Ancient Order of Hibernians Division #39

Ancient Order of Hibernians Division #39 Our Mottos is Friendship, Unity and Christian Charity

The Ancient Order of Hibernians is a private Rilley, who served as our chaplain for more than 25 years.

The Ancient Order of Hibernians is a Catholic, Irish American Fraternal Organization founded in New York City on May 4th, 1836. Division 39, the largest and second oldest division in Pennsylvania was established in 1889 and is named in honor of a priest, Monsignor Thomas J.

06/20/2026

The club will be closed tomorrow 6/21 in observance of Father’s Day! Happy Fathers Day to all the Dads out there! See you all on Monday at 6pm!

06/19/2026

Just a reminder that there is no meeting tonight! Next meeting will be in September. Will post date as soon we get the details! Have a great weekend and GO USA !!

This Sunday. All are welcome to attend !!
06/12/2026

This Sunday. All are welcome to attend !!

Great read ! Share if you’d like!
06/12/2026

Great read ! Share if you’d like!

Irish News report today on the Pat Finucane case: Widow of Pat Finucane hails ‘a monumental day for our family’

The widow of murdered Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane has hailed the first day of a long-campaigned for public inquiry into his death as “monumental”.

The 39-year-old was shot dead at his family home in north Belfast in 1989 by the Ulster Defence Association in an attack found by a series of probes to have involved collusion with the state.

The Finucane family has been campaigning for decades for a public inquiry to establish the extent of security force involvement.

During his opening statement to the Patrick Finucane Inquiry, inquiry chairman Sir Gary Hickinbottom said the conclusions he reaches will be informed by the evidence he hears and nothing else.

Sir Gary opened the first hearing of the independent inquiry, describing the killing of the prominent Belfast solicitor by loyalist paramilitaries in 1989 as a “horrific murder which remains one of the most high-profile and controversial of Northern Ireland’s troubled past”.

During the start of his opening statement, he also paused for a moment to remember all those killed during the Troubles.

Sir Gary went on to say that while investigations have taken place into Mr Finucane’s murder in the past, none were compliant with Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights.

The inquiry will be inquisitorial, he went on, and will have powers to require organisations to provide evidence and to compel witnesses to attend, but it cannot rule on or determine anyone’s civil or criminal liability.

Sir Gary stressed the independence of the inquiry, and said the conclusions he reaches “will be my own, informed by evidence and the submissions I receive, and nothing else”.

Earlier, Mr Finucane’s widow Geraldine was accompanied by family who arrived in a large coach at the venue for the inquiry in south Belfast.

Flanked by her sons Michael and John, and daughter Katherine, as well as Mr Finucane’s brothers Martin and Dermot, Mrs Finucane said no-one wanted to miss the long-awaited day.

Speaking to media outside Bradford Court, she said: “As you can see by the number of people who are with me today, this is a monumental day for our family.

“We have waited 37-and-ahalf years for this day and not one of us wanted to miss it.

“We fought long and hard to get to the truth, and to get to justice, and that’s what we’re hoping that this inquiry will provide us with.

“We’re hoping that all those questions that have never been fully answered will be answered during the inquiry and it will be thorough, and it will satisfy us, and then we will have closure.”

Mrs Finucane described mixed feelings on the first hearing day, but emphasised she was really glad it was happening after previously fearing it never would.

“I’m hoping for the best as usual, hoping for no more delays, no more obstructions and just so we can get it finished with, and get closure,” she said.

“It’s more about who was pulling the strings, why was Pat targeted, why were we never warned that he was targeted on more than one occasion, who thought it up, why was this strategy put in place.

“These are questions that need to be fully answered, not glided over superficially anymore.

“This is the opportunity to do that and get it right.”

Mrs Finucane added: “Maybe we will find out that what happened to Pat happened to a lot of other people, and maybe we will find out the strategy behind it all and who was responsible.”

The inquiry into the circumstances of Mr Finucane’s death was announced by Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn in 2024.

Last June the Government announced senior judge Sir Gary Hickinbottom as chairman of the inquiry.

The first hearing on Tuesday has been described as a “procedural hearing which will provide an opportunity to introduce the public to the inquiry”.

Pat Finucane has been remembered for his love of the law and role in “embryonic human rights” during some of the most chaotic years of the Northern Ireland Troubles on the first day of a public inquiry into his 1989 murder.

The prominent Belfast solicitor was killed in front of his wife and three children, aged 17, 12 and eight, in their home in the north of the city by loyalist paramilitary gunmen on February 12 1989.

His family has campaigned for decades for a public inquiry to investigate the extent of security forces involvement in his killing.

The first day of the Patrick Finucane Inquiry on Wednesday heard that his father had worked two jobs to feed his family, and how he had gone on to become the first of his family to go to university when he studied English, French and philosophy at Trinity College, Dublin.

It was here in the late 1960s that the west Belfast man met his wife Geraldine, who was from the Protestant community in Northern Ireland, and went on to study law.

Danny Friedman KC, counsel for the Finucane family, said Mr Finucane did not join the IRA, nor was he even vaguely sympathetic to it and, as an inquest into his death heard, had been a law-abiding citizen going about his business.

He said Mr Finucane found that he loved law and the opportunity to help others.

He told the first day of the inquiry that Mr Finucane, along with Peter Madden, founded the firm Madden and Finucane in 1979 to “help others who had no other constitutional avenue to help themselves”.

“Pat Finucane and Peter Madden held a mirror to the establishment using the standings of the rule of law and embryonic human rights,” he said.

Mr Friedman pointed out the clients Mr Finucane defended included Bobby Sands who would go on to die during an IRA hunger strike, as well as Patrick McGeown who was acquitted of the 1988 killings of British Army Corporals Derek Wood and David Howes in west Belfast.

He said this led to the RUC telling the government that Mr Finucane was “one of the lawyers in the pockets of terrorists”, and that he was regarded as a “thorn in the side of the establishment”.

He told the inquiry that Mr Finucane was never told of intelligence he was under threat in 1985 and November 1988, and that MI5 “deliberately spread false information”.

Mr Friedman said that the fact of collusion in Mr Finucane’s murder is “no longer disputed” following multiple investigations.

Save the date!! Come help our boys make their way to the Nationals in Boston !!!
06/11/2026

Save the date!! Come help our boys make their way to the Nationals in Boston !!!

06/11/2026

For anyone interested this is the team we sponsored in the Philly GAA!

06/09/2026

Help Keep Pennsylvania Represented on the National AOH Board!!

For over 50 years, Pennsylvania has had representation on the Ancient Order of Hibernians National Board through appointed and elected officers, including National Presidents. This year, we need your help to continue that proud tradition.

Ed Dougherty is seeking a second term as National Director at the upcoming National Convention in Omaha, Nebraska. Ed has dedicated countless hours to the AOH and the Irish community throughout the Delaware Valley, and his continued service at the national level will ensure Pennsylvania’s voice remains strong within our organization.

Please join us in supporting Ed’s campaign at the following fundraiser:

Beef & Beer Fundraiser for Ed Dougherty

Wednesday, July 8
6:00 PM – 10:00 PM
AOH Division 39
7229 Tulip Street, Philadelphia, PA

Donation: $25

Includes Beer, Food, and Live Music.

Can’t attend? Donations are greatly appreciated.
Ways to Contribute
• Checks payable to AOH Division 39
• Cash at the door
• Venmo: (Please note “DOC”)

Every contribution helps preserve Pennsylvania’s longstanding tradition of leadership within the AOH and supports a proven leader who has tirelessly served our Order.

For More Information

Seamus Boyle
215-820-1547
[email protected]

Shawn Anderson
484-824-2114 [email protected]

Thank you for your support of Ed Dougherty and the Ancient Order of Hibernians.

Come on out and enjoy marching to celebrate the 250th Anniversary of our great nation! Join your fellow AOH and LAOH fam...
06/09/2026

Come on out and enjoy marching to celebrate the 250th Anniversary of our great nation! Join your fellow AOH and LAOH family and friends along with other members of the Irish Community!! Gonna be a great day!

06/04/2026

Great job to all the people involved with the setting up the Garden Party at the club last night. A special thank you to the Ladies of LAOH 39 who took care of getting everything for the event and especially Tommy Conway for his many hours of setting up the the yard and “building” the bar! Great work to everyone!

Address

7229 Tulip Street
Philadelphia, PA
19135

Opening Hours

Monday 12pm - 11pm
Tuesday 3pm - 11pm
Wednesday 3pm - 11pm
Thursday 12pm - 11pm
Friday 12pm - 12am
Saturday 11:30am - 12am
Sunday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

+12156241590

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