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June July 2004 Issue

The First Irish American Olympic Champion

By John Berkery, Contributor
June / July 2004

June 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

Born in South Boston October 28, 1868 James Brendan Connolly was the sixth son of childhood sweethearts John Connolly and Ann O'Donnell from the Aran Islands off the west coast of Ireland. But in 1895, Jim Connolly's parents were far from pleased. At the age of 27 their son gave them a great sense of pride when he entered Harvard to study engineering. Less than a year later, he … [Read more...] about The First Irish American Olympic Champion

Ireland: Culture and Heritage

June 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

When summer comes, Ireland's in her glory. Lazy sunsets linger for hours in a softly glowing night sky. Every nook and cranny of the land turns lush and green. Roses ramble wildly up cottage walls and over stone stiles. Towering hedgerows turn country lanes into fragrant flowering tunnels. Music wafts on breezes everywhere. Fairs and festivals spring up like mushrooms after a … [Read more...] about Ireland: Culture and Heritage

Mothers United

By Lynn Tierney, Contributor
June / July 2004

June 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

Tara Stackpole read Football for Dummies from cover to cover. She needed to know the difference between a fullback and a halfback. Her husband, Timmy, had been a football player on the FDNY team, a coach for the kids' league and a huge sports fan. Tara wanted to get up to speed on the intricacies of the game so that she could be more than just a fan at her kids' games, and just … [Read more...] about Mothers United

The Old Irish Neighborhood

By Michael Scanlon, Contributor
June / July 2004

June 1, 2004 by 1 Comment

It is the fall of 1961. I am with my father. He has returned to his homeland for the first time after thirty-five years in America. The two of us stand silently under a sullen Irish sky in the high, dry grass among the fallen stones of the old country farm house in County Sligo where he was born and raised. He is quiet for a long time, shakes his head, and then leads me down a … [Read more...] about The Old Irish Neighborhood

Flying Boats

By Don Bedwell, Contributor
June / July 2004

June 1, 2004 by 1 Comment

Hundreds of misty-eyed villagers gathered at Foynes' harbor on October 22, 1945, to watch Capt. Charlie Blair make American Overseas Airlines' final scheduled flying boat departure from the small seaport that had once been the focal point for air traffic between the United States and Europe. Today, six decades after those "glamorous days" ended, a Flying Boat Museum reminds … [Read more...] about Flying Boats

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St. Columcille was born on this day in Gartan, Co. Donegal. Columcille, who would also become known as Columba, Colum, Columbus and Columkill, was born to a royal family but given in fosterage to a priest at a young age. After studying under St. Finnian, he spent 15 years preaching and traveling through out Ireland. By 25, he had already founded about 27 monasteries, including Kells which would become famous for producing the Book of Kells. Columcille was also famous through out other celtic regions, including Scotland. He founded the monastery at Iona, a tiny Island off the coast of Scotland. Iona would become the center of Christianity for the Celtic world.

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