New York Post

IT’S A ‘GO’ BRAGH

St. Pat’s Parade returns to Fifth Ave.

- By LEE BROWN lbrown@nypost.com

Miss me, I’m Irish! A scaled-down St. Patrick’s Day Parade returned to the streets of the Big Apple on Wednesday after being scrapped last year — and was hailed by organizers as a “great day for the Irish.”

Mayor de Blasio was among the slimmed-down group of early risers who gathered from 6:30 a.m. on Lexington Avenue and 26th Street to march to St. Patrick’s Cathedral on Fifth Avenue.

The parade — which organizers say started in 1762 — was watched by a far smaller crowd than usual, with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urging people to stay home.

Many of the annual events — including Mass by Timothy Cardinal Dolan — were live-streamed, with organizers also urging New Yorkers to toast the day from home.

“This morning’s parade may have looked a little different, but the spirit of our Irish community shone through all the brighter,” the Mayor’s Office tweeted along with a series of photos from the morning’s celebratio­n.

After the historic decision to scrap the annual march last year in the early stages of the raging coronaviru­s pandemic, getting back on the streets was a “great day for the Irish,” parade chairman Sean Lane told Irish Central.

“The Tradition Lives On!!” organizers said on the parade’s Facebook page.

Relaxed restrictio­ns on city eateries and bars meant New Yorkers were again able to celebrate what is traditiona­lly one of the most social dates on the calendar — but capacity was capped at 35 percent in the usually packed Big Apple hot spots.

Parade organizers say the original march in 1762 was by a “band of homesick, Irish ex-patriots and Irish military members serving with the British Army stationed in the colonies in New York.”

“This was a time when the wearing of green was a sign of Irish pride but was banned in Ireland,” the parade Web site said.

“In that 1762 parade, participan­ts reveled in the freedom to speak Irish, wear green, sing Irish songs and play the pipes to Irish tunes that were meaningful to the Irish immigrants of that time.”

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 ??  ?? EYES ARE SMILIN’: Timothy Cardinal Dolan presides over Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral Wednesday, as a scaled-down parade, including National Guard troops and an Irish wolfhound, was a welcome sight.
EYES ARE SMILIN’: Timothy Cardinal Dolan presides over Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral Wednesday, as a scaled-down parade, including National Guard troops and an Irish wolfhound, was a welcome sight.

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