March 14th, 2015 at the Musée Héritage
Museum was an early celebration of St. Patrick’s Day and more than forty people joined us for the
festivities! The celebration included traditional
Irish music; an Irish legend about the Pooka (a shape-shifting spirit), a pot of gold craft and a rainbow mosaic craft, after all what’s a
Leprechaun’s pot of gold without a rainbow!
All of this was topped off with an Irish party game called “Flap the Kipper.” What in the world is “Flap the Kipper?” Well…
- First, you make a paper fish (a kipper) and decorate it brightly.
- Then you set out two lines on the ground: start and finish.
- Each player puts his or her kipper on the starting line.
- Using rolled up newspapers, you beat the floor behind your kipper and the blasts of air from the newspaper hitting the floor, makes your kipper jump forward.
- The kipper that reaches the finish line first is the winner.
Flap the kipper is really silly, but a whole lot of fun! |
Why is St. Patrick’s Day important in St. Albert? Well…some of our most prominent historical figures were Irish! Here are some of the stories about Irish families in St. Albert.
The Métis Cunningham family has been in St.
Albert since the very beginning. Patrick Cunningham emigrated from Ireland to
Canada in 1812. It was his son, John,
who moved the Cunningham clan to what would become Alberta in the early 1840s. John’s son Sam served as a local politician,
and leader of the St. Albert Mounted Rifles.
Local farmer Dan Maloney, who settled out
west in the 1870s, led the charge to save St. Albert’s river lots in the 1880s
from the Dominion Land Survey, along with Father Leduc. John Maloney, Dan’s father, emigrated from
Limerick, Ireland in the 1830s, settling in Ontario.
William Cust came to North America from
Derry County, Ireland in the 1820s. He
first settled in the US, and came to Alberta in the 1860s. According to the Edmonton Bulletin in the 1870s,
Cust was the first person in Alberta to grow wheat for commercial purposes.
Michael and Edward Hogan came to Alberta
around 1900. Edward served as a town
councilor and school board member for fifteen years; while Michael would become
St. Albert’s longest serving mayor, from 1919 to his death in 1943: 24
years! The Hogan brothers’ father immigrated
to Ontario from Ireland in the mid-1800s.