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Showing posts from November, 2016

John Fitzgerald Kennedy (1917-1963)

President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, TX on November 22, 1963, putting an abrupt halt to one of the most promising presidencies in American history. His Administration, later referred to as the Camelot Era, bespoke the spirit of American pride, ambition and know-how in post World War II.  His Administration sent the first man to the moon, tackled the nation's thorny civil rights issue, and stood its ground against the Soviet Union and other threats to American sovereignty. In the half a century since President Kennedy's death, he continues to inspire and instruct people everywhere about the merits of democracy, the value of public service, and the positive spirit of the human condition. For more information on his legacy, visit the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library & Museum in Boston's Columbia Point throughout the year. Read stories about the Kennedy Family's Irish heritage here. For year round details on Boston's Irish comm

Boston Massacre Memorial Unveiled on Boston Common in November 1888

The  Boston Massacre Memorial , located  on the Tremont Street Mall on Boston Common, commemorates the famous episode in which five men were shot by British soldiers in Boston on March 5, 1770.  The shooting and its aftermath helped launch the Revolutionary War. Putting up a monument to commemorate these men seemed like a good idea in the 19th century, and an number of citizens gathered together to do just that.   The memorial was unveiled on Wednesday, November 14, 1888.   Governor Oliver Ames attended, along with  Mayor Hugh O'Brien , the city's first Irish-born mayor of Boston.  The poem for the event was written by Irish-born poet  John Boyle O'Reilly .  E ntitled Crispus Attucks, the poem honored the African American who was one of the five martyrs killed that evening, along with Patrick Carr, an Irish immigrant, Samuel Gray, James Caldwell and Sam Maverick.   But surprisingly, there was opposition to the Memorial from old-line Bostonians.   Jeffrey Roche not