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  • Part 2: St. Patrick's Day in 1863
  • Part 3: St. Patrick's Day in 1864 and 1865
  • Selected Bibliography
  • How St. Patrick's Day in the Year 1863 Was Celebrated by The Irish Brigade, A Reminscence by John Ryan
  • St. Patrick's Day's Powerful Tug

    America's four-year Civil War often intruded as the Irish under arms geared up to celebrate St. Patrick's Day. Kevin O'Beirne, in Part 1 of 3, looks at the war's early years.

    By Kevin O'Beirne
    WGT Contributing Editor

    harpsham.jpg  - 135 K
    From an early 20th century postcard
    Perhaps the most eagerly anticipated day in the year for an Irishman fighting in the American Civil War was St. Patrick's Day. March 17th was always celebrated in high-style back on the "Ould Sod" and in Irish neighborhoods in the United States; soldiers in the Army of the Potomac's Irish units kept this tradition alive and even enhanced it a bit.

    The Union Army's renowned Army of the Potomac, which comprised more than 100,000 men, was the chief hammer the United States used to try to bring about the end of the war. Stationed in the East, the Army of the Potomac fought for four years to close the circle on the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. Due to the unit's proximity to urban centers of immigration (such as New York, Boston, and Philadelphia), the Army of the Potomac and nearby commands contained a substantial portion of the Irish in the Union Army. Despite the fact that army service usually meant going without the good things in life, the men and officers of Irish regiments were always up for a party, especially on Erin's national holiday. The St. Patrick's Day celebrations of the Irish Brigade (69th, 88th, and 63rd New York, 28th Massachusetts, 116th Pennsylvania) are well-documented; unfortunately, the fame of the Irish Brigade often eclipses other units, such as
    roerinsm.jpg  - 155 K
    Courtesy of Historical Art Prints
    The 69th Pennsylvania at Gettysburg, detail from Don Troiani's "Rock of Erin."
    Corcoran's Irish Legion (155th, 164th, 170th New York Infantry regiments, and the 69th New York NGA), the 37th New York ("Irish Rifles"), 9th Massachusetts, and the 69th Pennsylvania, not to mention Irish infantry regiments in the Western armies.

    During the war's four years, Irish soldiers observed four St. Patrick's Days. They marked each in varying styles, depending on their unit, its military situation, and its ability to procure materials necessary for a good celebration. Just as the Irish Brigade was noted for its celebrations of St. Patrick's Day, so too were most of the "lesser-known" Irish regiments serving in the Virginia theater.

    March 17, 1862 was not an especially notable one for the 9th Massachusetts Volunteers. Earlier in the month, portions of what would eventually become the V Corps (including the 9th) embarked on an expedition to Fairfax, Virginia. On March 15, the regiment made an arduous return march to Alexandria, just across the Potomac River from Washington, D.C., in a torrential rainstorm, where the regiment spent about five days, including St. Patrick's Day, in bivouac. On March 21, the 9th boarded a ship for transport to the Peninsula formed by the James and York rivers, part of General George B. McClellan's advance on the Confederate capital of Richmond. Apparently, the 9th was not able to celebrate the 1862 holiday in a noteworthy fashion.

  • Part 2: St. Patrick's Day in 1863
  • Part 3: St. Patrick's Day in 1864 and 1865
  • How St. Patrick's Day in the Year 1863 Was Celebrated by The Irish Brigade, A Reminscence by John Ryan
  • Selected Bibliography

  • Abrahams, Joseph ("Fenian"), Irish-American newspaper, New York NY, April 11, 1863 and April 2, 1864.
  • Bilby, Joseph, "Remember Fontenoy: The 69th New York and the Irish Brigade in the Civil War," Longstreet House, Highstown NJ, 1995.
  • The Pilot newspaper, Boston MA, April 4, 1863.
  • Conyngham, David P., "The Irish brigade and its campaigns: With some account of the Corcoran legion, and sketches of the principal officers," William McSorley & Co., New York NY, 1867 (Kohl, Lawrence F. ed., Fordham University Press, New York NY, 1994 reprint).
  • Corby, William, "Memoirs of Chaplain Life: 3 Years in the Irish Brigage with the Army of the Potomac," Fordham University Press, New York NY, 1992 (reprint).
  • Kohl, Lawrence F. and Richard, Margaret C., editors, "Irish green and Union blue: The Civil War letters of Peter Welsh, color sergeant, 28th Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers," Fordham University Press, New York NY, 1986.
  • Maryniak, Benedict R., ed., "Letters of Sergeant George Tipping of the 155th NY Co. I", Maryniak Collection, Lancaster NY.
  • "Maurice", Irish-American newspaper, New York NY, April 1, 1865.
  • Sears, Stephen, "To The Gates of Richmond: The Peninsula Campaign," Ticknor & Fields, New York NY, 1992. Thompson, S. Millet, "History of the Thirteenth New Hampshire Volunteers," 1888.

    You can discuss St. Patrick's Day during the American Civil War in its famed Irish regiments on The Wild Geese Forum, where the epic adventures of Ireland's far-flung exiles are our daily fare.

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