Seasonal & Holidays

St. Patrick’s Day: How Burnsville Celebrates Amid Pandemic

See how Irish heritage will be celebrated in Burnsville this month.

BURNSVILLE, MN— The traditional parades, festivals, races and large parties that often mark the St. Patrick’s Day season and celebrate Irish heritage this month will again mostly not take place this year as the coronavirus pandemic approaches the one-year mark.

In Burnsville:

  • Eclectic Chic Boutique is hosting a virtual Stout Cake decorating workshop taught by StyledBlu on March 14. The class costs $75 per household, and participants must have stout beer, access to an oven, mixing bowls, wooden spoon, spatula or butter knife, and a baking pan. Register in advance to ensure your DIY kit with cake ingredients and frosting is shipped to your home in time.
  • IGM Gymnastics, a local preschool, is hosting a St. Patrick's Day party for children on March 16. There will be gymnastics, crafts, snacks, and fun. The event is $20 for members and $25 for non members with a sibling discount.
  • Landmark Center in St. Paul is offering free virtual performances of Irish music, theatre, and dance March 17.
  • Reservations for the 2021 Saint Paul drive-thru St. Patrick's Day parade are full, but the event will be live-streamed via Facebook.

Many of 2020’s St. Patrick’s Day celebrations were muted at the last minute as the spread of the virus was declared a global pandemic just six days before the March 17 holiday. This year, with more time to prepare, there’s a different vibe as events go on virtually and in more creative ways.

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Among the largest yearly neighborhood Irish celebrations across America is Chicago's South Side Irish Parade, which traditionally steps off on the Sunday before St. Patrick’s Day in the tight-knit Beverly community.

“Around here, the day of the South Side Irish Parade is like having Christmas and your birthday on the same day,” Tim McSweeney, co-chair of the South Side Irish Parade committee, told Patch.

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Since city of Chicago officials decided not to grant any parade permits until at least April this year, the popular community parade itself was canceled for the second year in a row. But organizers have turned their disappointment into a way to help the small businesses that have supported the parade for years and have been impacted by the pandemic.

McSweeney and other parade organizers this year created “Shamrock Our Blocks,” a neighborhood decorating contest that will award the most creative displays with gift cards to local businesses.

“This keeps the joy and spirit of the South Side Irish Parade alive, celebrates St. Patrick’s Day responsibly during the pandemic and gives people something fun to do,” McSweeney said.

St. Patrick’s Day celebrations in America date back to 1631, according to National Geographic. Originally declared a feast day, over time the holiday increasingly became associated with the Irish American tradition.

The 2020 St. Patrick’s Day holiday celebrations were the first in some places to be canceled in centuries. New York City’s annual parade was not held for the first time since 1762; and Savannah, Georgia, which also hosts one of the nation’s largest parades, canceled its event for the first time since its 1824 inception.

Not all St. Patrick’s Day parades are canceled this year, though. Some — such as the one in Oak Forest, Illinois — are still on. But Oak Forest's parade will be along a different route to allow for greater spacing among spectators.

For McSweeney and others who love the March parade season, the excitement is already in the air for a return to normal come 2022.

“The Irish have come up against adversity in the past. We are no stranger to hard times,” he said. “But we are also known for making the best of a difficult situation, and that’s what we are trying to do.”

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