The Glen Cove St. Patrick's Day Parade

Celebrating Irish Culture on the North Shore

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  • Grand Marshals

Past Grand Marshals

February 24, 2013 by Robert P. Lynch

Past Grand Marshalls, Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade

It is our custom each year to honor a person as “Grand Marshal” of the Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and one or more additional individuals as “Aides to the Grand Marshal:

1989 	 John F. Sweeney               Postmaster, City of Glen Cove
1990 	 P.O. Stephen McDonald         Hero Police Officer
1991 	 Hon. Denis Dillon             District Attorney, Nassau Co.
1992 	 Sr. Janet A. Fitzgerald       President, Molloy College
1993 	 Joseph V. Buckley             Restaurateur
1994 	 Rep. Peter King               Congressional Representative
1995 	 Jack Ryan                     President, SEIU Local 74
1996 	 William V. Whelan             President, Emerald Society, FDNY
1997 	 Brian Fitzpatrick             Councilman, City of Glen Cove
1998 	 Michael McCormick             National Historian, AOH
1999 	 Jack Irwin                    Governor’s Assistant for Irish Affairs
2000 	 Hon. Thomas R. Suozzi         Mayor, City of Glen Cove; Nassau County Executive
2001 	 Patrick J. Lynch              President, NYC Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association
2002 	 Mary Gilroy-Doohan, M.D.      Director, Emergency Services NSUH Glen Cove
2003 	 Tony Jackson                  Irish radio personality WRHU-FM Radio, Hofstra Univesity
2004 	 Mary Ann Holzkamp             Mayor, City of Glen Cove
2005 	 James McCabe                  Hibernian Activist
2006 	 The "Fighting 69th"
2007 	 Jack McDougal                 Police Sergeant
2008     John W.C. Canning             Attorney and Public Servant
2009     Robert P. Lynch               Attorney and Teacher
2010     Thomas J. Lilly               Attorney and Pro-Life Activist
2011     Andrew Stafford               Former Parade Chairman
2012     Maureen Basdavanos            Glen Cove Deputy Mayor
2013     Daniel J. Lane                Irish Activist

Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Brian Fitzpatrick, City Of Glen Cove, Emerald Society, Grand Marshal, Grand Marshalls, Grand Marshals, Irish Activist, J Lilly, Jack Irwin, James Mccabe, Michael Mccormick, Molloy College, Nassau Co, Nassau County, National Historian, Patrick J Lynch, Police Sergeant, Public Servant, Stephen Mcdonald, Thomas R Suozzi

2011 St. Patrick’s Day Parade

January 14, 2011 by Joe McDonald

parade_icon1The 23rd Annual Glen Cove St Patrick’s Day Parade will take place on March 20st at 1 p.m. This year’s Grand Marshal will be Andy Stafford.

The Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade The Parade has taken place annually since 1989.  The parade has grown to be the largest annual parade in Glen Cove and a civic celebration that is eagerly awaited each spring by all residents of the North Shore and the entire Irish community of Long Island.

Past and Present Grand Marshalls

It is our custom each year to honor a person as “Grand Marshal” of the Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and one or more additional individuals as “Aides to the Grand Marshal:

1989 	 John F. Sweeney               Former Postmaster, City of Glen Cove
1990 	 P.O. Stephen McDonald         Hero Police Officer
1991 	 Hon. Denis Dillon             District Attorney, Nassau Co.
1992 	 Sr. Janet A. Fitzgerald       President, Molloy College
1993 	 Joseph V. Buckley             Restaurateur
1994 	 Rep. Peter King               Congressman
1995 	 Jack Ryan                     President, SEIU Local 74
1996 	 William V. Whelan             President, Emerald Society, FDNY
1997 	 Brian Fitzpatrick             Councilman, City of Glen Cove
1998 	 Michael McCormick             National Historian, AOH
1999 	 Jack Irwin                    Governor’s Assistant for Irish Affairs
2000 	 Hon. Thomas R. Suozzi         Mayor, City of Glen Cove; Nassau County Executive
2001 	 Patrick J. Lynch              President, NYC Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association
2002 	 Mary Gilroy-Doohan, M.D.      Director, Emergency Services NSUH Glen Cove
2003 	 Tony Jackson                  Irish radio personality WRHU-FM Radio, Hofstra Univesity
2004 	 Mary Ann Holzkamp             Mayor, City of Glen Cove
2005 	 James McCabe                  Hibernian Activist
2006 	 The "Fighting 69th"
2007 	 Jack McDougal                 Police Sergeant
2008     John W.C. Canning             Attorney and Public Servant
2009     Robert P. Lynch               Lawyer and Music Teacher
2010     Tom Lilly                     Lawyer and Pro-Life Activist
2011     Andrew Stafford               Former Parade Chairman

Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Brian Fitzpatrick, City Of Glen Cove, Civic Celebration, Emerald Society, Fighting 69th, Grand Marshal, Grand Marshalls, Jack Irwin, James Mccabe, Michael Mccormick, Molloy College, Nassau Co, Nassau County, National Historian, Parade Chairman, Patrick J Lynch, Police Sergeant, Public Servant, Stephen Mcdonald, Thomas R Suozzi

2010 St. Patrick’s Day Parade – March 21st

January 27, 2010 by Joe McDonald

parade_icon1The 2010 Glen Cove St Patrick’s Day Parade will take place on March 21st at 1 p.m. This year’s Grand Marshal will be Tom Lilly.

The Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade The Parade has taken place annually since 1989.  The parade has grown to be the largest annual parade in Glen Cove and a civic celebration that is eagerly awaited each spring by all residents of the North Shore and the entire Irish community of Long Island.

Past and Present Grand Marshalls

It is our custom each year to honor a person as “Grand Marshal” of the Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and one or more additional individuals as “Aides to the Grand Marshal:

1989 	 John F. Sweeney               Former Postmaster, City of Glen Cove
1990 	 P.O. Stephen McDonald         Hero Police Officer
1991 	 Hon. Denis Dillon             District Attorney, Nassau Co.
1992 	 Sr. Janet A. Fitzgerald       President, Molloy College
1993 	 Joseph V. Buckley             Restaurateur
1994 	 Rep. Peter King               Congressman
1995 	 Jack Ryan                     President, SEIU Local 74
1996 	 William V. Whelan             President, Emerald Society, FDNY
1997 	 Brian Fitzpatrick             Councilman, City of Glen Cove
1998 	 Michael McCormick             National Historian, AOH
1999 	 Jack Irwin                    Governor’s Assistant for Irish Affairs
2000 	 Hon. Thomas R. Suozzi         Mayor, City of Glen Cove; Nassau County Executive
2001 	 Patrick J. Lynch              President, NYC Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association
2002 	 Mary Gilroy-Doohan, M.D.      Director, Emergency Services NSUH Glen Cove
2003 	 Tony Jackson                  Irish radio personality WRHU-FM Radio, Hofstra Univesity
2004 	 Mary Ann Holzkamp             Mayor, City of Glen Cove
2005 	 James McCabe                  Hibernian Activist
2006 	 The "Fighting 69th"
2007 	 Jack McDougal                 Police Sergeant
2008     John W.C. Canning             Attorney and Public Servant
2009     Robert P. Lynch
2010     Tom Lilly

Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Brian Fitzpatrick, City Of Glen Cove, Civic Celebration, Emerald Society, Fighting 69th, Grand Marshal, Grand Marshalls, Jack Irwin, James Mccabe, Michael Mccormick, Molloy College, Nassau Co, Nassau County, National Historian, Patrick J Lynch, Police Sergeant, Public Servant, Radio Personality, Stephen Mcdonald, Thomas R Suozzi

2009 Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Parade 3/22/2009

March 18, 2009 by Joe McDonald

parade_icon1The Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade The Parade has taken place annually since 1989.  The parade has grown to be the largest annual parade in Glen Cove and a civic celebration that is eagerly awaited each spring by all residents of the North Shore and the entire Irish community of Long Island.

Past and Present Grand Marshalls

It is our custom each year to honor a person as “Grand Marshal” of the Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade, and one or more additional individuals as “Aides to the Grand Marshal:

1989 	 John F. Sweeney               Former Postmaster, City of Glen Cove
1990 	 P.O. Stephen McDonald         Hero Police Officer
1991 	 Hon. Denis Dillon             District Attorney, Nassau Co.
1992 	 Sr. Janet A. Fitzgerald       President, Molloy College
1993 	 Joseph V. Buckley             Restaurateur
1994 	 Rep. Peter King               Congressman
1995 	 Jack Ryan                     President, SEIU Local 74
1996 	 William V. Whelan             President, Emerald Society, FDNY
1997 	 Brian Fitzpatrick             Councilman, City of Glen Cove
1998 	 Michael McCormick             National Historian, AOH
1999 	 Jack Irwin                    Governor’s Assistant for Irish Affairs
2000 	 Hon. Thomas R. Suozzi         Mayor, City of Glen Cove; Nassau County Executive
2001 	 Patrick J. Lynch              President, NYC Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association
2002 	 Mary Gilroy-Doohan, M.D.      Director, Emergency Services NSUH Glen Cove
2003 	 Tony Jackson                  Irish radio personality WRHU-FM Radio, Hofstra Univesity
2004 	 Mary Ann Holzkamp             Mayor, City of Glen Cove
2005 	 James McCabe                  Hibernian Activist
2006 	 The "Fighting 69th"
2007 	 Jack McDougal                 Police Sergeant
2008     John W.C. Canning             Attorney and Public Servant
2009     Robert P. Lynch

Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Add New Tag, Brian Fitzpatrick, City Of Glen Cove, Civic Celebration, Emerald Society, Fighting 69th, Grand Marshal, Grand Marshalls, Jack Irwin, James Mccabe, Michael Mccormick, Molloy College, Nassau Co, Nassau County, National Historian, Patrick J Lynch, Police Sergeant, Public Servant, Radio Personality, Stephen Mcdonald, Thomas R Suozzi

2009 Grand Marshal – Robert P. Lynch

March 14, 2009 by Joe McDonald

Robert P. Lynch Grand Marshal 2009

Robert P. Lynch
Grand Marshal 2009

Robert P. Lynch was born in Queens, New York, the first of seven children born to Robert B. and Mary Anne Hyland Lynch.  He resides in Glen Cove, Long Island with his wife Síghle and their children, Kieran, Aidan, Conor and Maura.  He is a graduate of St. John’s University, where he received a BA in history in 1977, and of St. John’s Law School, where he received a Doctor of Laws degree in 1980.  Robert is a practicing attorney, with offices located Glen Cove and Williston Park.

Robert cherishes his Irish roots and heritage.  He has from his youth been an activist in Irish causes and follows a long family practice of love and support for both the countries of their origin and adoption, keeping one foot firmly planted on each side of the Atlantic.  While he is “first generation” on his mother’s side, from Kiltimagh, in Mayo, the same County, along with Kerry, produced his earliest American ancestors, in 1820, followed by his maternal grandfather who arrived here from Westmeath in the early 1900’s.  He has traveled to his ancestral homeland many times for family, political and musical activities.

Robert follows in the footsteps of his brother, Patrick J. Lynch, President of the NYC Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association (PBA), who served as our Grand Marshal in 2001.

Robert has been a proud Hibernian all his adult life, being a Charter Member of Div. 13 in Queens and serving Glen Cove Division 8 as Corresponding Secretary, Vice President, with two terms as President in the 1990’s and two terms just ended.  He is also former Chairman of our Parade.

Ten years ago he devised the idea of a consortium he called Cairdenet, (invoking in loose Irish translation the idea of a “net of friends”) to allow Irish, religious, charitable and cultural associations he was involved with to establish and maintain a presence on the internet, something they had hitherto been slow to do for financial and technical reasons.  As part of this arrangement Division 8 was able to establish one of the first and largest Hibernian websites in the Metropolitan area.

Robert is well known as a traditional Irish piper.  Robert has been active for many years in a wide variety of efforts in support of Irish freedom and is a member of Friends of Sinn Fein and a founding member of the Brehon Law Societies in both NYC and Long Island.  He is an outspoken and active supporter of the Irish peace process, being a member of a delegation which met twice with the International Monitoring Commission (IMC) monitoring the Irish ceasefire and of the first Irish American delegation to meet with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) to encourage the formation of the present coalition government between that party and Sinn Fein.

In addition to his legal practice, Robert works as Supervisor of the after-school recreational and tutoring program at St. Martin De Porres School in Uniondale, where he also instructs students in the Irish tin whistle and pipes.  He is an active member of St. Boniface Parish in Sea Cliff, where he is a Eucharistic Minister the webmaster and instructs parents in the Baptism program.

He is a member of the County Tyrone and County. Mayo Societies, the Co. Tyrone Pipers, the Long Island Uilleann Pipers and was a founder of the North Shore Irish American Cultural Society and the St. John’s University Irish Society.

Address by Robert P. Lynch at the Grand Marshal’s Sash Presentation Ceremony, February 22, 2009

About thirty years ago I read an article in the Sunday NY Times about a young Jewish man from New York, Bill Ochs.  Bill had become fascinated by Irish music and especially the Irish bagpipes.

He sought out the few pipers left on Long Island and the Northeast and set out to revive that instrument, even though most Irish people seemed to have abandoned it.

He went to Ireland and sought out elderly traditional musicians to teach him.  They made the point to him that being an Irish piper was not only about being a proficient musician but also involved another special job.  That job was to preserve and tell the story of the people who had produced this musical tradition, and not to let it die.  It meant telling the people their own story.

I was reminded of Bill’s lesson a few years ago when Barney Lough and I attended a big annual St. Patrick’s dinner in Manhattan.   It was addressed by the acclaimed Irish actor Gabriel Byrne.

Gabriel asked those gathered to contemplate what purpose is served by getting together for these St. Patrick’s Day events.

He reminisced of how, as a child in Dublin, he listened to his relatives from Galway sit at home in the kitchen and tell stories.  That was how he learned of and developed a love for his culture.

Gabriel answered his own question by suggesting that St. Patrick’s Day events serve some of the same purpose for Irish Americans that those kitchen gatherings did for him:  they give us the chance to think about and share our story.

I agree with Gabriel.  The value of events such as our parade is that the give us the chance we might not otherwise have to ask ourselves “who are we” and “what is our story?” It gives us the opportunity to tell that story to our children and to our neighbors.

For all their trouble and expense, these are opportunities not to be missed.  The fact is that, for a people who are supposed to be great storytellers, we don’t practice that art very well when it comes to our own story.  We don’t value the concept of contemplating who we are and telling others about it.

There are many reasons for this.  It has been argued that this is the result of a subconscious lack of esteem for our own culture, coupled with a fear of expressing it openly, possibly the legacy of generations of colonial oppression.

Whatever the reason, the fact is that many of our immigrant ancestors didn’t tell us their story.  We, the Irish Diaspora in America, remains very Irish, indeed more than more Irish than most of us know, on what might be called an unconscious level, even many generations removed from “home”.

The fact that we don’t have a highly conscious level of awareness of who we are and where we come from leaves us somewhat inarticulate in describing ourselves.  Outsiders like the musician I spoke of earlier can often be more eloquent in explaining who the American Irish are than we can ourselves.

It has been said that the beautiful stained glass in venerable European church buildings were first developed to aid people who weren’t full literate enough to learn about their faith by reading Scripture and the written works of the church.

It might be said that events that surround St. Patrick’s Day in Irish America serve somewhat of the same purpose for our people.  We of the Hibernian Divisions of Glen Cove have been blessed with a veritable Parthenon of personalities whom we can view for a personification of who the Irish in America are.

They include not only our long list of distinguished Grand Marshals, but also the Aides to the Grand Marshal (for as is the case this year the Aides are often just as worthy or more so of recognition as the person with the top billing), Hibernians of the year and Presidents.

They include:

  • John Sweeney, Mike Moran, Charlie Phillips and John Whelan, who before they passed on taught us the love of our culture and pride in our Ancient Orders.
  • Andy Stafford, Paul Long, Patsy Furlong and Eamonn Beck, our very own “Boys of Wexford” who, along with likes of Bill Doherty, Vic Sackett and Martin Mannion, have kept that legacy alive.
  • LAOH members such as my wife, Sighle Lynch, Mary Moran, Shelia Zeineth, Pauline Stafford, Marylynn Johnson and Sioban Rack, who show us who really gets things done in an organization supposedly dominated by men;
  • Steve McDonald, the terribly wounded police officer who went on to quadruple his initial heroism by becoming a missionary of God’s mercy and forgiveness;
  • Denis Dillon who epitomizes the streak which runs through Irish life of fearless insistence on protection and justice for the weak and threatened;
  • Sister Janet Fitzgerald who embodied the Irish love of learning and the dedication of the generations of consecrated religious men and women who dedicated their lives to teaching;
  • Peter King, who put his career at risk, and honorary grand marshals Joe Doherty, Malachy McAllister and Gerry Adams who put their lives and freedom on the line, as did our own Patrick Webster, Danny Lane and Tony Deignan all to remind the world that for nearly a millennium the most passionate thread of the Irish story has been our struggle for national sovereignty;
  • Tom Suozzi, Brian Fitzpatrick, Maryanne Holzkamp and John Canning told us the story of Irish public service; it is not surprising that they are involved with the same Hibernian Divisions which once welcomed as a member Sen. Robert F. Kennedy during his brief time with us;
  • Jim McCabe, Eddie Doohan, Al Baker, Jeff Moore and Cardinal John O’Connor demonstrates the truism that the Irish male cherishes his faith just as much as the women do;
  • Joe Buckley, who embodied for us the ancient Irish tradition of hospitality;
  • Jack Ryan, Tom Lilly and my brother Patrick Lynch bring forward to our time the unparalleled Irish tradition of support for the right of working people to organize to protect their interests, even in the face of fierce opposition by the powers that be;
  • It is Dr. Mary Gilroy who is our most beloved exemplification of the Irish women’s reputation for healing and compassion;
  • Jack McDougal and the Fighting 69th teach us to “never forget” the courage of the Irish in uniform who clear the way for the rest of us when our lives are threatened;
  • Our Order’s real-life seanachie, Michael McCormick, who finds joy in telling our story in print, as does this year’s Aide to the Grand Marshal of the NYC parade, John O’Connell, while Tony Jackson and Patti Ann Brown do the same on the airwaves.

Ladies and Gentlemen, let us go forward with these models in mind to continue to tell the story of who we are.


Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Adult Life, American Ancestors, Ancestral Homeland, Benevolent Association, Brother Patrick, Charter Member, Doctor Of Laws, Glen Cove, Grand Marshal, Grand Marshall, Hibernian, Irish Roots, Irish Translation, Kiltimagh, Laws Degree, Maternal Grandfather, P Lynch, Patrick J Lynch, S University, Westmeath, Williston Park

2001 Grand Marshal – Patrick J. Lynch

March 17, 2001 by Robert P. Lynch

patric3BY JACK SHANAHAN

The Brooklyn Tablet August 12, 2000

 

A dozen memorial prayer cards – each for a cop killed in the line of duty – lie in a row atop the desk blotter of Patrick J. Lynch, president of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association. They were given to him by parents of the deceased officers, three of whom died since Lynch was elected head of the police union a little more than a year ago. It’s a reminder of why you do this job,” he said. Despite what he called the “bombardment’ of anti-police activists, Lynch said, ‘I think the average person out there who does not have a political agenda supports New York City cops.” He said, “we have detractors who try to tear down what we do and attack us on every turn, but … there’s no one on this earth who defends the civil rights, or the Constitutional rights, of the people of this country more than a police officer in uniform standing on that corner.” When a cop goes bad, he said, it’s like a betrayal to all cops. No self-respecting police man or woman likes it when a fellow officer breaks the law. “It taints the department,’ the PBA chief said.

Lynch said his Catholic education, at home and in school, has helped him in all walks of life. “It was all interconnected,” he said. “The lessons at home and the lessons at school were the same. “You have to work hard to get ahead. You have to believe in Cod. He’s the One who put you on the earth and allows you to do what you’re doing. That whole situation: it started at our kitchen table, but it was the same when you went off to school.”

He was taught by the Sisters of St. Joseph at St. Robert’s and by the Ohio Dominicans at Scanlon. He also worked as a maintenance man at St. Andrew Avellino in Flushing and briefly as a subway conductor before switching to the Police Department. Lynch and his wife, Kathleen, a nurse, have two sons, Patrick, 9, and Kevin, 7.

Lynch, 36, born in Bayside, and a graduate of St. Robert Bellarmine parochial school there, is, the youngest cop to become president of the 29,000 member PBA. He campaigned virtually 24 hours a day, seven days a week, visiting each police precinct house and talking to cops on the day, night and overnight tours to get their votes. ‘They needed to see their union. They needed to feel part of the union,’ he explained. “This is an ever changing job. You have to be out there to understand (what’s-going on).”

The youngest of seven children, Lynch found union activity almost second-nature. His father, Robert, now 75, was a subway motorman for 30 years and took him out of school on day to walk the picket line during the 1980 transit strike. “You saw it then. You could feel it,” Lynch recalled. “If everyone stood together, in unity, you could change things and you could fix things for the better.”

His desire to do something meaningful was why he became a policeman. “Everything you do makes a difference. It’s the one job where the lowest person on the totem pole, the average cop, makes all the preliminary decisions and all else follows from that police officer’s decision. So, you really can make a difference,” he said in an interview in his office in Lower Manhattan.

Patrolmen have to make life-and-death decisions – frequently in a matter of seconds, or even a split second – decisions that will withstand the test of legal challenges all the way up to the U.S. Supreme Court, he noted. “And we’re asking them to do that on a salary of $350,” he said. The union chief referred to the weekly take-home pay of a rookie cop who actually grosses $31,000-a-year to start. The pay increases with time on the job. Lynch, with 17 years in, now receives $49,000 annually as a police officer and an additional similar amount as union president.

He is asking for “a substantial increase” for PBA members to replace the union’s five-year-old labor contract which expired July 31. He noted that an arbitrator last month boosted the top yearly pay of Suffolk County cops to more than $80,000 in the year 2003.

Besides fighting for a salary hike for his members, the graduate of Monsignor Scanlon High School in the Bronx also is battling the “very anti-police climate right now. It’s not popular to stand with a cop who’s wrongfully accused, but we’re doing that – and that goes a long way,’ he said.

“It’s never been this bad,’ Lynch said, referring to recent high-profile cases. “There’s never been a time when there are so many people demonstrating against police. “And,” he added, “we’re going through a time when we should be celebrating the police. Crime is down in astronomical numbers. You could walk safely in the, neighborhoods. Five short years ago … you couldn’t.’ Lynch said much of the anti-cop attitude could be blamed on government policies. ‘What’s happening is: the New York City cop is being dragged into everyone’s politics … and they’re attacking the policies on the backs of the New York City. police officer.” Uniformed officers are the first branch of government that many people see, even in housing disputes, he remarked. ‘So many times you take the brunt of society’s problems. You take the blame for problems that other agencies can’t fix. It falls square on the shoulders of cops,” he lamented.

A veteran of foot and motor patrol and community policing in the racially-mixed and ethnically-diverse 90th Precinct in Williamsburg, Lynch said that differences between the police and community usually could be worked out without rancor. “Once you get the dialogue going, many times you get past the differences. You find you’re not that far apart,” he said.

He’s trying as PBA president to “put a face on the average cop” for the public. However, he declined to discuss his own decorations which include one for Exceptional Merit for rescuing two officers who had been shot by a man firing through a door. Asked if he put himself in the line of fire, Lynch replied only, “part of the job. Part of the job.”

Despite what he called the “bombardment’ of anti-police activists, Lynch said, ‘I think the average person out there who does not have a political agenda supports New York City cops.” He said, “we have detractors who try to tear down what we do and attack us on every turn, but … there’s no one on this earth who defends the civil rights, or the Constitutional rights, of the people of this country more than a police officer in uniform standing on that corner.”

When a cop goes bad, he said, it’s like a betrayal to all cops. No self-respecting police man or woman likes it when a fellow officer breaks the law. “It taints the department,’ the PBA chief said.

Lynch said his Catholic education, at home and in school, has helped him in all walks of life. “It was all interconnected,” he said. “The lessons at home and the lessons at school were the same. “You have to work hard to get ahead. You have to believe in Cod. He’s the One who put you on the earth and allows you to do what you’re doing. That whole situation: it started at our kitchen table, but it was the same when you went off to school.”

He was taught by the Sisters of St. Joseph at St. Robert’s and by the Ohio Dominicans at Scanlon. He also worked as a maintenance man at St. Andrew Avellino in Flushing and briefly as a subway conductor before switching to the Police Department. Lynch and his wife, Kathleen, a nurse, have two sons, Patrick, 9, and Kevin, 7.

The union leader, whose mother, Mary, came here from County Mayo, Ireland, also was a drummer in the County Tyrone Pipe Band. His brother, Robert, is a piper. Asked why he did not take up the pipes, Lynch said with a challenging smile, “It took more skill to be a drummer.”

Since he has been head of the union, the Police Holy Name Society member has received thousands of letters, many seeking help, others offering advice. Two contained vials of water which he keeps near his desk. One has water from Lourdes, the other from Knock.

Filed Under: Parade History Tagged With: Benevolent Association, Catholic Education, Desk Blotter, Dominicans, Education At Home, Fellow Officer, Grand Marshal, Jack Shanahan, Maintenance Man, New York City Cops, Parochial School, Patrick J Lynch, Police Man, Police Union, Prayer Cards, Scanlon, Sisters Of St Joseph, Subway Conductor, Walks Of Life, Wife Kathleen

The Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade is run by Glen Cove Parade Committee, Inc., a 501 (c) (3) charitable corporation, formed in the tradition of the Glen Cove Hibernians, who founded the Parade in 1989.

Upcoming Events

  1. Grand Marshal’s Mass March 15, 2026

    March 15 @ 11:00 am
  2. Grand Marshal’s Brunch March 15, 2026

    March 15 @ 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
  3. 2026 Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade

    March 22 @ 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm
  4. 2026 After-Parade Party

    March 22 @ 2:30 pm - 7:00 pm

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Photo Gallery

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Parade News

  • Press Release: Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade, March 22, 2026
  • John Cronin, Grand Marshal, 2026 Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade
  • Grand Marshal’s Mass and Brunch March 15, 2026

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Parade Photos

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The Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade is run by Glen Cove Parade Committee, Inc., a 501 (c) (3) charitable corporation, formed in the tradition of the Glen Cove Hibernians, who founded the Parade in 1989.

Upcoming Events

  1. Grand Marshal’s Mass March 15, 2026

    March 15 @ 11:00 am
  2. Grand Marshal’s Brunch March 15, 2026

    March 15 @ 11:00 am - 5:00 pm
  3. 2026 Glen Cove St. Patrick’s Day Parade

    March 22 @ 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm
  4. 2026 After-Parade Party

    March 22 @ 2:30 pm - 7:00 pm

View All Events

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