Jersey, the John Byrne Band is giving a free concert at the Burlington County Library Ampitheater in Westhampton Township on Sunday afternoon, starting at 2.

This coming Thursday, the Irish and the British make up. Well, sort of. The Irish American Business Chamber and Network is holding a networking event with the British American Business Council at the Trestle Inn in Philadelphia. There will be a panel discussion about corporate social responsibility.

Also on Thursday, the group Carbon Leaf, a fusion of Americana, bluegrass and Celtic flavors, is performing at the Sellersville Theatre.

On Friday—the first Friday of May—join the Paul Moore Band at their usual spot, Brittingham’s in Lafayette Hill.

And mark your calendars: Saturday, May 2, is the Philadelphia Fleadh, a day of music, ceili dancing, kids’ events, a dance feis, vendors, this year in a new location, the Cherokee Festival Grounds, 1 Declaration Drive, in Bensalem. You’ll hear music from the Mahones, The John Byrne Band, Jamison, the Birmingham Six, the Broken Shillelaghs, Galway Guild, Seamus Kennedy and more. Bring your lawn chairs and blankets and enjoy the day.

On Sunday, May 3, join another group of local trad and Celtic rock musicians, including John Byrne, the Derry Brigade, Galway Guild, Paraic Keane and more, at Marty Magee’s Pub in Prospect Park to help raise money for the Sunday Irish radio shows: Vincent Gallagher’s Irish Hour and Come West Along the Road hosted by Marianne MacDonald. This is your chance to enjoy another day of Irish music and see the magnificent Irish mural painted on the side of Marty Magee’s.

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News, People

Philly Parade Winners Get Their Just Rewards

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Sister Mary McNulty accepts the St. Frances de Sales prize with gusto. Behind her is Parade Director Michael Bradley.

One wall of the Second Street Irish Society’s third floor pub is given over to parade awards, and on Thursday night, they had the nail in place for the latest. The South Philly Irish-American organization won the James P. “Jim” Kilgallen Award for the organization that best exemplifies Irish unity by charitable works both in the US and abroad.

They also get the award for throwing a great party. Parade winners enjoyed some authentic Irish fare in the hall, with its glazed brick walls and dark wood floors, and danced to the sounds of the Bogside Rogues.

Sixteen individuals and organizations listed below took home plaques for their parade entries. See bottom of the page for photos of the event.

Hon. James H.J. Tate Award
(Founded 1980, this was named the Enright Award Prior to 1986)
Sponsored by: Mike Driscoll & Michael Bradley
Group that Best Exemplified the Spirit of the Parade
Christina Ryan Kilcoyne School of Irish Dance

Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley Award (Founded 1980)
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
Sponsored by: AOH Division 39 Msgr. Thomas J. Rilley
Irish of Havertown

George Costello Award (Founded 1980)
Organization with the Outstanding Float in the Parade
Sponsored by: The Irish Society
Cavan Society

Hon. Vincent A. Carroll Award (Founded 1980)
Outstanding Musical Unit Excluding Grade School Bands:
Sponsored by: John Dougherty
Marching Phoenix Band (Hartford Conn.)

Anthony J. Ryan Award (Founded 1990)
Outstanding Grade School Band
Sponsored by: The Ryan Family
St. Francis DeSales Catholic School

Walter Garvin Award (Founded 1993)
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group
Sponsored by: Walter Garvin Jr.
Coyle School of Irish Dance

Marie C. Burns Award (Founded 2003)
Outstanding Adult Dance Group
Sponsored by: Philadelphia Emerald Society
Temple University Irish Dance Team

Joseph E. Montgomery Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding AOH and/or LAOH Divisions
Sponsored by: AOH Div. 65 Joseph E. Montgomery
AOH / LAOH Division 61

Joseph J. “Banjo” McCoy Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding Fraternal Organization
Sponsored by: Schuylkill Irish Society
Cairdeas Irish Brigade

James F. Cawley Parade Director’s Award (Founded 2006)
Outstanding Irish Performance or Display Chosen by the Parade Director
Sponsored by: AOH Division 87 Port Richmond
McDade / Cara School of Irish Dance

Father Kevin C. Trautner Award (Founded 2008)
Outstanding School or Religious Organization that displays their Irish Heritage while promoting Christian Values
Sponsored by: Kathy McGee Burns
St. Patrick’s Parish (Malvern, PA)

Maureen McDade McGrory Award (Founded 2008)
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group Exemplifying the Spirit of Irish Culture through Traditional Dance.
Sponsored by: McDade School of Irish Dance
Broesler School of Irish dance

James P. “Jim” Kilgallen Award (Founded 2011)
Outstanding organization that best exemplifies the preservation of Irish-American unity through charitable endeavors to assist those less fortunate at home and abroad.
Sponsored by: Michael Bradley
Second Street Irish Society

Mary Theresa Dougherty Award (Founded 2012)
Outstanding organization dedicated to serving the needs of God’s people in the community.
Sponsored by: St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association Board
Malvern Retreat House

Paul J. Phillips Jr. Award (Founded 2012)
Outstanding parade marshal.
Sponsored by: Robert M. Gessler
Patrick Conneen
John Bradley

Phillip ‘Knute’ Bonner Award (Founded 2013)
Award given to the outstanding organization dedicated to preserve our freedom and protect us through sacrifice and compassion for others.
Sponsored by: Mary Beth Bonner Ryan
Pro Life Union

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News, People

Looking for a Fundraiser Idea? Bingo!

Maureen Smyth calls a number.

Maureen Smyth calls a number.

“I’ve never done this before so googled how to call Bingo,” said Maureen Smyth, as she took her place behind the small Bingo ball cage filled with multi-colored numbered balls at Maggie O’Neill’s Pub in Drexel Hill on Thursday night. “It said that the caller isn’t the most important thing in the game, that you shouldn’t speak in monotone and you shouldn’t make jokes or you can’t do the job. So let know how I’m doing.

“Oh,” she added, breaking one of the rules immediately, “if you or someone you know has a gambling problem, bring them to the next Irish Network-Philly Bingo night.”

And so it went all night. B 15, O 68, N 44, I “tirty-tree.”

“Oh, they told me not to use that one. Okay, I’m one and done,” laughed the tall, blond outgoing Smyth, owner of Havertown Auto Tags,cosponsor, with McCollum Insurance, of the first annual event.

But she wasn’t done. When one woman, sitting at the long tables in Maggie’s upstairs bar, groaned when her one remaining number wasn’t called, Smyth asked her “What number do you need?” The woman answered, and Smyth, without breaking stride, pulled another ball out of the cage and retorted, “Today’s not your day.”

Bingo was an out of the box choice for a fundraiser for Irish Network-Philadelphia, part of a nationwide networking group for people of Irish descent—usually professionals—to meet periodically to develop relationships, the kind that often translate into business success. They usually do it with monthly happy hours, where most of the minglers are still in their business suits. There were no business suits in evidence Thursday night.

“We were looking for something different to do,” said IN-Philly’s chair Bethanne Killian. “[Board member] Karen Boyce McCollum and I were talking about doing Quizzo, but then the Irish Center did a Quizzo fundraiser. So one of the other of us said, ‘The Irish love their Bingo.’” She looked around the room, where every table, booth, and bar stool was filled with people armed with Bingo daubers and two or three Bingo cards. She grinned. “The Irish love their Bingo.”

Yes we do. If you grew up with a weekly Bingo game at the parish hall, the good news is that Bingo is back, and it may still be in the parish hall. But this time, local Irish dance schools, sports clubs, charities, that scramble for operating money every year have taken it over and given it a twist.

The prize table may hold expensive handbags, bottles of booze and gift cards—and it’s going to be lucrative for both the winners and the sponsoring organizations. The grand prize at the IN-Philly Bingo event was a donated lavender beach bike (won at the end of the evening by Noreen Conley, wife of IN-Philly treasurer Chris Conley).

The Cummins School of Irish Dance and the Tara Gael Dancers, an adult Irish dance group, have both held successful “Designer Bag Bingo” events at parish halls. It’s become more popular in bars too. In fact, the Bingo set up that Maureen Smyth used was borrowed from Cawley’s Pub in Upper Darby. “They usually have their Bingo on Thursday nights too but fortunately they just stopped doing it for the spring,” said Karen Boyce McCollum.

The Bingo craze is infectious. On Thursday May 7, the Young Irelands Gaelic Football Club will be holding a fundraising “Bingo Blitz” at the Highland Park Fire Company at Park and Cedar Lanes in Upper Darby.

“We usually like to have a couple of fundraisers a year and Jessica Stevenson, a wife of one of the players came up with this fantastic idea,” says Trish Daly, a spokesperson for the Young Irelands. “I’ve been to many Bingo events in the last few months and they were all extremely popular and successful. I think people just love a night out with friends and the chance to win great prizes. And people just love playing Bingo!”

And, she adds, in usual Young Irelands’ style—this is the club that brought you male and female amateur boxers for a “Fight Night” fundraisers—“we’re doing it a little different and making it co-ed. This allows us to reach a lot more people and the prizes are much more interesting. But don’t worry, ladies. We still have handbags!”

See pictures from Thursday’s fun below.

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News

Philadelphia Fleadh Changes Location

You'll be buying a shirt like this at a new venue.

You’ll be buying a shirt like this at a new venue.

American Paddy’s Productions, producers of The Philadelphia Fleadh, announced on Friday, April 17, that the annual festival scheduled for May 2 will move from Pennypack Park in Northeast Philadelphia to The Cherokee Festival Grounds located at 1 Declaration Drive in Bensalem

The Cherokee Festival Grounds is a picturesque park with 15 acres nestled on the Neshaminy Creek surrounded by 30 beautiful acres of conserved land. The Cherokee Festival Grounds is home to The Cherokee Day Camp as well as some of Bucks County’s biggest festivals, including The Bucks County Food Truck Festival and The Giggles and Ghouls Fall Festival.

Promoter for American Paddy’s Productions, Frank Daly, said “The cost of keeping The Philly Fleadh in Philadelphia passed what we could afford with new regulations that were added this year concerning additional fencing, mandatory city workers, and added fees because alcohol is sold. In the 2 years we held the Philly Fleadh in Pennypack, we never had a single accident, arrest, or fight. We still aren’t sure why these additional fees and requirements were tacked on.”

CJ Mills, a Bensalem native, said “The Cherokee Festival Grounds was exactly what we were hoping for when thinking of an alternate location for The Philadelphia Fleadh. Moving to business friendly Bensalem allows us to attract not only our Philadelphia audience, but also makes it a closer ride for all of the people in Bucks County who might not have ventured into the city. The Cherokee family are people who see the value of a cultural festival and what they do year round is great for the community and families. We feel very grateful to be working with them.”

Bensalem Mayor Joe DiGirolomo is also very supportive of the event moving to his hometown, says Daly. DiGirolomo is no stranger to large events considering it was under his direction that The Bensalem Fall Festival and the Concert Series in the park at the TD Bank Amphitheater were started.

Other than the location, very little else will change for the May 2 event. The Philly Fleadh will still feature live music from The Mahones, Jamison Celtic Rock, The John Byrne Band, Seamus Kennedy, The Galway Guild, Birmingham Six, Broken Shilalaighs and more. There will also be a larger kids’ zone, 2 Ceilis, a traditional music session, an Irish dance feis, vendors with food, beer and apparel, and of course a great time for the Irish and those who want to pretend they are for the day.

Tickets for the Philadelphia Fleadh are $20 in advance, with group discounts over 10 people and kids 12 and under are free. To purchase tickets or get more information visit the Fleadh website.