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JAGG 02-23-2011 07:35 PM

hey
 
I'm Irish!!!!!!!!! And Scottish.

StillettoDoll 02-23-2011 07:41 PM

I'm not Irish. but Blaze is half Irish. , we like going to the celtic festival here in Houston . I love everything Irish especially the music and dancing stuff. . .. The festival only serves lemonade , tea and whiskey.. seriously.
http://images-partners-tbn.google.co...lticchoice.jpg

Ciaran 02-28-2011 03:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by StillettoDoll (Post 289398)
I'm not Irish. but Blaze is half Irish. , we like going to the celtic festival here in Houston . I love everything Irish especially the music and dancing stuff. . .. The festival only serves lemonade , tea and whiskey.. seriously.
http://images-partners-tbn.google.co...lticchoice.jpg

Usually, the options are just whiskey and tea at these sort of events. The presence of lemonade is a sign of debauchery and creeping liberalisation .....


I'm next back home to the island this weekend and very much looking forward to it.

Diva 03-06-2011 02:33 AM

I'm adopted, but I found out my heritage is Scot/Irish.....my adoptive family is Welsh....I know. :|

Maybe I said this already......



chrisbutch 03-06-2011 05:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Diva (Post 296075)
I'm adopted, but I found out my heritage is Scot/Irish.....my adoptive family is Welsh....I know. :|

Maybe I said this already......



I just knew it!!!!! Well you will have to come over and search for your Irish roots!!!

Cowboi 03-06-2011 07:45 AM

I am Scots/Irish on my poppas side of the family. We are from the MacKay Clan.
My Moms fathers people where from Spain.

I hope to travel to Scotland and Ireland one day.

cheekyali 08-15-2011 06:16 AM

Nice to see a few more Irish people in here!

*claps hands excitedly*

Sky_femme 06-27-2013 11:17 AM

I've been to Dublin a month ago and absolutely loved it!!! Will definitely come back again.
My gf is a plastic paddy :) :)

easygoingfemme 06-27-2013 11:23 AM

Curly headed pale skinned Irish femme checking in!

GraffitiBoi 06-27-2013 12:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by easygoingfemme (Post 816342)
Curly headed pale skinned Irish femme checking in!

100% Irish guy here... Although there have been some rumors that there may be some Norwegian lurking in my genes.

easygoingfemme 06-28-2013 09:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GraffitiBoi (Post 816353)
100% Irish guy here... Although there have been some rumors that there may be some Norwegian lurking in my genes.

I'm not a purist- have some German and Native American (Mohawk) blood. Interesting blend in my family...

thedivahrrrself 06-28-2013 09:59 AM

<--- O'Sharry clan here.

My grandmother traveled back to the Old Country to trace our ancestry. Turns out we are descended from Celts.

I'm mixed with a bit of German and English since my family has been in America since the 17th century.

puddin' 06-28-2013 03:56 PM

yup...
 
o'donoghue clan. i'ma 4th generation irish boi. (me great grandfather migrated to new york from county kerry)

i've got a fair bit o' lumbee indian in me as well. ('splains a lot!)


ni ceart go cur le cheile

Bard 06-28-2013 04:55 PM

my wife is beautiful Irish lass married to a very German Danish boi

Ciaran 06-29-2013 04:37 PM

Those who have passed by this thread recently to advise that they are Irish or part-Irish .............

I'm interested to learn more and understand what you mean by being Irish. In other words, the sense of Irishness you have seems to be inter-generational and may not be related to an actual link to Ireland nor may you have lived in Ireland or even visited there.

So what is it? What makes you Irish?


ps - not a deliberately provocative post but specific to, for me, the Irish dysphoria question.

Gráinne 06-29-2013 08:55 PM

If it's in the U.K., I have it (plus a fraction of Bavarian German). My grandmother was Scottish, born on the Mull of Kintyre that McCartney sang of. Of the counties in Northern Ireland, the only one I haven't found any definite ancestry in is Fermanagh. However, for some ancestors, the birthplace on the census or other records is only "Ireland", which is too vague. I know it's North, but not where. At the other extreme is "Bleachgreen, Londonderry", which is a pretty definite location!

As for what makes me Irish-I haven't been there, true. We're talking pretty far back, too: all the Irish in my family emigrated during the first big wave of the mid-1700's, a century before the potato famine. Many of my family pretty hastily beat it to Canada after the Revolution, and my parents were the first generation born in America. That's a long way of saying that going by length of time in a location and recent ancestry, I should have stronger ties to Canada than my own country or Ireland.

I know this sounds very woo-woo, but listening to "real" Irish music (not the Americanized forms) or just seeing pictures stirs some kind of ancestral pull or voice. It's a sense of something familiar. I think my father (of Scottish mother and Irish father) also felt that pull. He would sing of the mountains of Mourne to me with such emotion, atypical for him. He got to go back to Scotland but not to Northern Ireland for obvious reasons, so I will go.

Sorry for length, and I hope that's what you were asking for :).

Ciaran 06-30-2013 02:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Gráinne (Post 817213)
If it's in the U.K., I have it (plus a fraction of Bavarian German). My grandmother was Scottish, born on the Mull of Kintyre that McCartney sang of. Of the counties in Northern Ireland, the only one I haven't found any definite ancestry in is Fermanagh. However, for some ancestors, the birthplace on the census or other records is only "Ireland", which is too vague. I know it's North, but not where. At the other extreme is "Bleachgreen, Londonderry", which is a pretty definite location!


A large number of paper records were destroyed in fire during the Irish civil war in the early 1920s which can make tracing family heritage particularly challenging.


Interesting re lineage to Northern Irish counties excluding Fermanagh. The eyes of the world were on Fermanagh two weeks ago as it hosted the G8 summit - something that would have been unimaginable even a few years ago. We also had Obama visit Belfast on that trip and speak to a large audience of schoolchildren at our Waterfront Hall. For right or wrong, Northern Ireland has become something of a 21st century model for conflict resolution.


I often wonder what I would think of Ireland if I wasn't Irish and lived in the States as there are Irish stereotypes there, both good and bad, that don't mirror reality. I remember visiting San Francisco in March 2007 and walking the streets on St Patrick's Day. The amount of garish green outfits and leprechauns was enough to have me running to the nearest bar (not that I usually need much excuse anyway).

Gráinne 07-01-2013 07:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ciaran (Post 817266)

I often wonder what I would think of Ireland if I wasn't Irish and lived in the States as there are Irish stereotypes there, both good and bad, that don't mirror reality. I remember visiting San Francisco in March 2007 and walking the streets on St Patrick's Day. The amount of garish green outfits and leprechauns was enough to have me running to the nearest bar (not that I usually need much excuse anyway).

I've wondered the same, if I wasn't American and lived somewhere outside the USA/Canada. I suspect many of the stereotypes and images of "America" wouldn't be very flattering. There are Americans who magically become Canadians when overseas.

Thank Walt Disney for the little men in green suits and hats speaking in what is supposed to be a soft brogue. That was my idea of all Irish accents-wrong again ;). Somehow they got glommed onto St.Patrick's Day and became a mascot for a popular children's cereal.

I'm not interested in Ireland as shown through Hollywood, cheesy greeting cards every March, or green beer. To the best of my ability, I want to understand this land and its people from whom I descend, both the tragedy and the good.

(Obama has Irish ancestry, from Moneygall).


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