Archive for the ‘National News’ Category

Convention Results

admin | July 12th, 2010 | No Comments »

Brothers,

The National Officers elected at the Convention in Cincinatti are :

Seamus Boyle – National President
Brendon Moore – Vice President
Thomas McNabb – Secretary
Judge James McKay – Treasurer

Directors
Robert Mott – South Carolina
Jere Cole – New Jersey
Keith Carney – District of Columbia
Danny O’Connell – Ohio
Mike O’Connor – Montana
Chris Norris – Pennsylvania

Constitutional Changes passed were :
* Raised national per capita assessment from Eight (8) to Twelve (12) dollars per member.
* Religious brothers now eligible to be AOH Chaplains along with priests and deacons.

Site of 2012 National Convention to be Turning Stone, New York ( near Oneida ).
Site of 2014 National Convention to be Saint Louis, Missouri.

Saville Inquiry Report

admin | June 15th, 2010 | No Comments »

Brothers,

Tonight you will have access to the entire Saville inquiry report on our national website. It is a huge document and a huge victory for the families who have been fighting for this since 1972. Now those murdered can finally rest in peace knowing that the world knows that they were exonerated from any wrongdoing and it was just the British lies and propaganda machine at work for the past 38 years. it will finally give the families closure and those murdered rest in peace.

Seamus Boyle National President
Ancient Order of Hibernians in America, Inc

Memorial Day Greetings

admin | May 31st, 2010 | No Comments »

Brothers,

I wish you all a happy memorial day. Please keep in your prayers all our military personnell who are still in harms way in Iraq and Afghanistan and other parts of the world. Although it is a holiday for America and has recently been referred to as the beginning of summer, please reflect on what memorial day really means and thank God for our men and women in uniform who have protected us and have given the ultimate sacrifice.

Yesterday was a special day for me as I attended the dedication of a Viet Nam Memorial Wall in Wildwood NJ. Over 10,000 people attended this dedication with representatives from every branch of the military. This permanent wall is built to half scale of the Viet Nam Veterans Remembrance Wall in Washington DC and is the only permanent replica of that Wall although there is one somewhat similar in Florida.

About 2 years ago myself and some of our AOH brothers erected the Healing Wall, better known as the traveling wall,  in Fox Park in Wildwood NJ and at that time over 15,000 people visited it in just over 4 days. One of the people responsible for bringing that wall to NJ was Greg Mazzotta who proclaimed that “we will have our own permanent wall in Wildwood some day”. Unfortunately Greg died a month after starting the fundraising but his lifelong friend, Vince De Prinzio, would not let his friend’s dream die and contacted many of the organizations in the Wildwoods who got behind the project including the AOH and the Carpenters Union and many others and all the money was privately raised.  What a true memorial day for the people of New Jersey and especially for Tom Callahan who was there to see the wall in his own town. He lost one son in Viet Nam and another son died less than a year later from injuries received there. Just think of this father when you think of memorial day and as he said pray for all the troops and their families, living and deceased.

Seamus Boyle National President
Ancient Order of Hibernians in America, Inc

AOH 32 Carnegie, PA – Award Winners

admin | May 28th, 2010 | No Comments »

Hibernian of the Year is Congressman Tim Murphy!

Hibernian of the Year Tim Murphy and AOH 32 President Denny Maher

And the Service Award Winner is Bob Kelly!

Service Award Winner Bob Kelly and AOH 32 President Denny Maher

Memorial Day Request

admin | May 28th, 2010 | No Comments »

AOH Brothers & LAOH Sisters:

Memorial Day is upon us. I would respectfully request that all divisions  & county boards take a moment to reflect on the sacrifices made by our AOH Veterans, past, and present as well as the sacrifices of their families. Our AOH Brothers as well as LAOH Sisters, continue to serve this great nation in all branches of the United States military. They serve in locations as distant as Iraq, Kuwait, Afghanistan, Bosnia, Korea, and other current global “hotspots.” Others in our ranks who continue to serve this great nation will, over the next few days, volunteer their time to place flags, and provide poppies to honor our Veterans. Our Veteran’s Hospitals provide treatment, not just to our Hibernian Veterans but to all Vets who gave so much. Our nursing homes, provide quarters to those Veterans who no longer can take care of themselves. Please, over these next few days, offer a prayer for those who have sacrificed so much for our continued freedom.

I have attached a brief history of Memorial Day below.

Memorial Day was officially proclaimed on 5 May 1868 by General John Logan, national commander of the Grand Army of the Republic.The first state to officially recognize the holiday was New York in 1873.

However, Pennsylvania has it’s own claim on Memorial Day that is rather unique & worth a “read.”

Boalsburg, Pa. is a quaint little village situated in Centre County, Pa., just off Route 322, in the picturesque foothills of the Alleghenies. It’s only a dot on the map, and you as a casual driver might drive past it without even being aware that it is nestled there in the rolling valley beneath a coverlet of oaks and pines and cedars – were it not for a plain little marker by the side of the road: “Boalsburg. An American Village – Birthplace of Memorial Day.

It was a pleasant Sunday and in the little community burial ground behind the village the pioneers of colonial times slept peacefully side by side with the recently fallen heroes of the Civil War. Emma Hunter by name, and her friend, Sophie Keller, chose to gather some garden flowers and to place them on the grave of her father Dr. Reuben Hunter, a surgeon in the Union Army, who died only a short while before. And it was this very same day than an older woman, Mrs. Elizabeth Meyer, elected to strew flowers on the grave of her son  http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~pacentre/amos.htm Amos, who as a private in the ranks, had fallen on the last day of battle at Gettysburg.

And so the two with their friend met, kneeling figures at nearby graves, a young girl honoring her officer father, a young mother paying respects to her enlisted-man son, each with a basket of flowers which she had picked with loving hands. And they got to talking. The mother proudly told the girl what a fine young man her son had been, how he had dropped his farm duties and enlisted in the Union Army at the outbreak of the war, and how bravely he had fought.

The daughter respectfully took a few of her flowers as a token and placed them on the son’s grave. The mother in turn laid some of her freshly cut blooms on the father’s grave. These two women had found in their common grief a common bond as they knelt together in that little burial ground in Central Pennsylvania where Mount Nittany stands eternal guard over those who sleep there. Nor did they realize at the same time that their meeting had any particular significance – outside of their own personal lives; it was just that they seemed to lighten their burdens by sharing them. But as it happened these two women were participating in their first Memorial Day Service.

For the story goes that before the two women left each other that Sunday in October, 1864, they had agreed to meet again on the same day the following year in order to honor not only their own two loved ones, but others who now might have no one left to kneel at their lonely graves. During the weeks and months that followed the two women discussed their little plan with friends and neighbors and all heard it with enthusiasm. The report was that on July 4, 1865 – the appointed day – what had been planned as a little informal meeting of two women turned into a community service. All Boalsburg was gathered there, a clergymen – Dr. George Hall – preached a sermon, and every grave in the little cemetery was decorated with flowers and flags; not a single one was neglected.

It must have been such a scene as this that inspired Longfellow to write:

Your silent tents of green
We deck with flagrant flowers:
Yours has the suffering been,
The memory shall be hours.

It seemed such a fitting and proper way of remembering those who had passed on that the custom became an annual event in Boalsburg, and one by one the neighboring communities adopted a similar plan of observing “Decoration Day” each spring. On May 5, 1868, just four years after that first meeting in the little burial ground, Gen. John A. Logan, then commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, isued an order, naming May 30, 1868, as a day “for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who died in defense of their country.” He signed the order “with the hope that it will be kept up from year to year.” And so it has.

Brothers and  Sisters, since the late 1950′s on the Thursday before Memorial Day, 1,200 soldiers of the 3d U.S. Infantry place small American flags at each of the more than 260,000 gravestones at Arlington National Cemetery. They then patrol 24 hours a day during the weekend to ensure that each flag remains standing. In 1951, the Boy Scouts and Cub Scouts of St. Louis began placing flags on the 150,000 graves at Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery as an annual Good Turn, a practice that continues to this day. More recently, beginning in 1998, on the Saturday before the observed day for Memorial Day, the Boys Scouts and Girl Scouts place a candle at each of approximately 15,300 grave sites of soldiers buried at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park on Marye’s Heights. In 2004, Washington D.C. held its first Memorial Day parade in over 60 years.

In the language of our ancestors: “Dia ár veterans!” God Bless Our Veterans!!!!

A most sincere “Thank you” to all our AOH & LAOH Veteran’s!  May God bless you all, & may our Lord, and Patrick, Our Patron Saint, keep you safely in the palm of his hand!!!!

In Friendship, Unity, and true Christian Charity,
Gary Duncan, President
Lackawanna County Ancient Order of Hibernians

Irish Adds Up!

admin | May 21st, 2010 | No Comments »

The statistics for Irish spoken by NYC residents and visitors here are interesting and deserve careful consideration:

NYC welcomed 268,000 visitors from Ireland (presumably the 26 countries) in 2009.

According to the Central Census Office in Dublin, 41.9% of people in the 26 counties speak Irish. If this is accurate, the percentage of those who can READ Irish (and hence, can use an Irish ATM interface) would have to be higher. (If not fully accurate, the census answers certainly indicate an enthusiastic support for Irish.)

● If these Irish visitors to NYC are indicative of the norm in Ireland, we can safely assume that more than 112292 of last year’s visitors can read Irish.

Still, a combined report by the University of Ulster and the University of Limerick indicated that Irish-speakers enjoy higher incomes than the rest of the Irish population. Hence, we may suppose that a disproportionate number of these are included among those who can more readily travel to NYC.

● Furthermore, to these, we MUST add those visiting from the North of Ireland, where enthusiasm for Irish is most remarkable.

● To these, let’s add the 1290 Irish-speakers already living in Queens, the 590 in Manhattan, the 305 in Brooklyn and the 455 in the Bronx.

● Other visitors come from surrounding regions and States to visit us and are proficient in Irish.

Irish adds up!

An Irish-language ATM interface would be a win-win endeavor for Chase Bank, as well as NYC & Co (the City’s tourism & marketing office) and the Queens Tourism Council given that they show some of the imagination that is lacking in companies such Aer Lingus and too many “Irish”-American organizations in New York.

Further info: http://www.facebook.com/#!/group.php?gid=112321272139421

Recommended reading: http://tinyurl.com/Capitalising-on-Culture

Sinn Féin Mark Bobby Sands MP 29th Anniversary

admin | May 6th, 2010 | No Comments »

For immediate release: 5th May 2010

Sinn Féin mark Bobby Sands MP 29th Anniversary

Sinn Féin will be holding a number of White Line pickets today in Belfast and Dublin to mark the 29th Anniversary of the death of Bobby Sands MP following sixty-six days on hunger strike.

Speaking today Sinn Féin MLA, Martin McGuinness said:

“Today marks the 29th  Anniversary of the death on Hunger Strike of Bobby Sands, the then sitting MP in Fermanagh and South Tyrone. It is a historic anniversary.

“1981 was a watershed moment in Irish history. Irish Republican prisoners faced down Thatcher and her criminalisation policy. They exposed the true nature of British rule in Ireland and have been an inspiration to Irish Republicans and freedom loving people across the world ever since.

“We remember the Hunger Strikers with pride and we pay particular tribute to their families as we mark the 29th anniversary of their deaths in Long Kesh.”

“Let our Revenge be the Laughter of our Children”
Bobby Sands

UK Elections Tomorrow

admin | May 6th, 2010 | No Comments »

TO:   Our National Board and PEC Leaders
RE:   UK Elections Tomorrow
FR:   Ned McGinley and Joe Roche, PEC Co-Chairmen
DA:   May 5, 2010

We have had more than a decade of unparalleled progress in the Peace Process, The Good Friday Agreement, Devolution, and the Belfast Assembly as well as a final move to the Devolution of Police and Justice with movement toward a United Ireland. This has mostly occurred under a Labor Government in London and that period is most likely coming to an end and bringing in a period of political confusion. and government turmoil.

Historically, we all know this, this has meant the the Democratic and Ulster Unionists have an opportunity to enhance their influence and cast the Orange Card. David Cameron, the Conservative Leader has invited them to play that card to win the election for his party.

In our opinion, going back to before the turn of the century and even in 1916 the most effective force against the Orange Card is to trump it with the Green Card Suit that is Irish America and has been the Ancient Order of Hibernians for 174 years since 1836.

It is extremely important that we do not take our eyes off the prize of a United Ireland, do not take no for an answer, and we cannot allow the Unionists to push back against the tide which we, Irish American, driven by the AOH/LAOH will use to gain our Constitutional Mandate of a United Ireland.

Please read this article and raise your level of awareness!   Focus our attention! Attend the Convention in Cincinnati and become activists for a United Ireland.
Let’s keep our eyes on the Prize of a United Ireland!

Easter Rising Anniversary

admin | April 24th, 2010 | No Comments »

Brothers:

Today (April 24, 2010) marks the anniversary of the Easter Uprising! The proclamation itself is listed below. Even after having read it countless times, it is still a moving document to me. A brief history of the events is posted below. I hope you will take the time to share this with your family. It is how we keep our lineage, our history, and our love of Ireland alive. 26 + 6 = 1.

May our patron, St. Patrick, Our Lady of Knock, and our Lord watch over you all….and as always….

In Friendship, Unity, and true Christian Charity,

Gary Duncan, President
Lackawanna Co. AOH

On 24th April, 1916 the General Post Office was occupied by the heroic freedom fighters of Eire. Pádraig Pearse read the Proclamation of the Republic to a gathering of citizens on that day. .Here is what that document said:

POBLACHT NA H EIREANN
___________________________
THE PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT OF THE IRISH REPUBLIC TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND

IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN:

In the name of God and of the dead generations from which she receives her old tradition of nationhood, Ireland, through us, summons her children to her flag and strikes for her freedom.

Having organized and trained her manhood through her secret revolutionary organization, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and through her open military organizations, the Irish Volunteers and the Irish Citizen Army, having patiently perfected her discipline, having resolutely waited for the right moment to reveal itself, she now seizes that moment, and, supported by her exiled children in America and by gallant allies in Europe, but relying in the first on her own strength, she strikes in full confidence of victory.

We declare the right of the people of Ireland to the ownership of Ireland, and to the unfettered control of Irish destinies, to be sovereign and indefeasible. The long usurpation of that right by a foreign people and government has not extinguished the right, nor can it ever be extinguished except by the destruction of the Irish people.

In every generation the Irish people have asserted their right to national freedom and sovereignty; six times during the last three hundred years they have asserted it to arms. Standing on that fundamental right and
again asserting it in arms in the face of the world, we hereby proclaim the Irish Republic as a Sovereign Independent State, and we pledge our lives and the lives of our comrades-in-arms to the cause of its freedom,
of its welfare, and of its exaltation among the nations.

The Irish Republic is entitled to, and hereby claims, the allegiance of every Irishman and Irishwoman. The Republic guarantees religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens, and declares its resolve to pursue the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and all of its parts, cherishing all of the children of the nation equally and oblivious of the differences carefully fostered by an alien government, which have divided a minority from the majority in the past.

Until our arms have brought the opportune moment for the establishment of a permanent National, representative of the whole people of Ireland and elected by the suffrages of all her men and women, the Provisional Government, hereby constituted, will administer the civil and military affairs of the Republic in trust for the people.

We place the cause of the Irish Republic under the protection of the Most High God. Whose blessing we invoke upon our arms, and we pray that no one who serves that cause will dishonor it by cowardice, in humanity,
or rapine. In this supreme hour the Irish nation must, by its valor and discipline and by the readiness of its children to sacrifice themselves for the common good, prove itself worthy of the august destiny to which it is called.

Signed on Behalf of the Provisional Government.

Thomas J. Clarke,
Sean Mac Diarmada, Thomas MacDonagh,
P. H. Pearse, Eamonn Ceannt,
James Connolly, Joseph Plunkett

Six locations in Dublin were seized & reinforced with armaments by the Irish Volunteers on that day: the Four Courts, Boland’s Mill, St. Stephen’s Green, Jacobs Factory, the South Dublin Union, and of course, the GPO!. Attempts to seize Dublin Castle and Trinity College failed. The inability to seize Trinity College was most unfortunate. This failure restricted the means of mass communication by the Volunteers. Of equal misfortune was the failure of country wise support by Irish Citizenry to render impossible the arrival of English reinforcements. By Wednesday the revolutionaries were outnumbered by 20 to 1. The English secured a cordon about the city and closed in. They concentrated their attack on the GPO while none of the other strongholds came under the same sort of concentrated bombardment.

The Helga, a “gun ship,” arrived in Dublin and field guns were mounted on Trinity College. The effect of the continuous shelling of O’Connell Street virtually destroyed it and the surrounding areas. By Friday the GPO was engulfed in flames and Pearse gave the command to surrender. 450 people were dead; many of who were civilians, with over 2500 wounded. The city was in ruins with the damage estimated at a massive 2 Million
pounds. Over 3,500 people were subsequently arrested countrywide (including DeValera and Collins), although 1,500 were freed after questioning. 1,841 of these were interned without trial in England, and 171 were tried by secret court martial resulting in 170 convictions. 90 were sentenced to death but 75 of these sentences were commuted to life imprisonment. The seven signatories of the proclamation of independence (Pearse, Connolly, Clarke, MacDonagh, MacDermott, Plunkett, and Ceannt) were all executed to the outrage of the Irish public who had now begun to revise their opinion of the insurgents to that of a heroic nature.

Then and now: how names have changed:
* Sackville Street is now O’Connell Street.
* The Imperial Hotel is now part of Clery’s department store, O’Connell Street.
* The Metropole hotel is now Penney’s store in O’Connell Street.
* Hopkins jewellers was until recently a building society at the corner of O’Connell Street and Eden Quay.
* Great Brunswick Street is now Pearse Street.
* The South Dublin Union is now St James’s Hospital.
* Jervis St Hospital is now the Jervis centre in Mary Street.
* Mercer’s Hospital was between Grafton Street and South Great George’s
Street, close to the Stephen’s Green Centre.
* Sir Patrick Dun’s hospital was on Lower Grand Canal Street.
* Boland’s Mill was at Ringsend Road, close to Grand Canal Dock.
* Jacob’s biscuit factory, Bishop Street, was where DIT and the National Archives are now.
* Linenhall barracks were on Constitution hill, near North King Street.
* Richmond barracks were in Inchicore. St Michael’s CBS occupies part of the site.
* Royal Barracks, later known as Collins Barracks, is now part of the National Museum of Ireland.
* The Royal Military Hospital was at Arbour Hill.
* Ship Street Barracks adjoined Dublin Castle.
* Military Headquarters were in Infirmary Road, within the Phoenix Park.
* Wellington Barracks, later Griffith barracks, now houses Griffith College.
* Harcourt Street station was the large building beside the Harcourt Luas stop.
* Westland Row station is now Pearse Station.

Updated Registration Form for the Convention

admin | April 24th, 2010 | No Comments »

Click here (UPDATED CONVENTION REGISTRATION FORM) for an Updated Registration Form for the Convention.

As you can see Fish & Chips has been removed from the menu on Friday evening and substituted with Chicken Cordon Bleu. On Saturday evening, Lobster Pot Pie has been removed and in its place we have Columbia River Salmon and have also added Sliced Sirloin.

I apologize if this change in menu items cause any of you to now have to reorder a meal item.  If you would, as it would make it easier on me, please email me your changed menu item and specify who the change is for (yourself and/or your spouse).  Any other questions, please email me or call me at the number below during business hours of 9-5.

James V. Magee, Jr.

Co-Chair 2010 AOH/LAOH National Convention
36 East 7th Street, Suite 2020
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
Phone: 513-621-9660
Fax: 513-345-3900
Email:
jvmageejr@mageelaw.com

Web site by BrandMill