Thursday, March 17, 2011

It's not easy drinking green . . . beer.

Happy Evacuation Day in Southie!
Package stores in South Boston today will close at 4p (EDT) and bahs will close at 7:30p (EDT).
So what does this all mean? It means the spirit of Southie is sort of soiled by those who swarm there and think they're behaving like proud Irishman. But if you were born down on A Street and raised up on B Street, you'd know that all the other days of the year the packies and bahs don't shut down at those times. Let the amateurs swill down a Guinness or two at Amrhein's (home of the "oldest hand carved bar in America and . . . the first Draft Beer pump in Boston) while they savor "the quality cuisine." At home, though, you can chow down the corned beef and cabbage, along with a few pints of Murphy's Stout. And no one (else) will puke on your shoes!
And one more thing. Neither stout, nor ale, nor lager, nor pilsner is green. Green beer is about as natural as "light" beer. Ugh! Call me when the unicorns have left the building.


On March 17, 1901, the Mayor of Boston declared a new city holiday. It was the 125th anniversary of the day in 1776 that General Washington forced the British to end their occupation of Boston.
To commemorate the first Evacuation Day, 100,000 special medals were presented to the city's children. Municipal workers had a paid day off and schools were closed. The fact that March 17th also happened to be St. Patrick's Day was not lost on anyone, and in Boston the two holidays have been observed together ever since.
Of course, St. Patrick's Day predated 1776. Long considered the patron saint of Ireland, St. Patrick came to Boston with the earliest Irish immigrants. There is no hard documentation, but according to tradition, the first formal St. Patrick's Day celebration in the New World was held in Boston in 1737.
In one version of the story, a group of wealthy Protestant gentlemen and merchants who had recently emigrated from Northern Ireland gathered for a festive dinner on March 17th. In another, a meeting of the recently formed Charitable Irish Society happened to be held in a local tavern on that date; the meeting spilled over into the street and an impromptu procession constituted America's first St. Patrick's Day parade.
The custom of parades on St. Patrick's Day was well established in Boston by the time the British Army occupied the city in the 1760s. Irish soldiers in the British army celebrated St. Patrick's Day with marching, feasting, and dancing. On March 17, 1775, 70 Redcoats, most likely from Irish battalions, paraded through the streets of Boston in regimental form.
Within a year, things had changed. After the Battle of Lexington and Concord, British troops had retreated to Boston where the Continental Army held them besieged for 11 months. Finally General Knox arrived with 55 captured cannon from Fort Ticonderoga. By mid-March, Washington's troops had positioned the cannon on Dorchester Heights overlooking the city. The British would occupy Boston for only a few more days.
Generals Howe and Washington reached an agreement. If the British would not burn the town, the Americans would allow the Redcoats and their fleet safe passage out of the harbor. On March 17, 1776, with Continental soldiers watching from Dorchester Heights, the British Army and 1,100 Loyalist civilians boarded ships and sailed for Nova Scotia.
Washington was well aware that the liberation of Boston occurred on St. Patrick's Day. A number of the men on his command staff were of Irish descent. The General Orders he issued that day specified that anyone wishing to pass through Continental lines would give the password "Boston," to which the reply would be "St. Patrick." It is said that as the British troops departed, an American band played "St. Patrick's Day in the Morning."
Forcing the hated British Army out of Boston was Washington's first victory and a much-needed boost for American morale. As the 100th anniversary neared, an effort was made to recognize the significance of the event. But it was not until 1901 that Evacuation Day became a legal holiday in Boston. The next year, on March 17th, the city dedicated the Dorchester Heights monument. Located in predominantly Irish South Boston, Dorchester Heights has been the scene of St. Patrick's Day celebrations ever since.

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