Richard Daley is Mayor of Chicago and to
distinguish himself from Richard of Athy he spells his name with an “e”. I was reminded of both when I recently spent
some time in the Windy City during which I took the opportunity to do some
research on the Irish in that part of America.
Daley, the Mayor, has presided over the affairs of the Illinois city for
several years and by all accounts his stewardship meets with the general
approval of the residents. Certainly the
doorman of my hotel was loud in his praise of Mayor Daley. Patrick O'Sullivan, a native of Sneem, Co.
Kerry has lived in Chicago for 29 years but even as he spoke to me the Kerry
blas reasserted itself so that by the time he finished talking he sounded as if
he was standing outside the Great Southern Hotel in Parknasilla instead of a
hotel in the Chicago Loop.
Everywhere you look in Chicago you see the
results of a municipality geared to making the city a pleasant place in which
to live and work. Renowned for its architecture
Chicago has developed a cultural awareness which is second to none. Nowhere is this better demonstrated than in
the Millennium Park, a development of recent years which complements and
enhances the already existing people oriented facilities of the city. Just a short distance from the Park which
includes an auditorium capable of catering for thousands, is the worlds largest
public library opened just a few years ago.
It was there that I spent some time, much shorter than I had expected,
because of the readily accessible records which with the minimum of fuss were
made available to me to consult and to copy as I wished. I found myself contrasting the ease with
which I was able to conduct my research there with the sometimes stultifying
procedures I've had to comply with before doing similar research in this
country.
My research centered on a man of whom I had
often heard my mother speak. He bore the
same name as her only brother, Anthony O'Regan, but his place in history was
assured by virtue of the fact that he was Bishop of Chicago before the diocese
became an Archdiocese. In fact he was
the third Bishop of Chicago, an appointment he had initially refused but
eventually accepted when pressed to do so by Rome. I knew nothing of the man who was the uncle
of my Mayo grandfather, but amongst my mother's papers I found a copy of the
Bishop's Will, his photograph and a press cutting regarding the return of his
body for burial in his native Cloonfad.
The story of Bishop Anthony O'Regan unfolded as I picked up and read
various tomes on the church in Chicago, most of which had been published many
years ago and all of which were long out of print and unavailable in this
country.
Having achieved what I had set out to do in a
much shorter time than I expected I delved into the history of the Irish in
Chicago and could only marvel at the impact that Irish emigrants had on Chicago
and the mid West. Indeed the influence
of the Irish is everywhere to be seen in the social, economic and religious
life of the American people, but perhaps nowhere other than in New York, is such influence stronger than in
Chicago. The reason is fairly
obvious. The Catholic Church had a
presence from a very early stage of the development of the city of Chicago and
nowhere is that presence more visible even now than in the area which was once
a predominantly Irish neighbourhood. St.
Patrick's Church on West Adams Street with its twin towers of contrasting
styles is the iconic reminder of the working class Irishmen and women who a few
years after the Great Famine financed the building of the Church. The priest in charge of the parish at the
time was Timahoe, Co. Laois man, Fr. Denis Dunne who a few years later, despite
recognising that the average Irish emigrant was not enthusiastic about the
abolition of black slavery, nevertheless set about the raising of Irish
volunteers to fight on the Union side in the American Civil War. The 90th Regiment comprising 980
Irish emigrants left Chicago to fight in the war, but only 221 returned in June
1865. Their contribution did much to
integrate the Irish into the new United States.
The nave of St. Patrick's, itself unusual in
the context of Chicago in being a brick built Church, had an interesting
collection of stained glass windows depicting Irish saints. Irish politics of defiance is represented by
a stained glass window commemorating Terence McSweeney, the Mayor of Cork who
died on hunger strike in London in 1920.
Stained glass played an important part in the architectural revival of
Chicago after the Great Fire of 1871 and one of the great architects of the
time was Irishman Louis Sullivan, many of whose concepts and designs for
stained glass windows are on display in the Smith Museum of Stained Glass on
Chicago's Navy Pier. It's quite a
magnificent display of such work, indeed the best collection I have ever seen
in one place.
Another element of the Catholic Church's
involvement with the Irish in America centered on education and care of the
sick and elderly. It was here that the
Sisters of Mercy played a major role.
Interestingly the first Sisters of Mercy arrived in America in December
1843 having travelled from St. Leo's Convent in Carlow. Seven nuns out of twenty-one from that
convent who had volunteered to take up the invitation of an Irish priest in
America travelled to the States where they set up the first Sister of Mercy
convent in Pittsburgh in December 1843.
I had understood that one of the nuns involved was related to Patrick Maher
of Kilrush but I am now not at all sure on that point. Maher was one of the principal benefactors of
the Convent of Mercy established in Athy in 1852 and of the Christian Brothers
Convent founded nine years later and indeed one of his daughters was for many
years superior of the Athy Convent of Mercy.
The nuns from Carlow earned for St. Leo's the
right to be called the cradle of the Mercy congregation in America by virtue of
that first American convent founded in December 1843. Just three years later six Mercy nuns
travelled from Pittsburgh to Chicago and opened there a convent which they
called “St. Francis Xaviers”.
Within ten years the Sisters of Mercy in Chicago had opened an
orphanage, a hospital and schools, one of which they called “Francis Xavier
Female Academy”, a forerunner of the present day St. Xavier's University
and the Mother McCauley High School.
However, before the 8th anniversary of their arrival in
Chicago was reached, five of the original six nuns had died, none of whom were
more than thirty years old. They
succumbed one by one as victims of the cholera epidemics of 1849 and 1854
during which they had tended to the sick of the city. However, their places were quickly taken up
by young Americans so that by 1856 the Sisters of Mercy in Chicago numbered 88.
I did not get an opportunity to visit the
Irish American Heritage Centre in Chicago but from what I heard it is an
organisation actively involved in promoting Irish culture amongst the second
and third generation Irish and fulfilling that role quite well. Indeed I could well understand how any
organisation involved in promoting arts and culture would prosper in Richard
Daley's Chicago. It's a handsome place
in which the City Council takes pride in promoting community involvement in the
arts. Everywhere is to be seen evidence
of that in the promotional material produced by the City Council. How I wish the municipal governors of our
little town would take a similar interest on our behalf. Maybe the Mayor's namesake would take up the
cause.
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