By: PATRICK F. O'BRIEN
The chronicles of the Public Safety Emerald Societies is
relatively short in comparison to the history of the Irish in
America. All through the annals of America, the Irish played an
important role in shaping the United States. The Irish in
America, not only made history, they consumed it. They are one
of the premier success stories in the land of immigrants.
However, in the early days of America, the Irish immigrants were
not always welcomed. They were the first ethnic group to live in
the slums of the cities. Furthermore, the Irish were also the
first ethnic group that were publicly discriminated against for
jobs. It was common practice for employers to state “Irish need
not apply”, so the only jobs they could get were low paying,
back breaking work that few wanted. However, through
determination and hard work the Irish overcame these and other
obstacles. One profession that the Irish gravitated to were the
Police and Fire Departments.
In the late part of the 19th century and early part of the 20th
century, police jobs were undesirable because of the low pay and
few benefits. In the fire departments it was worse; there was no
pay because it was largely made up of volunteers. The Irish took
up these professions because it was a way to become a part of
America, a way to be accepted by mainstream America and a way to
give back to their new found country. By the beginning of the
20th century, not only were the Irish fully immersed in the
police and fire departments, they were in charge of them! The
Irish transformed the job of watchman and fire watch into the
organized police and fire departments of today.
Over the years the Irish started many of the traditions that are
still in existence today. The Irish-American police officers and
firefighters would march in mass in full uniforms at various
community parades and the biggest contingent would always be in
the St. Patrick's Day parade. These men were very proud of their
Irish heritage and equally as proud of being a police officer or
firefighter.
One of the time honored views the public identifies with the
Irish are the bagpipes. The Irish have made the bagpipes the
adoptive instrument of the police and fire departments. The
bagpipes were a revered musical instrument played in both
Scotland and Ireland. In the middle ages in Scotland and
Ireland, the bagpipes were used to rally the troops into battle,
usually against the British. The fighting factions in Celtic
lands used the bagpipes to assemble troops just as the United
States Cavalry used the bugle. The English outlawed the bagpipes
in Ireland (1366) and declared them an “instrument of war”.
Anyone caught playing the bagpipes or harp was put to death. The
bagpipes were also used during the funeral ceremonies when
burying their fallen comrades. In the early days when a police
officer or firefighter was killed in the line of duty, the Irish
forefathers within these departments ensured that their fallen
brothers were buried with full honors. In keeping with Celtic
tradition, the Irish would play “the pipes” to bury their
fallen. Today, that tradition transcends ethnic, racial and
religious lines and the bagpipes are played at police and fire
funeral regardless of race, color or creed. The Irish have made
the playing of the bagpipes a part of the fabric of America and
bagpipe bands an institution in many police and fire departments
across the United States.
With a strong sense of patriotic pride to their new found
country, the Irish started another tradition during the 1908
Summer Olympic games held in London, England. Patrolman Martin
J. Sheridan, of the NYPD was part of the American Olympic team.
Martin Sheridan was born in 1881 in County Mayo, Ireland and
immigrated to New York in 1901 and joined the police force in
1906. During the opening ceremonies of the Olympic Games,
athletes from all the countries would show their pride and march
in the “Parade of Nations”. During the 1908 games there was a
lot of animosity and bad feelings between Britain and the United
States. Initially, Patrolman Sheridan was to bear the American
Flag, however, at the last moment another Irish-American
teammate , Ralph Rose, was selected. It was felt that Patrolman
Sheridan, with strong Irish feelings, would not show proper
respect toward the King of England. Protocol of the day dictated
that each nation's flag would be dipped as it passed the royal
reviewing stand. Tradition has it, during the parade, Mathew
McGrath, another Irish-American teammate went up to the American
flag bearer and said words to this effect...”dip that flag and
you will be in a hospital tonight”. The flag was not dipped
which caused an international incident. During a news
conference, Patrolman Sheridan spoke for the entire Olympic
team; he pointed to the American flag and said “this flag dips
to no earthly king”. The precedent was set which is still
followed today during the Olympic Games.
The public perception of the ever present Irish cop on the beat
was more than just a stereotype, it was a fact. Up to the mid
20th century, the Irish dominated the police and fire
departments. These departments were largely made up of either
Irish born or 1st or 2nd generation Irish. The Irish produced
more chiefs of the police and fire departments than any other
ethnic group in America. Furthermore, they were at the forefront
of the labor movement in these professions, as well as many
others. However, two events in the 20th century changed that
phenomenon; the depression in 1929 and World War II. New ethnic
groups started to join the public safety ranks. The Germans,
Italians, Polish and African-Americans joined the police and
fire departments and eventually formed fraternal associations.
Organizations were also formed for officers of Catholic,
Protestant and Jewish religions.
By the second half of the 20th century, the Irish in the police
and fire departments felt they were losing their identity and
proud traditions. By the early 1950's, other ethnic
organizations were flourishing and creating a fraternity of
brotherhood amongst its membership. In 1953, members of the New
York City Police Department formed the first organization for
Irish-American police officers. Thus on March 16, 1953, the
first Emerald Society was founded. The New York City Police
Department Emerald Society was formed to help foster the spirit
of Irish heritage within its members and to promote and preserve
their accomplishments. The first president of the Emerald
Society was Henry J. Fitzgerald. Soon after, the New York Fire
Department (FDNY) formed an Emerald Society. Word spread about
the new Irish organization and Emerald Societies and other units
were formed by the New York City Corrections (‘55) as well as
the Transit (‘56) and Housing Police Department (‘58). By the
end of the 1950's, New Jersey and the Essex County Police & Fire
Emerald Society were formed (‘58), this would be the first
Emerald Society with both police and fire under one
organization.
The 1960's saw new Emerald Societies formed outside New York
City, Suffolk (‘67) New Jersey (‘68) and Nassau County (‘68)
Police Departments on Long Island, as well as Westchester County
Police established Emerald Societies. In 1965, the Port
Authority Police organized an Emerald Society which included
police officers from both the states of New York and New Jersey.
Also during this decade, a new dimension dawned upon the Emerald
Society, the establishment of an official police bagpipe band.
Prior to 1960, there wasn't any formal organized police or fire
bagpipe band in the United States. Once again, the NYPD Emerald
Society rose to the occasion and formed the first fully
uniformed and equipped bagpipe band. The Pipe and Drums of the
Emerald Society of the NYPD made their debut appearance on March
17, 1960 as they marched down Fifth Avenue in the New York City
St. Patrick's Day Parade. Finbar Devine of the NYPD was a
founding member of the Emerald Society and the inspiration
behind the bagpipe band. He led them as their Drum Major that
historical day, as well as for the next 35 parades until his
death in 1995. Sgt. Finbar Devine was an imposing man of stature
-6'4"- and over the years he became the quintessential Irish New
York City Police officer who was loved and admired and a sought
out figure at all of the parades. Over the years, due to
popularity, other police and fire Emerald Societies, along with
many public safety agencies across the United States, have
established bagpipe bands.
In the 1970's, Boston Police (‘71) established an Emerald
Society followed by Rockland County, NY (‘72). Philadelphia, the
City of Brotherly Love, both police and fire departments formed
an Emerald Society in 1973, then the Emerald Society movement
began to take hold in the mid-west also, as Chicago, the Windy
City, established the Emerald Society of Illinois in 1975. At
the end of the decade, New Haven (‘79) formed the first Police
Emerald Society in the state of Connecticut.
Due to a large contingent of Emerald Societies concentrated in
the New York City area, a regional organization was formed in
1975, called the Grand Council of United States Societies. The
Grand Council included police and fire as well as civilian
Emerald Societies. The civilian Emeralds Societies included
professionals from the Board of Education, Transit and Housing
Authorities, Public Utilities and telephone companies, the
Department of Sanitation and private bus companies. The Grand
Council provided a forum for all the Emerald Societies to meet
and share information. This regional concept proved to be the
model for the formation of statewide organizations, as well as
the forerunner to a larger national movement which would start
twenty years later in Washington, DC.
Nine new Emerald Societies were established in the 1980's. Rhode
Island and West Haven, CT came aboard in 1982. New Jersey
started three more Emerald Societies in Cape May, Mercer and
Union counties. Three new fire Emerald Societies were also
started, firefighters of Washington, DC (‘80), Nassau County
(‘86) and Jersey City (‘87). In the nation's capitol the Police
Emerald Society of the Washington, DC area was formed in 1986.
This Emerald Society had a unique membership as it came from
three jurisdictions: Maryland, Virginia and the District of
Columbia. The nation's capitol is considered a federal city and
therefore membership was extended to any Irish-American law
enforcement officer in the United States. In the beginning, the
Police Emerald Society of Washington served a dual purpose;
serving the local law enforcement community as well as law
enforcement communities across the county which did not have an
Emerald Society.
The last decade of the 20th century proved to be the most
significant and also the most historical time in the Emerald
Society movement. Unprecedented growth happened during this
time. Since 1990, thirty-two new police or fire Emerald
Societies were founded nationally, five times the amount of any
previous decade. The primary reason for the significant growth
was due to the formation of a nationwide organization called the
National Conference of Law Enforcement Emerald Societies. The
influence of the Emerald Society movement had grown from two
states in 1958 to twenty-one states by 1998. New Jersey saw the
biggest increase of Emerald Societies with seven, followed by
New York with six. The reason for the large increase in the
“Garden State” was due to the establishment of a statewide
organization called the Grand Council of Police & Fire Emerald
Societies of New Jersey which was founded in 1994. New societies
which were formed in New Jersey include Passaic County (‘91),
Middlesex and Ocean Counties (‘93), Camden County (‘94),
Middletown (‘95), Monmouth County (‘95) and Bayonne (‘96). New
York already with the largest contingent of Emerald Societies
added Nassau County Sheriff's (‘90), Suffolk County Sheriff's
(‘94), Westchester County Corrections (‘94), Drug Enforcement
Administration (‘94), Federal Law Enforcement Agencies (‘95) and
New York State Court Officers (‘95). The East Coast Corridor
spread north and south forming Emerald Societies in Delaware
(‘90), Vermont (‘95), Prince Georges County Firefighters (‘95),
Baltimore (‘96), Pittsburgh (‘97), Atlanta, GA (‘97), South
Florida (‘97) and Worcester, MA (‘98).
The Emerald network moved off the east coast and started moving
west by adding Emerald Societies in Wisconsin (‘90), Minnesota
(‘92), Wichita, KS ( ‘95), St. Louis MO (‘97), Omaha, NE (‘97)
and Heart of America, KS (‘98). The movement finally reached the
west coast with the formation of the Los Angeles Police
Department (LAPD) Emerald Society in 1992, followed by the San
Francisco Bay Area Law Enforcement Emerald Society in 1998. Not
to be left behind, Texas, the Lone Star State, also weighed in
with their Irish heritage. Deep in the heart of Texas, members
of the Austin Police Department started an Emerald Society in
1997, followed by their brothers to the north, Ft. Worth/Dallas
Public Safety forming their Emerald Society in 1998.
The crowning moment in the Emerald Society movement came with
the formation of a national organization. This vision came from
Patrick F. O'Brien, who was the President of the Police Emerald
Society of Washington, DC. The idea was the inclusion of all
Public Safety Emerald Societies nationwide. The main goals were
to bring the Emerald Societies together and to start new ones,
improve communications between the societies, to work in concert
with each other, to promote and preserve the accomplishments of
the Irish-Americans in the Public Safety professions and to
provide a unified voice for the Emerald Societies to the
Congress of the United States as well as other governmental
entities.
Patrick F. O'Brien, a lieutenant with the United States Park
Police, pursued his dream and persuaded his own Emerald Society
to support and financially back this worthwhile and far reaching
endeavor. On May 14th, 1995, during National Police Week, an
exploratory meeting was held in Washington, DC. Eighteen Emerald
Societies from across the country gave unanimous consent to move
forward in forming a National Emerald Society. After that
historic meeting, in a spirit of brotherhood and remembrance,
the Emerald Societies and Pipebands marched to the National Law
Enforcement Officers Memorial for a small memorial service. That
marked the first Memorial March which became an annual event
during National Police Week. The official establishment of the
National Conference of Law Enforcement Emerald Societies (NCLEES)
occurred on October 28th, 1995. On that date in the city of
Philadelphia, twenty-one Emerald Societies unanimously passed a
resolution approving the national by-laws, thus creating the
national organization. On May 14th, 1996, in the nation's
capitol, the first National Executive Board was elected by the
Board of Directors. Patrick F. O'Brien was elected the first
National President. Congressman Thomas Manton of Queens, NY and
a former member of the New York City Police Department,
administered the Oath of Office to the National Board.
Since that momentous occasion in 1995, the National Conference
has been moving forward with it's directed mission. Since it's
creation, NCLEES has assisted in establishing fifteen new
Emerald Societies in thirteen different states. Each year during
National Police Week, the National Conference sponsors the
annual Emerald Society/Pipeband March and Service at the Law
Enforcement Officers Memorial. The Memorial March and Service
has become an integral part of the National Police Week
activities.
Since its humble beginnings almost fifty years ago, the Emerald
Society movement has reached new heights. The Irish have a long
and proud history in the Public Safety professions. A glance
through the rosters of any police or fire department in America
will be filled with Irish names. Unfortunately, so are the walls
dedicated to the men and women who have given their lives in the
service of these noble professions. The Emerald Society is here
to preserve that legacy and to ensure that America never
forgets!
-Patrick F. O'Brien (3-17-99)
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