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Patricia Harty

First Word: “Did Ye Get Healed?”

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
August / September 2017

August 1, 2017 by 7 Comments

Mary Mac pictured at Niagara Falls in 1972. I’ve been long enough away from Ireland now that as I planned for a recent trip, I wondered that I might feel like an outsider. A stranger to my own people. But I didn’t. I found it easy to slip back into the half-speak, the nod that says everything, the shrug that says even more. Often there was no need for words at all – everyone … [Read more...] about First Word: “Did Ye Get Healed?”

First Word:
The Joys of Cooking

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
June / July 2017

May 24, 2017 by Leave a Comment

Our cover story on top chef and restauranteur, Barbara Lynch got me thinking about my first forays into cooking, which involved wrestling with a Stanley wood-burning stove. I have fond memories of that black-iron beast, and the time I spent practically hugging it for the warmth that it threw off. Always cold as a child, the “range” as we called it, was the only source of heat … [Read more...] about First Word:
The Joys of Cooking

The First Word:
“It’s Not What You Look at. It’s What You See.”

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
April / May 2017

March 12, 2017 by Leave a Comment

“We’re the nation that just had six of our scientists and researchers win Nobel Prizes – and every one of them was an immigrant." – @POTUS 3:40 PM • Oct. 13, 2016. President Obama on Twitter when the 2016 Nobel Prizes were announced. Welcome to our eighth annual Hall of Fame issue. Our inductees represent the many arenas in which the Irish have impacted the United States. … [Read more...] about The First Word:
“It’s Not What You Look at. It’s What You See.”

Celebrating St. Patrick’s Day Parades in the U.S.

By Patricia Harty, Michael Quinlin, Abdon Moriarty Pallasch, and Shannon Corcoran
April / May 2017

March 12, 2017 by 4 Comments

Some of the biggest and best celebrations of Ireland’s patron saint actually take place in America. New York may have the largest parade in the country, but it’s followed closely by Savannah, Georgia. And while the Boston parade has a long history, the Holyoke, Massachusetts parade rivals it for sheer color and gaiety. Here’s a sampling of parades across the … [Read more...] about Celebrating St. Patrick’s Day Parades in the U.S.

A Nation of Immigrants?

By Patricia Harty, Editor-in-Chief
December / January 2017

December 2, 2016 by 3 Comments

“Immigration policy should be generous; it should be fair; it should be flexible. With such a policy we can turn to the world, and to our own past, with clean hands and a clear conscience.” – John F. Kennedy This past Thanksgiving, as I made my way to a friend's for a home-cooked meal, I thought about my early years in New York when I worked most holidays at my waitressing job. … [Read more...] about A Nation of Immigrants?

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December 11, 1905

Erskine Hamilton Childers, son of revolutionary and author Robert Erskine Childers and the future fourth president of Ireland, was born on this day in 1905. In 1922, at the age of sixteen, Childers’s father was executed by the Irish Free State for charges of gun possession. After studying at University of Cambridge and Trinity College Cambridge, Childers was invited by Eamon de Valera to work for his recently founded newspaper, “Irish Press.” He became an Irish citizen in 1938. He was elected to the Dail Eireann and served as Minister for several different departments on De Valera’s cabinet. In 1973, he was elected President of Ireland. He suffered a heart attack and died on November 17, 1974.

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