Posts Tagged ‘Irish’
Education of a Warrior
The Wakefield Warrior debate of the last several months has certainly been educational, which is only fitting since it involves a school logo. I, personally, have learned a great many things, the latest as recently as yesterday. After finishing my annual boiled dinner, I decided to relax with a pint of Guinness and watch last […]
Filed under: Columns & Essays, History, Humor, News, Politics, Wakefield | 1 Comment
Tags: boiled dinner, cancel culture, civil rights, culture, education, Facebook, forum, Guinness, Humor, Indian, Irish, learning, letter, logo, mailbox, Mark Sardella, mascots, Native American, Opinion, panel discussion, Politics, schools, scoreboard, signs, St Patrick's Day, survey, teaching, teenagers, Wakefield Daily Item, Wakefield High School, Wakefield Warriors, youth
‘The New Electric Ballroom’ runs through August 15 Enda Walsh’s The New Electric Ballroom, currently at Gloucester Stage is not a conventional play and therefore may not be everyone’s cup of tea. But if you’re up for a bit of a challenge, the rewards of this dark comedy are many. The setting is a tiny […]
Filed under: Columns & Essays, Opinion, Reviews, theater | Leave a Comment
Tags: Adrianne Krstansky, Arshan Gailus, Catholic, Derry Woodhouse, Enda Walsh, Erika Bailey, Gloucester Stage Company, Ireland, Irish, Jenna McFarland-Lord, Mark Sardella, Marya Lowry, Maureen Lane, Miranda Giurleo, Nancy E. Carroll, New Electric Ballroom, play, Robert Walsh., Russ Swift, theater
Henry’s Heroics
“Girl Revived After Going to Bottom of Lake,” read the headline on the front page of the July 22, 1935 Wakefield Daily Item. “Presence of mind exercised by her male companion,” the story reported, “and prompt work by the Wakefield Police with the inhalator saved the life of Miss Mildred Bickerton, 21, of 881 Huntington […]
Filed under: Blaney Blog, Columns & Essays, Family, Wakefield | Leave a Comment
Tags: Arthur Philbrook, Blaney, Blaney Blog, Blaneys, Boston, Boston MA, Henry Bagwell, Irish, Irish-Americans, John G. Gates, Lake Quannapowitt, Mark Sardella, Massachusetts, Mildred Bickerton, Roxbury, Wakefield, Wakefield MA
“Let him be with his mother”
I recently paid a visit to the gravesite at Holy Cross Cemetery in Malden, Massachusetts where my gandfather John Blaney and my great-grandmother Alice Blaney are buried. I used to take my mother to this cemetery from time to time. According to family lore and cemetery records, Alice (O’Neill) Blaney purchased this plot on May […]
Filed under: Blaney Blog, Family | 1 Comment
Tags: Alice Blaney, Blaney, Blaney Blog, Blaney family, Boston, Daniel Blaney, Holy Cross Cemetery, Ireland, Irish, James Blaney, John Blaney, Joseph Blaney, Malden MA, Malden Mass, Malden Massachusetts, Massachusetts, Neil Blaney, Thomas Blaney
A Brief Blaney Genealogy
I hope to post occasional stories here collecting Blaney family stories and lore in the Blaney Blog, but a brief summary of my immediate family’s genealogy may also be in order. In the 1990’s, Richard W. Blaney compiled an excellent Blaney genealogy. He was able to trace our branch of the Blaney family back to […]
Filed under: Blaney Blog, Family | 3 Comments
Tags: Blaney, Blaney Blog, Blaney family, Boston, Co. Antrim, family history, genealogy, Ireland, Irish, John Blaney, Mark Sardella, Richard Blaney, Rosetta Blaney
TRAD is an Irish Feast of Words
At Gloucester Stage Company through September 12 In the opening scene of TRAD, 100 year-old Thomas shuffles over to wake his improbably ancient father who is sleeping on a wooden cot. That absurd premise sets the tone for Mark Doherty’s hilarious fable set in the Irish countryside. TRAD is also a grand way for Gloucester […]
Filed under: Art, Columns & Essays, Reviews, theater | Leave a Comment
Tags: acting, actor, actors, Billy Meleady, Carmel O’Reilly, cast, Colin Hamell, drama, Gloucester MA, Gloucester Mass, Gloucester Massachusetts, Gloucester Stage Company, Ireland, Irish, J Michael Griggs, Jayscott Crosley, John Malinowski, Mark Doherty, Nancy E. Carroll, play, playwright, playwrights, priest, Rachel Padula-Shufelt, stage, theater, theatre, theatres, TRAD, tradition
RIP, Rosaline (Blaney) McKenzie
On Saturday, August 28, 2010, we interred the ashes of my aunt, Rosaline (Blaney) McKenzie with her mother Rosetta Blaney and younger sister, Margaret Blaney, in the Blaney plot at New Calvary Cemetery in Boston. Aunt Rosaline died earlier this year, months short of her 90th birthday. She was my mother’s older sister and the […]
Filed under: Blaney Blog, Family | 1 Comment
Tags: Blaney, Boston, Boston MA, Boston Massachusetts, cemetery, Doyle's, Dpyle's Cafe, Frances Kilday, Gerry Burke, Irish, Jamaica Plain, John Blaney, New Calvary Cemetery, priest, Pudgy, Rosaline Blaney, Rosaline McKenzie, Rosetta Blaney, Roxbury