top of page

WELCOME TO DIVISION 14

Woodhaven, New York
Ancient Order of Hibernians

Home: Gallery
9CDAE148-1CA4-46F3-95F9-76629E4E7E7E.png

President's Message

Nár laga Dia do lámh

Brothers:

With the onset of summer, comes our break from the usual order of business of the Order. Many of us will be traveling to parts near and far. This does not mean that our Division will cease to be doing anything. In fact, Division 14 will be hosting two fundraising bar-b-q's at Holy Child Jesus Parish. Much work goes into putting these functions on and many volunteer hours are dedicated to their successes. If called upon to assist, please consider giving some of your time. Along with the Knights of Columbus, Holy Child will be the better for them.

We do still have our June meeting at St. Gregory's. Please try to attend.

National is holding its' Convention this Summer also. The City of Orlando will host this bi-annual meeting where our National leaders will be elected for the next two years. National President, Danny O'Connell, will be stepping down from the Chair after two terms in office. We congratulate him on a job well-done and all the best in the future.

Other things do crop up, so keep an eye out for other upcoming functions. Enjoy the Summer and we will get together again in September.

Bill

Home: Text

DIVISION OFFICERS

Chaplain ........................................................................................................................................ Fr. Frank Shannon
Associate Chaplain ............................................................................................................. Fr. Christopher Heanue
President ............................................................................................................................................... Bill Corrigan
Vice President .............................................................................................................................. Edmund Seewald
Recording Secretary ............................................................................................................................ Kevin Shiner
Financial Secretary .......................................................................................................................  James Corrigan
Treasurer .......................................................................................................................................... Walter Cooper
Chairman/Standing Committee ............................................................................................... Edmund Seewald
Marshal ................................................................................................................................................. Patrick Shea
Sentinel ............................................................................................................................................. Joseph Culina
Past President ........................................................................................................................... Edmund Seewald

Home: Text

OUR PAST PRESIDENTS

1940 ......................................................................................................................................................... W. Emmett Corrigan

1941-1945 ................................................................................................................................................ Thomas McLoughlin

1947 .................................................................................................................................................................... Michael Wells

1948 .............................................................................................................................................................. Thomas Mullooly

1949-1950 ........................................................................................................................................................ John L.P. Farley

1951-1952 ............................................................................................................................................... W. Emmett Corrigan

1953-1954 ..............................................................................................................................................;... Francis J. Corrigan

1955 ..................................................................................................................................................................... John L. Shea

1956 .................................................................................................................................................... Thomas J. McDermott

1957 ........................................................................................................................................................... Daniel A. Mangan

1985 ...................................................................................................................................................................... Thady Mills

1986-1988 ........................................................................................................................................................ James Sweeny

1988-1990 ............................................................................................................................................................. Thady Mills

1991-1992 ...................................................................................................................................................... Frank Corrigan

1992-1994 ........................................................................................................................................................ John Hannon

1994-1998 .................................................................................................................................................... Patrick McEntee

1998-2000 ................................................................................................................................................... William Corrigan

2000-2006 ..................................................................................................................................................... Walter Cooper

2006-2016 ................................................................................................................................................ Edmund Seewald

2016-Present ............................................................................................................................................. William Corrigan

* The names of the Presidents who served between the years 1957 and 1985 have been lost to history. If anyone can fill in the blanks, it will be appreciated. *

Home: Text

A Short Message from Your Webmaster

Due to mitigating circumstances, I was unable to update this website for a short time, the circumstances being computer problems. The problem has been taken care of and I am back up to speed. Over the next couple of weeks, the site will be updated with the latest information as time allows.

Home: Text

Summer Kick Off BBQ

Holy Child Jesus

Leonard Center Garden

86-13 112 Street, Richmond Hill NY 11418

Sunday, June 23, 2024                                                                                                                    1 PM to 5 PM

Adults                                                           Children                                                          Families

                                                                       (Accompanied by an adult)                             (Four or more Elm and HS)

  $15                                                                   $5                                                                  $40

FOOD                                                                 LIVE MUSIC

Sponsored by:

Knights of Columbus                                                                                                      Ancient Order of Hibernians

Morris Park Council - 566                                                                                                                   Queens - Division 14

BBQ Sponsorship $125: contact Walter Cooper 1.347.724.6438

(Checks payable to: Queens County AOH Div. 14 or Holy Child Jesus Church)

Proceeds of this fundraiser will be given to:

School Roof and Window Restoration Project

www.aohdiv14queens.com

AOH Division 14 is a 501c8 non-profit organization, donations may not be tax exempt.

Home: Text

Division Happenings

Home: Text

2024 Dinner Dance

Home: Text
IMG_3109.jpg
IMG_3110.jpg
IMG_0688.jpg
IMG_2962.jpg
Home: Gallery
Home: Text

St. Patrick's Day 2024

IMG_3109.jpg
IMG_3110.jpg
IMG_3111.jpg
IMG_3112.jpg
IMG_3113.jpg
IMG_3115.jpg
IMG_3114.jpg
IMG_3118.jpg
IMG_3119.jpg
IMG_3121.jpg
IMG_3123.jpg
IMG_3125.jpg
IMG_3128.jpg
IMG_3129.jpg
IMG_3130.jpg
IMG_3135.jpg
IMG_3136.jpg
IMG_3137.jpg
IMG_3138.jpg
IMG_3139.jpg
IMG_3143.jpg
IMG_3147.jpg
IMG_3149.jpg
IMG_3154.jpg
IMG_3157.jpg
IMG_3159.jpg
IMG_3160.jpg
IMG_3161.jpg
IMG_3162.jpg
IMG_3164.jpg
IMG_5372.jpg
IMG_5377.jpg
IMG_3166.jpg
IMG_3167.jpg
IMG_5386.jpg
IMG_5395.jpg
IMG_0685.jpg
IMG_0688.jpg
Home: Gallery
Home: Pro Gallery
Home: Text

2023 Christmas Raffle

Winners Announced

Merry Christmas to you and your families. Hopefully, Christmas 2023 will be your best one ever. So, our Christmas Raffle was a success and this year, thanks to donations received, we even had a second basket up for grabs. This years winners were Jim Corrigan and Fr. Ed Ryan. On delivering the baskets, each winner was heard to say, "How nice, I never win anything."

Thank you all for your support and again a Merry and Blessed Christmas to all.

Home: Image
IMG_1493.jpg
Home: Text

Walter Cooper Honored

(Left to Right: Queens County Board President Edmund Seewald, Past District 5 Director Walter Cooper and New York State Vice President Thomas Beirne)

Queens County Recently honored Walter Cooper for his over 20 years of service to the AOH. At the September County Board meeting. Queens County Board President, Edmund Seewald, presented Walter with the Cmdr. John Barry Medal, New York State Vice President, Thomas Beirne, presented him with a Certificate from the State. He was also the recipient of recognition with a Certificate from National.

Walter served as Division 14 President, Queens County Board President and District 5 Director. He also held numerous Chairmanships and elected offices. As County Treasurer, Walter was instrumental keeping Queens County and its Divisions in the good graces of the IRS and was an active member of the Red Branch Knights Major Degree Team.

Walter has also been recognized by the Church for his participation in Holy Child Jesus Parish in Richmond Hill, including serving as Director of the Parish Food Pantry.

Home: Image
IMG_0778_edited.jpg

Division 14 Participates in 2023 NYS Convention

Home: Text

Front Row (Left to Right): Robbie Salmon (Division 21), Walter Cooper (Division 14), John Manning (Division 4), Ed Seewald (Division 14) - Back Row: ??????????

Location: Mirabito Stadium - July 14, 2023 - Rumble Ponies (Mets AA Team) vs Patriots (Yankees AA Team)

Division 14, along with Divisions 4 and 21, represented Queens County at the 2023 NYS Biennial Convention in Binghamton, NY. For a complete synopsis of the Convention, go to the New York State section on this website. There are also pictures of the multi-day event.

Home: Image
IMG_4259.jpg

The Division volunteered to assist at the 2023 St. Gregory Festival.

Home: Image
IMG_0540.PNG

The Technology BBQ raised a record contribution for the Holy Child Jesus Academy to purchase the necessary computers and other technology that the students need to learn on. Division 14 and Morris Park Council, Knights of Columbus, provided volunteers to provide service to a higher than expected capacity crowd.

Home: Image
20BB78BB-93B0-43DA-B679-CCBDE2F94434.jpg

Division 14 came together with members of Division 22 at the December meeting in St. Gregory's to celebrate the merger of the two Divisions to create an even better Division 14.

Home: Text

2023 Dinner Dance

Saturday, March 11th, 2023
Irish American Society, Mineola, NY

IMG_9654.png
IMG_9508.jpg
IMG_9509.jpg
IMG_9510.jpg
IMG_9512.jpg
IMG_9511.jpg
IMG_9513.jpg
IMG_9516.jpg
IMG_9655_edited.jpg
IMG_9524_edited.jpg
IMG_9529_edited.jpg
IMG_9523.jpg
IMG_9542_edited.jpg
IMG_9548_edited.jpg
IMG_9551_edited.jpg
IMG_9547_edited.jpg
IMG_9550_edited.jpg
IMG_9555.jpg
IMG_9562.jpg
IMG_9558.jpg
IMG_9567_edited.jpg
IMG_9556_edited.jpg
IMG_9571_edited.jpg
IMG_9559_edited.jpg
IMG_9579_edited.jpg
IMG_9587_edited.jpg
IMG_9574_edited.jpg
IMG_9593_edited.jpg
IMG_9594_edited.jpg
IMG_9598_edited.jpg
IMG_9600_edited.jpg
IMG_9597_edited.jpg
IMG_9608_edited_edited.jpg
IMG_9605_edited.jpg
IMG_9614.jpg
IMG_9619.jpg
IMG_9620.jpg
IMG_9631_edited.jpg
IMG_9633_edited.jpg
Home: Gallery

2023 St. Patrick's Day

Friday, March 17, 2023

The day began with Mass celebrated by Fr. Frank at St. Gregory's at 10am, followed by our Annual St. Patrick's Day Luncheon at the New Hyde Park Diner. After boarding the bus at St. Gregory's afterwards, our contingent waited at our form-up point at East 46th Street and eventually proceeded to march down the green line on Fifth Avenue. Our ride hback to St. Gregory's was filled with song and trivia.

We didn't make the television as we did in 2022, but it WAS a great day for the Irish!

Home: Text
IMG_9719.png
IMG_9660.jpg
IMG_9661.jpg
IMG_9662.jpg
IMG_9663.jpg
IMG_9666.jpg
IMG_9674.jpg
IMG_9671.jpg
IMG_9673.jpg
IMG_9680.jpg
IMG_9682.jpg
IMG_9677.jpg
IMG_9683.jpg
IMG_9684.jpg
IMG_9685.jpg
IMG_9686.jpg
IMG_9687.jpg
IMG_9691.jpg
IMG_9689.jpg
IMG_9693.jpg
IMG_3497.jpg
IMG_9703.jpg
IMG_3891.jpg
IMG_9704.jpg
IMG_1361_edited.jpg
Home: Gallery

Fifth Avenue - NYC

March 17th, 2022

The Last Time Queens County Was on Television


(Sorry about the quality of the image but it is the fire first time in years that we made the television broadcast and I felt just for that reason it was worth putting up)

Home: Video

To watch the entire 2022 New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade broadcast as seen on television, click on the button below.

Look for Queens County at about 3:32:00. Division 14 is marching under the County Banner.

Home: Text

Division Meeting Dates

The Division meets every second Tuesday every month (except July and August) at 7:30 PM at Holy Child Parish in the Leonard Center, 86-13 112 Street, Richmond Hill NY 11418 or at St. Gregory's in Bellerose. Check back here to see which location we will be at.

Future Meeting Dates:

June 11, 2024 at St. Gregory's

Home: Text

Celebrating our Catholic Faith

Every June and December, our Division gathers to celebrate our faith before those monthly meetings. We also attend Mass before marching on St. Patrick's Day as a Division. Our Chaplain, Fr. Frank Shannon, has been leading us in prayer for many years. We are also honored to have Fr. Christopher Heanue as our Associate Chaplain.

As we all know, our Priests are spread pretty thin. Fr. Shannon is the Pastor of several parishes. Fr. Heanue is the Rector of the St. Joseph Co-Cathedral, where Bishop Brennan resides. As such, they are not always available. We were privilaged to to have Fr. Charles P. Keeney help us celebrate Mass at our December, 2021 Division meeting. Fr. Keeney is the Diocesan Director for the Society for the Propagation of the Faith for the Diocese of Brooklyn. Deacon Jerry Magaldi assisted Fr. Frank at our 2022 St. Patrick's Day Dinner Dance Mass. Deacon Jerry comes out of St. Aidan's in Williston Park. Fr. Frank was unavailable to celebrate Mass for our 2023 Dinner Dance, but we were lucky enough to get Fr. Innocent Duru of St. Bernard's Parish in Levitown. In his homily, he mentioned that it was the Irish Priests that brought the Faith to Nigeria, his homeland, and how he was now saying Mass for the Irish.

Home: Gallery

History of the AOH

The Ancient Order of Hibernians is a Catholic, Irish American Fraternal Organization founded in New York City on May 4, 1836. The Order can trace its roots back to a parent organization, of the same name, which has existed in Ireland for over three hundred years. However, while the organizations share a common thread, the North American A.O.H. is a separate and much larger organization.

The Order evolved from the need in the sixteen hundreds to protect the lives of priests who risked immediate death to keep the Catholic Faith alive in occupied Ireland after the reign of England's King Henry the VIII. When England implemented the dreaded Penal Laws in Ireland, various secret social societies were formed across the country. These groups worked to aid and comfort the people by whatever means available. Similarly, the Ancient Order of Hibernians in America was founded at New York's St. James Church, to protect the clergy and church property from the "Know Nothings" and their followers. At the same time, the vast influx of Irish immigrants fleeing famine issues in Ireland in the late 1840's prompted the growth of various social societies in the United States of America, the largest of which was, and continues to be, the Ancient Order of Hibernians.

Active across the United States, the Order seeks to aid the newly arrived Irish, both socially and politically. The many Divisions and club facilities located throughout the United States traditionally have been among the first to welcome new Irish Americans. Here, the Irish culture of art, dance, music and sports are fostered and preserved. The newcomers can meet some of "their own" and are introduced to the social atmosphere of the Irish American community. The A.O.H. has been at the political forefront for issues concerning the Irish, such as: Immigration Reform; economic incentives both here and in Ireland; the human rights issue addressed in the Mac Bride Legislation; Right to Life; and a peaceful and just solution to the issues that divide Ireland.

The Order has also provided a continuing bridge with Ireland for those who are generations removed from that Country. The A.O.H. sponsors many of the programs associated with promoting our Irish Heritage, such as the Irish Way Program.

You may further seek admittance to the FINEST Irish Catholic Organization in the World, all we ask is for you to live by our motto of:

"Friendship, Unity and Christian Charity"

Home: Text
Home: Gallery

Pictures from our June, 2020 meeting

1824EAC0-2B17-4E35-B38C-08B5EB6273D3.jpeg

Congratulations to The Most Reverend Robert J. Brennan D.D.

Newly Installed 8th Bishop of Brooklyn and Queens - November 30, 2021 at St. Joseph Co-Cathedral

Home: Text

AOH Honors Veterans

Walter Cooper Recognized for Military Service

The New York State AOH has begun recognizing Hibernians who have served in the Armed Forces of the United States. Our own Walter Cooper was asked to submit a short summery of his experience while in uniform. Take a moment to click the button below to learn about one man's time in the midst of the Vietnam War.

Home: Text

New York State

Home: Text
Home: Text

New York State Hate Crime Bill Report - 2023 AOH NYS Convention Report

Greetings Brothers. Since our last State Board meeting in East Durham, many hours of time by many members of our organization were put into our attempts to have legislation passed in New York that would create a presumption that any attack on a house of worship would be considered a hate crime. The intention of this initiative is to bring more attention and legal consequences to the desecration, damaging vandalism and theft occuring at houses of worship, particularly to Roman Catholic Churches, throughout N.Y. State. It is also intended to heighten awareness of acts taken against our churches and all houses of worship in New York State.

This initiative started after a casual encounter between NYS Attorney General Letitia James and our State President, John Manning, at the St. Patrick's Day Parade in Staten Island. When concerns were raised about the attacks on our churches, it was ultimately decided that the best way of implementing our goals was to attempt to pass legislation to strengthen and more consistently enforce the hate crimes statute. As State Legal Counsel, I wrote the first draft of the proposed legislation.

Unfortunately, despite herculean efforts, we were not able to get legislation passed in the last term of the State Legislature. There were many reasons for this, with the main one being, in my opinion, we came to the Legislature relatively late in the government cycle, and we did not have enough time to push our ideas across the finish line. The good news is that we have laid extensive groundwork, and we will be better prepared, when the Legislature convenes again next year.

As part on this initiative, I personally met with the Grand Council of Emeralds to enlist their support. Brother Manning, fellow Hibernian and NY State Assemblymen John McGowan and I also met with the District Attorney Association of the State of New York to enlist their support and to listen to any concerns they may have regarding the legislation. Every member of the Ad Hoc committee created by President Manning made numerous phone calls to legislators, their aides, and others with influence to promote this bill.

The last development on this issue was that last Friday, July 7, 2023, President Manning and I met with a political consultant/lobbyist who helped us develop a strategy going forward as we continue our efforts to prepare to push this legislation when the Legislature reconvenes. The lobbyist did not accept compensation for the meeting. The major takeout from the meeting is that, no matter what our personal political beliefs may be, we must engage both political parties if we want to get this legislation passed.

While there is obviously disappointment that we did not succeed on our first go-around, we are in a much better position to try to get this legislation passed next year. This is an important initiative for all houses of worship, and, in particular, for our Roman Catholic Churches. I wish to acknowledge the hard work of our brothers on the Committee: George Anderson, Neil Cosgrove, Dennis Grogan, Ed McLoughlin, Liam McNabb, Brendan Moore, Robert Nolan, James Russell, Craig Speers, and, of course, NY State President John Manning. Rabbi Potasnik has also done yeoman's work for the Committee to help advance this bill. I also wish to acknowledge Assemblymen/Brother John McGowan and Brother TJ Hatter for their work in the halls of government. Our fight is not over, and, in many ways, it has just begun.

Respectfully Submitted. Yours in Friendship Unity and Christian Charity.

A.J. Smith

New York State Board

New York State Legal Counsel

2023 NYS Convention

Home: Gallery

New York State held its Biennial Convention from July 12th to July 16th in Binghamton in Broome County. After the Opening Convention Mass on Thursday, the Opening Session was held. Presided over by NYS President John Manning, the Delegates were welcomed to Binghamton by the Broome County Executive and the Mayor of Binghamton. President Manning announced that there would be no vote during the Convention for the location of the 2025 Convention, a piece of business normally undertaken at this gathering. After an invocation by Fr. James O'Rourke, the Deputy Chaplain for New York State, Vice President Thomas O'Donnell led the Pledge of Allegiance. The Roll Call of New York State Elected and Appointed Officers was taken, the Official Call to Convention was read by State Secretary Thomas Bierne and Housekeeping issues were taken care of. Following the welcome for the National Officers and the initial Delegate Report, the State Officers gave their reports and the Appointed Officers began. This was recessed for lunch. Reports continued after the break, concluding with A.J. Smith discussing the legal issues involving the NYS AOH and Cy Hughes with the Delegate Report.

Later Thursday evening, the Irish Night/Awards Dinner took place. New York State Attorney General, Letitia James, and the Consul General of Ireland, Helena Nolan, were guest speakers. It was the first of several official socials to meet and greet friends, old and new.

On Friday, the day began with Mass and a resumption of the Convention. The National Officers were given an opportunity to make remarks. After Cy Hughes reported on the Delegate Count, the nominations for State Officers took place. The results of the Nominations were:

President - Thomas O'Donnell (No Opposition)

Vice President - Thomas Bierne (No Opposition)

Secretary - Kevin O'Reilly (No Opposition)

Treasurer - A.J. Smith (No Opposition)

District 1 Director - Mark Scully (No Opposition)

District 2 Director - Rick Long (No Opposition)

District 3 Director - Patrick St. Thomas (No Opposition)

District 4 Director - Clive Cronin (No Opposition)

District 5 Director - Mike McGardy (No Opposition)

District 6 Director - Peter Begley (Winner after an election held the next day)

District 6 Director - Tim Myles

District 7 Director - Larry Stevens (No Opposition)

District 8 Director - Kevin Howe (No Opposition)

After a break for lunch, Special Guest Speakers Fr. Gary Donegan and Rev. Bill Shaw of Belfast, Ireland spoke on the Good Friday Agreement.

Friday evening was a free night. Many of those attending the Convention went  to watch the Rumble Ponies play the Patriots at Mirabito Stadium, just a short walk or shuttle bus ride away. The Patriots won after playing 6-1/2 innings due to being called for rain as the field was deemed unsafe. Good news if you are a Yankee fan.

The Closing Session opened on Saturday Morning as the District 6 Director election was being held. Aside from a few donations, a standing vote was given for National Secretary Ed Halligen.

The motion was made, seconded and passed to recess. The Incoming President, Thomas O'Donnell, will close the Convention at the Installation Dinner.

A Closing Convention Mass was held at St. Patrick's Church, followed immediately by the Installation of the Newly Elected Officers at the same location.

The Installation Dinner followed back at the Binghamton Doubletree.  After several Speakers, President O'Donnell closed the Convention. Food, entertainment and socializing was the order of the evening.

For those who desired to do so, hospitality rooms were available every evening until the wee hours of the morning.

Home: Text

NYS AOH Memorial Mass - September 25, 2021

St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church

Untitled
Untitled
St. Peter's R.C. Church
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled
Home: Gallery

NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade

Home: Text
IMG_8795.jpg

Pictured (Left to Right): NYC St. Patrick's Day Chairman Sean Lane, Consul General of Ireland Helena Nolan, 2023 NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade Grand Marshal Kevin Conway, St. Patrick's Day Foundation NYC Chairman Hilary Beirne.

Home: Image

2023 Grand Marshal Introduced

The 2023 Grand Marshal for the 262nd New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade was introduced at the Irish Consulate on Tuesday, November 29th. After a hearty welcome from Helena Nolan, Consul General of Ireland, Hilary Beirne, St. Patrick's Day Foundation NYC Chairman, spoke about the history of the parade. Sean Lane, St. Patrick's Day Parade Chairman, followed up with a brief introduction of the 2023 Grand Marshal, Kevin Conway. When Mr. Conway took to the podium; he spoke about his family and the great honor it was to lead the parade on St. Patrick's Day. The retirement of Bag Piper, Joe Brady, was also announced. Joe led the Fighting 69th for the past 33 years.

Home: Text
IMG_8820.JPG

Kevin J. Conway

Grand Marshal
2023 NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade

Kevin J. Conway is the Vice Chairman of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, a global private equity firm which he joined in 1994. Conway is the Chairman of the Investment Committee at CD&R, a position he has held for over twenty years, during which time CD&R acquired over 75 companies with an aggregate transaction value of more than $200 billion. The firm's current portfolio employs more than 600,000 and generates annual revenues of approximately $100 billion. Conway also served as Managing Partner at CD&R from 2004 to 2016, as well as a member of the Management Committee. In his 28 years at the firm, Conway has helped build Clayton, Dubilier & Rice into a leading global private equity firm, been active in many of the firm's organizational initiatives, and he works closely with the chief executive officer on all aspects of CD&R's operations.

Prior to joining CD&R, Conway spent ten years with Goldman, Sachs & Co., where he was elected a partner. At Goldman, he was a senior member of the Mergers & Acquisitions Department, advising chief executives, boards of directors, founders, families, and public and private companies on a wide variety of transactions. Conway also served as Chief of Staff of the Goldman Sachs Investment Banking Division and as global head of Investment Banking Recruiting.

Kevin Conway holds a joint degree from Columbia University, with an MBA from Columbia Business School and JD from Columbia Law School, where he was a Harlan Fiske Stone Scholar. Conway is a magna cum laude graduate of Amherst College, where he was a joint political science and economics major and was awarded the Densmore Berry Collins prize in Political Science at graduation. While at Amherst, Kevin was a captain of the Varsity Wrestling team, a member of the Varsity Lacross team and the student advisor to the Economics Department. Since graduation, Conway has served in many leadership and volunteer roles for Amherst, including  as a member of the Presidential Search Committee for Amherst's 19th President and the Executive Committee of the Lives of Consequence capital campaign, Class President for the Class of 1980, Class Agent, and Reunion leadership, setting fundraising records for their 25th, 30th and 35th reunions.

Kevin Conway has been a member of many corporate and Charitable Boards. Currently, he is a Trustee of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, America's oldest grantmaking foundation. Carnegie Corporation was organized in 1911 by Andrew Carnegie to promote the spread of knowledge and understanding and focus its grant-making in support of international peace, education, and the strength of our democracy. Conway serves as Vice Chairman, formerly Chair, of the Board of Directors of Student Sponsor Partners, an organization providing educational opportunities to at-risk inner-city children in New York City that Conway and his family have been involved with for over thirty years. Kevin and his wife Dee have funded scholarships for over 100 SSP students, and each of their children also sponsor and mentor SSP students. Kevin also serves on the Board of Catholic Health Services of Long Island, a network of six hospitals, three nursing homes, and several community service organizations, and the New York Catholic Foundation, which administers funds for the Archdiocese of New York in pursuit of the religious, charitable, educational, and community services activities of the Archdiocese. Conway is currently co-Chair of Access for All, a new scholarship initiative at Chaminade High School, aimed at providing full scholarships for students and families in the most underserved communities on Long Island. Kevin was recently honored as a Distinguished Alumnus at Chaminade's inaugural Legacy of Leadership awards ceremony. Kevin and his wife Dee are also long-time supporters of many other charitable and civic causes, including Catholic Charities, Tuesday's Children, Adventures in Learning, Little Flower Children's Services, and many other charities addressing education, social services, and the needs of the disadvantaged.

Kevin Conway is a native New Yorker and was born in Queens, along with his identical twin brother Brian, one of five children of James and Dolores (Gilhooly) Conway. His parents were both of Irish descent, and because of Irish emigration in the mid- and late- 1800's, Mr. Conway can track relatives to many towns in Ireland, including Drumshanbo in County Leitrim, Newmarket in County Cork, as well as County Meath and County Limerick. Most directly, he traces his Irish heritage through James Conway, his great-grandfather who emigrated from Drumshambo, County Leitrim in the late 1800's and John Beechinor, his maternal great-great-grandfather from Newmarket in County Cork. Kevin Conway's family tree include well known Irish names such as Conway and Gilhooly, along with the earlier generational names dating to the early 1800's with many relatives bearing the names of Beechinor, Cannon, Daly, Doran, Farron, Fitzgerald, Halvey, Maher, Magushim, McCarthy, Murtha and O'Hare. Most of these branches of the Cpnway family tree also emigrated from Ireland, populating Brooklyn and Queens in the late 1800's and early 1900's.

Kevin Conway is married to Denise (Dee") Whalen Conway and they are the proud parents of four children: Jack, Ryan, Matt and Kate. Jack and his wife Shannon have given Dee and Kevin the blessing of two grandchildren. The Conways are members of the parish of Saint Mary's, Manhasset, Long Island.

Home: Image
IMG_2207_edited.jpg

Common Catholic Prayers in Irish

Home: Welcome

Comhartha na Croise
(The Sign of the Cross)

In ainm an Athar agus an Mhic agus an Spioraid Naoimh, Amen.

Home: Text

Glóir don Athair
(The "Glory Be")

Glóir don Athair,

agus don Mhac,

agus don Spiorad Naomh.

Mar a bhí ó thús,

mar atá anois agus mar a bheas go brách,

le saol na saol.

Amen.

Home: Text

Sé do bheatha, a Mhuire
(The "Hail Mary")

Sé do bheatha, a Mhuire,

atá lán de ghrásta,

Tá an Tearna leat.

Is beannaithe thú idir mná,

Agus is beannaithe toradh do bhroinne; Íosa.

A Naomh-Mhuire,

a Mháthair Dé,

guigh orainn na peacaigh,

anois, agus ar uair ár mbáis.

Amen.

Home: Text

Paidir na hÓiche
(Evening Prayer)

A Dhia, A Athair, molaim thú

As ucht do chineáltais liom inniu.

As ucht mo chairde molaim thú,

Agus as an teaghlach a thug tú dom.

I ndorchadas na hoíche cosain mé.

Amen.

Home: Text

Paidir na Maidine
Morning Prayer

A Dhia, tá grá agat dom.

Bíonn tú liom de lá is d'oíche.

Ba mhaith liom grá a thabhairt duit

Gach nóiméad den lá.

Ba mhaith liom tú a shásamh.

A Athair, cabhraigh liom.

Amen.

Home: Text

Ár nAthair
Our Father

Ár nAthair,
atá ar neamh,
go naofar d'ainm,
go dtaga do ríocht,
go ndéantar do thoil ar an talamh,
mar  a  dhéantar ar neamh.
Ár n-arán laethúil tabhair dúinn inniu,
agus maith dúinn ár bhfiacha,
mar a mhaithimidne dár bhféichiúna féin,
agus ná lig sinn i gcathú,
ach saor sinn ó olc.

Home: Text

Catholic Irish History

From the book "A Popular History of Ireland"
Dublin, 1961

Home: Text

St. Brigid

In the late 400's, there was a concentration of power in Ireland where Sovereign Power was alternated between the north and the south branches of the O'Neills. This relative concentration of power was followed by a striking expansion towards the Isle of Man and the islands along the Scottish coast. Some of the leading families willingly volunteered to disseminate the Catholic Faith and learning. Women participated in a remarkable manner. Gaelic Ireland and the surviving remnants of the native stock retained the memory of a social and family predominance of women, of a matriarchy. This peculiarity of Ireland (which Gaul, Rome and Germany never experienced) was to emphasise itself again in the missionary work. Brigid, or Bride, who had been a princess, became an abbess at Kildare in the time of St. Patrick. What attracted the sympathy of the Irish, perhaps, was the similarity of her name to that of Bride (Fada on the i - pronounced Breed), the lady who had the singular honour of being the solitary Celtic Goddess. St Brigid replaced her by becoming the Gaelic Madonna. The women and men engaged in the work of the missions were generally from the aristocratic or ruling classes, e.g., Enda was brother-in-law of the Munster King and Finnian was a Prince of Leinster. This was a factor which contributed greatly in giving to Irish Christianity its refinement of humility tinged by nobility.

Home: Text

St. Columba

The most representative of the high-born abbots was Columcille (Dove of the Church), for us St. Columba. Great-grandson of the founder of Tyrconnell, nephew of the High King, he received his early education on the banks of Strangford Lough in the heart of Patrick's country. He built a church on the small brushwood islet which later became Derry. Then, full of initiative and ardor, he traveled around the entire north-west founding monasteries here and there. He incited the northern O'Neills to wage war upon his southern cousin, whose turn it was to become High King. The north, perhaps due to the prestige of Columcille, won the day. What motivated the abbot?

The story which best recalls the Ireland of those days gives one reason. At the time of the great feast of Tara, which was held once during every reign, the king installed himself with his retinue of scholars, doctors, lawyers, poets and chroniclers. Various games were played and interminable debates took place. The gathering of people from every province necessitated a very strict discipline, and in consequence every act of violation carried a penalty of death for the aggressor. It happened that a northern nobleman forgot himself to the extent of killing another player with a blow of a hurley-stick, for hurling was already the main sport of the nation. The culprit sought refuge with Columcille, but the king ignored the claim of sanctuary and put the man to death.

The bellicose abbot incited the northern clans to revolt, but when he was subsequently disavowed by these chieftains he was obliged to leave the country hurriedly. His  mother's family governed the west of Scotland. They gave him the small island of Iona and entrusted him with the mission of evangelising the pagans along the mainland. Thus it came about that the abbot-prince, the royal failure from Tara, the great St. Columba, the apostle of Caledonia, became the first missionary to propagate afar the name of Ireland at the same time as that of Christ.

Home: Text

St. Patrick

First Apostolates

In the century immediately preceeding and the years following the Christian era Grecian civilisation receeded before the Roman. First under the Caesars, and later under the Emperors, Rome conquered the continent of Europe from the furthermost frontiers of Germany up to the Scottish Lowlands. Their hegemony did not penetrate to Ireland, which, remaining outside the uniform administration of Rome, retained its individuality, a fact which soon manifested itself in the peculiar manner of its conversion to Christianity.

The new religion arrived in the island in the middle of the Roman decline. To the Celto-Britons Christianity had presented itself as the faith of a master race; to the Celticised Irish it seemed the faith of a ruined temporal power, a fact which, however, in no way disquieted their independent spirit. It made great appeal to their innate spirituality, for long nourished by the Druids, and to their passion for learning, which was not latterly not satisfied by Druidism.

Christianity had penetrated into Britain two centuries before the arrival of St. Patrick to Ireland. In view of the constant intercourse between the two islands it is hard to imagine that some inkling of this new religion had not reached Ireland before this. Despite his unquestioned zeal, the first emissary, Pelagius, had not the tact so desirable in religious leaders, be he nevertheless converted a large number of communities. Palladius, who succeeded him, and Patrick himself were sent not to the pagan Irish but to the "Irish baptized in Christ". That the field should have been so prepared in no way diminishes the immensity of Patrick's achievement.

The druids were not the type of men to allow themselves to be easily dispossessed of that religious and moral authority which they wielded over society, be it educators of the youth or as counsellors to the chieftains. As in most other countries the struggle was a bitter one, though here virtually no bloodshed ensued. Martyrs are singularly few in Irish History. The simplicity and gentleness of Patrick, remarkable even for a saint, marked the decisive conversion of Ireland with a lasting originality.

St. Patrick

Patrick was the son of a Roman decurion (a member of a city or town council in ancient Rome. It can also refer to a Roman calvary officer in command of a squadron (turma). The former is the most probable according to historians), born a Christian though of native stock, if we are to judge by the little aptitude for Latin which he showed as a child. He was barely sixteen years old when he was seized by Irish pirates and carried away as a slave to the northern part of the island. After six years he succeeded in escaping on a trading vessel as far as Flanders whence he managed to rejoin his parents in Brittany. They would have liked him to have stayed with them at home, but Patrick had already heard the voices calling him to his vocation. He left us a "Confession" which reveals the essential of his spiritual life. He began to study and serve an apprenticeship to the religious life in order to become a missionary. From the age of twenty-two he worked fourteen years in the entourage of the famous bishop of Auxerre, Germain, one of the Christian luminaries of the epoch.

Around this time in Rome it was felt that the time was opportune to group together all the scattered believers in Ireland under the authority of one bishop. The person so designated for the task, Palladius, died almost immediately. The mitre and the responsibility for the mission were thereupon handed to Patrick. He landed in 432 C.E., probably near Wicklow, and headed northwards towards Strangford Lough. He was anxious to meet again the old druid or chieftain who had treated him so humanely as a slave and to betake himself to Tara, the seat of sovereign power. From his former experience he knew that real influence lay solely with the kings, their families, the druids and the intellectuals. Once they were converted to the new faith the rest of the country would follow.

The beginning proved difficult because Laoghaire, the High King, remained quite unconvinced. However, his brother received baptism from Patrick and presented him with a site for a church close to the river Boyne, which thus bows itself into Irish History. Later, Patrick won over the chief poet and through him reached the intelligensia surrounding the king. These official poets, the filidh, were finally suppressed only in the 13th century. They ranked in precedence immediately after the Druids and they were graded in ten categories according to the number of poems (from 7 to 350) which they could recite.

Attitude to the druids

This wholly oral literature was a rich mine of folklore. It lauded the exploits of the Gaels and went back deep into the pagan past. It had as its principal centres the two revered sanctuaries - Armagh, dominated by the family of Concobha Mac Nessa and the northern heroes, Fergus Mac Roy, Cuchulainn and the Red Branch Knights, and Tara, where were extolled the deeds of Finn Mac Cool and Cormac Mac Art, the first High King of Ireland. Patrick very wisely refrained from attempting to turn his new converts from their ancient culture. He was not an iconoclast in artistic matters, nor did he ever seek in the realm of law to proscribe the ancient native laws. Instead, he quietly dropped those tenets which were irreconcilable with Holy Writ. He was the inspirer, if not the actual draughtsman, of a new Code which enshrined the essence of the legalistic principles elaborated by the old jurists, the Brehons.

For almost thirty years Patrick traversed the country, surrounded by a retinue of collaborators who sought to rid the education of the new Christians of the older barbarities, to teach them how to build churches, to instruct them in the Rites of the Church, to found cloisters, and to copy the catechism. The first group of these voluntary workers was comprised of Bretons and Gauls. These formed the nucleus of the early bishops and were replaced as soon as practicable by native holders of office.

The siting of bishoprics presented a serious problem in an island studded with small farms and sparce communities, but devoid of any real towns. Following his political convictions, Patrick adopted the principle of installing a bishop in every centre of authority governed by a chieftain. Thus, so it is reported, he created more than 300 bishops and installed the Primacy of Ireland in its present seat, the city of Armagh.

His monumental work accomplished, Patrick returned to the humble hamlet of Saul in 461 C.E., there to die in the spot where he had made his first conversions.

Home: Text

Queens County

Home: Text
IMG_0638_edited.jpg

Queens Goes to Binghamton

Pictured above (Left to Right): Past District 5 Director Walter Cooper, Queens County Board President Ed Seewald and Queens County Board Recording Secretary Robbie Salmon

Queens County participated in the 2023 New York State Convention in Binghamton in early July. For a comprehensive report of the Convention, go to the New York State section of this website.

Home: Welcome
IMG_4693_edited.jpg

New Term for Queens

Pictured above (Left to Right): Financial Secretary Kieran Mahoney, NYS Secretary Tom Bierne, President Ed Seewald, Vice President John Mahoney, Treasurer Bill Corrigan and Recording Secretary Robert Salmon

Queens County held its bi-ennial  County Convention on May 18, 2023 at the Leonard Center in Holy Child Jesus Parish in Richmond Hill. Delegates from three Divisions came together to elect the Board of Officers that will serve Queens County for the term 2023 - 2025. President Ed Seewald thanked the Board of Officers for all their hard work in the term that was ending. He said that it takes the efforts of the entire team for any administration to be successful. He also thanked outgoing Treasurer, Walter Cooper, for all his work in setting up the County to be in sync with local, State and Federal tax regulations. The officers were installed by New York State Secretary Tom Bierne.

Home: Welcome
IMG_4113_edited.jpg

Another Two Years

NYS Secretary, Tom Bierne, hands the gavel to re-elected County Board President Ed Seewald for the 2023 -2025 Term

Home: Welcome
IMG_9225_edited.jpg

Queens Aide Installed

Pictured above: Mark Edwards (Center), 2023 Queens Aide to the NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade, with his parents, David and Monica

Mark C. Edwards, Queens County Aide to the Grand Marshal

Mark Edwards, President of AOH Division 21 Queens was installed as the 2023 Aide to the Grand Marshal for the 2023 NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade.

Mark was born in Brooklyn, NY on August 1, 1964. His father David was born in County Dublin and his mother Monica (nee Brennan) was born in Brooklyn, NY to parents from Counties Mayo and Kilkenny. He is the older brother Brian, Paul and Tara. The Edwards Family moved to Rockaway Beach in 1973 where Mark attended P.S. 114, J.H.S. 180 and Beach Channel High School. Mark met Alice Foley while in high school in 1980. They were married in 1989, and are the proud parents of three, Maeghan (31), a NYC school teacher, Sean (30), a NYC firefighter and Maura (17), a college bound student. In 1985, Mark began working for Con Edison, and in 1994, he became a High Voltage Troubleshooter in Con Edison's Brooklyn Emergency Department. He will be retiring from Con Edison in August 2023 with 38 years of outstanding service. Mark's love for Irish culture and music started at an early age. When he was 13 years old, he spent 3 months in Ireland with his aunt, uncle and cousins and grew to love the country and the culture even more. As a father, he passed on this love to his children with several family trips to Ireland over the years. With deep pride for his Irish heritage and faith, Mark joined the Ancient Order of Hibernians Division 21 Rockaway Beach/Breezy Point where he has served as President for the past 14 years. AOH Division 21 organizes the Rockaway Irish Festival, the proceeds of which benefit local Catholic churches and community minded organizations. Mark is also a past Vice President and Treasurer of the Queens County AOH, a member of the Knights of Columbus Division #2672, and a member of the Rockaway Graybeards. Mark and his family are extremely proud he has been selected as Aide to the Grand Marshal for the 2023 NYC St. Patrick's Day Parade.

Home: Welcome
IMG_8990.jpg

Division 9 Officers Installed

The re-elected and newly-elected officers of Division 9, Bayside, were installed in the upper room of Monahan & Fitzgerald on Saturday, January 14th. Witnessed by the Brothers of the Division, Queens County Board President Ed Seewald presided over the Installation. The gavel was handed over to the new President, Fran McLoughlin by the outgoing President, Kieran Mahoney. Kieran held the chair for 9 years.

Home: Welcome
09F9EB97-3C85-477D-B3A1-7BDCFBFD7C87.jpg

AOH/LAOH Icebreaker A Uniter

On December 11, 2022, Queens County AOH and LAOH came together for an afternoon of comradery at Maggie May's in Bayside. In the first get-together since before Covid disrupted everyone's life, the men and women of Queens County gathered to celebrate the Christmas season. Friendly banter peppered the occasion while good food and drink filled the gastronomic void. Bill Corrigan added a little spice to the gathering with a quick game of Christmas Trivia.

Home: Welcome
IMG_3292.jpg

Queens County Helps to Defeat Proposed Amendment

Pictured above (left to right): Past District 5 Director Walter Cooper, Past Queens County Board President Edward Rice, Queens County Board President Edmund Seewald, Division 14 Financial Secretary Jim Corrigan, Division 14 President Bill Corrigan)

(Not Pictured: District 5 Director Kieran Mahoney)

Home: Welcome

Queens County participated in the AOH National Convention in Pittsburgh from July 13th to 17th. Representing the County was County President Ed Seewald, Division 14 President Bill Corrigan, Division 14 Financial Secretary Jim Corrigan, District 5 Director Kieran Mahoney, Past District 5 Director Walter Cooper and Past County President Ed Rice. 408 Delegates were in attendance from all corners of the Country and everywhere in between.

The Convention consisted of multiple Officer and Director reports, resolutions and Constitutional Amendments, just to name a few of the proceedings. Some of the Resolutions were:

- Honoring the role of the AOH and John Dearie

- Freedom for All Ireland Legacy Resolution

- Resolution for the Creation of an All Island Assembly

- Social Media, Anti-Bullying Resolution

- Resolution Condemning Domestic Violence

- Resolution in Support of Ukraine

- Medal of Freedom Resolution to Jan Scruggs

Some of the Proposed Constitutional Amendments placed on the floor were:

- The role of the Historian/Archivist as set forth in Section 9 was PASSED

- The National Assessment was raised from $16 to $20 per member was PASSED

- The creation of the Human Dignity Award was PASSED

- An Amendment to the Sean McBride Humanitarian Award was REJECTED

- The creation of the Fr. Edward J. Flanagan Human Dignity Award was PASSED

- Establishment of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Founders Day Award was taken off the floor

- A Powers and Duties of Officers Oversite Committee was APPROVED

- Membership Qualifications allowing Women to join the AOH was REJECTED

The Membership Qualifications Amendment has been a hot potato in the months leading up to the vote. It would have allowed women to become full members of the AOH. After 6 meetings via Zoom with National, State and County leaders it was evident that there was no support for such a move except for a small section of the Northwest. The committee still decided to recommend it be passed. The LAOH protested such a move and said so at their Convention just across the hall from where the men were meeting. About a dozen delegates stepped up to the microphone to speak on the issue with only one in favor of passage. When the vote was taken, the "nays" won the day with thundering support.

I understand there were resignations within the Order just because the issue was being discussed. Others threatened to do so if passage went through. Now is the time to heal the rift and go back to doing the work of the Order.

The election of the new National Officers took place with the following results:

National President Daniel O'Conner (Re-elected)

National Vice-President Sean Pender (Re-elected)

National Treasurer Liam McNabb (Re-elected)

National Secretary Ed Halligan (replaced the retiring Jere Cole)

National Directors:

Ray Lynch (Re-elected)

Sean O'Dowell (Re-elected)

Richard Thompson (Re-elected)

Tim McSweeney (Re-elected)

Dan Devinny (Re-elected)

The next National Convention will be held in Orlando, Florida in 2024. There is talk about Kansas City or Atlantic City in 2026.

Home: Text
B6386FE2-DFAE-4E18-90DD-C560F02F4146.jpg

NYS Secretary Visits Queens County Board

Pictured above (left to right): Marshal Dave Carey, Financial Secretary Kieran Mahoney, President Ed Seewald, NYS Secretary Tom Beirne, Treasurer Walter Cooper, John Mahoney, Recording Secretary Bill Corrigan

NYS Secretary, Tom Beirne, paid a visit to Queens County at its' County Board meeting on October 20th. Those present were informed of the latest happenings in New York State, such as the location of the 2023 New York State Convention - Binghamton. Queens County is also proud to announce that Mark Edwards, President of Division 21 in the Rockaways, will serve as the 2023 New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade Aide to the Grand Marshal for Queens County. Mark has served the Order and Division 21 for many years, raising thousands for the local community as well as assisting fellow Hibernians elsewhere. Our heartiest congratulations go out to him on his election.

Home: Welcome
IMG_5293.JPG

Queens County Participates in NYS Convention

Pictured above (left to right): Past Queens County Board President Edward Rice, Past District 5 Director Walter Cooper, NYS President John Manning, Queens County Board President Edmund Seewald and Division 14 Queens President William Corrigan.

Home: Welcome

Division 14 participated in the New York State Convention held in Syracuse, NY from July 8th to 11th. The Division was represented by Bill Corrigan, Walter Cooper and Ed Seewald. Aside from the various workshops and meetings, we were there to elect our State Officers for the next two years. John Manning from Division 4 (Breezy Point) became the latest State President from Queens. The last time the County held the office was 40 years ago. Kieran Mahoney from Division 9 (Bayside) was elected District 5 Director. The new State Officers were installed after Mass on the Saturday of the Convention. During the evening hours there was plenty of time to socialize with the other delegates in attendance from throughout the State as well as from National. There was much to learn as well as time to have fun.

The 2023 Convention will be held in Binghamton in July. Further information can be found on this website as it becomes available.

Home: Text

QUEENS COUNTY BOARD OFFICERS

2023 - 2025

Chaplain ..................................................................................................................................... Fr. Francis Shannon

President ....................................................................................................................................... Edmund Seewald

Vice President ...................................................................................................................................... John Morony

Recording Secretary ............................................................................................................................. Kevin Shiner

Financial Secretary ......................................................................................................................... Kieran Mahoney

Treasurer ............................................................................................................................................... Bill Corrigan

Chairman/Standing Committee ................................................................................................... Kieran Mahoney

Marshal .......................................................................................................................................... Fran McLoughlin

Sentinel .............................................................................................................................................. Phil McManus

The Board meets on the third Thursday of each month (except for July and August)

Days and dates may change

Home: Text
Home: Text

QUEENS COUNTY BOARD MEETINGS

The Queens County Board meets mostly the third Thursday of the month (except for July and August) at 7:30 PM. Contact the Queens County Board at aohqueenscountyboard@gmail.com or call at 1.405.441.3354 for more information.

All members of the AOH in good standing are welcome to attend.

Scheduled Future Meetings:

NOTE: ALL DAYS AND DATES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE! LOCATIONS MAY ALSO VARY.

June 20, 2024 at Holy Child Jesus Parish

2022 Bayside St. Patrick's Day Mass and Parade

Home: Gallery

Division 14 Celebrates St. Patrick's Day

Home: Text

Our Dinner Dances

Good craic for all!

Home: Gallery

2022 Dinner Dance

Saturday, March 12th, 2022
Irish American Society, Mineola, NY

Home: Text
IMG_6392.HEIC
IMG_6395.HEIC
IMG_6393.HEIC
IMG_6398.HEIC
IMG_6399.HEIC
IMG_6401.HEIC
IMG_6402.HEIC
IMG_6405.HEIC
IMG_6434.HEIC
IMG_6438.HEIC
IMG_6441.HEIC
IMG_6443.HEIC
IMG_6449.HEIC
IMG_6453.HEIC
IMG_6455.HEIC
IMG_6457.HEIC
IMG_6458.HEIC
IMG_6459.HEIC
IMG_6463.HEIC
IMG_6465.HEIC
IMG_6468.HEIC
IMG_6472.HEIC
IMG_6476.HEIC
IMG_6477.HEIC
IMG_6480.HEIC
IMG_6484.HEIC
IMG_6488.HEIC
IMG_6493.HEIC
IMG_6496.HEIC
IMG_6512.HEIC
IMG_6513.HEIC
IMG_6515.HEIC
IMG_6521.HEIC
IMG_6528.HEIC
Home: Gallery

Everyone Loves a Parade

New York City St. Patrick's Day Parade

Home: Gallery

2022 St. Patrick's Day

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Home: Text
IMG_6608.HEIC
IMG_6609.HEIC
IMG_6611_edited.jpg
IMG_6612_edited.jpg
IMG_6613_edited.jpg
IMG_6619_edited.jpg
IMG_6622_edited.jpg
IMG_6624_edited.jpg
IMG_6626.HEIC
IMG_6628_edited_edited.jpg
IMG_6629_edited.jpg
IMG_6630.HEIC
IMG_6638_edited.jpg
IMG_6647.HEIC
IMG_6648.HEIC
IMG_6649_edited.jpg
IMG_6656.HEIC
IMG_6657.HEIC
IMG_6658.HEIC
IMG_6660_edited.jpg
IMG_6662.HEIC
IMG_2896.jpeg
IMG_7207.jpeg
IMG_6207.jpg
IMG_6788_edited.jpg
Home: Gallery
parade bus 2019.jpg

AOH 14 Parade Marchers 2019

Home: Image
Bernie%20Duffy%20and%20Family_edited.jpg

The Bernie Duffy family as they donate the AOH 14 Banner to the Division

Home: Image
IMG_3634_edited.jpg

Maureen Gallahue-Atkinson, Mark Trantel, Colleen Maguire, Jim Corrigan, Maryann and Tom Magaldi and John Maguire

Home: Image
IMG_0747.jpg

Erin Saderleaf

Home: Image
IMG_3633_edited.jpg

Tim O'Sullivan, Past Division 14 and AOH Queens County President and his dearly departed wife Maryann O'Sullivan

Home: Image
IMG_0748.jpg

Timmy Corrigan

Home: Image
Resized_2_edited.jpg

More St. Patrick's Day Memories

Home: Gallery

Division 14 Musical Favorites

Home: Text

Breastplate of St. Patrick

Christ be beside me, Christ be before me,

Christ be behind me, King of my heart,

Christ be within me, Christ be below me,

Christ be above me, never to part.

Christ on my right hand, Christ on my left hand,

Christ all around me, shield in the strife,

Christ in my sleeping, Christ in my sitting,

Christ in my rising, light of my life.

Christ be in all hearts, thinking about me,

Christ be on all tongues, telling of me,

Christ be the vision in eyes that see me,

In ears that hear me, Christ ever be.

Home: Text

Prayer of St. Francis

Make me a channel of your peace,

Where there is hatred let me bring your love,

Where there is injury your pardon Lord,

And where there's doubt true faith in you.

Make me a channel of your peace,

Where there's despair in life, let me bring hope,

Where there is darkness, only light,

And where there's sadness, ever joy.

O Master grant that I may never seek,

So much to be consoled as to console,

To be understood as to understand,

To be loved as to love with all my soul.

Make me a channel of your peace,

It is in pardoning that we are pardoned,

In giving of ourselves that we receive,

And in dying that we're born to eternal life.

Home: Text

Table of Plenty

Come to the feast of heaven and earth!

Come to the table of plenty!

God will provide for all that we need,

here at the table of plenty.

O come and sit at my table

where saints and sinners are friends.

I wait to welcome the lost and lonely

to share the cup of my love.

O come and eat without money;

come to drink without price.

My feast of gladness will feed your spirit

with faith and fullness of life.

Home: Text

Lady of Knock  by Dana (Rosemary Scallon)

There were people of all ages gathered 'round the gable wall

poor and humble men and women, little children that you called

We are gathered here before you, and our hearts are just the same

filled with joy at such a vision as we praise your name

     Refrain:

     Golden Rose, Queen of Ireland, all my cares and troubles cease

     as we kneel with love before you, Lady of Knock, my Queen of Peace

Though your message was unspoken, still the truth in silence lies

as we gaze upon your vision, and the truth I try to find

here I stand with John the teacher, and with Joseph at your side

and I see the Lamb of God, on the Altar glorified

     Refrain

And the Lamb will conquer and the woman clothed in the sun

will shine Her light on everyone and the lamb will conquer

and the woman clothed in the sun, will shine Her light on everyone

Home: Text

Hail, Glorious St. Patrick
(words: Sister Agnes / tune: ancient Irish melody, 1920)

Hail, glorious St. Patrick, dear saint of our isle,

On us thy poor children bestow a sweet smile;

And now thou art high in the mansions above,

On Erin's green valleys look down in thy love.

(optional repeat)

On Erin's green valleys, on Erin's green valleys,

On Erin's green valleys look down in thy love

Hail, glorious St. Patrick, thy words were once strong

Against Satan's wiles and a heretic throng;

Not less is thy might where in Heaven thou art;

Oh, come to our aid, in our battle take part!

In a war against sin, in the fight for the faith,

Dear Saint, may thy children resist to the death;

May their strength be in meekness, in penance and prayer,

Their banner the Cross, which they glory to bear.

Thy people, now exiles on many a shore,

Shall love and revere thee till time be no more;

And the fire thou hast kindled shall ever burn bright,

It's warmth undiminished, undying its light.

Ever bless and defend the sweet land of our birth,

Where the shamrock still blooms as when thou wert on earth,

And our hearts shall yet burn, wherever we roam,

For God and St. Patrick, and our native home.

Home: Text

Historian's Corner

Covid may not be on the front burner of many people's minds nowadays, but let's not forget the last time plague threatened Ireland.

Home: Text
IMG_0969_edited.jpg

Robert E. Bonner

Publisher and Horse Enthusiast

Home: Image
IMG_0973_edited.jpg
Home: Image

Robert Edwin Bonner (April 28, 1824 - July 6, 1899) was an American publisher, now best known for The New York Ledger, a weekly story newspaper. He owned famous trotting horses and he was a prominent supporter of the Presbyterian Church and Pastor John Hall.

Bonner was born in Ireland, in the town of Ramelton, Co. Donegal; his ancestors were Scottish Presbyterians. He arrived in America in 1839, where his uncle owned land in Hartford, Connecticut. Bonner became an apprentice in the printing trade and worked at the Hartford Courant. There he was an extraordinarily fasy compositor. Completing his apprenticeship in 1844, he moved to New York and worked for the organ of the new American Republican Party (later Native American; Know-Nothing) while he lived by "practicing the most rigid economy". When it suspended operation he found work at The Evening Mirror, a daily launched in 1844. He began writing and contributed to various newspapers in other cities.

He worked at The Merchant's Ledger, a financial weekly, in the advertising department and became involved with printing that newspaper. He purchased it in 1851 and changed the name to The New York Ledger in 1855, when he sought a wider readership by running articles by well-known writers. He also used advertising to raise the profile of the paper and increase the circulation.

Around 1856 Bonner became interested in horses and, in particular, the "trotting" form of harness racing. He paid large sums for his horses; one of the most famous was Dexter, a gelding that cost him $35,000. He purchased trotters for road driving on speedways. Other horses he purchased were $40,000 for young Pocahontas; $40,000 for Maud S. and $41,000 for Sunol. He did not gamble or race for money, but there was a rivalry between Bonner and Commodore Vanderbilt over who had the best horses. At one time, he was president of the New York Driving Club. In 1893, he was presented with a silver sculpture of his trotting horse, Sunol being driven by Charles Marvin. A bronze copy of the Cyrus Dallin sculpture is in the collection of the Harness Racing Museum & Hall of Fame in Goshen, New York.

Bonner was a philanthropist who preferred not to make his donations public, but he was a known supporter of Princeton University and contributed $131,000 towards the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. He was also president of the Scotch-Irish Society of America.

Bonner married Jane McConlis in 1850 and they had six children although one child, Martha Agnes, died in infancy. Bonner's wife Jane died in 1878.

In 1887 he passed the Ledger  to his three sons. Robert Bonner's sons published dime novels, too.

Pastor John Hall died September 1898 in Ireland and one son, Andrew Allen Bonner, died in December 1898. According to his obituary, Bonner never recovered from the shocks; his health and interest failed. He was confined to a bed at times during June and he died on July 6, 1899. He was survived by sons Robert Edwin and Frederick and daughter Mrs. Francis Forbes.

Bonner was one of the famous "Sealskin Brigade" and did much to promote the sport.

Bonner is the namesake of the city of Bonner Springs, Kansas.

Upon his death in 1899 he was interred in Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.

Home: Text
IMG_9005_edited.jpg

Arthur Griffith

President of the Dáil Éireann

Home: Image

 Arthur Joseph Griffith (31 March 1871 - 12 August 1922) was an Irish writer, newspaper editor, and politician who founded the political party Sinn Féin. He led the Irish delegation at the negotiations that produced the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty, and served as the president of Dáil Éireann from January 1922 until his death later in August.

After a short spell in South Africa, Griffith founded and edited the Irish nationalist newspaper The United Irishman in 1899. In 1904, he wrote The Resurrection of Hungary: A Parallel for Ireland, which advocated the withdrawal of Irish members from the Parliament of the United Kingdom and the setting up of the institutions of government at home in Ireland, a policy that became known as Sinn Féin (ourselves). On 28 November 1905, he presented "The Sinn Féin Policy" at the first annual convention of his organisation, the National Council; the occasion is marked as the founding date of the Sinn Féin party. Griffith took over a president of Sinn Féin in 1911, but at that time the organisation was still small.

Griffith was arrested following the Easter Rising of 1916, despite not having taken any part in it. On his release, he worked to build up Sinn Féin, which won a string of by-election victories. At the party's Ardfheis (annual convention) in October 1917, Sinn Féin became an unambiguously republican party, and Griffith resigned the presidency in favour of the 1916 leader Éamon de Valera, becoming vice-president instead. Griffith was elected as an MP for East Cavan in a by-election in June 1918, and re-elected in the 1918 general election, when Sinn Féin won a huge electoral victory over the Irish Parliamentary Party and, refusing to take their seats at Westminster, set up their own constituent assembly, Dáil Éireann.

In the Dáil, Griffith served as Minister for Home Affairs from 1919 to 1921, and Minister for Foreign Affairs from 1921 to1922. In September 1921, he was appointed chairman of the Irish delegation to negotiate a treaty with the British government. After months of negotiations, he and the other four delegates signed the Anglo-Irish Treaty, which created the Irish Free State, but not as a republic. This led to a split in the Dáil. After the Treaty was narrowly approved by the Dáil, de Valera resigned as president and Griffith was elected in his place. The split led to the Irish Civil War. Griffith died suddenly in August 1922, two months after the outbreak of that war.

Family and early life

Arthur Joseph Griffith was born at 61 Upper Dominick Street, Dublin on 31 March 1871, of distant Welsh lineage. His great-great-grandfather, William Griffith of Drws-y-coed Uchaf, Rhyd-ddu, Caernarvonshire (1719-1782), was a farmer and supporter of the Moravian Church cause. His great grandfather, Griffith Griffith (b. 1789), emigrated first to the United States and then to Ireland, where some of his sisters had settled in Dublin among the Moravian community there. A Roman Catholic, Griffith was educated by the Irish Christian Brothers. He worked for a time as a printer before joining the Gaelic League, which was aimed at promoting the restoration of the Irish Language.

His father had been a printer on The Nation newspaper - Griffith was one of several employees locked out in the early 1890's due to a dispute with a new owner of the paper. The young Griffith was a member of the Irish Republican Brotherhood (IRB). He initially supported Parnell's political views, but then decided that Parnell's political outlook was not what he thought was best for Ireland. Griffith visited South Africa from 1896 to 1898. In South Africa, Griffith supported the Boers in their campaign against British expansionism and was a supporter of Paul Kruger.

In 1899, on returning to Dublin, Griffith co-founded the weekly United Irishman newspaper with his associate William Rooney, who died in 1901. On 24 November 1910, Griffith married his fiancée, Maud Sheehan, after a six-year engagement; they had a son and a daughter.

Griffith's fierce criticism of the Irish Parliamentary Party's alliance with the British Liberal Party was heavily influenced by the anti-Liberal rhetoric of Young Irelander John Mitchel. Griffith supported the Limerick boycott, advocating shunning Jewish-owned businesses in the city. Griffith also supported movements seeking national independence from the British Empire in Egypt and India, and wrote a highly-critical description of the British government action at Matabele. Despite his opposition to communism and socialism, he sometimes worked with James Connolly, who also supported Irish nationalism.

In September 1900, he established an organisation called Cumann na nGaedheal ("Society of the Gaels"), to unite advanced nationalist and separatist groups and clubs. In 1903, he set up the National Council, to campaign against the visit to Ireland of King Edward VII and his consort Alexandra of Denmark. In 1907, the organisation merged with the Sinn Féin League, which itself had been formed from an amalgamation of Cumann na nGaedheal and the Dungannon Clubs, to form what would become Sinn Féin.

In 1906, after the United Irishman journal collapsed because of a libel suit, Griffith re-founded it under the title Sinn Féin. It briefly became a daily in 1909 and survived until its suppression by the British government in 1914, after which Griffith became editor of the new nationalist journal, Nationality.

Foundation of Sinn Féin

Most historians opt for 28 November 1905 as a founding date because it was on this date that Griffith first presented his 'Sinn Féin Policy'. In his writings, Griffith declared that the Act of Union of Great Britain and Ireland in 1800 was illegal and that, consequently, the Anglo-Irish dual monarchy that existed under Grattan's Parliament and the so-called Constitution of 1782 were still in effect. Its first president was Edward Martyn.

The fundamental principles of abstentionism on which Sinn Féin was founded were outlined in an article published in 1904, by Griffith called The Resurrection of Hungary, in which, noting how in 1867 Hungary went from being part of the Austrian Empire to a separate co-equal kingdom in Austria-Hungary. Though not a monarchist himself, Griffith advocated such an approach for the Anglo-Irish relationship, namely that Ireland should become a separate kingdom alongside Great Britain, the two forming a dual monarchy with a shared monarch but separate governments, as it was thought this solution would be more palatable to the British. This was similar to the policy of Henry Grattan a century earlier. However, this idea was never embraced by later separatist leaders, especially Michael Collins, and never came to anything, although Kevin O'Higgins toyed with the idea as a means of ending partition, shortly before his assassination in 1927.

Griffith sought to combine elements of Parnellism with the traditional separatist approach; he saw himself not as a leader but as providing a strategy which a new leader might follow. Central to his strategy was parliamentary abstention: the belief that Irish MPs should refuse to attend the Parliament of the United Kingdom at Westminster, but should instead establish a separate Irish parliament (with an administrative system based on local government) in Dublin.

Griffith was a staunch economic nationalist, he argued that nationalism was central to the fostering of economic growth. He often cited the works of German economist Friedrich List.

In February 1908, Sinn Féin unsuccessfully contested a by-election in North Leitrim, where the sitting MP, one Charles Dolan of Manorhamilton, County Leitrim, had defected to Sinn Féin. At this time Sinn Féin was being infiltrated by the Irish Republican Brotherhood, who saw it as a vehicle for their aims; it had several local Councillors (mostly in Dublin, including W.T. Cosgrave) and contained a dissident wing grouped from 1910 around the monthly periodical called Irish Freedom. The IRB members argued that the aim of dual monarchism should be replaced by republicanism and that Griffith was excessively inclined to compromise with conservative elements (notably in his pro-employer position during the 1913-1914 Dublin Lockout, when he saw the syndicalism of James Larkin as aimed at crippling Irish industry for Great Britain's benefit).

In 1911, he helped to found the Proportional Representation Society of Ireland, believing that proportional representation would help to prevent animosity between umionists and nationalists in an independent Ireland.

1916 Rising

In 1916, rebels seized and took over a number of key locations in Dublin, in what became known as the Easter Rising. After its defeat, it was widely described both by British politicians and the Irish and British media as the Sinn Féin rebellion", even though Sinn Féin had very limited involvement. When in 1917, surviving leaders of the rebellion were released from gaol (or escaped) they joined Sinn Féin en masse, using it as a vehicle for the advancement of the republic. The result was a bitter clash between those original members who backed Griffith's concept of an Ango-Irish dual monarchy and the new members, under Éamon de Valera, who wanted to achieve a republic. Matters almost led to a split at the party's Ard Fheis (conference) in October 1917.

In a compromise, it was decided to seek to establish a republic initially, then allow the people to decide whether they wanted a republic or a monarchy, subject to the condition that no member of Britain's royal house could sit on any prospective Irish throne. At that Ard Fheis, Griffith resigned the presidency of Sinn Féin in favour of de Valera; he and Fr. Michael O'Flanagan were elected Vice-Presidents. The leaders of the Irish Parliamentary Party (IPP) sought a rapprochement with Griffith over the British threat of conscription, which both parties condemned, but Griffith refused unless the IPP embraced his more radical and subversive ideals, a suggestion which John Dillon, a leader of the IPP rubbished as unrealistic, although it would ultimately mean the defeat and dissolution of the IPP after the election in December 1918.

War of Independence

In May 1918, along with ​Éamon de Valera and 72 other Sinn Féiners, Griffith was arrested on the pretext of involvement in the fictitious German Plot. Griffith spent ten months interned in HM Prison Gloucester, being released on 6 March 1919. Fr. O'Flanagan was left as Acting-President of Sinn Féin. Griffith was put forward as a Sinn Féin candidate for the East Cavan by-election on 20 June 1918. Under the slogan "Put him in to get him out," and was elected. He held the seat when Sinn Féin subsequently routed the Irish Parliamentary Party at the 1918 general election with a commitment of abstentionism from the British House of Commons. Griffith was returned for both East Cavan and Tyrone North West.

Sinn Féin's MPs set up an Irish parliament, Dáil Éireann and declared independence for the Irish Republic; the Irish War of Independence followed almost immediately. The dominant leaders in the Dáil included Éamon de Valera, President of Dáil Éireann (1919-1921), President of the Republic (1921-1922), and Michael Collins, Minister for Finance, head of the IRB and the Irish Republican Army's Director of Intelligence.

During de Valera's absence in the United States (1919-1921) Griffith served as Acting President and gave regular press interviews. He was arrested at his house at 3am, on 26 November 1920, and later jailed, Fr. O'Flanagan again taking over as acting leader until de Valera returned from America on 23 December. Griffith was to spend the next seven months in Dublin's Mountjoy Prison. He was released on 30 June 1921 as peace moves got under way.

In Ireland, a general election was held on 24 May 1921 and Griffith, while still in prison, headed the poll in the contested constituency of Fermanagh and Tyrone, and was returned unopposed for Cavan. On 26 August 1921, Griffith was appointed Minister for Foreign Affairs in the new Irish cabinet.

Treaty negotiations and death

In September 1921, de Valera, President of the Republic, asked Griffith to head the delegation of Irish plenipotentiaries to negotiate with the British government. The delegates set up Headquarters in Hans Place, London. After nearly two months of negotiations, on 5 December, the delegates decided in private conversation in their headquarters to sign the Treaty and recommended it to the Dáil; negotiations closed at 2.20 a.m. on 6 December 1921. Griffith was the member of the treaty delegation most supportive of its eventual outcome, a compromise based on dominion status, rather than a republic. The Treaty was ratified by the Dáil by 64 votes to 57 on 7 January1922. On 9 January, de Valera stood down as president and sought re-election by the Dáil, which he lost by a vote of 60 to 58. Griffith then succeeded de Valera as President of Dáil Éireann. A second ratification of the Treaty by the House of Commons of Southern Ireland followed shortly afterwards. Griffith was, however, to a great extent merely a figurehead as President of the Second Dáil.

Suffering from overwork and strain after the long and difficult negotiations with the British government (Griffith attended 41 of the 42 provisional government meetings held between 23 June and 30 July), and the work involved in establishing the Free State government, he entered St. Vincent's Nursing Home, Leeson Street, Dublin, during the first week of August 1922, following an acute attack of tonsillitis. He was confined to a room in St. Vincent's by his doctors, who had observed signs of what they thought might be a subarachnoid hemorrhage, but it was difficult to keep him quiet, and he resumed his daily work in the government building. He had been about to leave for his office shortly before 10 a.m. on 12 August 1922, when he paused to retie his shoelace and fell down unconscious. He regained consciousness, but collapsed again with blood coming from his mouth. Three doctors rendered assistance, but to no avail. Fr. John Lee of the Marist Fathers administered extreme unction, and Griffith expired as the priest recited the concluding prayer. The cause of death, cerebral haemorrhage, was also reported as being due to heart failure. He died at the age of 51, ten days before Michael Collins' death in an ambush in County Cork. He was buried in Glasnevin Cemetery four days later.

Posthumous commemoration

The historian Diarmaid Ferriter considers that, though he had founded Sinn Féin, Griffith was 'quickly airbrushed' from Irish history. His widow had to beg his former colleagues for a pension, saying that he 'had made them all'. She considered that his grave plot was too modest and threatened to exhume his body. Only in 1968 was a plaque fixed on his former Clontarf home on St. Lawrence Road.

Griffith Barracks which is now Griffith College Dublin on South Circular Road, Dublin, Griffith Avenue in North Dublin, Griffith Park in Drumcondra and Arthur Griffith Park in Lucan, County Dublin are named after him. An obelisk erected in 1950 in the grounds of Leinster House commemorates Griffith, as well as Michael Collins and Kevin O'Higgins.

Home: Text
6C73B510-158B-4FC5-B848-7168F1DCE5DC.jpeg

Bernard J.D. Irwin

Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient

Home: Image

We've all seen those movies depicting WW2 scenarios where the individual throws himself into the battle with no regard for his own safety. In some instances, they are recognized by Congress as going above and beyond the call of duty. The Congressional Medal of Honor is the highest medal that can be awarded to someone serving in the military who has been recognized by the United States for having done so.

Bernard J.D. Irwin, an assistant army surgeon during the Apache Wars, received the CMH for his actions on February 13, 1861. He was awarded the honor just prior to his retirement on January 21, 1894. Why the delay? The medal was not established until 1862. Irwin's actions were the earliest for which the CMH was awarded, pre-dating the outbreak of the Civil War.

Irwin was born in County Roscommon, Ireland on June 24, 1830 and immigrated with his parents to the United States in the 1840's. He attended New York University from 1848 to 1849, and served as a Private in the New York Militia. In 1850, he entered Castleton Medical College, but later transferred New York Medical College, where he graduated in 1852. He served as a surgeon and physician at the State Emigrant Hospital on Ward's Island until his appointment as an assistant surgeon to the U.S. Army in 1856.

At one point, Cochise, the Chiricahua Apache chief, and a group of Apache warriors had been accused of kidnapping a boy and a small group of U.S. soldiers in the Arizona Territory after the Army had captured Cochise's brother and nephews. When the Army refused to make a prisoner exchange, Cochise killed his prisoners. Soldiers then killed Cochise's brother and nephews. Second Lieutenant George Nicholas Bascom led a group of 60 men from the 7th Infantry after Cochise but was soon besieged, prompting a rescue mission by the army.

In response to the siege of Bascom and his men, Irwin set out on a rescue mission with 14 men of the 1st Dragoons. He was able to catch up with the Apaches at Apache Pass in present-day Arizona. He strategically placed his small unit around Cochise and his men, tricking the Apache leader into thinking that Irwin had a much larger army with him. The Apaches fled and Bascom and his men were saved. Bascom and his men joined Irwin and together they were able to track Cochise into the mountains and rescued the young boy that Cochise had captured previously.

Irwin subsequently served with the army during the American Civil War. He was promoted to captain in August 1861, and the next year was appointed medical director under Major General William "Bull" Nelson. He improvised one of the first field hospitals used by the US Army at the Battle of Shiloh on April 7, 1862.

He was captured during the Battle of Richmond while attempting to save the wounded Nelson. He was promoted to major in September 1862, and after his release the following month he became medical director in the Army of the Southwest. From 1863 to 1865, he was superintendent of the military hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, and in March of the latter year was brevetted to the rank of colonel. He was a companion of the California Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States and the Order of the Indian Wars of the United States.

After the war, Irwin served as a senior medical officer at several posts, including at West Point from 1873 to 1878. He received promotions to lieutenant colonel in September 1885 and to colonel in August 1890. He was retired shortly after his 64th birthday, and promoted to brigadier general on the retired list in April 1904.

His son George LeRoy Irwin (graduated from West Point in 1889) served in WW1 and became a Major General in the Army. His grandson Stafford LeRoy Irwin (graduated from West Point in 1915) served in WW2 and became a Lieutenant General in the Army. His daughter, Amy Irwin Adams McCormack, was a nurse with the American Red Cross during WW1 and married Robert R. McCormack in 1915

Irwin himself, went to his eternal rest on December 15, 1917 in Cobourg, Ontario, Canada and is buried at the U.S.Military Academy Cemetery, West Point. His awards, in addition to the CMH, include the Civil War Campaign Medal, the Indian Campaign Medal and the Spanish War Service Medal.

His Citation for the CMH states: "Voluntarily took command of troops and attacked and defeated hostile Indians he met on the way. Surg. Irwin volunteered to go to the rescue of 2nd Lt. George N. Bascom, 7th Infantry, who with 60 men was trapped by Chiricahua Apaches under Cochise. Irwin and 14 men, not having horses, began the 100-mile march riding mules. After fighting and capturing Indians, recovering stolen horses and cattle, he reached Bascom's column and helped break his siege."

Home: Text

The Soldier's Song

The Irish National Anthem
By: J. Michael Finn, Ohio State Historian

(While perusing the AOH universe, I came across this interesting article in the Ohio State Board Newsletter (Volume 3 Issue 9 Pages 5-6)

The text of The Soldier's Song consisting of three stanzas and a chorus was written around 1907 by Peader Kearney with music by his childhood friend Patrick Heeney.

The song was originally written in the English language. The original English text of The Soldier's Song was first published in Bulmer Hobson's Irish Freedom newspaper in 1912. Liam O'Rinn (1886-1943) was responsible for the translation into Irish in late 1916 and it was published in the Army magazine, An tÓglach, on November 3, 1923.

Peader Kearney was born in Dublin in 1883. He was educated at the Model School and St. Joseph's Christian Brothers School in Dublin. He left school at the age of 14 to become an apprentice house painter. He was the uncle of Irish writers Brendan and Dominic Behan.

Kearney was a member of the Gaelic League, where he was a teacher of Irish. In 1913 Kearney was also a co-founder of the Irish Volunteers. He took part in both the Howth and Kilcoole gun-runnings in 1914. In the Easter Rising of 1916 Kearney fought at Jacob's biscuit factory serving under Thomas MacDonagh.

In the Irish Language the correct official title is Amhrán na bhFiann. In Ireland, the song is always sung in the Irish language, even by those who know very little of the language. In fact, many Irish citizens are not aware of the words to the English version of the song.

What is now the official musical arrangement was done in New York City by composer Victor Herbert (Herbert was born in Ireland). Herbert's arrangement was used as a fund raiser for the Gaelic League in Ireland.

Unlike many other Irish songs, The Soldier's Song is not about any one historical event. Kearney claims he wrote it, "In order to impress on Irishmen that they did not have to join the British Army to be soldiers." That is likely the best interpretation of the song. The British Army was actively recruiting in Ireland throughout the early 1900's. Sadly, many Irish recruits died as cannon fodder for the British in the trenches of World War I.

The song was adopted as the formal marching song of the Irish Volunteers just prior to the 1916 Easter Rising. It was sung quite often in the General Post Office during the Rising and in Frongoch Interment Camp in Wales following the Rising. Legend has it that during Easter Week, after a rousing  rendition of the song in the GPO, someone shouted, "After we get the Republic, that should be our National Anthem."

It was adopted officially as the National Anthem in July, 1926 by the Irish Free State government. A section of the National Anthem (consisting of the first four bars followef by the last five) is also used as the Presidential Salute.

The most frequently asked question about the English version of the song is - What is the Bhearna Bhaoil? this is an Irish phrase meaning Gap of Danger. It refers to a battle during the 1798 Rising when John Kelly (The Boy from Killan) led a charge against Bewley Gate during the siege of New Ross in County Wexford. The carnage at the gate was so great that the place where the battle was fought was known as An Bhearna Bhaoil or the Gap of Danger. When the song was translated into English it was decided that in order to properly commemorate that battle, its title would remain in the Irish language.

Although he escaped capture by the British after the 1916 Rising, Peader Kearney was arrested and interned in 1920 for his republican activities. He was released in 1921 after the signing of the Anglo-Irish Treaty. He served on the Free State side during the Irish Civil War, as he was a good friend and supporter of Michael Collins.

After the war Kearney returned to work as house painter. He died in relative poverty at his home in Dublin in November 24, 1942. Sadly, Kearney, Heeney or O'Rinn never received any royalties for what became the Irish National Anthem.

Home: Text

Meagher and the Tricolour

Earlier this year marked another anniversary, as March 7 marked the 175th anniversary of the first public appearance of the green, white and orange tricolour. The man who hung the now familiar flag outside the Wolfe Tone Club in Waterford was none other than Thomas Francis Meagher, Young Irelander and leader of the Rebellion of 1848, Union General and Commander of the Irish Brigade and later Secretary and Acting Governor of the Montana Territory. The resemblance of the Irish tricolour to its elder French counterpart is no coincidence, as the United Irishmen of 1798 had been inspired by both the U.S. and French Revolutions. The tricolour hung by Meagher in Waterford remained in place for more than a week before being taken down by authorities. Significantly, another tricolour was raised at the same time in a procession at Vinegar Hill. The tricolour was little used after these early appearances until Easter week, 1916, when the green, white and orange was raised over the GPO. The tricolour was adopted by the Irish Free State in 1922, while simultaneously being claimed by Anti-Treaty Republicans. The Irish Constitution of 1937, in Article 7, declares the tricolour to be the national flag.

Home: Text

June 1798

The famous quote of the most famous of the United Irishmen of 1798 and widely acknowledged father of modern Irish Republicanism, Theobold Wolfe Tone, is well known: "To subvert the tyranny of our execrable government, to break the connection with England, the never failing source of all our political evils and to assert the independence of my country - these were my objectives. To unite the whole people of Ireland, to abolish the memory of all past dissensions, and to substitute the common name of Irishman in place of the denominations of Protestant, Catholic and Dissenter - these were my means." Wolfe Tone, like James Napper Tandy and Thomas Russell, the other founders of the United Irishmen in 1791, was a product of the Protestant ascendancy who favored Catholic Emancipation, universal (male) suffrage and the establishment of an Irish Republic.

The United Irishmen, who were inspired by the same Enlightenment thinkers whose works informed the founders of the United State and the revolutionaries of France, ultimately looked to France for more than just inspiration and by 1794 plans to obtain military assistance from England's traditional enemy were in the works. A French fleet, with some 14,000 soldiers and General Hoche and Wolfe Tone aboard, set sail from Brest in 1796. The French fleet, much like Phillip II's Spanish Armada of 1588, was thwarted by extreme weather and could not land. Tone subsequently accompanied a Dutch expedition, which was to be joined by French forces, only to be thwarted by the British victory in the naval Battle of Camperdown, leaving Tone to return to Paris to once again seek French assistance. Tone would finally arrive in Ireland with a smaller French force, which was too little and too late, in November, 1798.

Meanwhile, in Ireland, the United Irishmen had been outlawed in 1793, when the outbreak of war with France had caused the government to correctly perceive the organization as a threat. The failed French landing had further exacerbated tensions and the British instituted a counterinsurgency program, the brutal excesses of which served only to further inflame the Irish people and increase the production of pikes, the primitive, primary weapon of the masses. Finally, in May of 1798, hostilities erupted, and the United Irishmen rose in various locations acrosss the country.

It was in Wexford, however, that the movement had its greatest successes and where, in late June, a rebel army of some 20,000 men, women and even children came to be encamped on the high ground at a place called Vinegar Hill, just outside of Enniscorthy. The rebels made their headquarters at the top of a hill, where a stone windmill, already ancient at that time, served as focal point. The poorly armed and barely equipped masses, including Fr. Murphy and his parishioners, epitomized Wolfe Tone's notion that "If the men of property will not support us, they must fall; we can support ourselves by the aid of that numerous and respectable class of the community, the men of no property." On June 21, 1798, at 5:30 a.m., British General Lake and his force of some 13,000 Regulars and Militia opened an artillery barrage that could be heard twelve miles away in Wexfordtown. The outgunned defenders of Vinegar Hill fought ferociously throughout the day, but to no avail and while many escaped the battlefield, the aftermath of the battle was marked by the usual executions and atrocities against the local inhabitants.

The United Irishmen failed to achieve their goals, but inspired those who came after them to continue the quest for Irish freedom. Today the stone base of the windmill, now officially Irish National Monument no. 392, stands alone atop Vinegar Hill, a mute but enduring witness to the struggle and sacrifice of June, 1798.

Home: Text

Easter Rising Centenary

Home: Gallery

The 1916 Easter Rising
and the Rockaway Rebel

John Kilgallon Fights for Ireland's Freedom

Home: Gallery

The Wave / on April 22, 2016

by Ed Shevlin

As the story goes, on April 24, 1916, Easter Monday, an undermanned, under-gunned, band of rebels attacked the British Empire in Ireland. Though their effort had only the best intentions at its core - namely the liberation of Ireland from her long-standing British oppressors - popular opinion was not on their side.

No fewer than 212,000 Irishmen were away fighting with the British army during World War 1, and the recent passage of legislation by Parliament carried with it the promise of a good measure of self-governance for ireland, just as soon as the war was over. But those who attacked the British on Easter Monday had heard enough of British promises and believed that Ireland should be autonomous - not beholden to Great Britain in any way shape or form. They believed that violence was the only way by which nationhood could be gained for their country and so they drew the sword of Ireland upon Britain.

The standard narrative of the 1916 Easter Rising generally holds that the Irish-American role in the conflagration was limited to fundraising here in the United States, which was the most successful in New York City, and the participation of several American citizens who served in leadership roles. Tom Clarke, the first signatory of "An Phoblacht," or "the proclamation," was a naturalized American citizen who owned land on Long Island and lived for a time in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Eamonn DeValera, another of the leaders was born in Manhattan, and Diarmuid Lynch, one of the architects of the Easter Rising, became an American citizen in 1902. These were all brave men who put their lives and their fortunes on the line for Ireland, but recent research shows that the story of the American contribution to the Easter Rising and Ireland's freedom is incomplete.

The missing part of this puzzle may be found in St. Mary Star of the Sea Cemetery on Rockaway Turnpike in Cedarhurst, resting under a headstone that simply bears the name, "Kilgallon."

John Aloysius Kilgallon was born in Far Rockaway on Sept. 5, 1891, to Luke and Nora Kilgallon, emigrants from County Mayo. Luke ran a successful blacksmith and auto repair business on Beach 19th Street, and Nora saw to the affairs of their household along with her maid on Jarvis Street in Far Rockaway.

The Kilgallon family also provided opportunities for their relatives from Ireland, who lived and worked with them in the Beach 19th Street garage. The 1910 U.S. Census parsed these facts out and told us a good bit more. It would seem that John Kilgallon, just 19 at the time, was neither working nor going to school when the census was conducted. Following an evening of merriment at the Chauffer's Ball in the Imperial Hotel in Far Rockaway, John offered to drive his friends home through the rainy streets. He then walked to his father's shop and took a customer's car and returned to the hotel, piling 10 young people into the vehicle. His roundabout circuit ended when the car overturned after hitting a farm wagon in Springfield Gardens. Cecelia Wellstead, just 17 at the time, was thrown from the car and rendered crippled. Her Subsequent lawsuit against John Kilgallon sought a whopping $50,000, and immediately made headlines in the Brooklyn Daily Eagle and The New York Times.

John Kilgallon had become a pariah; his family was now in financial trouble and the question of "what to do about John," loomed perpetually over their heads. The answer to the question came in the form of a 1914 speaking tour by the Irish patriot, Padraic Pearse. Pearse was using the time tested format of recruiting young male travelers to the United States for St. Enda's, his school in Dublin, while raising much needed funding.

It appears the Kilgallon's attended Pearse's speech at the Brooklyn Academy of Music on March 2, 1914, as the New York State Automobile Guide for 1914 shows Luke Kilgallon as the owner of a Buick touring car, a more than adequate means of conveyance for a trip from Far Rockaway to Brooklyn. In any case, a letter written by Pearse to a friend in July of 1914 states that, "I have got another Irish-American for next term. His name is Kilgallon, his father owns real estate in Far Rockaway and he is quite a young man, he will rank as a university resident."

John was thriving in his new environment where honor and discipline were the watchwords. Military training, Irish language, history and literature featured prominently in the curriculum at St. Enda's. As the time for revolution drew near, John became a member of "E" Company (Pearse's own), 4th Battalion, Dublin Brigade, Irish Volunteers. On the morning of April 24, 1916, "E" Company marched in formation to Dublin's General Post Office, the epicenter of the Rising. The young men from St. Enda's met Pearse in the great hall of the GPO just after he finished reading "The Proclamation" to the public and were ordered to take up positions on the roof. There, they traded fire with British snipers and endured an artillery barrage from the gunboat Helga in the River Liffey. In his testimony, 1st Lieutenant Eamon Bulfin stated, "One of the pictures that stands out in my mind is seeing Kilgallon running round on the roof trying to stop fires."

When the battle ended with the rebel's surrender on Saturday of that week, John Kilgallon was taken into custody and eventually interned in Frongoch Prison Camp, Wales. John was released from prison in December of 1916, and returned to Far Rockaway shortly thereafter. Mr. Kilgallon lived a quiet life, managing his family's business on 19th Street and keeping in close touch with his former comrades until he entered eternity on January 30, 1972.

We here in Rockaway should be very proud of our native son, who carried his rifle into battle against an empire and lived to tell of it.

Home: Text

 National News

Home: Text
IMG_7503.jpg

Judge Jim McCay (right) passes the gavel to the newly re-elected National President Danny O'Connell at the National Convention in Pittsburgh on July 16, 2022.

Home: Image

Division Directory

Many times when we travel, the desire for something familiar follows us. As Hibernians, we seek the nearest Hibernian Hall. Meeting our Brothers from an area other than our own can be an enriching experience. While this list is not complete, it can be a useful guide. Just click on the button below.

Home: Text
Home: Text

A Message From Your Webmaster

Brothers:


There are many holidays throughout the year that are celebrated with our family and friends. For many of us it is St. Patrick's Day that is the pinnacle. At least it is for me. For two years, Covid-19 has put a damper on this celebration of our heritage and faith. 2022 appears to be the year where we come out of lockdown and set our feet on the green line in the middle of Fifth Avenue once again. This website has posted photos of St. Patrick's Days past from members, friends and their families. It would be great if we can post more experiences. If you would like to share yours with the group, you are invited to do so. These can be sent to the Division at:

aohdivision14queens@gmail.com

If you would like to see some of my own work, check out my link below.

Yours in Our Order

Ed Seewald

Home: Text
Home: Contact

Contact Us

We meet the second Tuesday of every month except for July and August at 7:30 PM.

The Leonard Center

86-13 112 Street

Richmond Hill, NY 11418

St. Gregory the Great

242-20 88 Avenue

Bellerose, NY 

IMG_3714.JPG
bottom of page