A fish takes for granted the water in which he swims. As a kid in 1970s Woodside, Queens, I never thought twice about how most of my classmates had a parent or two who spoke with a brogue. I attended Saint Sebastian’s, a Catholic grammar school a few blocks from where the 7 Train and Long Island Railroad cross paths at 61st Street station. Here’s a roll-call from memory of the Irish-American kids, many of whom, like me, had a mother and/or father from the Emerald Isle:
Carney
Casey
Connors
Curran
Delaney
Duff
Feeley
Ferguson
Haggerty
Higgins
Kilhoury
Lynn
McDermott
McQuade
Murphy
Quinn
Sweeney
And
“Walsh”
ends
that
list.
My
mom,
a
Rooney,
emigrated
to
America
from
County
Cavan
in
1957;
my
dad’s
mother
and
father
hailed
from
County
Galway
and
County
Mayo,
respectively,
and
came
to
New
York
in
1922.
For
all
the
transplanted
Irish
and
their
offspring
who
lived
there,
Woodside
might
as
well
have
been
Ireland’s
33rd
county.
Despite living beneath this ever-green canopy, once a year I grew keenly aware of my Irish roots: Saint Patrick’s Day. Our classroom decorations served as prelude. In a turf war where the calendar dictated victory, the Micks routed the Wops, St. Patrick ousted St. Valentine, shamrocks replaced stylized hearts, and shillelagh-wielding leprechauns evicted all those Cupids with their bows and arrows.
For
me,
the
day
served
up
an
extra
helping
of
Hibernian
pride
as
it’s
the
day
I
was
born
and,
hence,
the
reason
for
my
given
name.
I’ve
always
though
it
quite
an
honor
for
them
to
march
a
parade
down
5th
Avenue
in
celebration
of
my
birthday.
My
family
never
went
into
Manhattan
for
the
parade
(thank
Zeus!),
but
you
could
be
sure
that
it
would
be
on
the
television
in
our
apartment.
For
decades,
New
York’s
WPIX
broadcast
four
or
five
hours
live
coverage.
Whether
we
attended
or
not,
that
parade
on
Channel
11
comprised
an
essential
part
of
the
St.
Patrick’s
Day
tradition;
deeply
ensconced
within
that
tradition
you’d
find
its
venerable
television
host,
Jack
McCarthy.
Manhattan-born,
he
took
pride
in
his
Irish
heritage.
By
the
time
I
started
watching
the
parade
in
the
1970s,
McCarthy
had
achieved
a
distinguished
mien
with
a
mane
of
snow
white
hair
combed
straight
back,
as
well
as
his
status
as
an
institution,
having
presided
over
the
announcing
since
1949.
Along
with
legions
of
high
school
marching
bands
and
the
cops
and
the
firemen
with
their
platoons
of
dour,
kilt-clad
bagpipers
(every
one
of
them
sporting
a
Thurman
Munson
mustache),
there
were
contingents
representing
each
county
in
Ireland.
Two
lead
walkers
would
hold
a
long
rectangular
banner
on
a
pole
between
them
adorned
with
the
heraldic
crest
of
a
given
county.
Cheers
went
up
here
and
there
in
the
crowd
when
someone
with
a
tie
to
that
particular
county
spotted
their
people
going
by.
Back
in
our
little
Queens
apartment,
my
mom
anxiously
waited
to
see
Cavan
march
past.
She
could
be
in
the
kitchen
the
whole
time
and
still
follow
the
action
since
McCarthy
announced
each
group
as
they
approached
his
V.I.P.
box
on
5th
Avenue.
When
she
heard
him
say,
“Ah,
and
here
comes
County
Cavan
now,”
she’d
run
out
to
look
at
the
TV.
She’d
get
a
wistful
look
in
her
eye
then
go
back
to
fixing
dinner
and
baking
this
guy’s
birthday
cake.
We
often
had
a
party
to
celebrate
the
“dual
holiday.”
Most
of
the
guests
were
relations.
My
mom’s
sister,
Monica,
and
her
family
lived
in
Sunnyside,
a
hike
but
still
walking
distance
from
our
apartment
in
Woodside.
Monica
had
come
over
from
Cavan
with
my
mom
and
married
another
emigrant,
a
dashing,
dark-haired
soldier
in
the
MPs
originally
from
Brittany,
France.
As
a
kid
I
was
close
to
George
and
Monica’s
oldest
son,
my
cousin
Sean.
My
paternal
grandmother
also
lived
in
Sunnyside,
still
in
the
same
row
house
in
which
my
dad
grew
up.
Another
requisite
attendee
was
my
“Nana,”
Mrs.
Cahill,
who
lived
in
the
apartment
directly
below
ours
on
the
second
floor.
An
elderly
widow
whose
kids
had
grown
up
and
moved
away,
she
was
the
sweetest
honorary
grandmother
a
boy
could
ever
want.
She
babysat
me
from
the
time
I
was
a
tot.
We’d
play
gin
rummy
for
hours
at
her
kitchen
table
as
I
dipped
ginger
snaps
into
a
cup
of
tea
or
we’d
watch I Love Lucy and weep with laughter. A place of honor set aside for her, Mrs. Cahill was a beloved guest with a lively sense of humor.
Three
generations
converged
at
these
St.
Patrick’s
Day
gatherings.
In
short
order,
the
conversation
became
a
conjuring
of
the
Old
Country.
My
grandmother
grew
up
in
a
fishing
village
on
the
coast
of
Galway,
one
of
several
areas
on
Ireland’s
west
coast
designated
the
Gaeltacht
because
people
there
predominantly
speak
Irish
(or
at
least
they
did
in
her
day.)
She
routinely
peppered
her
speech
with
Irish
words
and
phrases,
particularly
when
chastising
me
for
unruly
behavior.
Mrs.
Cahill
came
grew
up
in
Sligo,
a
county
in
Ireland’s
northwest
corner
known
as
Yeats
Country
because
of
its
great
influence
on
the
poet
and
site
of
his
burial
in
Drumcliffe
Churchyard.
She
and
my
grandmother
provided
the
deepest
reminiscences
of
Ireland
in
the
old
days.
In
a
bittersweet
logic,
stories
of
privation
mingled
with
recollections
of
simple
pleasures.
They
could
recall
persecution
by
the
dreaded
Black-and-Tans,
as
well
as
corporal
punishment
at
the
hands
of
barbaric
priests
and
nuns.
Decades
later
I’d
understand
with
retroactive
clarity
the
terrible
double
yoke
under
which
the
Irish
labored,
aptly
summed
up
by
James
Joyce’s
alter
ego
in Ulysses:
“I
am
a
servant
of
two
masters,
Stephen
said,
an
English
and
an
Italian.”
Later
in
the
evening,
Channel
11
always
provided
Part
II
of
their
All-Things-Irish
gala
by
airing The Quiet Man,
John
Ford’s
1952
Rom-Com-Drama
starring
John
Wayne,
Maureen
O’Hara,
Victor
McLaglen,
Ward
Bond,
and
Barry
Fitzgerald.
I
realize
now
that
the
movie
must
have
held
tremendous
appeal
for
my
dad
in
several
ways;
in
addition
to
being
a
great
fan
of
John
Wayne
and
having
fought,
like
Wayne’s
character,
as
a
boxer,
most
of
the
outdoor
scenes
were
filmed
in
Galway
and
Mayo
where
his
parents
grew
up.
Among
the
decorations
I
distinctly
recall
were
little
green
linen
flags
embroidered
in
gold
stitching
with
the
phrase
“Erin
go
Bragh”
along
with
strands
of
shamrocks
and
a
harp,
Ireland’s
national
symbol.
The
slogan
means
Ireland
Forever.
My
dad
placed
a
few
of
these
flags,
hung
on
dowels
topped
with
gold-painted
ferrules,
in
a
sturdy
mug
with
same-sized
versions
of
the
Irish
flag,
the
tricolor
of
green,
white,
and
orange.
Those
flags
were
mysterious
party
favors
packed
with
history
I’d
barely
begun
to
learn.
Coffee,
tea,
soda
bread,
cigarettes,
and
brogue-inflected
blarney
abounded
in
joyful
profusion.
Ah,
we
shant
hear
the
like
of
them
again….
I
wish
I’d
listened
more,
but
I
was
too
busy
scarfing
down
birthday
cake
and
ice
cream.
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