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Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade

News

A Day of Ceremonies

Mayor Michael Nutter and Parade Director Michael Bradley.

Mayor Michael Nutter and Parade Director Michael Bradley.

For the day, said Philadelphia’s mayor of less than two months, he would be known as “Micheal (pronounced Mee-hawl) O’Nutter.” He got an appreciative laugh from the nearly 100 people who filled the richly decorated meeting room at City Hall after the annual wreath-laying ceremony by the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick on Thursday, March 6.

The Friendly Sons—an organization that pre-dates the signing of the Declaration of Independence by 5 years—honors Philadelphia’s Irish past where Philadelphia itself honors it: beneath a plaque erected on the west side of City Hall that contains the names of prominent Irish Philadelphians of the past.

Mayor Michael Nutter seemed to enjoy the event, which brought pipers and Irish dancers to the heart of city government for an hour. He grinned broadly as Rosemarie Timoney’s step dancers jigged across the navy and gold carpet in front of him, and later singled out the one young boy in the troupe. He didn’t say it, but it sounded like it was for his bravery. Irish Center President Vince Gallagher sang the national anthem, and Karen Boyce, whose parents, Barney and Carmel, are part of the St. Patrick’s Day parade’s Ring of Honor, sang the Irish national anthem in both English and Irish. The events at City Hall were followed by a luncheon at the DoubleTree Hotel on Broad Street to recognize the parade’s 2008 Grand Marshal, former restaurateur Jack McNamee, and those named to this year’s Ring of Honor.

News

Partying at Finnigan’s Wake

Campbell School dancers Stephanie Miller and Alison Silverman step lively.

Campbell School dancers Stephanie Miller and Alison Silverman step lively.

Local supporters of Hillary Clinton were gathering downstairs at Finnigan’s Wake to await the outcome of the primaries. They probably had a happy night.

Meanwhile, local Irish were up on the third floor with the primary purpose of celebrating their own special month. And was there ever really any question that they would have a great night?

The Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Parade Observance Association, under the leadership of director Michael Bradley, gathered with their partners from CBS3, for one last big blowout. (There’ll be a luncheon later, too, of course.)

There was, as always, some fabulous Irish music and some great dancing. (The food and the drink were pretty good, too.)

News

Philly’s Parade Celebrations Officially Start

Rince Ri Dancers

The Rince Ri dancers of Upper Southampton join Sister James Anne Feerick, a parade honoree and an Irish dance teacher, in a turn around the dance floor.

The event was a pre-St. Patrick’s Day Parade kick-off, mingling parade coordinators, this year’s honorees and their families, local Irish notables, and the staff of CBS3, which broadcasts the event every year. It was held at the new CBS3 studios on Spring Garden Street on Thursday night, February 21, and was lavish with food, drink, and music.

But what most people took away from the evening was a story told by the Irish Society’s Edward Costello, one of the 20 honorees of the 2008 parade. It was about “a kid from Fishtown” named George Costello, who was Grand Marshal of the parade in 1992. Ed’s father. And it was a poignant reminder that sometimes a parade isn’t just a raucous collection of marchers, floats, and music. Sometimes, it’s somebody’s dream.

“Two days before the parade, we were at Penn with him and the doctors told us he did not have much time to live,” Costello told the rapt crowd of more than 100. “George being George, he told me, Ed, take care of the family. And then he asked the doctor, ‘so how can I get out of here?’ The doctor said, ‘George, you’re a sick man, you can’t leave.’ And George being George, he said, ‘I’m just a kid from Fishtown, and all I ever wanted to do is be the Grand Marshal of the St. Patrick’s Day Parade. So I need to get out of here.’” Fortunately, his doctors were Irish “so we got George out.”

His father promised to take it easy, but George being George, he spent the entire parade “standing next to Cardinal Bevilaqua and tipping his hat to every organization that went by.” At the end of the parade, he turned to his son. “Ed,” he said, “it’s time to take me back. I promised the doctors I’d be back and I’m a man of my word. It’s been a grand day. I wish it would never end.’”

“Two weeks later, he died,” said Costello. “But there wasn’t a happier kid from Fishtown.”

Along with Costello, honorees this year include Donegal Association Chaplain Father Joseph McLoone, St. Malachy’s pastor and poet Father John McNamee, teacher Sister James Ann Feerick I.H.M., Justice Seamus McCaffery, the Donegal Association and parade committee’s Kathy McGee Burns, Perry Casciato of CBS3, The Irish Immigration Center’s Tom Conaghan, Finnigan’s Wake owner Mike Driscoll, Hibernian Hunger Project founder Bob Gessler, and three couples recognized for their many contributions to the Irish community, Barney and Carmel Boyce, Michael and Jeannie O’Neill, and James J. and Megan White IV.

Lifetime achievement awards are going to Edward Kelly and John Stanton, and special posthumous honors are being award to two Philadelphia police officers killed in the line of duty: Gary Skerski and Charles “Chuck” Cassidy.

Grand Marshal is Jack McNamee, a 30-year board member, past president and past treasurer of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association.

The parade is scheduled for Sunday, March 9. It will be aired from noon to 3:30 PM on CBS3 and live on the CBS3 home page at www.cbs3.com. It will be replayed on CW Philly 57 on March 17—the real St. Patrick’s Day—from 11 AM to 2:30 PM.

People

One More Honor for Jack McNamee

By Kathy McGee-Burns

Add a new laurel for Jack McNamee, a 30-year board member, past president and past treasurer of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association. This year, he will march up Broad Street as the parade’s grand marshal.

With 235 continuous years of marching in honor of St. Patrick, the Parade is the 2nd oldest in the country, outdone only by New York.

Jack started out as a parade marshal. He is first-generation Irish-American, with roots to be found in County Donegal. His parents, John McNamee, of Glenties, and Catherine Murray, of Creeslough, came to Philadelphia at separate times. They met at (surprise) a dance.

John worked for SEPTA for 38 years, while Catherine was a stay-at-home Mom. There were three McNamee children, Margie, Mary Jo and the youngest, Jack.

There was company every Friday night at the McNamee house with singing, dancing and great conversation. Margie would play the piano and family and friends would congregate. Jack loved the Irish music and his favorite song to sing was and still is “Four Green Fields.”

The children attended St. Benedict’s School, which was predominantly an Irish parish. Each year there would be a St. Patrick’s Play and Jack was always in it. Jack also remembers that each Friday, they would go to the post office and send money back to the Murray family in Donegal.

Jack graduated from Cardinal Dougherty and began to work with the Williamson Family and eventually was general manager of their City Line restaurant. Jim Williamson had nothing but praise for Jack. He had total faith and trust in his general manager. They were disappointed when they lost him but were thrilled at his success. Jim said a lot of people gave Jack advice and he took every bit of it. He took it to heart, filed it away and used it to make his own restaurant a triumph. This career spanned 29 years.

Jack decided to strike out on his own and opened CJ McGee’s, in Springfield, Delaware County. The C was for Catherine, J for John and McGee was his father’s nickname. With his excellent business skills he turned this into a highly successful venture. The family; Jack, wife, Loretta and Son, Sean, have worked this Irish Pub/Restaurant together for 16 years. They recently sold it.

Jack McNamee is a 30year member of the AOH Joseph E. Montgomery Division 65 and a member of the Donegal Association.

Jack McNamee’s generosity knows no limits. He is not showy about it and would never want anyone to know about it. He is a donor to his alma mater, Cardinal Dougherty.

During times of hardships to various organizations, he kept them afloat with donations and fundraisers. To the St. Patrick’s Day Observance Committee, he is the most giving.

His entrepreneurial skills are behind every event that is held. Jack McNamee has hosted virtually every committee and marshals meeting including the Annual Golf Outing. To Jack, being honored by your peers is an incredible experience

When association president Michael Bradley nominated Jack for this honor, he listed 10 reasons for why he was a worthy candidate. The first nine listed his accomplishments. The tenth summed up McNamee the man. In Bradley’s words: “While doing all the above quietly, he has never tooted his own horn, jumped in front of the camera, looked for recognition, accepted accolades, never complained or even once asked what’s in it for me.”

This, ladies and gentlemen, is Jack McNamee.

Kathy is 2nd vice president of the Philadelphia St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association.

News

Memorial Mass Honors St. Pat’s Parade Chaplain

New parade chaplains, from left, Father Kevin Gallagher, Bishop Joseph McFadden, and Father Chris Walsh.

New parade chaplains, from left, Father Kevin Gallagher, Bishop Joseph McFadden, and Father Chris Walsh.

The late Father Kevin Trautner, for 30 years the chaplain of Philadelphia’s St. Patrick’s Day Observance Association, was remembered at a memorial mass on Sunday, October 14, as a dedicated priest whose “smile was infectious and whose eyes would light up” when he talked to people, said Bishop Joseph McFadden.

“The last weekend I saw him he was so full of joy. He lived for the mass on St. Patrick’s Day,” said the bishop, who officiated at the special mass held in the ballroom at the Irish Center in Mt. Airy. Instead, in the ultimate irony, Father Trautner, 57, and pastor of St. Francis of Assisi parish in Norristown, was laid to rest on St. Patrick’s day last year. He died of a massive heart attack while jogging in Valley Forge Park just days after marching in the St. Patrick’s Day parade.

“We will miss his joy and happiness,” Bishop McFadden told the more than 60 people who gathered at the memorial service. “But we know that he is truly with us here today.”

And if he was, said parade director Michael Bradley, he was surely thrilled to see that he was replaced by not one chaplain, but three, including Bishop McFadden, who was named emeritus chaplain of the organization that runs what is the second oldest St. Patrick’s Day parade in the country, now more than 235 years old. “He would have loved the idea that he could only be replaced by two priests and a bishop,” Bradley joked with fondness.

Father Chris Walsh, chaplain and church history teacher at Archbishop Wood High School in Warminster, will be sharing parade chaplain duties with Father Kevin Gallagher, parochial vicar at St. Denis Church in Havertown. “Having two of us will make life easier for both of us,” said Father Walsh, who participated in the memorial mass along with Father Gallagher. “One of us will always be there for meetings.”

Philadelphia’s 2008 St. Patrick’s Day Parade will be held on Sunday, March 8.

News, People

A Great Loss

Father Kevin Trautner

Father Kevin Trautner

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

News

You Saw The Parade … Now Look at the Pictures

Long parade, right?

Long parade, right?

Funny the people you run into at the parade.

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

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

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

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

And maybe you’ll run into someone cool.

News

Who Took First?

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

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

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

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

George Costello Award
Organization with the Outstanding Float in the Parade

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

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

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

Anthony J. Ryan Award
Outstanding Grade School Band

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

Walter Garvin Award
Outstanding Children’s Irish Dance Group

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

Marie C. Burns Award
Outstanding Adult Dance Group

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

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

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

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

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

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

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