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A Ribbon of Green

The First Word


Patricia Harty
Patricia Harty


“There’s a huge can-do attitude here in the U.S. that’s very creative, very innovative.”
–    Liam Casey.

“You have to go, and you have to do well,” Molly Fogarty told her grandson.  Molly had been left a young widow with four daughters, the oldest of which was 13 years, and a farm to run. Now her grandson, the only male in that family of women, was about to leave home to take up his first job.

His name is Jack Ryan and he was born to Molly’s daughter Teresa and Thomas Ryan, whose father had worked as a telegrapher on the railroad before settling on a farm in Illinois.

Molly sent for her father, Dennis Keating, to come over from Limerick to help with the farm when her husband died. “Reports were mixed on how helpful he was,” Jack said, but “the one thing that is indisputable is that he certainly livened things up.” After her family was raised, Molly moved to Assumption, Illinois. She went to Mass every day and prayed that Jack and her other grandchildren would do well.

Jack did well. He went on to an extraordinary career that included a stint as Director of Supervison for the Federal Reserve. On the night we met, at our annual Stars of the South dinner in Atlanta on November 17, Jack wanted to talk, not about his career, but about his father’s family, the Ryans from Tipperary, his mother’s people, the Fogartys from Limerick, and most of all, his grandmother Molly.
He said it was Molly’s reserve of courage that he called upon when, as a young man, he was asked to present a proposal at the White House, and at other times during his life when he needed to face down a challenge.

There were many stories like Jack’s told at our Stars of the South dinner – indeed, the ancestors no longer with us were the true stars of the night.

Michael Nolan talked about his great-great-grandparents, Matthew and Ann Norris Nolan, who immigrated from Tullow, County Carlow and settled on the west bank of the Mississippi River in New Orleans in 1863, and how their son John Peter became a master mechanic for the Southern Pacific Railroad – the beginning of the family’s upward mobility.  Shirley Franklin, the first African-American female to serve as mayor of Atlanta, talked about her Irish grandmother sewing a green ribbon to her collar each St. Patrick’s Day to remind her grandchild that she had Irish heritage too. 




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