London and Antique searching down Portobello Road
Travelsleuth Stuart Buchanan MacWatt celebrates Ireland's St. Patrick's Day festival and Parade in Dublin and looks at Green celebrations around the world. Expatriate Irish have been celebrating the soul of their Irishness with Parades on March 17th, St.Patrick's Day, for well over two centuries. The annual Paddy day Parade in New York goes back 238 years to before the American War of Independence - the first Parade was in 1761. The war itself was halted for the Day in 1780 on Washington's Orders announcing a Stand Down to enable the Irish soldiers under his command to celebrate their Patron Saint's Day. One wonders what the opposing British forces such as His Majesty's 64th Regiment of Foot thought about that. In 1999 The Big Apple celebrated its spectacular and boisterous St. Patricks Day Parade with its first ever female Grand Marshall, Grande Dame of the Silver Screen, the ever beautiful Maureen O'Hara, who at a sprightly and bewitching 76 could teach the modern luminaries of Hollywood a thing or two...or three! The first Parade in Montreal, Canada, took place back in 1824 - 5 years before the great Irish leader Daniel O'Connell gained Catholic emancipation for Ireland from the government of King George IV. Since that first Parade, wherever expatriate Irish set down their Celtic roots to create a community, be it in the cold north of Canada, rural Western Virginia, or the southern shores of Australia, they have expressed their irrepressible and joyful Irishness, turning St.Patrick's Day into the Day of The Big Parade, a day of Dance and jollity; a day that paints the world emerald green. In Ireland, however, St.Patrick's Day was traditionally a low-key holiday.This was to change in 1997. In that year Dublin signalled its intent to vie with London for the title of "Coolest City in the World" by mounting a monster week-long St.Patrick's Festival that showed off the City's self-confidence, creative ebulliance, and bubbling joie de vie.
Under the continuing sponsorship of The Irish Times, the National flag carrier Aer Lingus and other Corporate bodies and individuals, the 1998 Dublin St.Patrick's Festival Week of celebrations exploded upon a delighted, and expectant world.
The copyright of the article London and Antique searching down Portobello Road in Royal Britain is owned by Stuart Buchanan MacWatt. Permission to republish London and Antique searching down Portobello Road in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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