• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
Irish America

Irish America

Irish America

  • HOME
  • WHO WE ARE
    • ABOUT US
    • OUR CONTRIBUTORS
  • IN THIS ISSUE
  • HALL OF FAME
  • THE LISTS
    • BUSINESS 100
    • HALL OF FAME
    • HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES 50
    • WALL STREET 50
  • LIBRARY
  • TRAVEL
  • EVENTS

1998

What the Future Holds

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
January / February 1998

January 2, 1998 by Leave a Comment

Bear in mind these dead: I can find no plainer words. - John Hewitt, "Neither an Elegy nor a Manifesto" The New Year brings good tidings to a young couple I know, the birth of a baby boy, a welcome addition to their ever expanding family. Unlike his mother, a Belfast native, this boy will grow up outside the danger zone of "The Troubles" in Northern Ireland. Other children … [Read more...] about What the Future Holds

Primary Sidebar

Featured Video

Featured Podcast

News from the Irish Post

  • In Ireland cattle is still king, but for how long?

    AMERICAN firm Stacy May memorably declared that “in the Irish economy cattle is king” when it re...

  • Belfast landmark will be lit yellow for annual Troubles reflection day

    BELFAST City Hall will open its doors to the public this month as a dedicated space to reflect on...

  • Use of AI up for discussion at British-Irish Council Summit

    THE role of artificial intelligence in the reform of public services is the theme of a British-Ir...

  • Woman charged in connection with fatal St Stephen’s Day collision

    A WOMAN has been charged in connection with a hit-and-run collision in Dublin on St Stephen’s Day...

June 13, 1865

William Butler Yeats, Ireland’s most famous poet and one of the leading literary figures of the 20th century, was born in Sandyhurst, Co. Dublin on this day in 1865 to an upper class Protestant family. He spent much of his childhood in Co. Sligo, which heavily influenced Yeats’s natural themes, and he read classics like Shakespeare, Donne, Alighieri and Shelley. With Lady Gregory, he helped establish the Gaelic Literary Revival and founded the Abbey Theater in Dublin. He was the first Irishman awarded the Nobel Prize in 1923, followed by Shaw, Beckett and Heaney.

Footer

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Subscribe

  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Newsletter

Additional

  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use & Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 · IrishAmerica Child Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in