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By Edythe Preet September/October 1998

Sláinte! A Visit to Derry  

By Edythe Preet

September/October 1998

September 11, 2024 by Leave a Comment

Like most Americans, my ancestry is mixed immigrant. Mom's people were Italian; Dad was a storytelling Irish rover. I inherited his wanderlust and his love of words. When I decided to dig up the family roots, Northern Ireland was my first stop. Arriving in Derry (birthplace of my grandmother) as sunset turned the River Foyle into a ribbon of molten gold, I checked into Beech … [Read more...] about Sláinte! A Visit to Derry  

Roots: O’Mahoney, McMahon and Vaughan

By James G. Ryan

September/October 1998

September 11, 2024 by Leave a Comment

The families of McMahon and O'Mahoney are related only by the common derivation of their names from the Irish name Mahon (in Gaelic Mathuna) which was a personal name, meaning a bear. The O'Mahoney or Mahony family are derived from Mathuna, a grandson of Brian Boru. The family were the Eoganacht, the regal dynasty of Munster and were one of the most prominent of West Munster. … [Read more...] about Roots: O’Mahoney, McMahon and Vaughan

Saving Private Ryan

By Joseph McBride

September/October 1998

September 11, 2024 by Leave a Comment

Although Ireland itself remained neutral during World War II, Irish Americans provided some of that war's most celebrated heroes. There were aviators Colin Kelly, Thomas B. McGuire, and Edward H. O'Hare, as well as infantryman Audie Murphy, the baby-faced Texan who went from being the most highly decorated American serviceman of the war to a career recreating his own exploits … [Read more...] about Saving Private Ryan

Boston’s Great Civil War Sculptor

By Michael Quinlin
IA Newsletter, September 14, 2024

September 11, 2024 by Leave a Comment

A portrait of Slig-born Sculptor Martin Milmore in Sepia.

Sculptor Martin Milmore of Boston (1844-1883), admired for his Civil War sculptures and for his classical statuary and busts of famous men throughout New England, was born in Kilmorgan, County Sligo on September 14, 1844, the youngest of five sons of parents Martin and Sarah Milmoe (nee Hart).  When the father died in 1851, Sarah emigrated with her five sons to Boston, where … [Read more...] about Boston’s Great Civil War Sculptor

Diary of an Irish Farmer

By Darina Molloy

September/October 1998

September 9, 2024 by Leave a Comment

"Imagine co-authoring a book with someone who's been dead for 130 years," laughs Ipswich, Massachusetts native Marjorie Harshaw Robie. "Well, that's exactly what I'm doing and I'm enjoying every minute of it." Robie's co-author, whose work she is revising and collating in the hope of finding a publisher, is County Down farmer James Harshaw, who died in 1867. Long before Anne … [Read more...] about Diary of an Irish Farmer

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June 22, 1866

Archbishop Paul Cullen of Dublin becomes the first Irish cardinal on this day in 1866. Born in Co. Kildare, Cullen went on to study at the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. Cullen was appointed rector of Irish College and helped secure the college’s future. While rector from 1832-1850, he forged a close friendship with Pope Gregory XVI and Pope Pius IX and helped safeguard the interests of the Irish church. He was first made Archbishop of Armagh and then transferred to Archbishop of Dublin in 1852, where he would be later made a cardinal.

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