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Festival in Silver Springs, M.D. Showed the Best of Irish Film

By Irish America Staff
March / April 2020

March 1, 2020 by 1 Comment

A festival showcasing the best of contemporary Irish film took place at the beautiful American Film Institute Silver Theatre and Cultural Center in Silver Spring, M.D. It was six days of feature films, short programs, and documentaries, with post-screening discussions and meet-and-greet receptions that ran from February 27 through March 1. Some of the highlights included a … [Read more...] about Festival in Silver Springs, M.D. Showed the Best of Irish Film

Education for Girls

By Irish America Staff
March / April 2020

March 1, 2020 by Leave a Comment

The urgent need to empower girls was the theme of an Irish Mission to the U.N. event in New York on February 11. The “Drive for Five” campaign identifies five transformative actions that the world’s governments should take to provide adolescent girls with quality education in supportive and safe environments. Millions of girls worldwide are not provided with this … [Read more...] about Education for Girls

Burns Library Exhibit on Writer Louise Imogen Guiney

By Irish America Staff
March / April 2020

March 1, 2020 by Leave a Comment

Louise Imogen Guiney (1861-1920), an American poet and essayist with ties to nineteenth-century Boston literary circles, is the subject of a retrospective exhibition at the John J. Burns Library, on display through May 29. Devoted Catholic & Determined Writer: Louise Imogen Guiney in Boston focuses on Guiney’s relationships with Catholic religious leaders, ­­fellow … [Read more...] about Burns Library Exhibit on Writer Louise Imogen Guiney

A Visit to the Irish America Hall of Fame

By Irish America Staff
March / April 2020

March 1, 2020 by Leave a Comment

The Irish America Hall of Fame is fast becoming a travel destination in Ireland. The Hall of Fame is housed at the Dunbrody Famine Ship Experience in New Ross, County Wexford. The ship, open for tours, is an exact replica of a sailing ship of that name that ferried thousands of Irish to America during the Great Hunger. New Ross is also the port from which Patrick Kennedy … [Read more...] about A Visit to the Irish America Hall of Fame

A Gala Evening at NYU Celebrates Jewish and Irish Ties

By Irish America Staff
March / April 2020

March 1, 2020 by Leave a Comment

NYU’s Glucksman Ireland House, at their eighth annual gala, recently honored Irish business leader Dómhnal Slattery and award-winning writer Colm Tóibín at an event at NYU’s Kimmel Center for University Life. Loretta Brennan Glucksman presented Mr. Slattery with the Lewis L. Glucksman Award for Leadership in recognition of his immense achievements over three decades, most … [Read more...] about A Gala Evening at NYU Celebrates Jewish and Irish Ties

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May 5, 1867

Nellie Bly, American journalist, was born Elizabeth Jane Cochran to Irish immigrants in Pennsylvania. Born in Cochran Mill’s, an area named for her father Michael who began as a mill laborer and ended up owning the mill. Bly once faked insanity to expose inhumane practices in the Women’s Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell’s Island. In doing so she spawned a new form of “investigative” journalism. It was custom at the time for female writers to use pen names and Cochran’s first editor suggested Nelly Bly from the Stephen Foster song. At age 25, she took a trip around the world in 72 days, beating Phileas Fogg, the fictional hero of Jules Verne’s Around the World in Eighty Days. She also was the first female war reporter in WWI.

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