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In Mount Holly, They Love a Parade

It was just a little cold.

It was just a little cold.

“Precious” had a boo-boo. As witness the tropical-themed multicolored foam ring around her neck. That didn’t stop her person, Arden Townsend, from decking her out in St. Patrick’s Day finery—a little plastic high hat and a charming green silk doggie t-shirt.

And amazingly, Precious didn’t seem to mind at all.

It wasn’t the most unusual sight at the Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade Saturday in Mount Holly.

Well, OK, maybe it was, but at this time of year there’s a lot of competition for “unusual.”

We’ve been covering St. Patrick’s Day in the Philly area so long, we’ve gotten used to even the most over-the-top top hat. Green hair? Ho hum. Shamrock deeply-bobbers? Fuhgeddaboudit.

That didn’t stop the folks along the parade route in Mount Holly from trying. Let’s face it, you have to be trying really hard to make a mummer look underdressed. The dude with the sparkly green tinsel wig sure pulled it off.

It was a bright but chilly day, and a lot of people along High Street wrapped themselves in blankets, but there’s something about a St. Patrick’s Day that leaves a warm feeling in your heart.

Or maybe it’s the Jameson’s.

Figure it out for yourself. Here are the pictures. More than 30 of ’em.

People

Ten Years Is the Charm

One happy baby enjoys the parade.

One happy baby enjoys the parade.

A little over 10 years ago, Jim Logue had a brainstorm: Hey, kids, let’s have a St. Patrick’s Day parade in Burlington County.

Logue didn’t know what he was getting himself into. He enlisted the aid of a friend, Scott Mahoney, who didn’t have a clue, either.

That first year, it was a pretty short parade, with just 17 units. When the 10th anniversary parade steps off tomorrow in downtown Mount Holly, in the neighborhood of 60 units will march down High Street, including pipe bands, local paddy rock bands on flatbeds, Irish dance schools, AOH divisions, and more.

Every year, of course, there’s a grand marshal. This year will be two: the two determined young fellas who co-founded the parade.

“Jim and l and I were both members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Tommy Maguire Division,” says Mahoney. “It was my first experience with the AOH. Right away, Jim was really into the idea of having a parade. I just went along for the ride.”

Scott Mahoney

Scott Mahoney

Logue and Mahoney have been instrumental in picking grand marshals year after year. Logue says the parade committee had often suggested that the two consider accepting the honor, but Logue always declined. Just running the parade was a massive undertaking, months in the planning. “We were just trying to keep things together. It never crossed our minds.”

Mahoney laughs when he recalls how the honor came their way. In the beginning, when they weren’t sure whether the parade would take off, they kidded other people on the committee about it. “We had kind of joked around about it. We said, if we make it to 10 years, we’ll be grand marshals. Once we mentioned it, people remembered.”

Logue says they kind of knew what was going on. Still, he says, being named grand marshal is a great honor—particularly when he thinks of all the grand marshals who went before.

His partner concurs.

Jim Logue

Jim Logue

“We have had some genuinely good people leading our parade. Being selected as grand marshal is something I’ll always remember, for sure.”

Typically, Logue emcees the parade from a platform at the bottom of the parade route. This year, he’s just going to sit back, take it all in—and try to relax.

“I’ll still be thinking: Is everything under control? The last few years, we got more and more people involved in the parade, and I know it’s gonna be even smoother this year. But still, in the back of my mind, I’m thinking: Is this gonna happen?”

People

A Look Back at the 2013 Mount Holly Parade

One of a flock of fiddlers in the parade

One of a flock of fiddlers in the parade

St. Patrick’s Day Parade-goers in Mount Holly bundled up but otherwise made no concession to the chilly 40-degree day. They certainly didn’t stay home Saturday afternoon. At the reviewing stand at the bottom of High Street, they stood two- and three-deep.

They had a lot to watch, from local bagpipe bands to Paddy rockers on floats (some of them wore kilts, too) to high-stepping Irish dancers. Scouts and Ancient Order of Hibernians members, fire engines, and at least one farm tractor also made the trek on what turned out to be a cool but (thankfully) dry day.

Of course, the spectators themselves, with their silly hats, green Mardi Gras beads and hair dyed green, are also worth watching.

Without further ado, here are the photos, and a video wrap-up of the day.

 

People

A Look Back at the 2013 Mount Holly Parade

One of a flock of fiddlers in the parade

One of a flock of fiddlers in the parade

St. Patrick’s Day Parade-goers in Mount Holly bundled up but otherwise made no concession to the chilly 40-degree day. They certainly didn’t stay home Saturday afternoon. At the reviewing stand at the bottom of High Street, they stood two- and three-deep.

They had a lot to watch, from local bagpipe bands to Paddy rockers on floats (some of them wore kilts, too) to high-stepping Irish dancers. Scouts and Ancient Order of Hibernians members, fire engines, and at least one farm tractor also made the trek on what turned out to be a cool but (thankfully) dry day.

Of course, the spectators themselves, with their silly hats, green Mardi Gras beads and hair dyed green, are also worth watching.

Without further ado, here are the photos, and a video wrap-up of the day.

Music, News

Gearing Up for the Mount Holly Parade

A scene from a recent Mount Holly parade.

A scene from a recent Mount Holly parade.

The area’s first St. Patrick’s Day Parade steps off on Saturday, March 2, at 1 p.m. in downtown Mount Holly.

With Grand Marshal Dr. Frank X. McAneny, Ed.D., leading the way down High Street, this parade features so many bagpipe bands, dance troupes, scout packs, Ancient Order of Hibernian divisions, paddy rock bands, and police and fire units, you’ll probably start to lose count.

Never fear, though: Parade organizer Jim Logue has matters well in hand. We snagged him for an interview at the recent Mid-Winter Scottish and Irish Festival.

People

A Blessing for a Peacemaker

Marie Hempsey

Marie Hempsey

Every summer, “marching season” comes to Northern Ireland. For several weeks, members of the Protestant unionist Orange Order parade through towns and cities, often through politically sensitive Catholic and nationalist neighborhoods. This contentious time of year culminates in a torrent of parades on July 12, celebrating Protestant King William of Orange’s bloody victory over the Catholic King James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

All of this drama plays out an ocean away, but for the 2012 Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day grand marshal, Marie Brady Hempsey of West Deptford, N.J., this divisive tradition strikes close to home, and for two reasons. First, because she’s the child of a Catholic father and a Protestant mother, both first-generation Irish; and second, because she is the mid-Atlantic coordinator for Project Children, which every summer transports more than 20 kids out of Northern Ireland to the Delaware Valley for a different kind of season—a season of peace.

(Note to readers: The Burlington County parade, originally scheduled for March 3, has been postponed to March 31, due to the threat of heavy rains and thunder.)

Hempsey, a Realtor and the mother of five, comes by her deep understanding of Northern Ireland divisions as a result of early childhood experience. Her father James Brady of Philadelphia’s Fairmount section and mother Florence (née McKnight) from Southwest Philadelphia met in October 1961 and eloped in January 1962. The Bradys embraced Florence, but the union didn’t go down well among the McKnights.

“It upset my mother’s parents more, to be honest with you,” says Hempsey. “My dad’s parents were deceased, but his family were much more accepting of her. Ultimately, the families did not get along. My grandmother (Mary McKnight, from Bushmills, County Antrim) was very hard-nosed against my father. It kind of destroyed my family, I didn’t get to know my cousins. I’m getting to know them now, and I know what wonderful people they are, but it took a while.”

Religious divisions were nowhere evident within her immediate family. In fact, Hempsey was brought up with no religious preference; she was left to decide for herself.

Decide she did in 1990, when her third child Kelly was very ill with a rare autoimmune disease that affected her lungs and her crippled her ability to breathe. “They had to put her on a vent, and people said she needed to be baptized,” Hempsey recalled. “I had a wonderful family and husband (Phi), but I knew something was missing. Father (James) Curran came to the house, and I asked him what I could do. He said, ‘Picture Jesus holding her,’ and I did. “That was my epiphany. I just knew I was meant to be a Catholic.”

Kelly’s survived the ordeal, by the way.

One life-changing experience would be enough for most people, but one more awaited Hempsey. It came in 1995, when she and her family were attending an Irish festival in Gloucester City. A nun by the name of Sister Frances Kirk, then the local coordinator for Project Children, was handing out fliers when she suddenly dropped them. Hempsey, her husband and the kids chased them all down and returned them to their rightful owner.

Before Hempsey knew it, she found herself pumping Sister Frances for information about Project Children. “I asked her about it, and when she told me, I said, ‘I want to do that!’ She said, ‘Send me an application and we’ll see what we can do.’”

A few years went by before the Hempseys were approved to host kids from Northern Ireland for the summer. Hempsey suspects Sister Frances held back because she knew there were five kids in the house already. “It probably looked to her like I already had my hands full.”

The Hempseys became a host family in 2000, taking in up to four kids every summer since, most of them multiple times, 11 kids in all. This summer, they’ll take in three kids, making for one packed household. Hempsey takes it in stride. “We’re a little crazy … fun crazy.”

Right from the start, Hempsey knew she was doing the right thing.

“For some reason, we always get the kids who are the ‘real deal.’ They have parents in prison, or had grandparents who were martyred. They send us a lot of kids from Belfast and Derry and Armagh.

“A lot of the kids’ parents we talk to say they can’t afford to take them away somewhere over the summer. If you’re a kid living in live in Ardoyne during marching season, you don’t get much of a summer. You know the parades are coming.”

Hosting fulfilled a need for Hempsey, a way to restore a bit of sanity to the lives of deserving kids. She wanted to do more.

From the start, Hempsey was an enthusiastic supporter of Project Children, and that enthusiasm evidently impressed Sister Frances. In 2004, Sister handed off the coordinator role to Hempsey.

“She said she prayed and prayed for someone to have the passion and drive to do this, and ‘God sent her me.’ That’s the best compliment I could have received.”

Given a lifetime of accomplishment and dedication to Irish causes—Hempsey is also historian and chairperson of immigration and legislation for the Ladies Ancient Order of Hibernians Camden County Division 1—it perhaps should not be very surprising that she was selected as this year’s Burlington County grand marshal. And the first woman grand marshal in the parade’s seven-year history, at that.

Really, only one person was surprised: Hempsey herself.

Now that it’s all sunk in, Hempsey plans to just enjoy and treasure the moment.

“I was absolutely shocked,” she says. “When I was told I was the grand marshal, I just laughed. I said, ‘What, are you kidding me?’ I’m honored. I really am.”

———

You can help support Project Children by attending the group’s annual benefit April 21 at the Richard T. Rossiter Memorial Hall in National Park. Tickets are $30. Call Hempsey at 609-330-4484 for details.

News

Video: The 2011 Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade

The Ireland Dancers

The Ireland Dancers

Well, we couldn’t shoot video of everybody and everything. Still, we think we’ve assembled a nice little sampler.

It includes Jamison, winners of a best Irish band contest, stopping to play in front of the reviewing stand. You’ll also see the DeNogla Dancers, who really didn’t hold still from the start of the parade to the very end. We’ve also tossed in a brief clip of the Ireland Dancers, who never fail to disappoint. And with their bright yellow sweaters, they’re hard to miss.

Hope you like it!

News

A Look Back at the 2011 Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade

Pearse Kerr, waving to the crowd.

Pearse Kerr, waving to the crowd.

Pearse Kerr rode down High Street, perched on the back seat of a bright blue convertible, his wife Liz at his side. He wore sunglasses to shield his eyes from the glare of the afternoon—a balmy day in the low 60s. He also wore the tricolor sash of the Burlington County St. Patrick’s Day Parade grand marshal. It looked good on him.

That was the happy start to the region’s first St. Patrick’s Day parade. Like most parades of the type, it was filled, beginning to end, with perky Irish dancers and serious-looking pipers, hordes of  Hibernians, and local paddy rock bands playing on flatbed floats. There were precious few missteps, with the exception of the Guinness man—some dude wearing a kind of soft-sculpture pint glass—who held up the parade for blocks (just like every year), as practically everyone ran into High Street to have their picture taken with him. At one point, a Mount Holly patrolman stepped forward to hurry him along. (“I warned him about this last year,” he grumbled.)

The crowd was three deep in some places, with folks wearing cardboard Irish top hats and green plastic shamrock beads.

All told, another grand day. We have the pictures. Check out the slideshow (above), or the photo essay here.