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The Irish Revolution in America

By Tom Deignan, Contributor
June / July 2006

June 1, 2006 by Leave a Comment

Tom Deignan explores the role that Irish America played in the Easter Rising of 1916. Ninety years ago this month, in May of 1916, over 20,000 Irish-American nationalists and their supporters flocked to New York City’s Carnegie Hall. They were not there for a night at the opera. They went, instead, to voice their anger. Just one month earlier the ill-fated Easter Rising had … [Read more...] about The Irish Revolution in America

Book Reviews

By Tom Deignan, Contributor
June / July 2006

June 1, 2006 by 1 Comment

NON-FICTION  Former New Yorker writer Bill Barich is best known for his horse racing book Laughing in the Hills, published 25 years ago now. For his latest book, Barich has again written about horses, but this time added Ireland as a topic as well in A Fine Place to Daydream: Racehorses, Romance and the Irish. Barich fell in love, moved to Dublin and took quickly to the Irish … [Read more...] about Book Reviews

Clean Green!

By Edythe Preet, Contributor
June / July 2006

June 1, 2006 by Leave a Comment

Natural Cleaning Solutions. Spring is in the air and summer is a-coming in! The clocks have been set ahead, the days are longer, and the light is brighter. But with the drapes pulled back, and sunshine illuminating the corners of every room, suddenly everything looks a little dingy. The windows could benefit from a good washing. The chandelier has lost its gleam. Ditto the … [Read more...] about Clean Green!

Two Saints & A Surgeon

By Emmett O'Connell, Contributor
June / July 2006

June 1, 2006 by 1 Comment

In the 1930s and 40s the neighborhood doctor was vital to the community. Dr. Hubert Kubel’s office was on the ground floor of a five-story-over-basement apartment house of the type with low-rise stoops leading from the sidewalk up to the hallway entrance. Across the broad cobble-stone thoroughfare and trolley tracks of 138th Street stood the Gothic-style edifice of St. Luke’s … [Read more...] about Two Saints & A Surgeon

Carlin

By Liam Moriarty, Contributor
June / July 2006

June 1, 2006 by Leave a Comment

The Carlin name is found in County Limerick, where they held a family seat in ancient times, as well as in the counties of Meath, Derry, Cavan, Monaghan and Tyrone.  The name is derived from  the original Gaelic forms, O Caireallain and O Cearbhallain.  The O Caireallains hailed from County Derry, and were the chiefs of the Clan Diarmada in the area of Tirkeeraqn, and … [Read more...] about Carlin

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March 26, 1999

On this day in 1999, Social Democratic and Labour Party founder and head John Hume revealed that he would donate all£280,000 of Nobel Peace Prize money to the victims of violence in Northern Ireland. As a young ex-seminarian, Hume was inspired by the example of Martin Luther King, Jr., and led a nonviolent civil rights movement in his home town of Derry. Never giving up on the quest for a peaceful solution, he worked continuously for tolerance and international cooperation. His meeting with Unionist leaders led to the 1993 Joint Declaration by Britain and Ireland, and the 1994 cease-fire agreement between the IRA and Unionist paramilitaries. Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize along side Hume.

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