Chattanooga Times Free Press

St. Patrick’s Day events subdued across the world

- BY ALANNA DURKIN RICHER

BOSTON — St. Patrick’s Day revelers across the world tried to salvage the holiday with makeshift celebratio­ns after parades and parties were scrapped and residents were urged to hunker down at home to slow the spread of the new coronaviru­s.

It was the first St. Patrick’s Day in more than 250 years without a large parade in New York City, but a small group of organizers marched the rain-soaked streets early Tuesday anyway — observing “social distancing,” they said — to keep the tradition alive.

Led by police cars with flashing lights, people in uniforms and sashes marched up Fifth Avenue before dawn with a banner and flags as bagpipe music played. The brief march wasn’t advertised, and the sidewalks were largely empty.

After having to postpone shows in Boston due to the virus, American Celtic punk band The Dropkick Murphys hoped to spread Irish cheer to those holed up in their homes with a concert that will be livestream­ed Tuesday night on YouTube, Instagram and Facebook.

“We’re gonna play it like there are people in front of us, at level 10,” singer and bassist Ken Casey of the band, known for its popular song “I’m Shipping Up To Boston,” told WBUR.

Neighbors in some communitie­s were organizing “Shamrock Scavenger Hunts” on social media to give kids whose schools are shuttered because of the virus something fun to do for the holiday. Residents were told to hang a shamrock in their window so kids could go around the neighborho­od and spot the shamrocks, while keeping a safe distance from one another.

Parades were canceled across the globe as government­s raced to contain the virus. Bars and restaurant­s that would typically be filled with partiers on St. Patrick’s Day were closed to all but take-out and delivery in places like New York and Massachuse­tts.

Irish authoritie­s called off Dublin’s parade, which usually draws half a million revelers into the streets of the capital city, and pleaded with people not to congregate at house parties.

 ?? AP PHOTO/PETER MORRISON ?? Tourists cover their faces Tuesday in Dublin’s city centre. The St Patrick’s Day parades across Ireland were canceled because of the outbreak of COVID-19 virus.
AP PHOTO/PETER MORRISON Tourists cover their faces Tuesday in Dublin’s city centre. The St Patrick’s Day parades across Ireland were canceled because of the outbreak of COVID-19 virus.

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