THE PILOT

THE PILOT
JOHN BOYLE O’REILLY CLUB
VâÄàâÜx? YtÅ|Äç? tÇw gÜtw|à|ÉÇ XáàA DKKC
Irish Music festival
Black 47
ON SATURDAY, AUGUST 8TH, 2009 THE
IRISH MUSIC FESTIVAL COMMITTEE WILL BE
PRESENTING ITS’ 11th ANNUAL IRISH MUSIC
FESTIVAL.
Black 47 espouses an unblinkingly political and thoroughly Irish form of rock 'n' roll, with songs covering
topics from the Northern Ireland conflict to civil
rights and urban unrest in contemporary New York.
Black 47 earned their chops playing the pub scene in
Manhattan and self-producing their first indie record
Black 47, before converting The Cars' Ric Ocasek to
the cause and gaining mainstream attention with their
second album. The band is made up of:
Geoffrey Blythe on tenor and soprano saxophone;
Joe Burcas on bass.
Thomas Hamlin on drums and percussion;
Larry Kirwan does lead vocals and Stratocaster;
Joseph Mulvanerty on uilleann pipes and flute;
Fred Parcells on trombone and pennywhistle In addition to publishing online over 1700 transcriptions of
Irish music performances, Fred also maintains the
Black 47 Archive featuring photographs and press
from the early days of the band.
Check out The Reel Book and the Black 47 Archive.
♣ ♣ ♣
TIME: 3:00 PM TO 1:00 AM
BANDS WILL BE PLAYING IN BOTH THE
UPSTAIRS HALL AND THE DOWNSTAIRS
LOUNGE SIMULTANEOUSLY. MUSIC WILL
ALSO BE PLAYING IN OUR OUTDOOR
TENT. THIS EVENT IS RAIN OR SHINE
AND OPEN TO MEMBERS AND NONMEMBERS
•
•
HAMBURGS, HOTDOGS AND OTHER
FOOD WILL BE AVAILABLE.
•
VARIOUS IRISH CRAFTS WILL BE AVAILABLE FROM CRAFTERS FROM THROUGHOUT THE WESTERN MASS AREA.
•
ADMISSION IS ONLY $10.00 FOR
ADULTS, WITH CHILDREN UNDER 12
ADMITTED FREE.
•
ANYONE WISHING TO VOLUNTEER
AND HELP THE COMMITTEE MAKE THIS
A GREAT DAY IS ASKED TO ATTEND A
VOLUNTEER MEETING ON AUGUST 6TH
AT 7:00PM IN THE DOWNSTAIRS
LOUNGE.
•
THIS IS A DAY FOR ALL THE MEMBERS,
THEIR FAMILIES, FRIENDS AND THE
PUBLIC TO COME TO THE JOHN BOYLE
AND SHOW THEIR SUPPORT WHILE ENJOYING THE BEST IN IRISH MUSIC THAT
NEW ENGLAND HAS TO OFFER.
•
TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED AT THE
DOOR ON THE DAY OF THE FESTIVAL.
Continued on page 2, Col. 1
Gaelic Games
One of the most expensive projects that the Club produces each year is receiving the Gaelic football and
hurling games directly from Ireland. Normally the
games are received on Sunday mornings, and sometimes they are played on Saturday as well. You can
check with the Irish Hours on Saturday morning to
get the schedule as to which game has been scheduled.
MEMBERSHIP MEETINGS
Next monthly meeting is scheduled for September 20
MONTHLY BREAKFAST
Sunday October 4.
BACHELOR SUPPER
Friday September 18, October 16
LADIES AUXILIARY MEETING
Next monthly meeting is scheduled for September 20
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 1
.
MUSIC LINE-UP
3:00PM – 6:00PM
UPSTAIRS HALL
LEO DOHERTY & CHARLIE BONGOVI
DOWNSTAIRS LOUNGE
THE BARDS
6:00PM – 9:00PM
UPSTAIRS HALL
THE GREEN ROVERS
DOWNSTAIRS LOUNGE
FERGUS
9:00PM – 12:00AM
DOWNSTAIRS LOUNGE
THE HEALYS
OUTDOOR MUSIC TENT
3:00PM-5:30PM
OPEN IRISH SESSION
6:00PM – 9:00PM
THE RISING
9PM
OUR FEATURED PERFORMERS
BLACK 47
PERFORMANCES BY THE McDERMOTT ACADEMY
OF IRISH DANCE & THE SPRINGFIELD KILTIE
BAND
♣ ♣ ♣
Coming Events.
The following activities are scheduled as follows:
Sunday October 4, 2009
Monthly Breakfast Returns.
Saturday October 10, 2009
Holiday Craft Fair – contact Gloria at 519-5126 for
more information.
New Britain Rock Cats
Still time to attend the trip to the New Britain Rock
Cats trip! On Saturday July 11, 2009 the JBO will be
heading back to New Britain, CT for Irish Night at
the Rock Cats. The Rock Cats will be playing the
Binghamton Mets and our own Bill Eagan will be
providing the entertainment.
Cost for a ticket to the game, including the bus is
$25.00. Please contact Timmy O’Sullivan if you are
interested in going.
Those who attended last year enjoyed two baseball
games, Irish entertainment, Guinness beer, great
food and watched Eric Devine throw out the first
pitch. While we will only be seeing one game this
year, it looks like this year’s festivities will be even
better than last year!
♣ ♣ ♣
Saratoga Bus Trips
As usual, there will be two trips to Saratoga.
On Wednesday, August 12, Bill Jones will be in
charge of the first trip that will be leaving promptly at
9:30 AM and no waiting for the tardy. The cost has
gone up, by five dollars, due to changes in packages
offered by the New York Racing Association. The
cost is $50.00 per person and includes round trip
transportation; admission to the track and grandstand
seating. Also included, at the track, this year is a program and hot dog with soft drink. As usual the trip
includes refreshments on the bus, to and from the
track.
To make reservations, call Bill at the Club 788-8603 or
at his home 788-7898, starting July 1. He is normally
at the Club Monday through Friday from 12:00 noon
until 2:30 PM.
Remember tickets for this trip go fast and no ticket
will be held without payment, in full.
Saturday November 7, 2009
Comedy night at the JBO
Gloria and Eric are running the second trip on Saturday August 22. There will be two buses leaving the
JBO for a fun filled day at 9:00 AM. The cost is
$35.00 per person and includes refreshments on the
way to and from the track.. This is always a popular
trip so if you are interested in going, please contact
Gloria at 519-5126, or Eric at 222-0676 to reserve
your seat.
Watch for the September/October newsletter with
further information.
As usual, payment in full, for the ticket, guarantees a
seat on the bus.
Saturday October 10, 2009
Gaelic Garlic Night II – dinner with Pat Tobin – contact James or Thomas Feeley for more information.
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 2
Calendar of Events:
Sunday
Monday
July 2009
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
1
Friday
Saturday
2
3
4
Holiday Hours
Check with bar
open times
5
6
7
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
12
Irish Session
13
14
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
19
Irish Session
20
26
Irish Session
27
Sunday
Irish Session
Monday
10
Boyle Boys
8 PM
15
16
22
23
Pitch League
28
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
9
11
New Britain
Rock Cats
“Irish Night”
17
8
24
25
Pitch League
21
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
8
Pitch League
Jim McArdle
8PM
29
30
Pitch League
Tuesday
31
Rick Guzzo
8PM
Wednesday
August 2009
Friday
Saturday
Thursday
1
2
3
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
9
4
Irish Session
10
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
5
11
Irish Session
6
7
Pitch League
12
8
Music Festival
13
14
15
Saratoga
Pitch League
16
17
Bagpipe and
Drum Lessons
23
30
18
Irish Session
24
Bagpipe and Drum
Lessons
25
19
20
Pitch League
26
21
Dan Ringrose
8 PM
27
28
22
Saratoga G&E
29
31
Bagpipe and Drum
Lessons
Every Monday: Bagpipe and Drum LesEvery Tuesday: Open Irish Sessions, Every Wednesday: Pitch League,
sons, Upstairs Hall 7:00 P.M.
Members’ Lounge 7:30 P. M.
Members’ Lounge 7:30 P. M.
The lessons are free. Come join the Kilties! Come and enjoy Irish music!
Come and play! Everyone welcome.
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 3
Brick Sales Are Brisk
Just a little information on the bricks.
Brick sales are doing great with the next order of “14”
arriving at the end of the month. Five more are on
order for a total of seventy six. We have to wait until
we get at least ten, before submitting the order to the
supplier.
It takes about six weeks from the time the order goes
in before they are delivered to us.
So, spread the news and let us see if we can hit a hundred before the winter season.
Special Thanks to Billy Jones, Pat Martin, Sean Baker,
Mike George, Tom Ryan, Johnny Goonan& Bobby
Desormir for all their help!! It looks great!
THINGS YOU NEVER KNEW ABOUT
DUBLIN
by David Carey
Dublin's O'Connell Bridge was originally made of
rope and could only carry one man and a donkey at a
time. It was replaced with a wooden structure in 1801.
The current concrete bridge was built in 1863 and was
first called 'Carlisle Bridge'.
O'Connell Bridge is the only traffic bridge in Europe
which is wider than it is long and Dublin's second
O'Connell Bridge is across the pond in St. Stephen's
Green.
Dublin Corporation planted 43,765 deciduous trees in
the Greater Dublin area in 1998.
Dublin's oldest workhouse closed its doors for the last
time in July 1969. Based in Smithfield, the premises
housed 10,037 orphan children during the one hundred and seventy years it operated. Dublin was originally called 'Dubh Linn' meaning 'Black Pool'. The
pool to which the name referred is the oldest known
natural treacle lake in Northern Europe and currently
forms the centerpiece of the penguin enclosure in
Dublin Zoo.
None of the so-called Dublin Mountains are high
enough to meet the criteria required to claim mountain status. The Sugarloaf is the tallest 'Dublin Mountain' yet measures a mere 1389 feet above sea level.
Dublin's oldest traffic lights are situated beside the
Renault garage in Clontarf. The lights, which are still
in full working order, were installed in 1893 outside
the home of Fergus Mitchell who was the owner of
the first car in Ireland.
The Temple Bar area is so called because it housed
the first Jewish temple built in Ireland. The word 'bar'
refers to the refusal of Catholics to allow the Jewish
community to enter any of the adjoining commercial
premises.
Tiny Coliemore Harbor beside the Dalkey Island Hotel was the main harbor for Dublin from the fifteenth
to the seventeenth century.
Dubliners drink a total of 9,800 pints an hour between
the hours of 5.30pm on a Friday and 3.00am the following Monday.
Dublin is Europe's most popular destination with
traveling stag and hen parties.
The average 25-year-old Dubliner still lives with his/
her parents.
There are twelve places called Dublin in the United
States and six in Australia.
Buck Whaley was an extremely wealthy gambler who
lived in Dublin in the seventeen hundreds. Due to
inheritances, he had an income of seven thousand
pounds per year (not far off seven million a year at
today's prices). He lived in a huge house near Step
which is now the Catholic University of Ireland. He
went broke and he had to leave Ireland due to gambling debts. He swore he'd be buried in Irish soil but
is in fact buried in the Isle of Man in a shipload of
Irish soil which he imported for the purpose.
The converted Ford Transit used for the Pope's visit
in 1976 was upholstered using the most expensive carpet ever made in Dublin. The carpet was a silk and
Teflon weave and rumored to have cost over 950.00
Irish pounds per square meter.
The largest cake ever baked in Dublin weighed a
whopping 190 lbs and was made to celebrate the 1988
city millennium. The cake stood untouched in the
Mansion House until 1991 when it was thrown out.
Strangers are more likely to receive a drink from Dubliners than from a native of any other County.
Saint Valentine was martyred in Rome on February
28th, eighteen centuries ago. He was the Bishop of
Terni. His remains are in a Cask in White Friar Street
Church, Dublin. He is no longer recognized as a Saint
by the Vatican.
The short lived millennium clock that was placed in
the River Liffey in 1999 was known as ‘the chime in
the slime’.
Nelson's Pillar was blown up in 1966 to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the 1916 rising. It now lies in a
heap in a valley in County Wicklow.
The original name of Trinity College was ‘Trinity College Near Dublin’. The capital was a lot smaller then.
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 4
Newsletter
The Pilot is a newsletter that belongs to each and
every member of the Club. With that thought in
mind if you would like to have an article appear in
the newsletter and it is relevant to the membership,
then submit the article for publishing. And if the
material is something that would be enjoyed by the
membership and is Club newsworthy, it will appear in the next edition that has space available.
Also each committee that has an upcoming event
requiring publicity, must get the information to me
in a timely manner, so that the material gets into
the correct edition of the newsletter.
I will attempt to get the newsletter printed at the
Office: 413-737-4733
THOMAS M. LEAHY
MASTER ELECTRICIAN
MA. Masters License #A14855
FREE ESTIMATES
FULLY INSURED
beginning of the last full week of February,
April, June, August, October and December. This
schedule can only be maintained with the cooperation of each committee and member who
wishes to have an article appear in the newsletter.
To facilitate getting material to me, my email is
joe81victo@comcst.net. Also I am normally at the
Club, Monday through Friday from 12:00 noon
until 2:00.
I thank you, in advance, for your cooperation in
this matter and look forward to producing an interesting and informative newsletter.
Yours Truly
Joe Walsh
Fax: 413-733-4024
Daniel M. Shea
All types of wiring:
Electrical, Telephone, Cable TV,
Fiber Optic
(413) 536-6386
Interested in advertising?
Email:
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Irish & Scottish
Bagpipes &
Drums
Office
(413) 781-6126
Pager
(413) 730-8973
Bill Sullivan
Other Offices
West Springfield, MA
Providence, RI
Free Lessons
Monday Nights
Springfield Kiltie Band
Est. 1917
www.springfieldkiltieband.org
John Boyle O’Reilly Club
33 Progress Avenue ·Springfield, MA
Booking Agent
Jim Martin
(413) 733-2709
Kitchen
(413) 592-8231
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TEL:
860-646-2469 ext 5201
FAX:
860-533-5133
Email: kmiller@fando.com
Internet: www.fussandoneill.com
Pipe Major
Matt O’Connor
(413) 427-0922
Trumbull, CT
Shelburne, VT
Columbia, SC
Greenville, NC
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(413) 592-3595
Cell: (413) 262-9626
Sears Real Estate
Kevin M. Sears
928 Belmont Ave
413-785-1636
Springfield, MA KevinSears@searsRE.com
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 5
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Free Consultations
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Fax: 413-732-1738
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Insured
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Healys’ Irish Program
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SUNDAY MORNINGS FROM 10-12
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To advertise call:
65 Hazard Ave
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DON HEALY
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Or email at: Healysirish@aol.com
July / August 2009 Newsletter (www.jbo-club.com) 6
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Ø Databases
Ø Programming
Ø Web Site Design & Hosting
Bill Quinn
413-847-0809
bill@harpsoftware.com