September is the month for Irish Festivals in the Greater Boston area.
In addition to the Dropkick Murphys festival in New Hampshire, the BIR is looking forward to raising a pint at the South Shore Irish Festival on Sept 10 and 11 at the Marshield Fairgrounds, 140 Main St in Marshfield, MA.
This two-day event (Saturday 11a.m.-10 p.m. and Sunday 11a.m.-8 p.m.) will feature live performances from such local favorites as John McDermott, Erin’s Melody, the Fenian Sons, Aoife Scott and the Fighting Jamesons.
CORK – For many across the world of Olympics-watching, Paul and Gary O’Donovan have taken home to Ireland not only a silver medal for rowing at the August Games in Rio de Janiero but also a medal of another sort for the ebullience and Irish wit they displayed in front of tens of millions after their second-place finish.
Images of the happy brothers openly chatting to Irish television via satellite after the race about urine tests, “podium pants,” and how they plan to celebrate their achievement instantly spread around the earth.
The European Union’s crackdown on corporate tax avoidance has landed on Apple; the Union’s antitrust regulator is demanding that the United States tech giant pay Ireland up to 13 billion euros ($14.5 billion) plus interest in back taxes.
The ruling is the highest-profile move yet in the European battle to make international companies pay what authorities consider their fair share of EU taxes. The EU charges that Apple and other big companies struck deals with EU countries to pay unusually low tax in exchange for basing their European operations there.
Ian-Lloyd Anderson, Lloyd Cooney and Liam Heslin in the Abbey Theatre production of Sean O’Casey’s “The Plough and the Stars,” playing the American Repertory Theater from September 24 to October 9. Ros Kavanagh photo
“The Plough and the Stars” has a long history with Dublin’s legendary Abbey Theatre – Ireland’s national theater. Sean O’Casey’s absorbing play about the liberation of Ireland had its debut at the Abbey in 1926 and has been produced there more than 50 times in the years since.
In “Plough,” named for the Starry Plough banner flown by the Irish Citizen Army, the story begins in November of 1915 and then moves to the Easter Rising in April of 1916.
As tension builds, the residents of a Dublin tenement take shelter from the violence that is sweeping through the city streets. The action is focused not on the revolt raging against British imperial rule but on the impoverished characters struggling to survive in a seemingly doomed existence.
Andy O'Neill from Kilkenny and Emma Ni Chearuil from Galway have been crowned the new King and Queen of Gingerdom at the 7th Annual Redhead Convention which is in full swing in Crosshaven, Co. Cork this weekend.
The fun, family festival of ginger-loving madness is a celebration of all things to do with having fabulous red hair, the rarest hair colour in the world.
Hy-Brasil: Jodocus Hondius (1563-1612) America (detail) Amsterdam, [between 1609 to 1633] Norman B. Leventhal Map Center at the Boston Public Library
Beginning in the 14th Century, a curious island located off the coast of Ireland was recorded on official nautical maps of the time. The Island, known topographically as Hy-Brasil, was, in early years, noted to be a round formation near the western coast, and was reported to be observable only once every seven years.
The island was believed to be inhabited by an advanced civilization belonging to Elysium and Tir Na Nog, the Land of Eternal Youth. Despite hundreds of maps depicting Hy-Brasil’s existence over roughly 500 years, it is now known that the Island is actually a result of folklore and mythical storytelling run amok.
Brookline, MA - John Fitzgerald Kennedy National Historic Site will celebrate the centennial of the National Park Service on Thursday, August 25, 2016 with special programming and events. President Woodrow Wilson signed into law the National Park System Organic Act, which created the National Park Service under the Department of the Interior. Though much has changed over the past 100 years, the mission remains the same: to preserve and protect natural and cultural resources within the United States for the enjoyment of visitors now and in the future.
“August – our birthday month – will be a nationwide celebration of national parks, and we’re inviting everyone to the party,” said National Park Service Director Jonathan B. Jarvis. “We like to think that we look pretty good for 100, and with so many events and activities to commemorate this milestone, we hope all Americans will join us to celebrate the breathtaking landscapes and inspiring history in our nation’s parks and public lands. Whether it is in a distant state or in your own community, there are hundreds of ways and places to find your park!”
Throughout the day, special talks celebrating Kennedy’s connection to the National Park Service, living history tours, and crafts and activities for all ages will be offered.
The quaint seaside village of Crosshaven, Cork, will once again come alive for the annual Irish Redhead Convention ! Now in its seventh year, the weekend-long ginger extravaganza will be filled with fun, freckles and frolics, taking place from 19-21 August 2016.
Thousands of redheads near and far will flock to the usually-sleepy village for a festival of extraordinary uniqueness, which raises vital funds for the Irish Cancer Society. From carrot tossing championships and live music on the Foxygen and ElectRED Picnic
stages, to seminars on redhead history and ginger speed dating, there’s something for every redhead and redhead appreciator at the Irish Redhead Convention!
A Gathering in Donegal: Kerryman Mark Lyons, the bus driver assigned to Cardinal O’Malley’s pilgrimage tour to Knock last month, made this photo in Donegal at Grainan of Aileach ring fort overlooking Lough Swilly. Waving hello are pilgrims from New England who traveled through the Great Atlantic Way in Ireland’s northwest while on the island for the services at Knock. The following is taken from Boston’s Cardinal O’Malley’s online blog, which is also published in The Pilot, the archdiocese’s weekly newspaper.
The Knock airport was established 30 years ago by the rector of the Shrine of Our Lady of Knock, and is now one of the most important airports in Ireland serving the Western part of the country.
By BostonIrish.com... (not verified) July 28, 2016
By Judy Enright
Special to the Reporter
Some travelers claim that it doesn’t really matter what type of accommodation you choose when you’re on a trip because “it’s just a place to sleep.” We heartily disagree. Securing interesting places to stay in interesting locales can add so much to your ultimate experience.
Castlecoote House, an historic Georgian mansion in Co. Roscommon, is open for B&B from April 1 until the end of September. In the foreground is a 16th Century castle tower. Judy Enright photos