New York Post

St. Pat’s Parade a party

- By DESHEANIA ANDREWS and NATALIE O’NEILL

Irish eyes were smiling as tens of thousands of revelers took to the sunny streets of Manhattan Friday for the nation’s oldest and largest St. Patrick’s Day Parade.

A sea of green along Fifth Avenue stretched from 44th Street up to 79th Street as paradegoer­s cheered for bagpipers, high-school bands and marching FDNY and NYPD officers. “I’m celebratin­g all weekend long. Guinness all day every day,” said one paradegoer, Nick, 29. The New Yorker, whose family hails from Ireland, said he’d come to celebrate the cherished Irish tradition of knocking a few back.

Revelers basked in the warm weather, waved Irish flags and snapped photos as they spread out along the 35-block parade for its storied 262nd run.

A total of 343 firefighte­rs also marched in honor of Bravest who died in 9/11 as spectators waved signs reading “We love FDNY” and “We Stand with our Firefighte­rs.”

Teresa O’Connell, 63, said she’d been coming to the Irish street bash since the 1980s and that she’s never missed a year aside from during the pandemic.

“I like coming here celebratin­g my heritage, you know, where my grandma came from,” said O’Connell, who is a first-generation American.

Mayor Adams spoke briefly to cheer the working-class roots of Irish New Yorkers.

“Our firefighte­rs, our teachers, our members of the Police Department, this is a blue-collar community. I’m a blue-collar mayor. I feel home in this parade.”

He added, “When you think about the Irish community . . . during the Great Depression, they were able to come and lend their hands, sweat equity, and built the entire Empire State Building in one year.

“This is a group of people who built our subway system, built the Brooklyn Bridge, built so much,” he continued. “And so we’re here again, we need to renew our spirit and our energy, no better way to do it.”

Gov. Hochul also spoke briefly, calling the event “truly the nation’s most incredible parade.”

“We do it here best in New York City, and I’m really proud to be marching here today with my fellow Irishmen,” she said.

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 ?? ?? GREEN DAY: New York’s Irish and its close-enough celebrate along Fifth Avenue on Friday at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, with its bagpipers (below), police, firefighte­rs and marching bands.
GREEN DAY: New York’s Irish and its close-enough celebrate along Fifth Avenue on Friday at the St. Patrick’s Day Parade, with its bagpipers (below), police, firefighte­rs and marching bands.
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