The real Fighting Irish - Boston Irish fight each other
Posted on Thursday, February 02, 2012 at 08:45 AM
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| Former Boston Mayor Kevin White |
And yet, it really wasn’t so long ago that the Boston Irish were at the center of a drama that was ugly, raw and rooted in ancient hatreds. And it had nothing to do with Whitey Bulger.
The death last week of former Boston Mayor Kevin White, at the age of 82, was another reminder of these bad old days.
This also reminds us that while we have our problems in the year 2012, they are nothing compared to the rancor of 1970s Boston.
Finally, lest we ever forget, the White days also proved that we may be known as the “Fighting Irish” not because we fight against the world, but because we fight each other.
White’s glory days were 1970s Boston, a town ruled politically by the Irish. In fact, former Boston Globe reporter and editor Gerard O’Neill has a new book coming out in March entitled Rogues and Redeemers: When Politics Was King in Irish Boston (Crown).
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The book’s starting point is “Four Micks,” including, Thomas Fitzgerald (JFK’s Irish-born great-grandfather) and Michael Curley, whose grandson James would serve as Boston mayor and Massachusetts governor, while also serving time in prison.
But perhaps the most interesting – and timely - sections of O’Neill’s book are the White years.
White was briefly a towering figure. He was nearly selected as George McGovern’s presidential running mate in 1972.
And yet, White may be the least colorful of four key figures from late 1960s and early 1970s Boston.
They were all Irish and all, in their own ways, despised each other.
First there was White, who like most Irish pols of his generation had a strong political pedigree. His father once served as Boston’s City Council president, and also served in the state senate. He even eyed the mayor’s chair his own son would eventually occupy from 1968 to 1984.
White, simply put, was a moderate liberal. He even labeled Boston “racist” in 1980.
And so, when the notorious bussing controversy of the early 1970s hit South Boston, White was vulnerable when it came to political enemies such as Louise Day Hicks.
“Bussing” hit the big time in 1974, when Irish American judge Arthur Garrity ruled the Boston’s schools were racially segregated.
The solution? Sending African American kids on busses to mostly white schools, and vice versa.
Louise Day Hicks looked like everybody’s grandmother, but she was supported by the vociferous, sometimes violent, anti-bussing crowd, including the group ROAR.
Demanding that someone “Restore Our Alienated Rights,” Hicks won over her fans and earned her
enemies when she said, “You know where I stand.”
To some, she and ROAR stood for racial segregation in the north, just as fat, bald sheriffs had done in the American south.
A more complex opponent of White’s was Joe Timilty. “They came from opposite sides of the tracks to enter city politics at the same time, in the same place,” O’Neill writes.
“One was a hard-charging, beer-drinking Marine from St. Gregory’s parish in Dorchester. The other was something of an intellectual from a lace curtain family in West Roxbury who read the philosophers and sipped white wine – when he drank at all.”
Timilty and White, who battled in three ugly races for mayor throughout the 1970s, represent two sides of the Irish American experience -- one, blue collar and feisty, the other more upper class and anxious to escape these less sophisticated roots.
When all was said and done, there was racial tension and violence, not to mention Irish-on-Irish violence.
Most notoriously, Judge Garrity faced death threats and Senator Ted Kennedy was nearly mauled by an angry crowd.
Meanwhile, even though White got the most votes in those mayoral races, it’s hard to say someone actually won given the long-lasting scars left behind.
To some, these days are ancient history. And that’s a good thing.
So long as we do everything we can to avoid the passing of such days ever again.
(Contact “Sidewalks” at tomedeignan@earthlink.net or facebook.com/tomdeignan)
15 comments
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joycean | Feb 03, 2012, 08:55 AM EST
Ireland North, crime is a common topic of movies, and there are already other movies about Boston's Irish Mafia, like Mystic River and the Departed.So a new one won't be breaking new ground. Most of this essay isn't about movies, but about a new non-fiction book which will cover Boston's Irish political families: what happened in Boston after the Famine Irish arrive. Imagine: in 1840, Boston had 100,000 people, mainly White, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant. Then Irish began coming, about 30,000 a year, quickly overwelming the political system. They learned to vote as a block, while the Yankees were following their individual consciences, the way democracy is supposed to work. The Irish took over the city government and began giving out favors: jobs, contracts, and very quickly, Lace Curtain Irish began to appear. It is a fascinating story that has not been thoroughly explored.
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IrelandNorth | Feb 03, 2012, 06:48 AM EST
I would question the artistic merits of making fillms about gangersters of whatever background. It'll only colour impressionable young adolescent masculine minds as to the acceptability of hoodlum behaviour. Still, America's love affair with laizzer faire capilatism does lend itself to such free-for-all entrepreneurial mobsterism.
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Murph46 | Feb 02, 2012, 06:47 PM EST
Then you are self schooled by yourself are ya?
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seanomelb | Feb 02, 2012, 06:40 PM EST
You're right murf we stand before them to protect and educate the ill-advised and the bigots.
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Murph46 | Feb 02, 2012, 05:33 PM EST
Never knew a lib to stand behind the facts!
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seanomelb | Feb 02, 2012, 04:55 PM EST
Phlutie's phluttered again and Murph the surf is sharing his bottle.
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Porickseantuny | Feb 02, 2012, 04:48 PM EST
Isn't limousine liberal and appropriate epitaph?
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Murph46 | Feb 02, 2012, 12:48 PM EST
Pretty astute Phlutie!
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PhlutiePhan | Feb 02, 2012, 12:27 PM EST
Looking back, the Kennedys actually sold out the Irish culture for political advantage. The schools were destroyed and it helped no one except to accelerate the detioration of society. JFK served his purpose and then the "devil" killed him. Read the tea leaves. If St. Patrick came to Boston, he would be stoned to death by the feminists.
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Murph46 | Feb 02, 2012, 11:22 AM EST
Would the movie be ....Departed II?
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joycean | Feb 02, 2012, 11:13 AM EST
School busing was a grest tragedy for Boston. Middle class parents could send their children to private or Catholic schools. Many families simply moved outside the city limits. The people who were left were less affluent white and blacks. I live in Virginia which has only recently shaken off the residual effects of busing. My children were bussed when they were in middle school. They rode on school busses for 23 miles, 45 minutes each way, passed 2 other middle schools. Only recently, have studies shown that there is little actual academic advantage to bussing.
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CitizenWhy | Feb 02, 2012, 09:58 AM EST
When bringing up Whitey Bulger as "Irish" (that is, Irish-American), you need to mention that he was half Lithuanian (that is, Lithuanian-American). ... The racism in Boston was very ugly but remember that the rich suburbs (where the judge lived) , practically part of Boston, were exempted from the busing ruling and remained lily white, liberal, and smug. So Afro-American kids were bused from low-level Afro-American neighborhood schools to low-level neighborhood schools in white working class areas. ... One good thing that did come from the judge's ruling was the mandated building of some very nice new schools to replace the schools built in the 1800s and falling apart. And credit Kevin White for opening these great facilities to neighborhood use (in white and Afro0American areas) in the late afternoon and evening through the creation of the Community Schools program.
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joycean | Feb 02, 2012, 09:47 AM EST
Thomas Fitzgerald (who may have been a distant relative of mine) was the father of John Fitzgerald (Honey-Fitz), JFK's grandfather and mayor of Boston from 1906-08, who preceded Curley. He was Rose Kennedy's father. She grew up in Ashmont Hills in Dorchester's lace curtain section. The stories of the Boston Irish should make fantastic movies and reading. I am anxious for the book to appear. Let us know when it is out.
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BillyFitz | Feb 02, 2012, 09:32 AM EST
Stubborn pride is bad pride Tom .. something we are very good at ..
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