Irish Institute of New York.
The Irish Institute of New York, originally known as the American Irish Feis Institute, is a non-profit organization dedicated to cultural and philanthropic endeavors since 1950. It maintains a small but extremely influential membership in matters of the local Irish American community. Established by County Mayo native Paul O’Dwyer, the Institute’s building on West 48th Street was the best known address in New York City from 1952 until 1982, serving as the headquarters for scores of Irish organizations. Since 1960 the Institute has distributed more than one million dollars to non-profit organizations both here and in Ireland.
The American Irish Feis Institute was created in 1950 to establish a center for Irish activities in New York. The founders included Paul O’Dwyer, Sean Keating, Joseph F. McLoughlin, James FitzPatrick, Patrick Corley, Michael Mullvaney, William B. Burke, John Niblo, and Dorothy Hayden Cudahy, as well as other prominent members of the New York Irish community. Their goal was to promote Irish culture and provide financial support for fledgling projects both in America and Ireland. The organization officially changed its name to the Irish Institute of New York, Inc. three years later. In 1952, under the leadership of its board chairman, Paul O’Dwyer, the Institute purchased a building at 326 West 48th Street in New York City to serve as their Irish center. For almost thirty years, this building was headquarters to hundreds of Irish American organizations who paid little or no rent.
During its early years, the Institute was plagued with financial worries. The Institute tried a variety of fundraising schemes, including charter tours to Ireland and an annual fundraising dinner, the latter which proved most successful. With the political connections of Mayor William O’Dwyer and other public officials, the Institute was able to feature such figures as Congressman Charles Buckley (D-NY), and Senator John F. Kennedy (D-MA) as honored guests at the annual dinner. An audience of 1700 people paid $25 a seat to hear Buckley in 1956, while only 700 came to see Kennedy in 1957, a man Buckley introduced as the next president of the United States. By 1960, the Institute had paid off its mortgage and began to establish its grant fund. The first grant was awarded that year to the Irish Arts Council in Dublin in the amount of $5,000. In 1966, the Institute contributed $150,000 to the John F. Kennedy Memorial Arboretum in Wexford as a memorial to the late president and an attempt to aid Ireland’s reforestation project.
The Institute was forced to sell the original building at West 48th Street in 1982 due to rising costs and a decreasing New York Irish population. A result of this sale, however, was an increase the Institute's grant awards. Grants in excess of $100,000 were made to the Irish American Cultural Institute for scholarship purposes and to the New York Irish History Roundtable to commission the publication, The New York Irish, edited by Ronald H. Bayor and Timothy Meagher, a collection of scholarly essays published in 1996.
Since 1990 the Irish Institute has supported the work of the Emerald Isle Immigration Center and its predecessor, the Irish Immigration Reform Movement (with grants totaling more than $75,000), as well as Glucksman Ireland House at New York University, the Pat Finucane Centre in Derry and the Conway Mill Project in West Belfast.
From the guide to the Irish Institute of New York Records, 1950-2001, (Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archive)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Guide to the Archives of Irish America Collection of Irish Institute of New York, 1950-2018 | Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Hayden Cudahy, Dorothy, 1922-2010 | person |
associatedWith | Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963 | person |
associatedWith | Kennedy, Robert F., 1925-1968 | person |
associatedWith | O'Dwyer, Paul, 1907- | person |
associatedWith | Uris, Leon, 1924-2003 | person |
associatedWith | Van Arsdale, Harry, 1905-1986 | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country |
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Subject |
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Irish Americans |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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