Ancient Order of Hibernians in America
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When Americans think of the naval heroes of the American Revolution, the name usually comes to mind is John Paul Jones. Yet there was another officer—an Irish immigrant from County [...]

Members learn traditional rhythm techniques from bodhrán instructor Derek Burpee while accompanying live music performed on uilleann pipes and Irish flute. Members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Wake County, [...]

Ancient Order of Hibernians National President Sean Pender recently visited St. Raphael School in Hamilton, New Jersey, where he presented copies of the children’s book Our Friend, Saint Patrick to [...]

Born to impoverished Irish immigrant parents. Dr. J.B. Murphy was described by Dr. William J. Mayo, one of the founders of the Mayo Clinic, as "the surgical genius of our [...]

Across the Revolutionary War, five Butler brothers—sons of an Irish immigrant gunsmith—served as officers in the Continental Army. They fought in some of the most important campaigns of the war [...]

As one of his fellow Marines stated, “(McCarthy) was not a one-shot hero, he was a hero at every campaign and everything he did.” [...]

Marie Connolly Owens was a trailblazer, yet history nearly erased her name. As the first female police officer in the United States, she wielded real authority—making arrests, enforcing child labor [...]

Long before the Irish were welcomed or celebrated in American life, they were already fighting for the country’s liberty. In the spring of 1775, in the small frontier settlement of [...]

On the night of March 5, 1770, British soldiers fired into a crowd on Boston’s King Street. The shooting left five men dead and helped ignite the chain of events [...]

When John Boyle O’Reilly arrived in Boston in 1869, he was not a celebrated poet or civic leader. He was a Fenian exile who had escaped from a British penal [...]