Immigrant.
World Traveler. Chicago Police Officer. Scholar. Author. Historian. Musician.
Husband and father of ten children. Francis O'Neill, Chicago's Police Superintendent
from 1901-05, is virtually unknown today. Yet this remarkable man not only
served as a heroic police officer and reforming chief of police, but also
made an enduring contribution to his native Ireland and Irish culture through
the gathering and publication of the largest collection of Irish music
ever assembled.
The youngest of seven children, O'Neill was born in Tralibane, County Cork,
in 1848, the last year of Ireland's devastating Potato Famine. Pushed by
ambition and pulled by adventure, the spirited young man passed up a chance
to become a teacher. Instead, at the age of 16, he set out to seek his
fortune as a cabin boy on an English merchant vessel. On one of his voyages,
he met Anna Rogers, an Irish girl he then married in Bloomington, Illinois.
The couple moved to Chicago soon after the Great Fire to start a family.
In 1873, O'Neill signed on as a Chicago policeman, and distinguished himself
from the start. Nicholas Carolan, Director of the Irish Traditional Music
Archive in Dublin and author of a new book on O'Neill entitled A Harvest
Saved, relates: "In [O'Neill's] first month on the police force, he
showed his bravery by tackling an armed burglar. He was shot, and carried
the bullet encysted near his spine for the rest of his life." O'Neill's
intelligence and political savvy helped him rise in the ranks quickly.
In 1901, he was named General Superintendent, where he earned respect for
his efforts to reform what had been a corrupt police department.
At the same time, O'Neill was also pursuing his other passion, the performance
and collection of Irish music. He retained strong memories of his childhood
in Ireland where he learned to play the flute and listen to the musicians
at Crossroad Dances near his home. In later years, he wrote, "traditional
Irish music could have survived even the famine if it had not been capriciously
and arbitrarily prescribed and suppressed" by the English and some elements
of the Church. O'Neill went to great lengths to unearth the music -- and
musicians who could play it. Siobhan McKinney, a native-born Irish musician
and co-owner with her husband Brendan of Chief O'Neill's Pub in Chicago,
explains, "As soon as he heard of pipers coming to America, he would bring
them all to Chicago. And immediately he would snap 'em up, put 'em on the
police force, and write down their music." Historian Richard Lindberg adds, "He
would travel the streetcars of Chicago in civilian clothing, listening
to people on the street cars humming and whistling little tunes. He really
collected these songs in much the same way an archeologists digs for things
in tombs." O'Neill's great granddaughter Mary Mooney Lesch concludes: "He'd
go back to his office and play them for his sergeant, who would write them
down." O'Neill eventually published eight books of some 3,500 traditional
Irish tunes, most of them after he retired from the police force in 1905
and could devote himself to the cause on a full-time basis. Carolan states, "It
was the largest snapshot ever taken of Irish traditional music and we still
have it."
Francis O'Neill is revered today, 65 years after his death, because at
a critical time for Irish culture, his books helped to keep Ireland's music
alive. Noel Rice, President of the Academy of Irish Music, has taught O'Neill's
music to his students for the past 25 years. "He did a magnificent job.
. .of gathering it together and trying to keep it from dying." Kevin Henry,
an Irish piper who plays in the sessions at Chief O'Neill's Pub, says, "I
have to take off my cap to the Chief; there was nobody like him." Paddy
Ryan, music officer of Comhaltas Ceoltoiri Eireann, the organization that
promotes traditional music in Ireland, concurs. He put Chicago on the
map in the musical sense. Chicago is a very important place in the history
of Irish traditional music. Extremely important place. Because of Francis
O'Neill."
Admiration for the "Music Mad" Francis O'Neill
(from A Harvest Saved: Francis O'Neill and Irish Music in Chicago)
In all his wanderings and throughout his police career and long retirement,
O'Neill was obsessed with music, 'music mad' as he said of himself. He
continued with his childhood instrument the flute as his main instrument,
and privately considered himself 'a fair freehand fluter.' At different
times he played the fiddle, the Scottish Lowland pipes and Scottish Highland
pipes on which he described himself as 'a tasty performer.' He was also 'an
excellent performer on the [uilleann] pipes,' according to his friend the
Rev. Dr. Richard Henebry, professor of Celtic at the University of Washington,
D.C. The enthusiastic Henebry is likely to have been the anonymous admirer
of O'Neill's piping made fun of by the piping historian Seamus O Casaide:
Captain O'Neill is a musician himself, and a good one. He has at least
one admirer who places him above all the musicians of the world. If Paderewski
were to give one of his masterly performances of a Mozart sonata, or if
Kubelik were to play the Hungarian Rhapsody with that wonderful artistic
feeling which is so characteristic of his work, and if one were to say
to a certain distinguished votary of music, 'Isn't that exquisite?,' the
chances are a hundred to one that the reply would be, 'Ah, yes, but you
should hear Chief O'Neill play "The Fox Chase"!'
Links of Interest
A Harvest Saved, Francis O'Neill and Irish Music in Chicago, by
Nicholas Carolan. Ossian Publications, 1997.
O'Neill's 1001: Irish Music, by Francis O'Neill. Irish Books & Media,
1987.
Folk Music and Dances of Ireland : A Comprehensive Study Examining
the Basic Elements of Irish Folk Music and Dance Traditions, by Breandan
Breathnach. Ossian Publications, 1971.
Irish Music Magazine
The site of the leading folk and traditional music magazine from Ireland.
Irish Traditional Music Archive
A reference archive and resource center for traditional song, music and
dance, based in Dublin.
Irish
Music International
Specialists in Irish Music on CD, cassettes and video.
Chief
O'Neill's Pub and Restaurant
This pub at 3471 N. Elston was opened in the fall of 1999 by All-Ireland
musicians Brendan and Siobhan McKinney, to celebrate Chief O'Neill's life
and achievements, and to keep his musical tradition alive and well in the
city he loved.
The Real Magic of Irish Music
by program producer Leonard Aronson
Why is Irish music so popular? That's one of the questions we set out to
answer in our documentary on Chicago's turn-of-the-century Police Chief
Francis O'Neill.
O'Neill left Ireland at the age of 16, circumnavigating the world as a
seaman before arriving in Chicago just after the Great Fire in 1871.
One anecdote from his early life did not make it into the documentary,
but is worth telling here because it helps answer the above question.
On one voyage O'Neill and his fellow crew members were shipwrecked and
faced the prospect of starvation, marooned on Baker Island in the middle
of the Pacific.
An accomplished musician, O'Neill showed a native crew member on the ship
that rescued them how to play Irish tunes on the native's crude wooden
flute and, in exchange, he received extra rations of food. When they arrived
in San Francisco, O'Neill was one of the only members of his crew who didn't
have to be hospitalized for malnutrition.
It was an early example of the power Irish music has to connect people,
and, I think, is an essential part of its spirit and allure.
Popular music in America tends to be generational, connecting listeners
in one generation, but dividing them from those in others. In Ireland,
because the traditional music has been respected and virtually unchanged
for hundreds of years, you'll often find, as one of Irish musician observed, "the
tiny tot sitting down with the pensioner and the judge or lawyer playing
with the common man of the street."
Simply put, it is music that somehow helps us cross the barriers of class,
age and ethnicity and makes us feel that we are all in this together. Lord
knows, there is not enough of that going on in the world today.
That, I believe, is the real magic of Irish Music, and the legacy of Francis
O'Neill's life.
Len Aronson, a former newspaper reporter, has been producing documentaries
for WTTW11 for the past 15 years, including the Emmy Award-winning "Vietnam:
The Next Generation" and "Vietnam: A Chicagoan Goes Home." In total, Aronson
has won eleven Emmy awards, two Cardinal's Communicator's Awards, two Peter
Lisagor Awards, and a Peabody Award. He is Executive Producer of our "Chicago
Matters" series, which this spring will focus on issues related to housing.
For ten years, he has wanted to produce a program about Chief Francis
O'Neill. The advent of WTTW's "Chicago Stories" series finally provided
a broadcast venue for this look at one of Chicago's most interesting "unsung
heroes and untold stories."
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