Irish Seisiún Newsletter
.
This Week’s Session 3
There was no sessiun today as the players were all getting together
for a pleasant and calm Easter dinner with family

I want to wish all our readers a very Happy Easter …..Tommy Mac
Finnegan's Calender
Find out what’s happening at Tim Finnegan’s this month.
.
Click here to view calendar
Click either event below to view
Finnegan’s supports us…Let’s support them!

.
“That’s How I Spell Ireland”
Saturdays at 7 to 8 PM EST.
You can listen on 88.7FM or WRHU.org.
For a request please text me on 917 699-4768.Kevin and Joan Westley
Note: Show will be preempted whenever the NY Islanders have a Saturday game
Old Ireland
Old Ireland farming and straw boys
And today, our kids say, It’s too hard!” when asked to do a minor chore.
Click here to view and click on the speaker if there is no sound

Recent Mail


Travel in Ireland

FAVOURITE PLACES IN IRELAND

Dunquin, County Kerry. (See it on a map here.)
Perched on the very western edge of Ireland, the village of Dunquin in County Kerry serves as the mainland’s gateway to the Blasket Islands.
As part of the Gaeltacht, the Irish-speaking community has preserved centuries of Gaelic language and culture, from traditional storytelling to haunting sean-nós singing that echoes across the windswept landscape.
Watch this documentary snippet about Dunquin village life in 1967,
or watch this video to experience traditional Irish music at a Dingle pub.

Irish Language
Tír gan Teanga, Tír gan Anam:
A land without a language is a land without a soul.

Submitted by our own
Anita

Dia duit Tom, ta suil agam go bhfuil tu go maith!
It’s Eastertime!! An Chaisc!!

Easter in Ireland is celebrated in much the same way as in most western countries, with Easter Holidays, Easter Eggs and even a visit from the Easter Bunny to Ireland.
Cupla focail ag baint leis an Chaisc:
Seachtain na Paise (shachtin nah Pawshe) Passion Week
Domhnach na Pailme (doh-nach nah palm-eh) Palm Sunday
Deardaoin Naofa (jair-deen neh-fa) Holy Thursday
Aoine an Cheasta (eena on kay-sta) Good Friday
An Satharn Naofa (on sa-hern neh-fa) Holy Saturday
An Chaisc (on caw-sk) Easter
Aiseiri Iosa Criost (ash-eye-ree eesah chreest) Resurrection of Jesus Christ
Beannachtai na Casca oraibh (ban-ach-tee nah caw-ske ur-ive) Happy Easter!

Slan agus beannacht,
Anita

Free Irish Classes
The classes are over zoom and are held at 12:00 eastern time the 1 st Sunday of every month.
It is basic conversational Irish and open to learners of all ages, especially beginners.
All are invited.
Hope to see you there!
slan go foill. Le dea ghui,
Anita
click here to register
Travel Quiz
Can you identify this site
and its location in Ireland
Send your guess to Tommy Mac at [email protected]
Answer in Next Week’s Newsletter
Last week’s answer

O’Brien’s Tower
O’Brien’s Tower marks the highest point of the Cliffs of Moher in County Clare, Ireland. It is located a short distance from the villages Doolin and Liscannor.
The tower was built on the cliffs in 1835 by local landlord and MP Cornelius O’Brien as an observation tower for the tourists who frequented the cliffs at the time: “strangers visiting the Magnificent Scenery of this neighbourhood”. It is said to have initially served as a teahouse, featuring a large round table with seats of ironwork.[1]: 29
On a clear day the view can extend as far as Loop Head at the southern tip of Clare and beyond to the mountains of Kerry. Looking north, the Twelve Bens in Connemara (also known as the Twelve Pins) beyond Galway Bay can be seen, and typically the Aran Islands to the west.
This week’s Irish Recipe
Hearty Cheesy Ham and Potato Soup
My Hearty Cheesy Ham and Potato Soup is rich, creamy, and wonderfully satisfying, the kind of meal that warms you from the inside out. If you have some leftover ham on hand, this is a lovely way to turn it into something truly special. With Easter just around the corner, I thought today was perfect timing for a leftover ham recipe.
Equipment
-
1 Soup Pot 4 Quart
-
1 Wooden Spoon
-
1 Medium Cooking Pot
Ingredients
- 4 medium russet potatoes peeled and diced
- 1 medium onion diced
- 2 cups cooked ham diced
- 4 cups chicken broth
- 3 tablespoons butter
- 3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 2 cups whole milk
- 2 cups shredded cheddar cheese
- ½ teaspoon garlic powder
- ½ teaspoon smoked paprika (optional)
- ¼ teaspoon salt and pepper (to taste)
- 2 green onions thinly sliced to garnish soup
Instructions
-
In a large pot, add the diced potatoes, onion, and chicken broth. Bring the mixture to a boil, then lower the heat to a gentle simmer. Let it cook for 10 to 12 minutes, or until the potatoes are soft and fork-tender.
-
In another saucepan, melt the butter over medium heat. Stir in the flour and cook for 1–2 minutes, stirring continuously.
-
Slowly whisk in the milk and continue cooking until the mixture thickens into a smooth sauce.
-
Pour the roux into the pot with the potatoes and stir well to combine.
-
Add the ham, garlic powder, and smoked paprika (if using), then let everything simmer for about 5 minutes.
-
Mix in the shredded cheese and gently stir until it has fully melted and the soup is smooth and creamy. Taste, then adjust the seasoning with salt and pepper as needed.
-
Ladle the warm soup into bowls and garnish with green onions. Serve with bread if desired.
Poem of the week
Four Green Fields
by Tommy Makem
“What did I have?” said the fine old woman
“What did I have?” this proud old woman did say
“I had four green fields, each one was a jewel
But strangers came and tried to take them from me
I had fine strong sons, they fought to save my jewels
They fought and died, and that was my grief” said she
.
“Long time ago” said the fine old woman
“Long time ago” this proud old woman did say
“There was war and death, plundering and pillage
My children starved by mountain valley and sea
And their wailing cries, they shook the very heavens
My four green fields ran red with their blood” said she
.
“What have I now?” said the fine old woman
“What have I now?” this proud old woman did say
“I have four green fields, one of them’s in bondage
In stranger’s hands, that tried to take it from me
But my sons have sons, as brave as were their fathers
My fourth green field will bloom once again” said she

Stories and Tales
Céad Míle Fáilte, and welcome to your Letter from Ireland for this week. The clocks leapt forward an hour here in County Cork last night, so time to get writing this Letter as the morning flies on! However, when I look out the window I see the trees just starting to show leaf, our lovely magnolia tree in flower and a bright sunshine lighting up the surrounding fields. What a great time of year! I’m settling down with a cup of Barry’s tea as I write. How is the season turning where you are?
This time of year always reminds me of the old agricultural rhythm that once governed Irish life completely. Ploughing, sowing, and the long wait for harvest. And within that rhythm, one day stood apart: the day your ancestor walked into town and waited to see what the coming year would bring.
We’re going to talk about the hiring fairs that occurred all over Ireland at this time of year. Today’s Letter from Ireland was inspired by the note below I received from Tom in Ottawa.
The Hiring Fair: One Day That Could Decide a Year
A couple of weeks ago, I heard from Tom in Ottawa:
“Hi Mike, I’ve been researching my great-great-grandfather Patrick Dolan from County Roscommon. He appears in the 1901 census as an ‘agricultural labourer’ and is living with another family, not his own. He would have been about 25 at the time. Why would a grown man be living this way? Was this common? I’d love to understand his situation better. Tom.”
Tom, what you’ve probably found is one of the most common, and most misunderstood, entries in the Irish census. You see, your Patrick Dolan almost certainly passed through a hiring fair at some point in his young life. Once you understand that, his situation comes into much sharper focus.
A Marketplace for Labour
Picture a country town – Ballinasloe, Drogheda, Letterkenny, or Buttevant here in Cork – on a spring morning in the 1880s or 1890s. The streets are full of cattle dealers and horse traders, and stalls selling rope and ribbons and much more beside. Gathered in loose clusters near the square or crossroads are the men and women who have come to be hired.
Hiring fairs, also known in Ulster as “rabble days”, were held twice yearly around April and November. They were one of the main ways landless labourers and domestic servants found work, and how farmers took on the help they needed for the months ahead.
A young man like Patrick would have arrived early. He might carry a spade over his shoulder, a simple signal that he was offering himself as a farm labourer. A young woman seeking domestic service might carry a mop or a pail. These were not marks of pride, but signals, understood at a glance.
The Bargain
Farmers moved through the crowd, looking men up and down much as they might assess a horse at market. They asked questions: where are you from, what can you do, have you handled cattle, can you plough a straight furrow?
If they liked what they saw, they made an offer – a wage for the season, usually paid at the end, along with food and lodging. If the labourer accepted, the farmer pressed a small coin into his hand – known as the “earnest”, or fáistín in Irish. That coin sealed the agreement as there was no written contract – the coin itself was the contract.
For many, the balance of power lay with the farmer. Dozens might compete for a handful of places. A poor season, or simply too many men in the district, could drive wages down sharply. A young man without connections, without someone to vouch for him, might wait all day and leave with nothing.
Patrick Dolan, living in another family’s household at age 25, fits squarely into this world. He was not unusual. He was a landless labourer hiring himself out season by season, living where the work was, saving what he could. It was precarious and often lonely, but entirely typical.
The Human Reality
Of course, the records themselves are quiet about the emotional side of all this. But memoirs, folklore, and accounts collected over time tell a fuller story. Young people, some barely in their teens, are leaving home for the first time. Parents watching them go, and unsure when they might return. There is the relief of being hired, or the shame of not being chosen.
In some parts of Ulster, children as young as twelve or thirteen were hired out for six-month terms, living with strangers and sending small wages home. It’s worth pausing on that when you find a very young person in the census listed as a servant in a household not their own.
So, if you find an ancestor listed as an agricultural labourer or a servant living in another household, there is a strong chance that they stood in one of those crowded squares at some point. At some stage in the day, a coin was pressed into their palm – securing employment in the months ahead. Perhaps, if things turned out as they hoped, their life began to settle into something more secure over time.
So when you next come across an ancestor living in a household not their own, it might be worth pausing for a moment and picturing them at such a hiring fair.
I’d be very interested to hear from you this week. Have you come across ancestors living this way? Or heard stories passed down in your own family? Do HIT REPLY and let me know.
Slán for this week,
Mike
Will You Keep This Letter Going?
Your Letter from Ireland is entirely reader-supported. There’s no large publisher behind us – just Carina and me here in Ireland, plenty of cups of tea, and a deep commitment to sharing the stories, customs, and historical insights that bring Irish family history to life each week.
Only a small percentage of readers, around 3%, choose to become Letter from Ireland Plus supporters. Their support allows us to:
- Keep the weekly letter free for everyone
- Continue researching Ireland’s customs, records, and traditions
- Devote the time needed to uncover the deeper context behind your family history
If these letters matter to you – if they help you feel closer to your Irish roots – please consider becoming a Plus supporter today.
It costs little more than a weekly cup of tea, yet it makes a real and lasting difference.
With sincere thanks,
Mike & Carina
See more on Plus membership (and benefits) by clicking below:
Irish Sayings, Blessings and Quotations for Spring
Springtime in Ireland is a quiet awakening. When the long stretch of winter nears its end, there’s a softness in the air, a brightness in the evenings, and a gentle greening of the land that lifts the spirit.
The hedgerows begin to stir, lambs dot the fields, and the rhythm of life feels just a little lighter. Spring in Ireland doesn’t arrive with great fanfare, instead, it unfolds slowly, like a blessing whispered on the breeze.
In this post, I’ve gathered a collection of Irish sayings, blessings, and poetic quotations to celebrate this beautiful season of renewal, including some treasured phrases from the Irish language itself.
Traditional Irish Sayings About Spring
In Ireland, wisdom about the seasons has long been passed down through generations. These sayings reflect a deep connection to the land and its rhythms.
“What is bound in harvest is ripped in spring.”
~ Old Irish Saying
These words are a reminder that the seeds of change often show themselves when new growth begins.
“A kind word is like a spring day.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This simple saying reminds us that a kind word can bring warmth and brightness to someone’s day, just like a lovely springtime morning.
The timing of buds appearing on the trees was closely watched in years gone by.
“If the oak blooms before the ash, you will have a late spring.”
~ Wise Old Words From Ireland
This old piece of countryside lore is still quoted today.
“He who doesn’t sow in the spring shall not reap in the autumn.”
~Agricultural Advice from Ireland
These wise old words remind us that effort and preparation today are essential, for without planting the seeds in spring, there can be no harvest to gather in autumn.
“Cast not a clout ’til May is out.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This old saying warns us not to shed our warm layers too soon, a ‘clout’ being clothing. Take heed of such a wise reminder in Ireland where a sudden scaraveen, a sharp, unexpected cold snap in spring, can arrive just when we think winter is behind us.
“A January spring is worth nothing.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This is a caution against false starts and fleeting warmth.
“A soft day is a blessing.”
~ Irish Saying
In Ireland, a gentle rainy day is welcomed. It nourishes the earth and coaxes new life to grow.
“Springtime is the land waking up, and the soul remembering its joy.”
~ Traditional Irish Saying
This lovely saying captures the quiet magic of spring as it stirs both the earth and the human spirit back to life.
“A misty winter brings a pleasant spring.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This old saying reflects the hopeful belief that a gentle, misty winter helps nurture the land, leading to a mild and pleasant spring.
“In the spring time, the heart regrows hope.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This lovely saying reminds us that with the arrival of spring, our spirits are renewed and hope blossoms once more in the heart
I just think all of these wise old words from years gone by are beautiful and reflect the essence of all that spring brings to the earth.
Irish Sayings About Springtime in the Irish Language
There is something especially beautiful about springtime expressed as Gaeilge. The Irish language has a poetic way of capturing both the season and the emotions it stirs.
“Ráithe an earraigh, ráite an ghrá.” Phonetic Pronunciation: “RAW-heh un AR-ig, RAW-cheh un ghraw.”
English Translation: The season of spring is for utterances of love.
These old Irish phrases remind us that spring is not only about the land, but it’s about the heart, too.
“Is fearr dhá lá san earrach ná deich lá san fhómhar.”
Phonetic Pronunciation: Iss far gaw law san AR-akh naw jeh law san OH-ur.
English Translation: Two days in spring are better than ten days in autumn.
This traditional Irish saying beautifully expresses how precious and uplifting even a few days of spring can be.
“Grá, ceol agus ríl in earrach an tsaoil.” Phonetic Pronunciation: “Graw, kyohl ah-gus reel in AR-akh un theel.”
English Translation: Love, music, and dancing in the spring of life.
This lovely Irish phrase celebrates the joy and vitality of youth, likening it to the carefree beauty of springtime.
Words from Irish Poets and Writers
Ireland’s poets have always drawn inspiration from the natural world. While they don’t always name spring directly, their words are filled with its spirit of renewal, light, and the quiet turning of the seasons.
From William Butler Yeats:
“I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree…”
~ William Butler Yeats
Yeats expresses a longing for peace and harmony with nature.
“The world is full of magic things, patiently waiting for our senses to grow sharper.”
~William Butler Yeats
From Seamus Heaney:
“Warm thick slobber
Of frogspawn that grew like clotted water.”
~ Séamus Heaney from Death of a Naturalist
This is a perfect example of how Heaney portrays spring not as delicate or romantic, but as alive, messy, and full of energy, a very true-to-life image of the Irish countryside in spring.
From Patrick Kavanagh:
“Leafy-with-love banks and the green waters of the canal…”
~ Patrick Kavanagh from Canal Bank Walk
Kavanagh’s words are rich with the lush greenness of the Irish landscape.
From Eavan Boland:
“The trees are in leaf
And the fields are turning.“
~ Eavan Boland from Song
Boland provides us with a gentle reflection on the persistence of seasonal change.
Irish Blessings for Springtime
Spring lends itself beautifully to Irish blessings, those heartfelt wishes that carry warmth, hope, and a touch of poetry.
“May your days be touched by a bit of Irish sunshine, and your heart warmed by the promise of spring.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This gentle blessing captures the uplifting spirit of spring, wishing you light in your days and renewed hope in your heart.
“May your troubles melt away like frost in the morning sun, and may new blessings bloom like flowers in spring.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This beautiful blessing speaks of renewal and hope, where worries fade away and fresh joys blossom with the coming of spring.
“May the road rise up to meet you,
May the wind be always at your back,
And may the light of springtime fill your days with joy.”
~ Old Irish song with a springtime twist
This springtime version of the well-loved Irish blessing adds a seasonal touch, wishing you not only guidance and good fortune, but also the bright joy and renewal that come with longer, lighter days.
“May each new blossom remind you of life’s quiet miracles.”
~ Old Irish Saying
This gentle blessing invites us to notice the small wonders of spring, where every new blossom is a reminder of life’s simple and beautiful miracles.
A Season of Renewal and Hope
In Ireland, spring is as much about patience as it is about beauty. The warmth comes slowly, the blossoms take their time, and the land awakens in its own gentle rhythm. But that’s part of its charm.
Spring reminds us that growth doesn’t need to be rushed. That even after the longest winter, life returns, quietly, faithfully, and full of promise.
As the Irish saying goes:
“Ráithe an earraigh, ráite an ghrá.”
The season of spring is for utterances of love.
So may this season bring you fresh beginnings, light in your heart, and the simple joy of watching the world come alive again.
May your spring be filled with laughter, love, and a little bit of Irish magic. ☘️
Slán agus beannacht,
(Goodbye and blessings)
Mairéad –Irish American Mom
Pronunciation – slawn ah-gus ban-ock-th
Mairéad – rhymes with parade
Lambs, legends, and local chocolate: Easter in Ireland
From artisan chocolate trails to baby lambs and early Christian sites, the island offers a spring break with both sweet and spiritual appeal.

Tourism Ireland is pitching the island as a memorable Easter escape, with experiences that range from handmade chocolate tastings to farm visits and heritage landmarks. The seasonal showcase highlights Ireland at its most welcoming, as spring brings new life to the countryside and fresh reasons to explore.
Whether your Easter is religious, chocolate focused or simply a celebration of the arrival of spring, you’ll find that the island of Ireland makes the perfect Easter break destination.
Indulge in an artisan chocolate experience

Tucking into an Easter egg is a seasonal delight for young and old so why not make it extra special by seeking out a craft chocolate experience in Ireland. The island’s craft chocolate scene is thriving as more people discover the exceptional confectionary that results from the combination of premium dairy produce and the skills of Irish artisans.
At Lorge Chocolatier in picturesque Kenmare, County Kerry, Master Chocolatier, Benoit Lorge leads a small team making handmade chocolates. He also runs chocolate-making classes that are a fun, hands-on way to find out what goes into making his delicious gourmet treats. Hazel Mountain Chocolate, located on the edge of the famous Burren landscape in County Clare, is one of Ireland’s bean to bar chocolate factories. You can drop into the factory any time to watch the artisan chocolate being made or book a 45-minute immersive experience and get up close to the magic. And in the gorgeous setting of the Mourne Mountains in County Down, NearyNógs Stoneground Chocolate Makers share their passion for ethically sourced beans, sustainable processes and sublime chocolate in a Master Craft Chocolate Experience that combines a taste journey with storytelling.

Get up close to spring’s new life

As spring paints the Irish landscape with colour and renewed growth, there is a wonderful opportunity to take a moment to appreciate the new life that the season brings. And there is nowhere better to do this than at Ireland’s renowned National Stud. Each spring the stud welcomes some 300 new thoroughbred foals, and a guided tour will take you to see the mares and foals as the new arrivals playfully explore their surroundings. Follow the tour with a visit to the stud’s marvellous Japanese Gardens as they awaken after winter and walk the Path of Life that traces the human journey from birth to death. A stroll through the raw beauty of adjacent St Fiachra’s Garden, which commemorates the patron saint of gardeners, is also a delight in spring when ducks, rabbits, squirrels and other wildlife will be busy with their spring chores.

There is nothing more indicative of spring in Ireland than fields full of frolicking lambs and for those looking to get up close to these cuties, there are farms that offer the chance to hold, feed and cuddle them. In County Kerry, Aedán’s Farm offers a Hold a Baby Lamb experience where you can hold and bottle-field a lamb. The farm is located on stunning Slea Head on the Dingle Peninsula and also presents sheepdog demonstrations. In the fields beside the farm, amazing Neolithic beehive structures link back to Ireland’s ancient past and are fascinating places to visit as part of your farm experience.
Explore early Christian heritage sites

The island of Ireland is dotted with important early Christian heritage sites which draw many visitors, especially around the holy time of Easter.
One of these is the atmospheric sixth‑century monastic settlement at Glendalough, nestled in a valley in the beautiful Wicklow Mountains. Founded by St Kevin, it was one of the great centres of learning in early Christian Ireland. The ruins of the monastic buildings now create a tranquil space that is perfect for pilgrims and those seeking a place for quiet reflection.

On Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way, Kylemore Abbey is a striking neo-Gothic building that was built as a token of love and later became home to an order of Benedictine nuns. A visit here is a chance to combine an exploration of spiritual heritage with immersion in the beauty of the Connemara landscape and the ordered splendour of the abbey’s Victorian walled gardens.
For those seeking connection to Ireland’s ancient past, a visit to the Beaghmore Stone Circlesin County Tyrone will take you back over 4,500 years to arrangements of standing stones that are said to be linked to the lunar calendar. Follow the Solar Walk from the stones to nearby OM Dark Sky Park to discover more about the astronomical importance of the area.
Celebrating an Irish Easter: traditions, blessings and recipes
A time of rebirth and celebration! A look at some of the Easter traditions in Ireland, past and present.

From dinner to dessert to the special Irish bread in hot cross buns, the traditional Irish Easter celebration is full of great recipes and fantastic Easter food.
Apart from Christmas and St. Patrick’s Day, Easter is the most important religious holiday in Ireland’s calendar with traditional Irish dinner, blessings, recipes, greetings, and even bread. The works!
Preparation for Easter Sunday in Ireland starts at the beginning of Lent and culminates with a gathering of family and friends and everyone’s favorite food, usually chocolates or whatever other vice was given up for the Lenten period, is eaten.
Although many of the older traditions remain in place, some of them have not. Here’s a look at some of the Easter traditions in Ireland, past and present.
A guide to celebrating a traditional Irish EasterApart from Christmas and St. Patrick’s Day, Easter is the most important religious holiday in Ireland’s calendar. Celebrate like the Irish! Read more here: http://irsh.us/2o2Ho3b
Posted by IrishCentral.com on Tuesday, April 11, 2017
Before Easter
Clean house thoroughly inside and out – whitewash applied.
Get new clothes.
On Good Friday
Fast – this is the most serious day of fasting from the Lenten calendar. Some devout Catholics will not eat until midday and even then will only have a piece of bread and three sips of water, honoring the Holy Trinity.
Cut your hair to prevent headaches during the year and trim your fingers and toenails.
Take off your shoes when entering a Church.
Remain quiet from noon until 3 pm.
Visit holy wells and graveyards. All water from holy wells has curative properties on Good Friday.
Plant a few crop seeds to bring a blessing to all your crops.
A child born on Good Friday and baptized on Easter Sunday will have the gift of healing. It was thought that boys born and baptized on these days should enter the ministry. Those who die on Good Friday go straight to heaven.
Chicken’s eggs laid on Good Friday are marked with a cross. Each member of the household eats one on Easter Sunday. And chicks hatched on Good Friday will be healthy.
Easter Saturday
You must have holy water blessed. Drink three sips of the water for good luck and sprinkle everything for good luck.
Bring the cinders from the fire to be blessed.
During Lent, Catholics would abstain from any red meat eating only fish. On Easter Saturday a tradition developed of having a mock funeral for a herring.
Easter Sunday
Gather your family and go to a hilltop to see the sunrise. Catholics believed that this is the Savior rising from his grave.
Alternatively, view the reflection of the sun in a bucket of water and then move it so the sun appears to dance.
Celebrate with eggs as a signifier of life. Either color them or give them as gifts.
Have a Cludog / Cluideog. This is a ritual where children collect the eggs and cook them with other food in a structure at the edge of the farm. Essentially it’s roasted eggs.
Merrymakers dressed in brightly colored rags would go from place to place singing and dancing and demanding the eggs of Easter.
Have a feast with your family. Traditionally, leek soup and roast lamb were served.
Have a cake dance. The best dancer gets the prize of a cake.
What are the Irish Easter traditions in your house? Let us know in the comments section, below.
* Originally published in 2013, updated in March 2024.
The amazing Tommy Makem – the bard of Ireland and his “Four Green Fields”
The Armagh-born ballad master helped redefine Irish folk music and left a legacy that still resonates on both sides of the Atlantic.
Mike Farragher
Mar 23, 2026

The late great Tommy Makem.
Tommy Makem was more than a singer. He was a storyteller whose banjo, baritone, and lyrical gift helped carry Irish ballads from kitchen tables to the world stage. From Four Green Fields to his years with The Clancy Brothers, his music captured the pride, poetry, and rebellion at the heart of Irish identity.
Tommy Makem, who was widely regarded as the modern-day bard of Ireland and the genius of Irish ballad and rebel music, is still deeply missed. Armed with his banjo, tin whistle, poetry, stagecraft, and his magnificent baritone voice, Tommy mesmerized audiences for more than four decades. Simply put, his contributions to Celtic culture cannot be overstated. He expanded and reshaped the boundaries of Irish culture, and infused pride in that culture in the Irish and a quest for knowledge of it in countless others.
For a period in the mid ‘60s, he was among the best-known Irishmen in the world as The Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem took America by storm. Among the highlights were the Ed Sullivan Show, which 60 million people watched, and a concert for JFK, which the president attended.
The four Irish performers revived an entire tradition of ballads and folk songs that had long been ignored, and they spearheaded a massive revival that has lasted to this day. The Irish folk tradition had been cast aside as the songs of poor people. Count John Cormack, the great tenor, had more imitators than anyone. Irish folk music did not count. The Clancys and Tommy Makem changed all that.
Makem wrote dozens of hits that are forever embedded in Irish pub jukeboxes on either side of the Atlantic. His best-known songs include “Four Green Fields,” “Gentle Annie,” “Red is the Rose,” The Rambles of Spring,” “The Winds Are Singing Freedom”, and “Farewell to Carlingford
“Four Green Fields” has become a classic. Makem frequently described the song as having been inspired by a drive through the borderland with Northern Ireland, where he saw an old woman tending livestock. She was oblivious to the political boundaries that loomed so large in the public’s eye; the land was older than the argument, and she didn’t care what was shown on the map. The ballad is one of the most famous of the Troubles era.
Makem was born in 1932 and raised in Keady, County Armagh (the “Hub of the Universe” as Makem always said), in Northern Ireland. His mother, Sarah Makem, was an important source of traditional Irish music,
His father, Peter Makem, was a fiddler who also played the bass drum in a local pipe band. Young Tommy Makem, from the age of 8, was a member of the St. Patrick’s church choir for 15 years, where he sang Gregorian chant and motets. He did not learn to read music, but he made it in his “own way”.
Tommy’s ambition to become an actor took him to New York, where, after a brief but rewarding career in live television, summer stock, and Off Broadway plays, he teamed up with Liam, Tom, and Paddy Clancy. Folk music was the “in” music in 1961, and when Tommy appeared at the Newport Folk Festival, he and Joan Baez were chosen as the two most promising newcomers. Both fulfilled that promise.
During those early days, the Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem were heavily influencing a folk movement in the States; they counted Bob Dylan among their biggest fans. “Topical songs weren’t protest songs,” Dylan wrote in his memoir Chronicles Volume One.
“What I was hearing pretty regularly, though, were rebellion songs, and those really moved me. The Clancy Brothers — Tom, Paddy, and Liam — and their buddy Tommy Makem sang them all the time.” That love affair carried on into the decades. In 1992, Makem and the Clancys were among the stars performing in a gala tribute to Dylan at New York’s Madison Square Garden. Eric Clapton, George Harrison, Johnny Cash, Willie Nelson, Tracy Chapman, and Dylan himself also took part.
Together with the Clancy Brothers, Tommy appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show, “The Tonight Show”, and on every major television network show in the U.S.
They soon became the four most famous Irishmen in the world. They played to SRO audiences from New York’s Carnegie Hall and London’s Royal Albert Hall to every major concert venue in the English-speaking world.
In 1969, Tommy left the Clancy Brothers to pursue a solo career and immediately sold out the Felt Forum in Madison Square Garden in New York. His popularity soared, and he went on to three sold-out concert tours of Australia, including Sydney’s Opera House, three in the United States, and several in Canada, Ireland, England, Scotland, and Wales, all within a two-year period.
Tommy continued his concert career on a solo basis until July of 1975, when he was booked for a festival in Cleveland, Ohio. Liam Clancy was booked as a solo act for the same festival.
Tommy and Liam were persuaded to do one set together and thus began Makem and Clancy, the magical combination which was to last until March of 1988 and which garnered them an Emmy nomination for a TV series done with New Hampshire Public Television as well as several platinum and gold records.”
In later years, Makem continued to give back to the Irish culture by lending his formidable brand to arts and culture. The first Tommy Makem International Festival of Song was held in South Armagh in June 2000.
Tommy was said to be especially proud of the brilliant success of this event, which drew people from the U.S., the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, England, and of course, many from other parts of Ireland to mingle with the locals.
Asked once if he had any plans to retire, he replied: “Yes, of course, I retire every night, and in the morning when I awake I realize just how lucky and privileged I am to be able to continue doing the things I love to do.”
President Mary McAleese of Ireland led the tributes to Makem after his death in 2007. “Always the consummate musician, he was also a superb ambassador for the country, and one of whom we will always be proud,” McAleese said
“Tommy was a man of high integrity, honesty, and his courage really shone through towards the end,” Liam Clancy told RTE Radio in Dublin. “He just had the knack of making an audience laugh or cry… holding them in his hands.”
Rare footage of Clancy Brothers and Tommy Makem playing for President Kennedy:
Sign up to IrishCentral’s newsletter to stay up-to-date with everything Irish!
* This article was originally published in 2017 and updated in March 2026.
More Irish Catholic Easter Traditions and “Roseleigh”

Vintage Irish Easter greeting featuring eggs
Easter, a cornerstone of the Christian liturgical calendar, holds profound significance for Irish Catholics. Irish Catholics in Ireland deeply value Easter traditions, intertwining religious observances with unique local customs that reflect the country’s rich historical and spiritual heritage. My historical fiction work, Roseleigh, prominently features an Irish Catholic family, the Cavanaghs. Because of this, I represent them partaking in traditions around the Easter Holy Week.
The Lenten Journey
Easter traditions in Ireland begin with Lent, a 40-day period of fasting, prayer, and penance leading up to Easter Sunday. For Irish Catholics, Lent is a time of self-reflection and spiritual preparation. Ash Wednesday marks the start of this period, when priests draw crosses in ash on the foreheads of the faithful as a symbol of repentance. Many Irish Catholics abstain from meat on Fridays, give up certain luxuries, and engage in acts of charity. Adherents see these Lenten sacrifices and practices as a way to purify themselves in anticipation of Easter.
During the Lenten season, people from all walks of life, including royalty, clergy, and commoners, widely observed the rigorous Black Fast. Its details are:
- One may not eat or drink anything from midnight until sunset
- One may not eat meat, eggs, dairy products, or alcohol
- One may have one vegetarian meal per day
- The meal during Holy Week may only include bread, salt, herbs, and water.
By the early 20th century, Irish Catholic traditions surrounding the Black Fast had significantly evolved. However, by the early 1900s, these stringent practices relaxed. The Catholic Church lessened the severity of The Black Fast, allowing for lighter meals and fewer dietary restrictions. These changes aimed to make religious practices easier for believers to follow. This shift allowed for a greater focus on spiritual reflection and charitable deeds during Lent, rather than purely on physical deprivation, thus aligning with contemporary interpretations of piety and devotion.

Holy Week: The Path to Easter
A series of solemn and significant events mark Holy Week, the final week of Lent. Palm Sunday, commemorating Jesus’ triumphant entry into Jerusalem, begins the week. People received blessed palms at church to take home. In earlier times, men would also wear these blessed palm slips on their lapels. Additionally, people would hang palms in barns and on tree limbs to safeguard livestock. Palm Sunday was a day when people would also perform the spring cleaning of their homes.

Good Friday: Blessings and Prohibitions
Good Friday, the day of Jesus’ crucifixion, is significant in Ireland. It is a day of fasting, prayer, and penance, with many attending the Stations of the Cross, a devotional service that retraces the steps of Jesus to Calvary. Despite it being a favorable day to plant potatoes and grain, for the most part, people avoid work. People could not shed blood, slaughter animals, or launch fishing boats. Because of Christ’s suffering on the cross, adherents don’t burn, saw, or drive nails into wood. Traditional customs include covering mirrors in the home and avoiding unnecessary work, reflecting the somber nature of the day.
He, Fearghal, and Da rose at sunrise to take two large timbers representing the Cross to Father Dudley at Our Lady of Dolours for the Stations of the Cross and to attend the first mass of Good Friday. When they returned home, there was a small corner of Ma’s kitchen garden reserved for the garlic she said must be planted before noon. This done, the garlic would have significant curative properties. She would pull it in late summer for use between the Feast of the Assumption and the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. Ma made an awful-tasting cough tonic with the garlic, based on Da’s old-family recipe. Donnacha felt sure he and his siblings had developed excellent constitutions just to avoid her medicine.
Meanwhile, each of his four sisters would have lined up to have Ma cut their hair, none of them sure they should believe if they had a haircut on Good Friday their hair would grow twice as long and twice as thick but partaking in the ritual just in case. Ma and the girls would attend the 3:00 P.M. service Da found too theatrical, hating to see the girls cry, especially Cat, when they took their turns driving nails into the cross, and he’d refuse to go out in public without shoes for the Adoration. Their only meal today would be sowens — fermented oat milk…
The belief that hair cut on Good Friday would grow back thicker and longer was widespread. There was also a somewhat contradictory belief that hair cut during Lent (which includes Good Friday) would never grow back. People also believed that washing your hair at this time prevented headaches for the year to come. Yet another difference of opinion involved whether trimming finger- and toenails was a good idea on Good Friday or they would never grow again if you did.
Garlic played a crucial role in Irish folk medicine, believed to have healing properties for persistent coughs. There was a variety of recipes involving the ingredient, such as the Cavanaghs use in my novel, Roseleigh. However, garlic in goat’s milk was renowned for its curative properties. If any garlic was good, Good Friday garlic was especially so. In addition to its medicinal use, people also used it to keep hens and cattle healthy.
Get Mariah Torsney’s stories in your inbox
Join Medium for free to get updates from this writer.
Remember me for faster sign in
As on Ash Wednesday and Spy Wednesday, on Good Friday, those fasting would often drink sowens. The process of making sowens involved soaking oatmeal in cold water until it fermented, or boiling a handful of oatmeal in spring water to create a milk substitute. Because of the prohibition of dairy, sowens found its way into many other dishes. These included mashed potatoes and bread and the bases for white gruel dishes that also included nettles, turnips, cabbage, and herring.

Holy Saturday: Readying the Feast
Holy Saturday, known as Easter Vigil, is a night of anticipation. A unique Irish custom also took place on this day — “gugging for eggs.” Children would dress in old clothes, including aprons and headscarves, cover their faces, bringing a basket and a stick. They would go from house to house asking for eggs, with phrases like:
Gugs, gugs, eggs or the money, ma’am.
or
My Aestar Egg on you, please.
With Lent nearly over, people were tired of eating fish and looking forward to better fare. In some areas of the country, including Cork, people held a procession called “whipping the herring” to herald the last day of Lent. Someone, possibly a butcher, tied a herring to a stick and carried it out of town while the crowd whipped it to pieces.

Many Irish Catholics would also take part in the Easter Vigil Mass, one of the most important liturgies of the year. The service begins in darkness, symbolizing the tomb of Jesus, and includes the lighting of the Paschal candle, representing the light of Christ’s resurrection.

Easter Sunday: Celebrating the Resurrection
Easter Sunday is a day of joyous celebration, marking the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The day begins by breaking the fast of Lent with hen or duck eggs, preferably sprinkled with blessed salt. The children would also gather for a feast called a clúdóg, eating the eggs and other treats they had gathered the day before. Then there was a festive mass at churches adorned with flowers, and hymns of praise filled the air.

Symbolic Foods and Feasts
Food plays a central role in Irish Easter traditions, with many symbolic dishes and treats. Families gathered for a special meal, often featuring lamb, symbolizing Jesus as the Lamb of God. People would also eat other spring meats, such as veal or kid. Simnel cake, a light fruitcake topped with marzipan and originally associated with Mothering Sunday, came to be used simply as an Easter cake. People participated in cake dances at crossroads on Easter evening with the couple who dance longest winning a cake.

Easter Monday: A Day of Reflection and Celebration
Easter Monday is a public holiday in Ireland, often marked by parades, commemorative events, and family gatherings. Many visit the graves of loved ones, laying flowers and offering prayers. It is also a day for community activities, such as egg rolling competitions and other games, fostering a sense of togetherness and joy.
Modern Adaptations and Continuity
While traditional customs remain strong, modern Irish families often incorporate new elements into their Easter celebrations. The exchange of chocolate Easter eggs, a practice that gained popularity in the 20th century, is now a cherished part of the holiday. Easter egg hunts have become common, blending traditional religious observance with contemporary family fun.
The Easter Rising of 1916 transformed Easter in Ireland, blending religious celebration with a sense of national identity and the fight for independence. Historically a time of religious reflection, Easter took on new meaning as the Rising, which began on Easter Monday, drew symbolic parallels between Christ’s resurrection and Ireland’s hoped-for rebirth. The execution of rebel leaders, seen as martyrs, infused Easter with sacrifice and patriotic fervor. As a result, Easter in Ireland became a time to honor those who died for freedom, reshaping the nation’s cultural and political landscape.
Despite these modern influences, the core of Irish Easter traditions remains deeply rooted in Catholic faith and communal values. The resilience of these practices highlights the enduring nature of Irish cultural and religious identity.
Conclusion
Irish Catholic Easter traditions deeply intertwine religious devotion, cultural heritage, and national identity. From Lenten sacrifices to Easter Sunday celebrations, these practices have shaped the spiritual and communal life of Irish Catholics for generations. Despite modern adaptations and historical influences like the Easter Rising, the essence of Easter in Ireland remains rooted in faith, family, and community. These traditions, as depicted in Roseleigh’s historical fiction, showcase the enduring power of rituals in shaping identity. Irish Easter customs celebrate Christ’s resurrection and reflect the resilience and spirit of the nation, making Easter a time of reflection and renewal.
This Week’s Question:
Why Do My Irish Ancestors Seem to Disappear Before 1845?
Hi Tom,
Each week, we take a reader question and share suggested approaches, resources, and a little historical context to help answer that question.
Do feel free to reply to this email and let me know if it helped you in any way. It’s always great to get feedback.
Today, we answer the question: Why Do My Irish Ancestors Seem to Disappear Before 1845?
Let’s kick off with the following question from Patsy:
“I’ve been making real progress on my Irish research. I found my great-great-grandparents in the 1901 and 1911 censuses, traced births and marriages through civil registration, and felt like I was finally getting the hang of it. But the moment I try to push back before about 1845, everything seems to dissolve. The same approach that worked so well just stops producing results. Am I doing something wrong, or is there something fundamentally different about researching that earlier period?”
Patsy, Auckland, New Zealand
Thank you, Patsy. You’re not doing anything wrong at all. What you’ve encountered is one of the most common, and disorienting, experiences in Irish genealogy research. I find that once you understand what’s happening, it tends to be something of a turning point.
The short answer is this: you haven’t just crossed a date, you’ve crossed a border of sorts. Let me explain what I mean.
Pre-Famine and Post-Famine Ireland: Two Different Countries.
The Great Famine of 1845 to 1852 didn’t just reduce Ireland’s population through death and emigration, but actually remade the country including its landscape, its social structures, its economy, and the records that survive to tell us about it. The Ireland that exists on one side of this fault line and the Ireland that exists on the other are, for a genealogist’s purposes, almost two different places.
The research instincts you yourself have built up, and they sound like good ones, were built primarily in post-Famine Ireland. Civil registration, which begins in 1864, gave you births, marriages and deaths in a reasonably consistent form. The 1901, 1911 and 1926 censuses give you households, ages, relationships. As a result, the records probably feel familiar and manageable.
However, cross back into pre-Famine Ireland and the landscape changes entirely. And if you don’t know that the landscape has changed, you might keep looking for things that just aren’t there – and conclude that the trail has gone cold, when often it hasn’t.
What Pre-Famine Ireland Actually Looked Like.
To understand the records of pre-Famine Ireland, it helps to picture the place itself – and nowhere illustrates the contrast more vividly than County Mayo on the western part of the island.
By 1841, Ireland’s population had reached somewhere close to eight million people. In Mayo, the population you would see in the rural countryside was extraordinary. Families of eight and more farmed tiny plots, sometimes just an acre or two of poor Atlantic soil, supplemented by income from spinning and weaving in the home. Holdings were frequently subdivided between sons, then subdivided again. A townland that might house a handful of families today could have held dozens of families in up to 1845.
This was a world in which a great deal of daily life left no official record at all. People were born, lived, and died in a rhythm governed by land and season and community, not by registration at official offices. Catholic parish records exist for this period, and can be invaluable, but coverage before the 1820s is patchy in many areas, and the further west you go, the thinner it tends to become. The records that do survive often reflect a world of Irish language names, local naming customs, and informal arrangements that can look very unlike what you’ve grown accustomed to finding.
Then the Great Famine of the mid 1840s arrived.
In Mayo, the impact was catastrophic. The population fell by somewhere between a quarter and a third in a decade – through a combination of starvation, disease, and emigration. What survived became a physically and socially transformed place. The tiny subdivided plots were consolidated or cleared. Whole townlands that had teemed with families were emptied. The Ireland that emerged in the 1850s and 1860s – the Ireland where civil registration began, and where your research has been working so well – was built on the ruins of something quite different.
The Straddling Families: Where It Gets Interesting.
Here is where this understanding becomes practically useful for most of us.
The majority of researchers with Irish ancestry don’t have ancestors who were entirely pre-Famine or entirely post-Famine. They have families that straddled the divide. Maybe a grandmother who was born in the 1830s who survived the famine, or parents who stayed and children who left. A household might appears in both worlds, but looks very different in each.
These are the families where I use a “Two Irelands lens” and it pays off directly.
Take a family you might find in the 1901 census in Mayo: there might be an elderly widow in her seventies with a son in his forties working a modest holding with his wife, and a couple of grandchildren. Straightforward enough. But push back a generation to her parents, to the world she was born into in the 1820s or 1830s – and you’re in a different country. Her parents may have farmed a fragment of land that no longer exists as a separate holding. Her siblings may have scattered so completely in the Famine years that no Irish record connects them. The very townland she grew up in may look unrecognisably different in the records that survive from that period.
Understanding this won’t make the research easier, but it will stop you being baffled and frustrated by it. Don’t think of it as hitting a wall, but think of it as crossing a border. Like any border crossing, it goes better when you know you’re doing it. That, in essence, is what it means to look through the Two Irelands lens.
How to Know Which Ireland You’re In.
Here are a few practical signposts that can help you orient yourself:
- Civil registration begins in 1864. If you’re working in records before that date, you’re in pre-Famine or transitional Ireland and your primary sources for births, marriages and deaths will be Catholic parish registers, not civil records. However, remember that Civil death records straddle these two Irelands and will often provide a death registration for a person who was born in the earlier Ireland. Sometimes, this is the only record you will find in relation to them.
- The 1901, 1911 and 1926 censuses are post-Famine documents. The Ireland they describe had already been through the Famine and a generation of consolidation and emigration. The families you find there may be significantly smaller, and significantly different in composition, from what existed thirty years earlier.
- Griffith’s Valuation (compiled between roughly 1847 and 1864) sits right on the border. In some counties it was compiled early in that timeframe, while the Famine was still reshaping the landscape. In others, it was done later. What it shows you is not a stable, settled Ireland, but an Ireland in the middle of being remade. It’s an enormously valuable record, but reading it correctly means understanding the moment it was capturing.
- If your ancestors were in the west of Ireland (Mayo, Galway, Roscommon, parts of Clare, Kerry, Cork, Sligo, Leitrim and Limerick) then the contrast between the two Irelands tends to be sharpest, and the pre-Famine records thinnest. Adjust your expectations accordingly.
The Realisation That Changes Everything.
When I think about researchers who have had a breakthrough in this earlier period, a version of the same awareness tends to have dawned on them all. They stopped approaching pre-Famine Ireland as a slightly more difficult version of post-Famine Ireland – but started approaching it as a genuinely different place, with its own logic, its own records, and its own way of leaving traces.
This shift in the researcher’s perspective is, I’d argue, more valuable than any individual record source.
It means you stop being frustrated that civil registration doesn’t exist, and start asking what does exist. It means you start reading the Catholic parish registers not as a poor substitute for something better, but as a direct window into a world that the Famine would soon destroy. It means you look at a townland in Griffith’s Valuation and wonder, not just who is there, but who is missing – and why. It means you look at supporting historical documents such as landed estate papers or the “Topigraphical Dictionary of Ireland” which was published in 1837.
Pre-Famine Ireland is harder to research than post-Famine Ireland, but it is not inaccessible. The stories of the people whose lives it contains – lived at high density, under extraordinary pressure, on the very edge of day to day survival – are some of the most compelling stories in Irish history.
The key is simply to look carefully through the “Two Ireland Lens” and consider which Ireland you are looking at.
Slán for this week,
Mike.
With the 110th anniversary of Ireland’s Easter Rising today,
I felt this might be of interest…..Tommy Mac
This is Ireland
The flag which flew over the GPO on O’Connell Street Dublin in 1916 is returned to the Irish on 30 March 1966.
At a ceremony in Government Buildings Taoiseach Seán Lemass is presented with the Flag of the Rising by Comdt Frank Neill accompanied by the Irish Ambassador in London JG Molloy. The flag has been held in the Imperial War Museum in London since the events of Easter Week 1916.
The words “Irish Republic” are emblazoned in gold and white lettering on a bullet holed green background.
Upon receiving the flag Taoiseach Lemass thanks the British government and the authorities of the Imperial War Museum for returning the flag in the year that celebrates the 50th anniversary of the 1916 Rising. Lemass also remarks that this is a gesture of good will by the British government to improve relations between the two countries.
Click below to watch and click the speaker once opened
Dublin still bears the scars of the 1916 Easter Rising
More than a century after the 1916 Easter Rising, places in Dublin still bear the scars.

The 1916 Easter Rising in Ireland was over a century ago, but Ireland’s capital city of Dublin still bears the scars from the battles.
Author and Irish military historian Paul O’Brien and Dr. Joanna Brück, a University of Bristol reader in archaeology, traced the physical reminders of the 1916 Easter Rising for The Journal.
The uprising began on Easter Monday, April 24, 1916. It was on that day that seven Irishmen proclaimed the establishment of the Irish Republic, with themselves as its government, and attempted to break away from British rule.
Involved were the Irish Volunteers, led by Pádraig Pearse, the much smaller Irish Citizen Army, led by James Connolly, and members of Cumann na mBan.
The week-long uprising cost about 1,500 lives – mostly civilians – and left another 2,000 people wounded. It also left its mark upon many spots around Dublin, which are still palpable today.
Mount Street Bridge and Northumberland Road
O’Brien says that “one of the biggest battles of the rising happened on that road.
“25 Northumberland Road was occupied by Lt Michael Malone of the Irish Volunteers. The schoolhouse was occupied by another group of volunteers as well.”
The old schoolhouse is still standing today, but has since been converted into The Schoolhouse hotel and restaurant.
The battle there occurred when members of the British 59th North Midlands Division ran into 17 volunteers who were positioned on that street. 214 British soldiers met their deaths.
“They had them in crossfire – the British didn’t know what direction they were coming from or what position the Irish had,” explained O’Brien. “That battlefield is still there bar one building that was burnt down and is now an office block.”
St. James Hospital
While most of the hospital in Dublin 8 today is new, the area around it was the site of “fierce battles,” according to O’Brien.
“It was known as the South Dublin Union. It was a workhouse for impoverished people. A man called Eamonn Ceannt was one of the Irish Volunteers and occupied the workhouse.
“The battlefield and the majority of the buildings are still there within the modern complex. You can see the nurse’s home; the convent is still there,” said O’Brien.
The Four Courts Area
“A lot of it was damaged or destroyed in the civil war – in relation to 1916, many battles took place in streets and alleyways behind the Four Courts,” said O’Brien. The area now is mostly new and rebuilt.
“Urban combat was very new to the British Army, and they had to adapt very quickly to what was happening in Dublin,” said O’Brien.
“One of the biggest battles in the area happened at North King St and involved the Irish Volunteers and the British South Staffordshire regiment. The army suffered heavy casualties at that spot.”

While many of the houses there were knocked down, some originals still remain. The Irish Volunteers occupied a public house at the junction of North King St called Reilly’s which is still standing but under a different name. Similarly, the Capuchin hall, where Comdt Edward Daly set up his headquarters, is also standing.
Also near the Four Courts was a medical mission, where a group of British lancers took shelter after being intercepted making their way up the quays. This building still stands today, but “The whole front of that building is peppered with bullet holes.”
St. Stephen’s Green
Now a bustling hub for Dublin city, St. Stephen’s Green was used to dig trenches during 1916.
“The rebels dug trenches, probably at the four entranceways and other places – the written sources aren’t very specific about where they were.” Dr. Brück added that with it being a Victorian park, the Irish Citizens Army takeover of the area was quite symbolic.
“The rebels took St Stephen’s Green over on Easter Monday,” said Dr. Brück.
“There has been debate over whether it was a strategically good location to take over or not. Some would say it was stupid to take over Stephen’s Green as it was looked over by different buildings and they didn’t have enough men to take control of buildings overlooking the green. Others would say there is a water source so that was good.
“The rebels were led by Michael Mallin and Countess Markievicz – there is a limestone bust of Markievicz in the park today. There, they dug trenches and put barricades up around entrances and smaller entrances in the park, and also commandeered passing vehicles to help them in their task,” said Dr. Brück.

O’Brien added that “one photograph taken of the trenches for a newspaper at the time showed them facing straight down Dawson St.”
Today, you can see pock-marks and bullet holes on the Fusilier’s Arch at the entrance to St Stephen’s Green.
Shelbourne Hotel
Still a popular spot in Dublin today, The Shelbourne Hotel became a takeover spot for British forces beginning on Easter Monday in 1916. At first light, they began shooting at the rebels from the windows of the hotel.
The soldiers barricaded downstairs in the Shelbourne, and some guests were wounded by fire from the rebels in the park. The guests were moved to the rear of the building to avoid more injury.
While the inside has since been refurbished, the outside of The Shelbourne remains the same as it was back then.
Royal College of Surgeons
“The buildings they took over were very symbolic,” said Dr. Brück, “with this spot being no exception. Irish rebels retreated to here and remained there until they surrendered on Sunday. The masonry outside the college today still bears the pockmarks of bullets exchanged between the Irish and British.”

GPO (General Post Office)
This landmark on O’Connell Street, then called Sackville Street, served as headquarters for the Irish Volunteers during the Uprising. Though it was burned down during the week of rebellion, its remaining facade bears the scars of bullet holes still visible today.

H/T: TheJournal.ie
* Originally published in October 2012, last updated in April 2026.
News From Ireland
110th anniversary of Ireland’s Easter Rising to be marked in Dublin on Sunday
The 1916 Proclamation will be read on Sunday outside Dublin’s GPO as part of the State commemoration of the 110th anniversary of the Easter Rising.

A ceremony to mark the 110th Anniversary of the 1916 Easter Rising will take place outside the GPO on O’Connell Street in Dublin’s City Centre this Easter Sunday, April 5.
The ceremony, which will commence at 12 noon on Sunday, will be led by President Catherine Connolly, Taoiseach Micheál Martin, and Minister for Defence Helen McEntee.
Defence Forces’ Personnel, including a brass band, a pipe band and representatives of the Army, the Air Corps and the Naval Service, will take part in the ceremony, which will conclude with an Air Corps fly past, weather permitting.
At noon, the National Flag on the GPO will be lowered, and the 1916 Proclamation will be read by an Officer from the Defence Forces.
The President will then lay a wreath to commemorate those who died in the 1916 Rising. A minute’s silence will be observed.
Members of the public are invited to attend the Ceremony and should be in position in the public viewing areas outside the GPO by 11:30 am.
Viewing areas are located at the Clery’s side of O’Connell Street and at the south end of the GPO. An area has been reserved for wheelchair users.
Large video screens will also be erected on either side of the GPO to display the Ceremony to the public. A Commemorative Programme will be distributed on the day and will be available to download via a QR code on display.
A traffic management plan will be in place on Sunday.
This 110th State Commemoration to mark the anniversary of the 1916 Rising will be broadcast live on RTÉ.
What is the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic?
According to the National Museum of Ireland, the ‘Proclamation of the Republic’ was a formal assertion of the Irish Republic as a sovereign, independent state, and also a declaration of rights.
It was read by Patrick Pearse in front of the GPO in Dublin at 12:45 pm on Easter Monday, April 24, 1916, heralding the Easter Rising, and Ireland’s advance towards self-determination.
The seven signatories – Thomas J. Clarke, Seán Mac Diarmada, Patrick H. Pearse, James Connolly, Thomas MacDonagh, Éamonn Ceannt, and Joseph Plunkett – would all be among those court-martialled and executed after the failure of the Rising.
The document was printed in considerable haste in Liberty Hall on Easter Sunday and the morning of Easter Monday by printer Christopher Brady and compositors Michael Molloy and Liam Ó Briain. As they were short of type, the document had to be printed in two halves, since the first half was broken up in order to provide type for the second half.
Also owing to the age and dilapidation of the printing press, individual copies show idiosyncrasies in terms of ink pressure and spacing.
It is unclear how many copies of the Proclamation were printed, but a figure of 2,500 has been suggested. On Easter Monday 1916, between 12 noon and 1 pm, the printed copies were sent to General Headquarters in the GPO and from there distributed to different areas.
What does the 1916 Proclamation of the Irish Republic say?
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 organised and trained her manhood through her secret revolutionary organisation, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, and through her open military organisations, 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 past three hundred years they have asserted it in 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 of all 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 Government, 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 dishonour it by cowardice, inhumanity, or rapine. In this supreme hour the Irish nation must, by its valour 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
Cillian Murphy leaves fans obsessed after unexpected New York street quiz
Cillian Murphy has been dubbed “effortlessly cool” after a street interview in New York City showed fans a different side to the usually reserved star.

The Cork native appeared on the latest episode of the web series Track Star, which dropped on March 27, where host Jack Coyne stopped him mid-stroll in NYC for a quick-fire game of “Guess That Tune.”
Keeping things close to home, Coyne quizzed Murphy on a lineup of Irish icons like Van Morrison and Thin Lizzy, alongside newer acts such as Fontaines D.C.
Murphy didn’t miss a beat, correctly naming every track while casually dropping stories and insights that had viewers hooked.
“This guy is just effortlessly cool,” one fan wrote in the YouTube comments, echoing a wave of praise for the Irish actor’s laid-back charm.
Murphy played it down with a modest, “Sometimes, yes,” before diving straight into the challenge.
He opened strong by identifying “Rock & Roll” by The Velvet Underground, calling it ‘one of the great rock ’n’ roll tracks of all time’, even joking about feeling pressure from his kids.
Next up was “Sweet Thing” by Van Morrison, which Murphy said perfectly captures Ireland.
He described the album “Astral Weeks” as something that could “distill Ireland” into a single record, adding it’s “one of my favourite albums of all time.”
The actor also breezed through “What’s Happening Brother” by Marvin Gaye, noting how the track still sounds “so fresh,” before eventually clocking “A Hero’s Death” by Fontaines D.C. after a brief pause.
Murphy revealed he has had some input in the music featured in Peaky Blinders, particularly its upcoming project The Immortal Man, explaining: “I get involved, yeah.”

The chat also touched on his famously intense on-screen persona, especially as Tommy Shelby. Laughing it off, Murphy said: “He’s extremely intimidating and extremely powerful, which I am not in any way,” adding that his approach to acting is about creating fully rounded characters without judgement.
One of the more personal moments came when Coyne played “Son Of Mr. Green Genes” by Frank Zappa, a track Murphy instantly recognised, having once played in a band of the same name as a teenager.
He praised Zappa as someone who “never played the game” and was “the real deal.”
The final Irish nod came with “Romeo And The Lonely Girl” by Thin Lizzy, with Murphy paying tribute to frontman Phil Lynott, calling him “an icon” in Ireland.
When asked what he’s currently listening to, Murphy kept it local, shouting out Irish acts like Cardinals, Lankum and Lisa O’Neill.
He said there’s been an “explosion” of “great, great music” coming out of Ireland, adding: “It’s lovely when you can listen to music that’s made at home and is world class.”
The interview has since gone down a storm online, with fans praising not just Murphy’s music knowledge but how relaxed he seemed, a contrast to his often low-energy press appearances.
“Perhaps the happiest I’ve ever seen the lad,” one viewer commented, while another wrote: “I’ve NEVER seen him so animated… music is clearly what gets him to relax and be himself.”
* This article was originally published on Extra.ie.
WATCH:
An Oscar-nominated look at the history of Dublin’s Abbey Theatre
Abbey Theatre’s stalwarts tell the history of the Irish theatre through colourful reminiscences in “Cradle of Genius.”

The documentary “Cradle of Genius” is now available to stream for free via the Irish Film Institute’s IFI Archive Player.
In the short film, British documentarian Paul Rotha celebrates the playwrights and players of the Abbey Theatre, Ireland’s national theatre founded by W.B. Yeats and Lady Gregory in 1904.
The highlight of the film is an intimate and humorous conversation between octogenarians Barry Fitzgerald and Seán O’Casey at O’Casey’s home in Devon.
Nominated for an Academy Award® for Best Documentary Short in 1962, “Cradle of Genius” is part of the IFI’s Oscar® Collection: A Selection of Irish Academy Award® Nominated Short Films.
The Irish Film Institute’s Oscar® Collection
A great short film, like a great short story, conjures worlds with clarity and economy, bringing viewers on journeys which are brief but deeply engrossing. Since the 1950s, Irish filmmakers have mastered the short film form and secured international recognition through an impressive array of awards, including numerous Academy Award® nominations and wins. Popularly known as the Oscars, the awards are the most famous and prestigious in the entertainment industry.
This collection brings together a selection of these award-winning films – ghostly tales and pitch-black comedies, illuminating documentaries and exquisite animations – populated by an array of famous folks such as Seán O’Casey, Orson Welles, Fionnula Flanagan and Brendan Gleeson. The films, directed and written by Irish men and women, date from 1951 to 2018.
The Oscar® Collection: A Selection of Irish Academy Award® Nominated Short Films is drawn from material preserved in the IFI Irish Film Archive.
This programme is supported by the Government of Ireland through the National BCP Network.
“Cradle of Genius” is published here thanks to the Irish Film Institute (IFI), with whom IrishCentral has partnered up to bring you a taste of what their remarkable collection entails. You can find all IrishCentral articles and videos from the IFI here.
To watch more historic Irish footage, visit the IFI Archive Player, the Irish Film Institute’s virtual viewing room that provides audiences around the globe free, instant access to Irish heritage preserved in the IFI Irish Film Archive. Irish Culture from the last century is reflected through documentaries, animation, adverts, amateur footage, feature films, and much more. You can also download the IFI Archive Player App for free on iPhone, Android, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV, and Roku.
IrishCentral has partnered up with the IFI to bring you a taste of what their remarkable collections entail. You can find all IrishCentral articles and videos from the IFI here.
Belfast welcomes Arnold Schwarzenegger back
as he receives honorary degree
Decades after Arnold Schwarzenegger first came to Belfast as a young bodybuilder,
The Terminator star has fulfilled his promise to return to the city.

Schwarzenegger arrived in Belfast this week to receive a special honour from Ulster University.
The university awarded the Hollywood icon an honorary degree in recognition of his contributions to public service, environmental advocacy and the arts.
Upon his arrival, Ulster University’s vice-chancellor, Paul Bartholomew, stated: “Few individuals have shaped global culture across sport, film and public life in the way that Dr Arnold Schwarzenegger has.”
Schwarzenegger has been meeting students and athletes at the college’s campus in Belfast city centre before being presented with the honorary doctorate.
The Austrian-born star has collected several honorary degrees over the years, but his return to Belfast has been particularly notable due to a past visit to the city.
Before earning his riches, Schwarzenegger arrived as a guest in 1966 after receiving an invitation from a local bodybuilding judge.
He was welcomed to stay in the judge’s house in Dundonald and was treated to a fry-up for breakfast.
Now, 60 years after the visit, the 78-year-old’s return has been hailed by Ulster University as carrying “a personal significance”.
The university rolled out the red carpet for Schwarzenegger for Monday’s event, with students clapping and cheering as he arrived.
He was greeted by the chancellor and the pair chatted briefly at the top of the carpet, while students recorded on their phones.
An honorary doctorate is a very high achievement and is only awarded to inspirational people who have made an outstanding impact in their field.
Bartholomew said: “He built a name for himself in professional bodybuilding and acting and he used that platform for ultimate good.”
The vice-chancellor also remarked that Schwarzenegger was a powerful advocate “for the environment, for the people of California and for the philanthropic causes he champions”.
He added: “His story – from a young athlete finding his voice in front of an audience in Belfast to becoming one of the world’s most recognisable leaders, actors and activists – speaks strongly to the importance of confidence, determination and ambition.”
Jokes
The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly
is to fill the world with fools.
— Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
Funnies From My Wife



Funny Headlines

?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
Times when you might be excused for using foul language
What could possibly go wrong????

Funny Statue Photos

Funny Signs

Many news items, stories, recipes, jokes, and poems are taken from these sites
with their generous permission.
Please support them by clicking on the links below
and sign up for their free newsletter.
Welcome to
Tír na mBláth
Tír na mBláth is one of hundreds of branches throughout the world of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann (CCÉ) pronounced “kol-tus kyol-tori air-in“, the largest group involved in the preservation of Irish music, dance and song.
Our board and membership is made up of Irish, Irish descendants, and all those who support, celebrate and take pride in the preservation of Irish culture.
We also aim to promote good will and citizenship.
Interested in belonging to Tír na mBláth? Feel free to download our membership form
Facebook page is at Tír na mBláth
Our meetings and several events are held at Tim Finnegan’s Irish Pub in Delray Beach Florida.
Well, that's it for this week.
Number of visitors to this website since Sept 2022



















