This being the season for the “Wearing of the
Green” I thought I might take this time
to wish my readers a Happy St Patrick’s
Day and relate to you the story behind why I didn’t join the Hibernian Society.
Of course,
the Irish are famous for blarney, so, in the spirit of the occasion of the Holy
Saint, don’t think I might not be taking just a wee bit of
artistic license as I weave this tale of Irish revelry.1801. You see, my father, Bernard Ray, was quite the man about town and belonged to numerous clubs and societies, prominent among them the Hibernian Society, an Irish Fellowship Society founded here in 1801. As a young man with rising prospects
in the Real estate Industry, he strongly suggested that I join the Irish
Brotherhood since it would be good for business.
Hibernian Society Hall ,1840 |
And so I
went with Dad to my first meeting, where
the gathered company was excited to be served Eddie Lockwood’s famous
spaghetti. Now I knew this recipe, it was my mother’s, the very one she learned in Home Ec class at Memminger: a few bits of tomato perched atop a bed of spaghetti noodles, a thin watery sauce pooled around the bottom of the plate. Manna from Heaven as a child, my brother’s girlfriend, an Italian girl by the name of Angela Bambino, had introduced me to her Italian family's rich and fragrant "Sunday Sauce".
I was
unimpressed.
After
dinner, the festivities began, which consisted of shots! More shots! The brown
liquor was flowing!!! The goal: throw
down til you fall down! I remember few
names from the many introductions made that
night but I distinctly remember the huge hangover the next morning!
My dear
father was disappointed that I was so unimpressed. I never have had much of a taste for liquor.
But, at his insistence, I gave it another try.
At the
second meeting, I arrived with an open mind and enjoyed the fellowship. I found
myself getting into the “spirit” of the event, but as I was making my way to the bar on my hands and knees, someone stepped on my fingers. That just struck me the wrong way.
And that’s
why I never joined the Hibernian Society of Charleston...
Charleston Old Walled City Tours offers public and private walking and driving tours of historic Charleston and surrounding areas. For information got to www.walledcitytours.com
No comments:
Post a Comment