6 Facts You May Not Know About St. Patrick's Day

On 17 March each year, millions celebrate the traditional feast day of St Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. Here are six facts you might not know about past celebrations – from the first St Patrick’s Day parade to the history behind the traditional dish of corned beef and cabbage…

1. St Patrick wasn’t Irish

St Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland, was born Maewyn Succat to a Christian family in Roman Britain in the late fourth century AD. Shortly before he was 16, Patrick was captured from the villa of his father, Calpurnius,by a group of Irish raiders who took him to Ireland and forced him into slavery. Six years later he escaped home to Britain, his religious faith strengthened during his time in slavery. Believing he had been called by God to Christianize Ireland, he later returned to Ireland as a missionary of the Catholic church (adopting the name Patricius, or Patrick, which derives from the Latin for ‘father figure’). He played an important role in converting the native Irish to Christianity, traveling around the country performing baptisms and confirmations.

2. St Patrick’s Day was first celebrated in the 17th century

By the end of the 7th century, St Patrick had become a legendary figure and was venerated as a saint – although he was never formally canonized. Legends around St Patrick – which are still told today – include the story that he drove the snakes of Ireland into the sea to their destruction, supposedly after they began attacking him during a 40-day fast. Natural historians have suggested that there is no evidence of snakes having ever existed in Ireland, as the country was too cold during the Ice Age for reptiles to survive. (Though, of course, many have highlighted the metaphorical link between the snakes of the legend and Patrick’s promotion of the Christian faith).

It wasn’t until the 1630s that 17 March, the traditional day of St Patrick’s death, was added to the Catholic breviary (a book of prayers) as the Feast of St Patrick. By the late 17th century, Irish people were celebrating the day by wearing crosses, ribbons or shamrocks – the latter which St Patrick used (according to tradition) to explain the concept of the Holy Trinity to an ‘unbeliever’ by showing him the three-leaved plant with one stalk.

3. Blue – not green – was the color traditionally associated with St Patrick

Though green dominates the celebrations today, it was the color blue – a shade known as St Patrick’s blue – that was first associated with the saint. The earliest depictions of St Patrick show him in blue garments, and the color also appears on ancient Irish flags.

In 1541, when King Henry VIII was declared the first English king of Ireland, he used a gold Irish harp on a blue flag for the Irish coat of arms. The blue shade also appears on the 18th-century Order of St Patrick, an order of chivalry created by George III.

As the blue symbols became more associated with English rule, green grew in popularity as a symbol of rebellion. During the 1798 Irish Rebellion, the shamrock became a symbol of nationalism and the ‘wearing of the green’ on lapels became regular practice.

4. The first St Patrick’s Day parade might have taken place in Florida

Today St Patrick’s Day is a largely secular celebration commonly marked by boisterous revelry across the world, though most prominent in Ireland and the USA. The first parade has long been believed to be a small celebration by Irish colonists, held in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1737. However, in 2018 historian J Michael Francis of the University of South Florida found evidence to suggest that, in March of 1601, residents of St Augustine in Spanish Florida gathered together and processed through the city’s streets in honor of St Patrick, who seems to have served as the official ‘protector’ of the city’s maize fields.

The huge parades that take place across American cities today have their roots in a New York parade of 1762, when Irish soldiers in the British Army marched to a St Patrick’s Day celebration with their band playing and their regimental colors flying.

In 2008, St Patrick’s Day religious celebrations in Ireland were moved forward two days to 15 March because 17 March 2008 fell on the second day of Easter Week, a celebration which takes priority over any other feast days. In 1940, the religious celebrations of St Patrick’s Day were also moved when the day clashed with Palm Sunday. However, secular celebrations usually take place on 17 March, regardless.

5. Abraham Lincoln’s inaugural luncheon was the traditional St Patrick’s Day dish of corned beef, cabbage and potatoes

When he was inaugurated on 4 March 1861, the 16th president of the United States chose a meal of mock turtle soup, followed by corned beef and cabbage, a dish traditionally associated with St Patrick’s Day feasting.

Beef was not traditionally an Irish dish; it was under British rule that the cow came to be farmed for meat. In the era of colonial rule, beef’s prohibitive cost in Ireland meant that it “became synonymous with the well-fed British aristocracy and middle class.”Later, with the invention of ‘corned beef’ in the 17th century (and the ‘corn’ did not refer to corn kernels but to the kernel-sized salt crystals used to cure the beef) it was Ireland’s substantially lower salt tax, and not the beef itself, that cemented its reputation as an Irish export.

As large numbers of settlers moved to America, gaining greater prosperity, beef was back on the menu – and once Irish Americans popularized St Patrick’s Day as a celebration, the corned beef and cabbage of their ancestors became the traditional fare of the day.

6. Chicago has colored its river green for St Patrick’s Day for more than 50 years

The city of Chicago, Illinois, has colored its river green to mark the holiday since 1962. In 1961 sanitation workers realized that the green vegetable dye they used to check for dumped sewage could double as a St Patrick’s Day decoration – andso a tradition was born. It reportedly takes 40lbs of dye to achieve the verdant hue, while the color can last anything from a few hours to two days.

Meanwhile, the Caribbean island of Montserrat stages its own celebration that lasts between a week and 10 days each year, commemorating both the island’s Irish settler history (in 1678, more than half of the Caribbean island’s white population was Irish Catholic, including laborers and plantation owners) and also an unsuccessful slave uprising that occurred on 17 March 1768.

The honor of the shortest parade is held by Hot Springs, Arkansas, which travels over just 98 feet, while the town of New London in Wisconsin, population 7,000, changes its town name to New Dublin for St Patrick’s Day and attracts more than 30,000 visitors each year.


Sponsored Content

Sponsored Content