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Irish American
Heritage Month 2021

March 2, 2021 by Leave a Comment

VP Joe Biden with his mother Catherine Eugenia Finnegan at the 2008 Democratic Convention.

A Proclamation on Irish-American Heritage Month, 2021

On Monday March 1, 2021 President Joe Biden proclaimed March as Irish American Heritage Month to honor the achievements and contributions of Irish immigrants and their descendants living in the United States. Irish American Heritage Month was first celebrated by a proclamation in 1991 by President George H.W. Bush.


Since before the founding of our Nation, Irish immigrants have arrived on our shores with an unyielding spirit of determination that has helped define America’s soul and shape our success across generations.  Driven by the same dreams that still beckon people the world over to America today, so many crossed the Atlantic with nothing but the hope in their hearts and their faith in the possibility of a better life.

That’s what brought the Blewitts from County Mayo and the Finnegans of County Louth to the United States.  For years, they brought Ireland into their homes in America.  Working hard.  Raising families.  Remembering always where they came from. By 1909, my grandparents Ambrose Finnegan and Geraldine Blewitt met and married in Scranton, Pennsylvania, and passed on to my mother, Catherine Eugenia Finnegan Biden, a pride and a passion that runs through the bloodstream of all Irish-Americans.

Miners near Hazleton, PA. Exact year unknown, probably early 1900s. (Photo: Shorpy.com)

The story of the Irish the world over is one of people who have weathered their fair share of hard times, but have always come out strong on the other side.  From often humble beginnings, Irish Americans became the farmers, servants, miners, factory workers, and laborers who fed our Nation, kept our homes, and built our industry and infrastructure. They became the soldiers who won American independence, died to preserve our Union, and fought in every battle since to defend America and its values. 

The Sullivan Brothers aboard the USS Juneau – Joe, Frank, Al, Matt, and George

Irish Americans became the firefighters and police officers who have protected us.  They are the activists who organized unions to give voice and strength to America’s workers.  They are the educators who taught generations of American students and the public servants who have answered the call to service in the halls of the Congress, the Supreme Court, and the White House.

Top left: Rookie firefighters carry American flags for each of the 343 firemen who died on September 11, 2001 in the NYC St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Photo: Peter Foley. Top right: Mounted police march in the Boston St. Patrick’s Day Parade. Bottom left: A family of firefighters – Chuck, Ray, and Joe Downey. Bottom right: Police Officer Moira Smith leads injured Edward Nicholls, a broker at Aon Corporation, to safety from the burning World Trade Center just before the collapse of the first tower. Police Officer Smith, who worked at the 13th Precinct, was killed in the disaster minutes after this photograph was taken.

We owe a debt of gratitude to the Irish-American inventors and entrepreneurs who helped define America as the land of opportunity. Irish-American writers pollinated America’s literary landscape with their love of language and storytelling, while Irish lyricism has brought poetry, art, music, and dance to nourish our hearts and souls.

Top Left: Writers, Jimmy Breslin, Pat Fenton, and Pete Hamill. Top Right: Author, writer, and director Mary Pat Kelly. Bottom Left: Riverdance choreographer and dancer, Jean Butler, Bottom right: Cherish the Ladies, Mary Coogan, Nollaig Casey, Joanie Madden, Kathleen Boyle, and Mirella Murray.

As I said when I visited Dublin in 2016, our nations have always shared a deep spark — linked in memory and imagination, joined by our histories and our futures.  Everything between us runs deep:  literature, poetry, sadness, joy, and, most of all, resilience.  Through every trial and tempest, we never stop dreaming.

The fabric of modern America is woven through with the green of the Emerald Isle.  This month, we celebrate the sacrifices and contributions that generations of Irish Americans have made to build a better America, and we renew the bonds of friendship that will forever tie Ireland and the United States.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR., President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim March 2021 as Irish-American Heritage Month.  I call upon all Americans to celebrate the achievements and contributions of Irish Americans to our Nation with appropriate ceremonies, activities, and programs.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this first day of March, in the year of our Lord two thousand twenty-one, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and forty-fifth.

                             JOSEPH R. BIDEN JR.

Read about President Joe Biden’s Irish roots in Joey from Scranton by Megan Smolenyak.

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