Ireland was settled around 6000 BC by people of Celtic and Anglo-Norman origin. Legend has it that St. Patrick arrived in 432 and helped to convert the country to Christianity from Paganism and Druidism. Christianity became intertwined with the nation’s history through Viking invasions and the Norman Conquest of the 12th Century. Although Ireland became part of the British Empire in 1800, the country fought for its independence, first during the Easter Rising of 1916 and then during the Anglo-Irish War of 1919-1921. Ireland battled religious strife between its Catholic and Protestant populations, as well as economic difficulties, including the Great Famine of 1845-1852. Since then, Ireland has successfully dealt with “the Troubles” in the northern part of the country and jump-started its formerly stagnant economy. Recently, liberalized social policies have led to unionist and nationalist political victories at the national level, as well as the full disarmament of the Irish Republican Army.
Lay of the Land: The island of Ireland is separated from Scotland on the northeast by the North Channel, from England on the east by the Irish Sea, and from Wales on the southeast by St. George’s Channel. Its west coast fronts the Atlantic Ocean. The terrain gives Ireland the appearance of a giant bathtub; the mountainous coastal rim protects the low-lying interior of farms, pastures, bogs, and cities.
The Irish were among the Europeans to first to reach America. Irish-born William Ayers was a crewman on Columbus’s 1492 voyage. Immigrants in the 17th Century were mainly poor Catholics, coming over as indentured servants or unskilled laborers.
From 2003 to 2007, US imports from Ireland were dominated by medicinal, dental and pharmaceutical preparations, which averaged $16 billion annually. Other top imports were other scientific, medical and hospital equipment, averaging $2 billion; soft beverages and processed coffee, averaging $1.7 billion; industrial organic chemicals, averaging $1.4 billion; clocks and other household goods, averaging $1.8 billion.
North Ireland Past Derails Awards Ceremony
According to the State Department, in 2007 there were some reports in Ireland of police abuse and inadequate care for prisoners with mental disabilities. There were also instances of discrimination against immigrants, racial minorities, and Travellers, of trafficking in persons, mistreatment of children, and domestic violence.
Frederick A. Sterling
Anne Anderson presented her credentials as Ireland’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on September 17, 2013. It’s the fifth ambassadorial posting for Anderson, a career foreign service officer.
Anderson was born in July 1952 in Clonmel, County Tipperary, Ireland. She moved with her family to Kilkenny, and then Dublin as her father, a psychiatric nurse, got different jobs. Anderson attended University College Dublin, graduating at age 19 with a B.A. in history and immediately started in the economic division of Ireland’s foreign service. She later earned a diploma in legal studies from King’s Inns.
Geneva was the site of Anderson’s first foreign posting, in 1976. She was part of the Irish mission to the United Nations. She was stationed there four years, although she worked for six months in Belgrade. In 1980, Anderson returned to Dublin to work on Eastern European issues as first secretary in the political division of the ministry of foreign affairs. Anderson’s first posting to the United States came in 1983, when she was economic attaché, then press attaché, at the Irish Embassy. Much of her time was spent explaining the 1985 Irish-Anglo accords to American audiences. Her daughter Claire was born in Washington during this period.
Anderson returned home in 1987 to serve as counselor in the Anglo-Irish division of the ministry. In 1991, she was made assistant secretary of administration, with ambassadorial rank, for the ministry and served in that position until 1995.
Anderson went back to Geneva, this time as head of Ireland’s mission to the UN. While there, she served for a year as chair of the UN Commission on Civil Rights. In 2001, Anderson moved to Brussels as the Irish representative to the European Union.
In 2005, Anderson was transferred to Paris as Ireland’s ambassador to France. During her time in this position, she organized an extensive renovation of the embassy, provoking some criticism back home over its cost. During part of this period, she was also accredited as Ireland’s ambassador to Monaco. Anderson moved to New York as the Irish ambassador to the United Nations, serving until taking the Washington post. Anderson is a frequent lecturer at U.S. universities.
Since becoming ambassador to the United States, Anderson has pushed for immigration reform. There are as many as 50,000 undocumented Irish in the U.S.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Ireland’s First Female Ambassador to the U.S. Anne Anderson (by Debbie McGoldrick, Irish Central)
On July 29, 2014, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the nomination of Kevin F. O’Malley to be ambassador to the Republic of Ireland, a post that has been vacant since 2012. He was confirmed by the full Senate on September 18. O’Malley, an attorney in St. Louis, is a longtime supporter of President Barack Obama.
O’Malley has strong Irish roots; all four of his grandparents were born in Westport, County Mayo, Ireland. O’Malley was born in St. Louis and grew up there, but attended high school at St. Vincent’s Seminary in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, with the intent of entering the priesthood. Instead, he returned home and attended Saint Louis University, earning a B.A. in 1970, taking a break in 1968 to serve as a community ambassador in Prague, Czechslovakia. O’Malley earned a J.D. from the Saint Louis University’s law school in 1973. He also served for a time as an officer in the Army Reserve.
After earning his law degree, O’Malley was a special attorney in the Organized Crime and Racketeering Section of the Department of Justice and in 1979 was named an assistant U.S. attorney in St. Louis.
O’Malley went into private practice in 1983, focusing on defending medical professionals against malpractice claims, but also representing defendants in cases involving foreign trade and securities issues. O’Malley served as an instructor in the American Bar Association’s Central and Eastern European Law Initiative, first in Moscow in 1996 and then in Warsaw in 1999. In 1998, he helped write the nine-volume Federal Jury Practice and Instructions, still a standard reference manual for judges and trial lawyers.
O’Malley worked for his own firm until 2003 and then joined Greensfelder, Hemker and Gale in St. Louis. In 2004, he secured a huge defense verdict in a medical negligence case and the following year successfully defended a pharmaceutical executive in a Medicare kickback trial.
In 2009, O’Malley was appointed by Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) to be the only non-physician on the Missouri Board of Registration for the Healing Arts, the medical licensing board in the state. The appointment was criticized in some quarters because of the belief that O’Malley’s status as a malpractice defense attorney would cause him to defend physicians whose fitness to hold a license was questioned.
O’Malley worked as an adjunct professor of law at St. Louis University School of Law from 1979 to 1985 and at Washington University School of Law in 2013-2014.
O’Malley has strong ties to the Democratic Party, campaigned for Obama in 2008 and was on the credentials committee for the Democratic Convention that year in Denver. He was part of a group that fought to have the party’s 2012 convention held in St. Louis, but the effort was unsuccessful, with the event being staged in Charlotte, North Carolina.
In his confirmation hearing, O’Malley was asked about his position on the release of information from the Boston College Belfast History Project on the Northern Ireland conflict. Many participants from both sides of “The Troubles” were asked to talk about their role in the fighting for the project, with the proviso that the interviews would be made public only upon the participant’s death. However, the British government sought some of the interviews via a treaty obligation and some information was turned over to Britain. Although the disclosures have caused some participants to be arrested, O’Malley said he didn’t think the disclosures would harm the still-sensitive peace process.
Until being nominated for the Dublin post, O’Malley held dual Irish and American citizenship, but gave up his Irish citizenship to accept the ambassadorial position. O’Malley and his wife, Dena, have two sons, Brendan and Ryan.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Testimony before Senate Foreign Relations Committee (pdf)
more
Ireland was settled around 6000 BC by people of Celtic and Anglo-Norman origin. Legend has it that St. Patrick arrived in 432 and helped to convert the country to Christianity from Paganism and Druidism. Christianity became intertwined with the nation’s history through Viking invasions and the Norman Conquest of the 12th Century. Although Ireland became part of the British Empire in 1800, the country fought for its independence, first during the Easter Rising of 1916 and then during the Anglo-Irish War of 1919-1921. Ireland battled religious strife between its Catholic and Protestant populations, as well as economic difficulties, including the Great Famine of 1845-1852. Since then, Ireland has successfully dealt with “the Troubles” in the northern part of the country and jump-started its formerly stagnant economy. Recently, liberalized social policies have led to unionist and nationalist political victories at the national level, as well as the full disarmament of the Irish Republican Army.
Lay of the Land: The island of Ireland is separated from Scotland on the northeast by the North Channel, from England on the east by the Irish Sea, and from Wales on the southeast by St. George’s Channel. Its west coast fronts the Atlantic Ocean. The terrain gives Ireland the appearance of a giant bathtub; the mountainous coastal rim protects the low-lying interior of farms, pastures, bogs, and cities.
The Irish were among the Europeans to first to reach America. Irish-born William Ayers was a crewman on Columbus’s 1492 voyage. Immigrants in the 17th Century were mainly poor Catholics, coming over as indentured servants or unskilled laborers.
From 2003 to 2007, US imports from Ireland were dominated by medicinal, dental and pharmaceutical preparations, which averaged $16 billion annually. Other top imports were other scientific, medical and hospital equipment, averaging $2 billion; soft beverages and processed coffee, averaging $1.7 billion; industrial organic chemicals, averaging $1.4 billion; clocks and other household goods, averaging $1.8 billion.
North Ireland Past Derails Awards Ceremony
According to the State Department, in 2007 there were some reports in Ireland of police abuse and inadequate care for prisoners with mental disabilities. There were also instances of discrimination against immigrants, racial minorities, and Travellers, of trafficking in persons, mistreatment of children, and domestic violence.
Frederick A. Sterling
Anne Anderson presented her credentials as Ireland’s ambassador to the United States to President Barack Obama on September 17, 2013. It’s the fifth ambassadorial posting for Anderson, a career foreign service officer.
Anderson was born in July 1952 in Clonmel, County Tipperary, Ireland. She moved with her family to Kilkenny, and then Dublin as her father, a psychiatric nurse, got different jobs. Anderson attended University College Dublin, graduating at age 19 with a B.A. in history and immediately started in the economic division of Ireland’s foreign service. She later earned a diploma in legal studies from King’s Inns.
Geneva was the site of Anderson’s first foreign posting, in 1976. She was part of the Irish mission to the United Nations. She was stationed there four years, although she worked for six months in Belgrade. In 1980, Anderson returned to Dublin to work on Eastern European issues as first secretary in the political division of the ministry of foreign affairs. Anderson’s first posting to the United States came in 1983, when she was economic attaché, then press attaché, at the Irish Embassy. Much of her time was spent explaining the 1985 Irish-Anglo accords to American audiences. Her daughter Claire was born in Washington during this period.
Anderson returned home in 1987 to serve as counselor in the Anglo-Irish division of the ministry. In 1991, she was made assistant secretary of administration, with ambassadorial rank, for the ministry and served in that position until 1995.
Anderson went back to Geneva, this time as head of Ireland’s mission to the UN. While there, she served for a year as chair of the UN Commission on Civil Rights. In 2001, Anderson moved to Brussels as the Irish representative to the European Union.
In 2005, Anderson was transferred to Paris as Ireland’s ambassador to France. During her time in this position, she organized an extensive renovation of the embassy, provoking some criticism back home over its cost. During part of this period, she was also accredited as Ireland’s ambassador to Monaco. Anderson moved to New York as the Irish ambassador to the United Nations, serving until taking the Washington post. Anderson is a frequent lecturer at U.S. universities.
Since becoming ambassador to the United States, Anderson has pushed for immigration reform. There are as many as 50,000 undocumented Irish in the U.S.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Ireland’s First Female Ambassador to the U.S. Anne Anderson (by Debbie McGoldrick, Irish Central)
On July 29, 2014, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee approved the nomination of Kevin F. O’Malley to be ambassador to the Republic of Ireland, a post that has been vacant since 2012. He was confirmed by the full Senate on September 18. O’Malley, an attorney in St. Louis, is a longtime supporter of President Barack Obama.
O’Malley has strong Irish roots; all four of his grandparents were born in Westport, County Mayo, Ireland. O’Malley was born in St. Louis and grew up there, but attended high school at St. Vincent’s Seminary in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, with the intent of entering the priesthood. Instead, he returned home and attended Saint Louis University, earning a B.A. in 1970, taking a break in 1968 to serve as a community ambassador in Prague, Czechslovakia. O’Malley earned a J.D. from the Saint Louis University’s law school in 1973. He also served for a time as an officer in the Army Reserve.
After earning his law degree, O’Malley was a special attorney in the Organized Crime and Racketeering Section of the Department of Justice and in 1979 was named an assistant U.S. attorney in St. Louis.
O’Malley went into private practice in 1983, focusing on defending medical professionals against malpractice claims, but also representing defendants in cases involving foreign trade and securities issues. O’Malley served as an instructor in the American Bar Association’s Central and Eastern European Law Initiative, first in Moscow in 1996 and then in Warsaw in 1999. In 1998, he helped write the nine-volume Federal Jury Practice and Instructions, still a standard reference manual for judges and trial lawyers.
O’Malley worked for his own firm until 2003 and then joined Greensfelder, Hemker and Gale in St. Louis. In 2004, he secured a huge defense verdict in a medical negligence case and the following year successfully defended a pharmaceutical executive in a Medicare kickback trial.
In 2009, O’Malley was appointed by Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) to be the only non-physician on the Missouri Board of Registration for the Healing Arts, the medical licensing board in the state. The appointment was criticized in some quarters because of the belief that O’Malley’s status as a malpractice defense attorney would cause him to defend physicians whose fitness to hold a license was questioned.
O’Malley worked as an adjunct professor of law at St. Louis University School of Law from 1979 to 1985 and at Washington University School of Law in 2013-2014.
O’Malley has strong ties to the Democratic Party, campaigned for Obama in 2008 and was on the credentials committee for the Democratic Convention that year in Denver. He was part of a group that fought to have the party’s 2012 convention held in St. Louis, but the effort was unsuccessful, with the event being staged in Charlotte, North Carolina.
In his confirmation hearing, O’Malley was asked about his position on the release of information from the Boston College Belfast History Project on the Northern Ireland conflict. Many participants from both sides of “The Troubles” were asked to talk about their role in the fighting for the project, with the proviso that the interviews would be made public only upon the participant’s death. However, the British government sought some of the interviews via a treaty obligation and some information was turned over to Britain. Although the disclosures have caused some participants to be arrested, O’Malley said he didn’t think the disclosures would harm the still-sensitive peace process.
Until being nominated for the Dublin post, O’Malley held dual Irish and American citizenship, but gave up his Irish citizenship to accept the ambassadorial position. O’Malley and his wife, Dena, have two sons, Brendan and Ryan.
-Steve Straehley
To Learn More:
Testimony before Senate Foreign Relations Committee (pdf)
more
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