THE SAINT PATRICK'S DAY PARADE IN NEW YORK
Christopher Cahill, Editor in Chief,
The Recorder: The Journal of THE AMERICAN IRISH HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
ST. PATRICK'S DAY PARADE INC.
OFFICERS & DIRECTORS
The first recorded Saint Patrick's Day Parade in New York City took place
fourteen years before the signing of the Declaration of Independence. On
March 17,1762 a small group of Irish New Yorkers marched to the inn of one
John Marshall/'at Mount Pleasant, near the College" (near the present-day
intersection of Barclay and Church streets in lower Manhattan] where the day
would be celebrated. Little else is known about that early parade, and in
years earlier still there may have been similar marches and gatherings that
have escaped record, but whatever else those solemn revelers accomplished on
that late winter's day close on two and a half centuries ago, they began, or
can be credited with beginning, here in New York, an annual celebration
which has continued without interruption ever since.
It is only appropriate, given the uncertain record of the life and times
of St. Patrick himself, that the early instances of New York's St. Patrick's
Day celebrations are somewhat lost in the mists of unrecorded history. As
the late Liam de Paor wrote in his classic study, Saint Patrick's World:
No actual manuscript of any find written in Ireland in that century now
survives. There is virtually not a single Irish artifact in a museum or a
single monument in the field of which an archeologist could say with full
confidence that it was made in the fifth century.
And yet Patrick's writings, as we know them from later copies, survive
today and continue to instruct and delight; his great work of conversion
survives, immeasurably woven into the fabric of Irish life and culture and,
consequently, into the cultures of all those many nations to which the Irish
have emigrated over the centuries.
Pre-revolutionary Manhattan may not be as distant and unrecoverable as
fifth century Ireland, but it is far enough away, and the records of the
life lived by those Irish who were here already at that time are sketchy at
best, are more often blank. There is, again, a certain appropriateness to
this obscurity, to our inability to bring that past time into satisfactory
focus. For those early New York marchers were not only beginning the
tradition we continue today, they were themselves carrying on a much older
tradition, one which they had brought with them, as perhaps their sole
precious possession, to this country and this city. To quote once more from
Liam de Paor's splendid work of scholarship:
From the seventh century onward, Patrick was regarded as pre-eminent
among Ireland's early saints. His feast day, as a kind of national day, was
already being celebrated by the Irish in Europe in the ninth and tenth
centuries. In later times he become more and more widely known as the patron
of Ireland. The crowds who march up Fifth Avenue in New York on March 17*
each year may not know a great deal about him, but in honoring his memory
they follow a very ancient tradition.
So let it be said, with all Irish humility, that not only does New York's
Saint Patrick's Day Parade predate the independence of the United States, it
can even be traced, by extension, back nearly as far as St. Brendan the
Navigator's discovery of the American New World.
St. Patrick's Day is a uniquely Irish holiday, and yet it is celebrated
in more countries around the world than any other national holiday. There
are St. Patrick's celebrations in Dublin, Tokyo, Melbourne, Kuala Lumpur,
New Orleans, Savannah, Toronto, Auckland, Chicago and Montreal, to name a
few/and the day must be a pleasure in all of those places, for those unlucky
enough not to be in New York City. This geographical spread is less
surprising when one considers the prolific dispersion undertaken by the
Irish, through choice or necessity, over the past three centuries. There is
no corner of the globe the Irish have left unvisited, and there is none
where they have settled that has been more deeply shaped by them than has
New York.
There's no denying the preeminence of New York's St. Patrick's Day
Parade. Last year over 400 marching bands, Pipe S Drums Corps, County
Societies, police, firefighters, and scores of others made up the 200,000
marchers who followed the course from St. Patrick's Cathedral up Fifth
Avenue to 86th Street. Over 2,000,000 spectators lined the sidewalks to
watch and cheer. These vast numbers are a far cry from the celebrations of
the early years, when the parades here were chiefly military in nature, with
the small groups of marchers drawn largely from Irish members of the local
militia. It was not until the 1820s that the sponsorship of the parade (or
of the various parades, rather, as there used to be more than a few) began
to be undertaken by such social and fraternal organizations as the Hibernian
Universal Benevolent Society and the Independent Sons of Erin.
It was in 1853 that the Ancient Order of Hibernians, for many years now
the parade's principal sponsor, first marched. From that time onward, the
time of the Great Famine and the massive increase in Irish emigration to
America, the parade has been a fixture in the city's social, political, and
cultural life. If it was at first intended "to show the newly arrived
immigrants as respectable citizens worthy of esteem in American society" [to
quote John T. Ridge, the author of a fine history of the parade], it soon
became an assertion of the political strength and centrality of the Irish in
New York.
Throughout its history, the parade, mindful of its religious origins and
impulse, has remained more understated than some, with its row after row of
marchers and riders unaccompanied by floats or amplified music. It is still
what Thomas Francis Meagher, later to be a hero of the American Civil War,
called it in 1855: "a festival of memory" It is a festival of religious
memory, of cultural memory, and of familial memory. Though it is Patrick's
day that we celebrate, it is also surely our own. For each marcher and each
spectator, even those who are Irish only for the day, has his or her own
family history, a history which, this country being what it is, this world
being what it is, is likely to tell a tale of exile and dispossession, of
struggle and success, of decline and rebirth and continuance.
It is well-known that, during the period of conversion, Christian
holidays were grafted onto existing pagan periods of celebration, which they
were intended to, and did in fact, replace or subsume. St. Patrick's Day
must cover and continue some ancient festival celebrating spring's arrival
or approach, for it does always seem to mark a turning point in the year,
whether of one season dying or another coming to life. And for all the
religious solemnity of the occasion, a certain pagan Celtic joie de vim is
not too difficult to detect in the atmosphere.
With this year's parade, we have entered the third millennium in which
St. Patrick's Day will be celebrated by the Irish and their adherents. I am
writing this in the last days of the second millennium, in the middle of
winter looking forward to the start of spring. It will be good to see the
crowds line the avenue, as they do each year on March 17*, and to see this
year's crowd larger even than the last. It will be good to see the familiar
bands and banners -"The Fighting 69'", "the 42"" Infantry with their Irish
wolfhounds, the County Societies, the parochial, high school, and college
marching bands - and to see the year's new faces. Some years, pleasantly, it
can seem as though the day will have no end to it. As an Irish American
novelist once wrote, describing a mid-century parade, "The Irish swept
endlessly up Fifth Avenue as if replenished hourly by fresh shiploads of
immigrants." May they, may we, do so always.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY
PARADE INC.
OFFICERS & DIRECTORS
JOHN T. DUNLEAVY, Chairman-Director
JOHN J. O'CONNOR, President-Director
HON. THOMAS J. MANTON, Honorary Chairman-Director
DR. JOHN L. LAHEY, Vice Chairman-Director
CATHERINE MITCHELL MICELI, Recording Secretary-Director
JOHN TAYLOR, Financial Secretary-Director
HILARY BEIRNE, Corresponding Secretary-Director
ROSEMARY LOMBARD, Treasurer-Director
PETER M. CASSELS, Sergeant-At-Arms-Director
ST. PATRICK"S DAY PARADE, INC.
DIRECTORS:
TIMOTHY AHERN
FRANCIS X. COMERFORD
JOHN FITZSIMONS
DENIS P. KELLEHER
BRIAN A. LEENEY
JEROME R. McDOUGAL
KEVIN G. NELSON
TRUSTEES:
JOHN FITZPATRICK
THOMAS W. GLEASON
SONNY HALL
DENIS HEALY
GEN. PAUL X. KELLEY
JAMES G. O'CONNOR
GEORGE O'NEILL
DENNIS SWANSON
thanks to our friends @ http://www.angelfire.com/ny2/aohqueens/parade.html