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Public Employee Press
Irish Heritage celebration
All things Irish
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All Irish eyes were smiling as step dancers in traditional
attire took center stage at the celebration
on March 3.

Irish Heritage Committee Co-chairs John Townsend and Bernadette
O'Leary Enzmann celebrate along with former Committee Co-chair
Cathy Fitzgerald and Committee member Maggie Donohoe, both honored
for their service.
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By JANE LaTOUR
Leprechauns and lullabies, corned beef cabbage and boiled potatoes, the
Irish Flag and National Anthem, tradition always travels with the Irish.
Up and down the island of Manhattan and all across the citys outer-lying
boroughs, you can trace their story.
Monuments like the Irish Hunger Memorial in Battery Park and the old St.
Patricks Cathedral in Little Italy tell parts of it. So do the subway
tunnels and the newest addition Water Tunnel #3 now in production
built by the citys mostly Irish sandhogs.
Irish literature stocks the library shelves of the New York Public Library,
with a disproportionate contribution from such a small island.
William Butler Yeats, the great Irish poet and dramatist, wrote one of
his famous poems, The Coming of Wisdom with Time, in 1910.
For decades before and since, many thousands of Irish have migrated to
the shores of the city.
For generations, the Irish have made up a large part of the workforce
of the power plants, the Police and Fire departments, and every other
civil service job. Theyve literally built this city.
Ironworkers, carpenters, and all the other skilled craft unions have been
home for the Irish and Irish-Americans. Their contributions make up one
important stream of the great ethnic success story that is New York City.
All of this history and tradition was on view on March 3 at the unions
14th annual Irish Heritage Celebration.
Irish Heritage Committee Chair John Townsend, president of the Dept. of
Environmental Protection Supervisory Employees Local 1322, offered the
traditional, one hundred thousand welcomes.
Co-chair Bernadette OLeary Enzmann introduced the program, featuring
the drummers and bagpipers of the Knights of Columbus Pipe Band and the
step dancers of the Tir Na Gael School of Dancing.
In her remarks, delivered by Associate Director Oliver Gray, DC 37 Executive
Director Lillian Roberts recalled the proud legacy of the Irish: They
created a great community of hard-working Americans and made major contributions
to our growing nation. The Irish-American commitment to the labor movement
is great and lasting.
The recently retired Maggie Donohoe was present for the evening. She was
honored for her 28 years of service to the DC 37 Education Fund.
I cant think of a better way to honor the great contributions
of our Irish-American sisters and brothers than by gathering as a union
family and enjoying this wonderful event, Roberts said.
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