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Thread: My Irish ancestry

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    That's a good song, I listen to Irish/Celtic music on the Internet, there's a wide variety to listen to. I find that Quaffing back some good Irish whiskey or a few pints of Guinness while listening puts you in touch with your Irish ancestors.

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    Quote Originally Posted by Mars_ax View Post
    That's a good song, I listen to Irish/Celtic music on the Internet, there's a wide variety to listen to. I find that Quaffing back some good Irish whiskey or a few pints of Guinness while listening puts you in touch with your Irish ancestors.
    I enjoy a few pints of Guinness and a drop or two of Bushmills from time to time, and I am finding Irishness that must have rubbed off through contact as I have no genetics to boast of!

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    Quote Originally Posted by superheavyrhun View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Mars_ax View Post
    That's a good song, I listen to Irish/Celtic music on the Internet, there's a wide variety to listen to. I find that Quaffing back some good Irish whiskey or a few pints of Guinness while listening puts you in touch with your Irish ancestors.
    I enjoy a few pints of Guinness and a drop or two of Bushmills from time to time, and I am finding Irishness that must have rubbed off through contact as I have no genetics to boast of!
    My Sir name starts with the initials McC and the full name is usually associated with being either Irish, Scottish or Scot/Irish. My father always claimed that our last name was from a 100% Irish linage, as did his father, so I gotta believe it must be true.
    In any event, my wife and I, most identify with just being an American, followed by being ethnically Irish, English, German and French, with a dash of Native American. (Heinz 57) I'm not sure I like the French genealogy, but it's there, and there's not much I can do about it. Frenchie snuck in there somewhere.

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    I class myself as English.

    But am very proud to have an Irish heritage.

    My mother was born here but her brothers and sisters were all born in Ireland.

    I have family still in Ireland

    They moved here nearly 50-60 years ago.

    That makes me half Irish, and yes my grandma said feck all the bloody time.
    And when I was younger I ate potatoes nearly every day

    My grandfather on my fathers side was from Portsmouth, but I have a very Irish sounding surname, so you never know I could be even more Irish than I think.

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    Hidden Content " border="0" />

    I can explain it.
    But I cant understand it for you.

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    It is all a bit romantic to think that Irish heritage places you firmly in the place of the oppressed underdog with all the Celtic sentimentalism that goes with it. While I can understand your pride Mars in your Irish ancestry, I think Andre's post is a good example of where in a genuine effort to balance the argument the truth becomes a little obscured.

    The song posted speaks of coming out and fighting like a man, something people backing the republican cause clearly did not do during the IRA's extended bombing campaign against civilians on British Soil. I can remember public bins being removed in London so extensive and real was the threat. Even reducing the great famine to a Potato famine engineered by the English is an oversimplification of what happened. The Irish landlords and the Catholic Church were also to blame and yet are rarely mentioned.

    I live on the border of Cornwall where a few still insist to not be part of England and have more in common with the Irish and Welsh. Needless to say most of these were born in England in places like Swindon and just like the idea of being somehow more authentic and rootsy by claiming they are Celts. The fact is the English came from the same Celtic tribes as the Welsh, Scottish and Irish with equal measures of French Norman, Viking/Scandinavian and Roman ancestry.

    My Grandmother on my fathers side was an Irish Romany Gypsy who married my Grandpop a Polish Jew who came to England and joined the RAF to fight in the war. My Other Grandparents were both Westcountry English and my Parents English. I am interested and proud of my ancestry but equally proud of being an Englishman with all that my country has given the world.
    Hidden Content

    "I am always doing that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it."

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    Quote Originally Posted by Greenbeanz View Post
    It is all a bit romantic to think that Irish heritage places you firmly in the place of the oppressed underdog with all the Celtic sentimentalism that goes with it. While I can understand your pride Mars in your Irish ancestry, I think Andre's post is a good example of where in a genuine effort to balance the argument the truth becomes a little obscured.

    The song posted speaks of coming out and fighting like a man, something people backing the republican cause clearly did not do during the IRA's extended bombing campaign against civilians on British Soil. I can remember public bins being removed in London so extensive and real was the threat. Even reducing the great famine to a Potato famine engineered by the English is an oversimplification of what happened. The Irish landlords and the Catholic Church were also to blame and yet are rarely mentioned.

    I live on the border of Cornwall where a few still insist to not be part of England and have more in common with the Irish and Welsh. Needless to say most of these were born in England in places like Swindon and just like the idea of being somehow more authentic and rootsy by claiming they are Celts. The fact is the English came from the same Celtic tribes as the Welsh, Scottish and Irish with equal measures of French Norman, Viking/Scandinavian and Roman ancestry.

    My Grandmother on my fathers side was an Irish Romany Gypsy who married my Grandpop a Polish Jew who came to England and joined the RAF to fight in the war. My Other Grandparents were both Westcountry English and my Parents English. I am interested and proud of my ancestry but equally proud of being an Englishman with all that my country has given the world.
    Beanz, the older i've gotten the more I appreciate my Irish/English, European heritage, and i'm proud to say it's where I come from. Even though i'm an American, I still feel a close bond with my ancestry and the distant relatives still living in those countries. - A Band of Brothers as it were...

    Cheers

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    Default Re: My Irish ancestry

    Quote Originally Posted by Greenbeanz View Post
    It is all a bit romantic to think that Irish heritage places you firmly in the place of the oppressed underdog with all the Celtic sentimentalism that goes with it. While I can understand your pride Mars in your Irish ancestry, I think Andre's post is a good example of where in a genuine effort to balance the argument the truth becomes a little obscured.

    The song posted speaks of coming out and fighting like a man, something people backing the republican cause clearly did not do during the IRA's extended bombing campaign against civilians on British Soil. I can remember public bins being removed in London so extensive and real was the threat. Even reducing the great famine to a Potato famine engineered by the English is an oversimplification of what happened. The Irish landlords and the Catholic Church were also to blame and yet are rarely mentioned.

    I live on the border of Cornwall where a few still insist to not be part of England and have more in common with the Irish and Welsh. Needless to say most of these were born in England in places like Swindon and just like the idea of being somehow more authentic and rootsy by claiming they are Celts. The fact is the English came from the same Celtic tribes as the Welsh, Scottish and Irish with equal measures of French Norman, Viking/Scandinavian and Roman ancestry.

    My Grandmother on my fathers side was an Irish Romany Gypsy who married my Grandpop a Polish Jew who came to England and joined the RAF to fight in the war. My Other Grandparents were both Westcountry English and my Parents English. I am interested and proud of my ancestry but equally proud of being an Englishman with all that my country has given the world.
    Yes the original IRA and the reason behind their public backing through the mismanagement of the black tans is a far cry from the murderous revengeful pitiless bunch the IRA became.

    I was born in England too by the way, with Maclannens for great grand parents.

    Still its a great folk song with an amazing (is that a mandolin) lead break in the middle.
    Hidden Content " border="0" />

    I can explain it.
    But I cant understand it for you.

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