AOH Leavenworth Kansas

AOH Leavenworth Kansas Welcome to the Ancient Order of Hibernians Thomas Ambrose Butler Division Leavenworth Kansas

03/15/2023
03/03/2023
Happy birthday Kansas!
01/29/2023

Happy birthday Kansas!

12/07/2022

80th anniversary of attack on Pearl Harbor - Irish heroes remembered

Remembering John William Finn and Frank C. Flaherty, Irish American heroes of that infamous day in Pearl Harbor.

On December 7, 1941, the attack on Pearl Harbor killed 2,403 people and injured more than a thousand others. The attack, a surprise military strike by the Imperial Japanese Navy against the United States, came as a massive shock to the American people and triggered America's entry into World War II.

The United States declared war on Japan on December 8. On this, the 80th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, we remember those lost and the Irish stationed at the Hawaiian naval base that day. In particular, we remember two Irish heroes, John William Finn and Frank Flaherty, who were both awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for their bravery and valor during the attack.

Two thousand, four hundred and three Americans died that day. More than a thousand others were wounded. Not a few of the dead were Irish Americans.

Two Irish Americans secured the very opposite of infamy by winning the Congressional Medal of Honor. They were John William Finn, who survived the attack, and Frank C. Flaherty who did not.

Finn, a chief aviation ordnance man stationed at Naval Air Station Kaneohe Bay, earned his medal by manning a machine gun from an exposed position throughout the attack, despite being repeatedly wounded.

Like just about everyone else on Oahu that day, Finn was rousted from the more somnolent duties of a Sunday.

Finn didn’t hesitate.

He ran to a mounted gun and began firing at enemy aircraft. Two hours later he had twenty-one shrapnel wounds and a record of heroic action that would earn him the first Medal of Honor for World War II.

Born in 1909, Finn would live to be a hundred. He died in May 2010.

He was born on July 24, 1909, in Los Angeles. His grandparents on his father’s side were immigrants from Co. Galway, Ireland.

His father supported the family as a shipping clerk in a machinery firm and later as a plumber. Young John left school at age eleven to work. In 1926, at the age of seventeen, Finn enlisted in the Navy. He looked so young that his mother had to accompany him to the recruiting station to verify his age.

Finn’s lack of formal education didn’t hold him back in the Navy and by 1935 he’d risen to the rank of chief petty officer. Six years later, in December 1941, he found himself stationed at Kaneohe Bay, Hawaii, as a Navy aviation chief ordnance officer.

The attack on Pearl Harbor and other military facilities on Oahu commenced a few minutes before 8 a.m. and caught American forces completely by surprise.

The Pacific fleet was a sitting duck and the Japanese pilots took full advantage. Those Americans who could, eventually fought back. When John Finn reached his base, it was too late to launch any Navy pilots (their planes were in flames), so he ran to a mounted .50 caliber machine gun and began firing.

His position was completely exposed and soon came under fire. Despite numerous shrapnel wounds, Finn kept up the fight. “I just kept shooting,” he later said in an interview, “because I wasn’t dead.”

Witnesses later claimed that he shot down at least one Japanese plane.

“I’m not sure I shot a plane down, but I can take credit for shooting at every plane I could bear on.”

Two hours later, Finn was receiving medical treatment for his wounds and learning the dreadful details of the attack.

Eighteen ships, including all eight battleships of the Pacific fleet, were sunk or badly damaged. Over 350 aircraft, most while still on the ground, were destroyed.

Nine months later, Finn (now an Ensign) received the Medal of Honor aboard the USS Enterprise from Admiral Chester Nimitz. The official citation bears reading in full:

“For extraordinary heroism distinguished service, and devotion above and beyond the call of duty. During the first attack by Japanese airplanes on the Naval Air Station, Kaneohe Bay, on December 7, 1941, Lt. Finn promptly secured and manned a .50-caliber machinegun mounted on an instruction stand in a completely exposed section of the parking ramp, which was under heavy enemy machine-gun strafing fire. Although painfully wounded many times, he continued to man this gun and to return the enemy’s fire vigorously and with telling effect throughout the enemy strafing and bombing attacks and with complete disregard for his own personal safety. It was only by specific orders that he was persuaded to leave his post to seek medical attention. Following first-aid treatment, although obviously suffering much pain and moving with great difficulty, he returned to the squadron area and actively supervised the rearming of returning planes. His extraordinary heroism and conduct in this action were in keeping with the highest traditions of the U.S. Naval Service.”

Finn remained in the Navy for the duration of the war and stayed on after 1947 in the Navy reserves. He retired in 1956 (at 47 years of age) with the rank of Lieutenant.

He spent the next few decades running a repair shop in San Diego and then a 92-acre ranch 70 miles outside San Diego that he and his wife, Alice, bought in the late 1950s.

Intensely patriotic, and proud of his Irish heritage, he attended World War II memorial services and served for many years as a spokesman for causes such as the campaign to raise funds to secure and preserve the USS Arizona memorial.

While John Finn faced the enemy and survived that day, so long ago and yet so vivid, Frank Flaherty did not live.

And his bravery was not displayed by hands on a machine gun, but rather a flashlight.

There were many acts of extraordinary heroism at Pearl Harbor and they were performed in myriad ways.

Flaherty, who was from Charlotte, MI and an Ensign at the time of the attack, was aboard the USS Oklahoma.

Flaherty’s Medal of Honor reads in part: “For extraordinary devotion to duty and extraordinary courage and complete disregard of his own life….when it was seen the USS Oklahoma was going to capsize and the order was given to abandon ship, Ensign Flaherty remained in the turret, holding a flashlight so the remainder of the turret crew could see to escape, thereby sacrificing his own life.”

Four hundred and twenty-nine men were entombed in the Oklahoma at Pearl Harbor, including Flaherty, after the great ship rolled over.

The ship was raised for salvage in 1943, and the remains inside were eventually interred in mass graves marked "Unknowns" at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific in Honolulu.

In 1943 a destroyer bearing Flaherty’s name was commissioned and it served for the duration of the war.

Flaherty's name is inscribed in the Courts of the Missing at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, and a memorial headstone was placed in Maple Hill Cemetery in his Michigan hometown.

Along with all the other heroes of December 7, 1941, he will be especially remembered on this 80th anniversary.

Ray O’Hanlon

Dec 07, 2021

Di**le is calling
11/29/2022

Di**le is calling

11/20/2022

WHAT IS THE AOH?

The Ancient Order of Hibernians in America is a Catholic, Irish American Fraternal Organization founded in New York City in 1836. The Order can trace its roots back to a parent organization, of the same name, which has existed in Ireland for over 400 years. However, while the organizations share a common thread, the North American AOH is a separate and much larger organization. The Board of Erin and the Board of America cooperate on projects and had a joint Board meeting in Dundalk, Ireland in 1995.

The Order evolved from a society formed in 1565 to protect the priests who risked immediate death to keep the Catholic Faith alive, in occupied Ireland, during the reign of England’s Tudor monarchs. In 1697, when England imposed its dreaded Penal Laws on Ireland, secret societies were formed across Ireland to aid and comfort the clergy and the people by whatever means available. Similarly, the Ancient Order of Hibernians in America was founded on May 4, 1836, at New York City’s St. James Church, to protect the clergy and church property from the likes of the “Know Nothings” and their followers. In the late 1840s, the vast influx of Irish immigrants ,seeing The Great Hunger (An Gorta Mor) in Ireland prompted a growth of various social societies in the United States to aid these refugees, the largest of which was, and continues to be, the Ancient Order of Hibernians.

We invite all Catholic men of Irish birth or descent to seek admittance — all we would ask is for you to live our motto of:
“Friendship, Unity, and Christian Charity”.

The preceding is based on text kindly supplied by Ned McGinley, Past AOH National President.

11/20/2022

FATHER THOMAS AMBROSE BUTLER

Thomas Ambrose Butler (March 21, 1837 – September 6, 1897) was an Irish American Catholic priest known for his writings on Irish immigration and his promotion of Irish settlements in the state of Kansas, which led to the founding of the Irish colony of Butler City, Kansas.

Thomas Butler was born on March 21, 1837, in Dublin Ireland to a middle-class family. Growing up, he attended St. Paul's Parish in Dublin. He received secondary education through Schools of the Christian Brothers. Upon hearing of John Henry Newman's new school, Catholic University of Ireland, young Butler was the first to sign his name upon the roster. On October 19, 1854, Butler left the University and enrolled in the humanities class at St. Patrick's College, known at the time as Maynooth College. For the first three years of his priesthood, Butler remained in Ireland where he was appointed to a curacy in Wicklow County at St. Nicholas Parish in Dunlavin.

In 1867, Butler immigrated to America and was assigned to Leavenworth, Kansas. Bishop John Baptiste Miège made Butler associate pastor of the Cathedral of Immaculate Conception. While here, Butler started analyzing the life of an average Irish immigrant in America as well as promoting the state of Kansas as a safe-haven for the Irish to start farms and communities. Although stationed in Leavenworth, Butler spent much of his 8 years traveling the state of Kansas, offering Mass, dispensing sacraments, and assessing the progress of Irish immigrants.

After his time in Leavenworth, Butler was assigned pastor of St. James Parish in St. Louis. While there, he interacted with many immigrants living in deplorable conditions and not fully finding root in their new home. In 1877, remembering the fertile lands back in Kansas, Butler won the support of wealthy Irish men to fund efforts to create a colony in Northeast Kansas. Soon, they purchased 12,000 acres of land in Pottawatamie County, Kansas from Union Pacific. On February 1, 1887 Butler organized a final meeting of the Colonization Board; the next day, a group of men headed west on the train to start the community. Eventually 600 people moved to this land and established a central community, Butler City; the center of the community being St. Columbkille's Church.

In April 1890, Butler made a visit to the former Butler City (the name of the town had since been changed to Blaine). He was met with a grand celebration with nearly all the surrounding residents attending.

— courtesy of hnm.wiki

Congratulations to the newly elected officers of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Father Thomas Ambrose Butler Division L...
11/19/2022

Congratulations to the newly elected officers of the Ancient Order of Hibernians Father Thomas Ambrose Butler Division Leavenworth Kansas —
Dave Gwartney, Tim Fitzgerald, Brian Rogers, Ed Standish, Rod Bray, Rick Rogers, and Brad Murray.

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Leavenworth, KS
66048

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