Almost 1 in 10 Americans claim Irish heritage, according to the Census Bureau. But even the non-Irish celebrate Saint Patrick ...
"There is no such thing as one, definitive, version of Irish America." This phrase, or a variation of it, comes up time and time again when speaking to people who broadly fit under the umbrella of ...
"I absolutely do feel for people." Aisling, an undocumented Irish waitress in Chicago, who has lived in America for eight years, says that while she is concerned she may become a "collateral ...
many Irish Americans still identify as Irish. Diaspora is defined as the dispersion of any people from their original homeland. For centuries, the Irish have quite famously dispersed.
As our documentary, Trump, Tariffs and Us, has discovered, he has garnered support for this new direction from many different ...
While Irish people are delighted to have their culture celebrated all around the world on St Patrick's Day, they want to make it very clear how to correctly pronounce the holiday ...
As he signed the proclamation in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump said of the Irish: "They're great people, great people." More than 31 million Americans have Irish ancestry, making it one of ...
One place where Mamo's Bread sales are popular is Pretty Moon Mercantile and Tea Bar in the Boston neighborhood of West ...
Holding up the signed document, Trump said: "So for the Irish American people, proclamation." While there is no set date for the proclamation to be signed, the signing of this year's Irish ...
US President Donald Trump has hailed the impact of the Irish in America days ahead of Taoiseach (Irish prime minister) Micheál Martin's visit to the White House to celebrate St Patrick's Day.
America’s first St. Patrick’s Day celebration was in 1600 in the Spanish colony of present-day St. Augustine, Florida. Spanish colonial records mentioned a celebration for Saint Patrick in 1600 and ...