“Have you ever been to Mars?” I was asked one morning at 2am as I made my way up east 81st. street in Manhattan. I was returning home from a night out at Manny’s Car Wash, a favorite blues bar on 2nd avenue. I stopped and heard it again, louder this time, “Have you ever been to Mars?” Looking around I couldn’t see anyone and…
ContinueAdded by John Anthony Brennan on March 30, 2016 at 10:30pm — 7 Comments
Speech by John Bruton, former Taoiseach, at 11 a.m., Monday 28th March, in Iveagh House, Dublin, as part of RTE's “Reflecting the Rising” series.
President John Kennedy once said that a “nation reveals itself “ by the events and people it chooses to commemorate.
This state is a rule of law based, parliamentary democracy, which has…
ContinueAdded by The Wild Geese on March 30, 2016 at 10:30am — 4 Comments
My friends kid me about one of the websites I frequent, a place called Banjo Hangout (dot Org). It’s a place where banjo geeks like me go and talk about strings and rings, and pots and picks, and necks and woods and, well, banjo makers! And occasionally I receive messages from those fellow Banjo geeks – so I wasn’t too…
ContinueAdded by Jed Marum on March 28, 2016 at 1:30pm — 5 Comments
William Thomas (Liam) Cosgrave was not one of the iconic figures of the early 1900s, nor indeed was he a man who had any real status of leadership in the 1916 Rising, although he was a chief adviser to Eamonn Ceannt during the 1916 Rising at South Dublin Union. It was an apt role because the vicinity was his home turf…
ContinueAdded by That's Just How It Was on March 26, 2016 at 12:30pm — 6 Comments
Mayo born singer songwriter Seamus Ruttledge has recorded a new version of 'James Connolly' to mark the centenary of the 1916 Easter rising.
Ruttledge has adapted, arranged, and written new verses for this 2016 interpretation of the famous…
ContinueAdded by Seamus Ruttledge on March 25, 2016 at 6:30pm — 3 Comments
The GPO, Mount Street Bridge, The South Dublin Union -- these are names that resonate when it comes to Easter 1916 as the battlegrounds for what became Padraig Pearse’s ‘glorious failure.’ However, for some quirk of history, the success that took place in the sleepy town of Ashbourne, County Meath, during the Rising has…
ContinueAdded by David Lawlor on March 25, 2016 at 3:30am — 16 Comments
When I entered the University of Notre Dame in 1965, the first thing I had to do was make some close friends. Notre Dame has no social fraternities and in 1965 no women. So one had to fish around your residence halls and classes to find some friends with mutual interests.
During the…
ContinueAdded by Michael H.J. Kane on March 22, 2016 at 2:30pm — 5 Comments
Invite a seanchaí into your home . . . you will be glad that you did. With Jim Hawkins new CD, My Own Native Land: Stories and Songs of Ireland, that has never been easier. Hawkins’ debut album will carry you across the miles, over the waters and back in time.
When a colleague suggested that I review “My Own…
ContinueAdded by Bit Devine on March 21, 2016 at 2:30pm — No Comments
Although the first census of the United Kingdom was held in 1801, it was not until the 1841 census that respondents were asked to state their country of birth, thereby enabling us to see the size of the Irish population in Britain. We cannot, therefore, accurately judge how many Irish refugees had flooded into England, Scotland…
ContinueAdded by Kieron Punch on March 21, 2016 at 1:00pm — 3 Comments
Photo of window at St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, courtesy of George R. Doyle, 2014
I bind to myself today
The strong virtue of the…
ContinueAdded by Liam Murphy on March 17, 2016 at 9:30am — 3 Comments
In the next few hours a large chunk of the world will go green – not out of a love for the environment, but because that’s what you do on March 17.
Forget about any sense of style, every shade of green you can envisage will be flown, painted, worn and waved on St Patrick’s Day. All those inner Irishmen and women will…
ContinueAdded by David Lawlor on March 16, 2016 at 5:00pm — 6 Comments
Even on the best of days, when the weather is temperate and the sky soft and cloudless, Galway City has a worn, secondhand feel to it: an historic, pensive, erudite quality everywhere you roam down its serpentine streets. But there’s also an energetic undercurrent to Galway that seems to thrive on the idea of opposites,…
ContinueAdded by Claire Fullerton on March 16, 2016 at 12:00pm — 21 Comments
Irishmen everywhere celebrate the
1916 Easter Risings 100-Year Anniversary
Where was Irish Patriot Tom Barry during the Easter…
ContinueAdded by James Francis Smith on March 13, 2016 at 7:30pm — No Comments
"Brother Pleads Guilt to Free Jailed 'Twin' " reads the headline in the July 30, 1931, edition of The New York Times.
The story refers to two of my grandmother’s first cousins, Tom and John Irwin. Tom stood accused with two other men -- and all were later convicted -- in the rape of a woman and the armed robbery of the…
ContinueAdded by Gerry Regan on March 11, 2016 at 10:00am — 3 Comments
I know that many of you have been to Galway (or intend visiting) and I…
ContinueAdded by Brian Nolan on March 10, 2016 at 8:30am — 4 Comments
Our esteemed Irish Heritage Partner Wild West Irish Tours has kindly supplied us with some new photos of last year's successful ‘Wild West of Ireland: You Won’t Forget Your First Time’ tour giveaway competition!…
ContinueAdded by Fran Reddy on March 9, 2016 at 10:30am — 1 Comment
Say nothing
And keep saying it
In this silent land.
Men draped in cassocks
Possess a Nation’s secrets
To barter for souls over open graves
And we stay silent
In…
ContinueAdded by Seamus Ruttledge on March 8, 2016 at 7:30pm — 7 Comments
DOMHNAIGH -- On March 6, 1831, Philip Sheridan, one of the greatest Union generals on the American Civil War, was born. We know he was the son of Irish immigrants, but his place of birth is uncertain, with Albany, New York; somewhere in Ohio; at sea; and County…
ContinueAdded by The Wild Geese on March 5, 2016 at 1:30pm — No Comments
“The Wolf and the Shield: An Adventure with Saint Patrick” by Sherry Weaver Smith, reads like a heartwarming parable. Although it is ostensibly a children’s story, ideal for ages seven through twelve, this lovely book hit all the requisite high notes to hold my rapt attention: that it is set in…
Added by Claire Fullerton on March 3, 2016 at 4:00pm — 3 Comments
While reading Dancing to an Irish Reel by Claire Fullerton, I felt as if I had joined a dance myself, part of a song beyond the ordinary world I’d left behind. The setting, Connemara on the West Coast of Ireland, lives on every page—the coastal pathways, a midnight pier, a hillside graveyard.
Readers meet one of…
ContinueAdded by Sherry Weaver Smith on March 3, 2016 at 12:00pm — 3 Comments
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