James O’Mara

Shamrock Resolve

Limerick observed St Patrick’s Day on Saturday, 17 March 1900, beneath dark skies, persistent rain and an unwelcome chill. The difficult weather reduced the comfort of those moving through the city but did not erase the feast from public life. Residents attended religious services, wore shamrock and gathered wherever music, companionship and shelter could be found. The occasion belonged less to the organised civic spectacle familiar in later generations than to churches, families, neighbourhoods and voluntary associations. Its importance lay in the determination to honour Ireland’s patron saint despite conditions that might otherwise have emptied the streets.