Mrs. Muriel MacSwiney, widowed wife of Lord Mayor of Cork Terence MacSwiney, visited Boston two months after her husband died on October 20, 1920, after a 74-day hunger strike protesting British rule in Ireland. She came here to express her gratitude to the Boston Irish for their steadfast support of her husband during his imprisonment and subsequent hunger strike. She was accompanied by Harry Boland, secretary to Ireland's President Eamonn deValera, and her sister in law, Miss Mary MacSwiney. During her visit, MacSwiney met with William Cardinal O'Connell, and later attended a dinner in her honor at the Copley Square Hotel, attended by numerous Boston Irish leaders. The following day, the visitors went to the State House, where she was received in the Hall of Flags, and invited to address the Massachusetts Senate. Addressing the senate, Mrs. MacSwiney said, "It gives me great pleasure to thank you for the greeting that has been extended to me today. I never made a pu...
A new era in city government took hold on Monday, January 5, 1885, when Hugh O'Brien became Boston's first Irish-born mayor. O'Brien's victory at the polls in December finally broke the hegemony of old-line Yankees who had run local government since Boston was incorporated as a city in 1822. O'Brien defeated incumbent mayor Augustus Pearl Martin by 3, 124 votes, with more than 52,000 citizens casting their votes. Once Mayor Martin heard the news, he sent a note to O'Brien cordially congratulating him on his victory. O'Brien said in a statement that evening: “As I have been elected, I am ready to assume the responsibilities of the position fearlessly and in good faith. In this connection I will say emphatically that there is no ring behind me, and there never will be. The nomination was tendered to and accepted by me without pledges of any kind, or of any name or nature. After living In Boston for upwards of half a century, being educ...