logo
St. Patrick's Day 2025: Why do we celebrate? History, tradition of Irish holiday

St. Patrick's Day 2025: Why do we celebrate? History, tradition of Irish holiday

Yahoo17-03-2025

Groundhog Day is behind us. Easter is around the corner. And in the middle is a holiday associated with merry drinking and a centuries-old religious figure: St. Patrick's Day.
Monday, March 17, is the holiday to celebrate everything Irish, including St. Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland.
Cities across the U.S. will celebrate with parades of green adornment, Irish foods and thematic bar crawls.
But St. Patrick's Day wasn't always a day for partying. Here is what you need to know about the day to celebrate Irish heritage.
St. Patrick's Day 2025: Save some green with these food and drink freebies, deals
St. Patrick is credited with introducing Christianity to Ireland in the 5th century.
But the man who spurred an Irish holiday wasn't Irish himself. He was born in Roman Britain, kidnapped and brought to Ireland as a slave at 16, according to the History Channel. Patrick escaped slavery but returned to Ireland later.
Legend has it that Patrick died on March 17.
People in Ireland started observing a feast day on March 17 in celebration around the ninth or 10th century, according to the History Channel, but the parades to honor it actually started in America.
The official New York City parade dates to March 17, 1766, according to the Library of Congress.
Irish culture and heritage experts previously have told USA TODAY the holiday was once a solemn religious day, but it started getting its boozy reputation when the Americans started celebrating it.
Although it is not a federal holiday in the U.S., it is a bank holiday and a great source of pride in Ireland. Leaders also use the day to promote Irish partnerships abroad across various industries.
Many Americans have something to celebrate this St. Patrick's Day, according to a news release from the U.S. Census Bureau:
30.5 million U.S. residents claimed Irish ancestry in 2023.
Cook County, Illinois, which includes Chicago, is the U.S. county with the largest Irish-American population, according to 2023 data. The population comes in at 434,081.
117,219 U.S. residents were born in Ireland, as of 2023.
Kinsey Crowley is a trending news reporter at USA TODAY. Reach her at kcrowley@gannett.com, and follow her on X and TikTok @kinseycrowley.
(This article was updated to include video and change the promo image.)
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: St. Patrick's Day explained: Why celebrate Irish culture March 17?

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

When the US Navy tried to send mail using a missile
When the US Navy tried to send mail using a missile

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

When the US Navy tried to send mail using a missile

What if Americans' daily mail could be delivered not by postal truck but by a cruise missile? On June 8, 1959, the U.S. Navy had a submarine try just that. It kind of worked. 66 years ago today the U.S. Navy tested out a concept previously known as 'rocket mail,' only in this case they used a relatively new Regulus 1 cruise missile. The idea of 'rocket mail' was first theorized in 1810 by German author Heinrich von Kleist. The initial concept was more artillery bombardment mail than rocket mail, with the idea being to fire the mail from cannons, using ballistic power and trajectories to route letters. Early, independent attempts were done in the 19th Century, but nothing widespread came out of it. However the idea picked up momentum in the first half of the 20th Century. Hobbyists and scientists in Europe and the United States gave it a shot, launching experimental rockets back and forth as a way of ferrying the mail. Some were even unofficial Post Office Department (now the United States Post Office) launches. Things changed in 1959. Then-Postmaster General Arthur A. Summerfield endorsed the idea of rocket mail, but he, with partners in the United States Navy, took things a step further, using modern missiles. In this case, the Navy and Post Office Department would use a SSM-N-8A Regulus, or Regulus I, nuclear-capable cruise missile that had entered service only a few years prior. It was modified, of course, to remove the nuclear warhead and replace it with the capacity to carry 3,000 letters. The Navy would fire it from the USS Barbero, a Balao-class submarine, to a naval station in Florida. If it worked, it would show the speed of 'missile mail' and the accuracy of the Navy's cruise missile. 'This peacetime employment of a guided missile for the important and practical purpose of carrying mail is the first known official use of missiles by any post office department of any nation,' Summerfield said at the time, per the USPS, 'Before man reaches the moon, mail will be delivered within hours from New York to California, to England, to India or to Australia by guided missiles.' Let's look at the selling points here. Rocket mail is fast — it uses missiles after all — and with the U.S. military, deep in the 1950s Cold War military industrial boom, as a partner, there is a reliable backer to this plan. So on June 8, 1959, the USS Barbero was in the Atlantic Ocean. The submarine was surfaced, with the Regulus 1 cruise missile perched well above the water. The letters were loaded in and the missile was prepped. And since this was an office Post Office Department shipment, the letters still had addresses marked on them, all to high ranking government officials including U.S. President Dwight Eisenhower. The missile fired, traveling through the air for just over 20 minutes, on a path towards the Navy's base at Mayport, Florida which was roughly 100 miles from the launch point. 22 minutes after take off, it landed on the runway in Florida. The mail was sorted and sent off to its recipients. As the number of mail trucks still driving around the United States today shows, missile mail did not become a standard part of the postal service. The USS Barbero's test was the only one the Navy would do and despite its success, the cost of the missiles and the limited carrying capacity essentially killed any further development. Navy SEAL Team 6 operator will be the military's new top enlisted leader Veterans receiving disability payments might have been underpaid, IG finds Guam barracks conditions are 'baffling,' Navy admiral says in email Navy fires admiral in charge of unmanned systems office after investigation The Pentagon wants troops to change duty stations less often

Passengers in Tennessee plane crash airlifted to hospitals: Officials
Passengers in Tennessee plane crash airlifted to hospitals: Officials

USA Today

time5 hours ago

  • USA Today

Passengers in Tennessee plane crash airlifted to hospitals: Officials

Passengers in Tennessee plane crash airlifted to hospitals: Officials A plan crashed in Coffey County, Tennessee, with 16-20 aboard. Passengers were airlifted to hospitals. Several people have been airlifted to hospitals following a plane crash in Coffey County Tennessee, according to the Tennessee Highway Patrol. The patrol said in a Facebook post between 16-20 people were onboard the plane, which crashed near Tullahoma – about 60 miles south of Nashville. First responders from Coffey County and Tullahoma are leading the response, according to the patrol. USA TODAY has reached out to local first responders for further information. This is a developing story

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store