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In This Issue 2024

Roots: O’Mahoney, McMahon and Vaughan

By James G. Ryan

Fall 2024

October 18, 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 name is 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

Andrew McMahon – Leading With Purpose

By Tom Deignan

Fall 2024

October 11, 2024 by Leave a Comment

Guardian CEO Andrew McMahon

Guardian’s CEO: Leading with a purpose that transcends immediate goals and reflects a deeper commitment to positive change and enduring values. You might say Andrew McMahon discovered his thing in college. That thing?   He didn’t like limiting himself to just one thing. “I have a lot of natural curiosity,” the president and CEO of Guardian Life Insurance Company of America … [Read more...] about Andrew McMahon – Leading With Purpose

Tim Walz of the Tomhaggard Doyles

By Megan Smolenyak

Fall 2024

October 10, 2024 by 2 Comments

How A Solitary Tombstone in Wisconsin Solved the Mystery of His Irish Origins As a professional genealogist of half-Irish heritage, I’ve long embraced the opportunity to underscore the ties between Ireland and the United States, and one of the most obvious ways to do this is to trace the roots of high profile Americans to their place of origin in Ireland. This is trickier … [Read more...] about Tim Walz of the Tomhaggard Doyles

Miotas | The Ancients

By Rosemary Rogers

Fall 2024

October 10, 2024 by Leave a Comment

Tuatha Dé DannanThey came in the mist... Ireland is a land of sacred spaces but none as mystical as Newgrange in County Meath. Newgrange is a prehistoric monument, a collection of Stone Age burial mounds and kerbstones, enormous rocks carved with art. It is a place older than the pyramids, a place of spiritual, archaeological and historic importance, and a place that brings … [Read more...] about Miotas | The Ancients

Jack Moran on Tar Beach

Text and photos submitted by Margaret "Peggy" Phelan of Willingboro, New Jersey. Originally published in
June / July 2010 , republished in Fall 2024

May 16, 2024 by Leave a Comment

My father Jack Moran arrived in New York on April 5th, 1923. He was from Athea, a small village in County of Limerick. He loved New York. And Brooklyn. My mother was born in Kerry but raised in Limerick but she didn’t meet my father until she came to the States in 1927.  The Irish in New York would all get together for parties and they met at one of those parties. My mother … [Read more...] about Jack Moran on Tar Beach

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December 13, 1779

The demand for the removal of restrictions on Irish free trade through out the colonies is satisfied on this day in 1779. After boycotting British goods and parading on College Green in Dublin in November, the Irish Volunteers, who had been armed and marched under a slogan of ‘free trade or else’ are granted their demands by the British government.

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