ANCESTORS
IRISH MEMORIES
By
Thomas Fleming
My County Mayo born grandfather, David Fleming, could
not read or write. He had a brogue so thick I couldn't
understand a word he said. But I knew one thing. He was
Irish and proud of it. He had a favorite poem that he made
me memorize and recite when I was six. It was called: "Why
I Named You Patrick." I can only remember one verse of it.
When you wear the shamrock, son,
Be proud of your Irish name.
No other one I know of
Can stand for greater fame.
Old Davey was a big bulky man, with thick arms and
solid shoulders. He looked like he could put his fist
through a door if he got mad. He liked jokes about fighting
Irishman. One of his favorites was about the Irishman who
got shipwrecked and drifted up to the shore of an unnamed
country.
"Is there a government in this place?" he asked the
natives.
They said yes.
"I'm agin' it," the Irishman said.
The joke had some personal meaning to Davey. In 1870,
when he arrived in Jersey City, the place was run by Anglo-
American Protestants, better known these days as WASPS. No
Irish Need Apply signs were plentiful. During World War I,
when an Irishman was promoted to foreman at the Colgate
factory, it made headlines in the local paper.
Old Davey, as I called him privately, was an angry
man. He would not tolerate a bag of Lipton's tea in the
house. He disliked Thomas Lipton because he was English and
flaunted his wealth, winning all sorts of prizes on his
famous racing yacht.
Davey also disliked insurance men. Around the turn of
the century, there was a big expose about how the insurance
companies had cheated millions of poor people by collecting
fifty cents a week from them long after they had paid up
their little policies.
Fifty cents was real money to David Fleming. It was
what he had gotten paid for a day's work at Standard Oil
when he started out there as a laborer. He told my Aunt
Mae, with whom he lived after his wife died, that he never
wanted to see an insurance man in the house.
My Aunt Mae used to meet the insurance man out on the
corner. One day someone's schedule got confused. The
insurance man came to the door of their second story flat.
"Metropolitan Life!" he chirped as Davey opened the
door.
Wham! Davey punched the poor guy down a whole flight
of stairs. Aunt Mae had to change insurance companies.
My father always referred to Davey as "the old gent."
He never said the old man. Or my old man. I sensed there
was a lot of respect in his choice of words. Now I think I
know why. The old gent got up and went to work at Standard
Oil every day for fifty years. He never drank his pay. He
cared about his wife and kids.
When my publisher, W.W. Norton, started a series
called The States and the Nation, they asked me to write
the history of New Jersey. My agent, a Wasp from
California, said he didn't think the money was good enough.
I said: "My grandfather couldn't read or write. Now they're
asking me to write the history of the state. I'll do it for
nothing."
My mother didn't like Davey very much. She called him
a thick mick. She never said that to my father, of course.
But that's what she called him to me and my brother. My
mother was what they used to call lace curtain Irish. She
was a beautiful darkhaired woman, a stylish dresser. Her
father had been a pretty prosperous carpenter. Her mother
was the daughter of a schoolteacher in Ireland. She could
read and write and my mother was one of the few Irish-
Americans to graduate from Dickinson High School and spend
a year in normal school to earn a teaching certificate.
My mother considered culture more important than a
well decorated house -- though she liked that too. She read
the latest novels, she loved the theater, especially the
plays of Eugene O'Neil. She started taking me to Broadway
shows when I was seven or eight. She had a lot to do with
making me a writer.
The kind of Irish jokes she liked were about thick
micks. One told how this Irishman, just off the boat, was
invited to a banquet. They served a consomme. He had never
seen anything like it, but he drank it. They served a
salad. This baffled him too but he ate it. Then came a
lobster. He threw down his napkin and left the table. "I
drank your wather and I ate your grass," he said. "But I'll
be damned if I'll eat that bug!"
My father, Thomas J. Fleming, whom everyone called
Teddy -- that was my Jersey City name too -- was built like
my grandfather, big hands and arms and the same shoulders,
but somewhat shorter.
His side of the family told me what it meant to grow
up Irish and poor in Jersey City. During the summer, while
he was still in grammar school, he and his brothers Dave
and Charlie used to work in a watch factory next door to
their tenement on Pacific Avenue. Each morning they faced a
clerk in a high white collar who looked down at them from a
tall desk and asked: "Protestant or Catholic?"
If you said Protestant, even though the map of Ireland
was on your face, you got a job. If you said Catholic, the
clerk said: "No work today."
You can imagine what David Fleming thought of this
Protestant supremacy act. It gives you a glimpse of why the
Irish supported a politician named Frank Hague, who took
over the city in 1917 and soon made it clear that no one
was going to push the Irish around any more.
Before Hague arrived, my father's ambition when he was
a kid at All Saints School was to became a major league
baseball player. He loved the game. Some mornings he and
his friends would get up in the dawn and play a few innings
before school began. Sometimes in March they had to shovel
snow off their field down in Lafayette.
I've always liked the name of the field -- The Happy
Nines.
Watching them on many mornings was a big blackrobed
figure -- Monsignor Michael Meehan, the pastor of All
Saints. When my father graduated from the 8th grade he
called him into the rectory.
"What are you going to be, Fleming?" he asked.
"A major leaguer," my father said.
"No you're not," Monsignor Meehan said. "You can't hit
a curve. We've got too many tramp Irish athletes already.
You're going to business school."
Thirty years later, when my father became leader of
the Sixth Ward, Monsignor Meehan was still there. He called
my father into the rectory again. "I suppose you're going
to work your head off to make good down here," he said.
My father allowed that he was going to do something
like that.
"Well just remember this," the Monsignor said. "Jesus
Christ himself couldn't keep these people happy."
My father never became the businessman Monsignor
Meehan envisioned. History had other ideas. In 1917 he
found himself in the U.S. Army on the way to France to
fight the Germans. He went because Monsignor Meehan and
other leaders said it was a way to prove the Irish were
good Americans.
He and other Irish Americans in Jersey City were not
exactly worshippers of President Woodrow Wilson. They
elected him governor in 1910 on his solemn promise that he
would allow Boss James Smith of Newark and Boss Bob Davis
of Jersey City to have the okay on patronage. The minute he
got to Trenton, Wilson went back on his word.
That was a mortal sin to an Irish-American politician.
They might pad the voting rolls, tolerate gambling, cut a
deal or two with a local contractor. But your word was your
bond. Then Wilson made a speech in 1915 in which he accused
Irish and German Americans of "pouring poison into the
veins of American life" because they did not like the way
he sided with the English in the war that was killing
millions of people in Europe.
But the Irish, including Teddy Fleming and a lot of
his friends from Jersey City, went to Europe and fought the
Germans. In the gigantic battle of the Argonne in 1918, all
the officers in my father's company were killed or wounded.
He was the top sergeant and they made him an instant
lieutenant.
In 1968, on the 50th anniversey of the Argonne, my
wife and I went to France and I followed my father's
struggle through the Argonne, using his regiment's diary. I
saw the price the Irish in the 78th Division paid to prove
they were Americans.
We got to a place where the diary said they attacked
La Ferme Rouge -- the red farm house. It was still there.
We went to the door and with the help of an interpreter
introduced ourselves. The farmer, a guy built like my
grandfather, had been there when my father's regiment
attacked! He had been sixteen at the time.
He took us to the trenches around the farm's
perimeter. He pointed out a nearby wood, The Bois de Loges,
which the Germans had filled with machine guns. The
regiment lost almost a thousand men attacking it. It was as
bad as Belleau Wood, but it never got the publicity the
Marines got for that show.
My father, like most doughboys, utterly despised the
Marines for the way they bragged about themselves.
Back at La Ferme Rouge, the farmer broke out a bottle
of Moet et Chandon and he offered a toast: "To the son of
the man who freed the Bois de Loges."
That was one of the proudest moments of my life.
My father never made a big deal about his combat days.
His favorite Argonne story was about four Irish-Americans,
led by a Corporal named Delaney, that he sent out to patrol
no man's land one night. The two previous patrols had not
come back. These guys didn't either.
In 1920, my father was walking down Thirty Third
street in New York. Who comes toward him but Corporal
Delaney. "I thought you were feeding the worms in the
Argonne," my father said.
"Lieutenant," Delaney said. "Do I look crazy? The
minute we got out there, we found a break in our trenches
and ran like hell for the rear. After about a mile, we
yelled gas and started coughing our brains out. They put us
in nice comfortable beds at the hospital and sent us home
on the next ship."
My father always shook his head over that one. "I
might have done the same thing if I was in his shoes," he
said.
When he got back to Jersey City, my father discovered
that getting commissioned in the Argonne had changed his
life. Frank Hague was looking for war heroes to give his
organization voter appeal. Teddy Fleming soon became a
politician. Doc Holland, the leader of the Sixth Ward, made
him his right hand man.
In private, my father always strenuously denied he was
a war hero. He never had much use for guys who won
promotions or medals. He said he had seen too many people
do things under fire to save the life of a friend and get
nothing for it -- except maybe get themselves killed. But
he let the organization add "commissioned in the field" to
his biography every time they ran him for office.
He meant what he had told Monsignor Meehan. He worked
hard at being a politician. Especially during the Great
Depression. Night after night, he sat in the ward
clubhouse talking to people who were desperately looking
for jobs. He never promised a job he could not deliver.
That was basic to his Irish-American code. The people knew
his word -- plus his handshake -- was his bond.
One night that saved his life. A man with a Slovak
name appeared for the third or fourth time. My father said
he would go all out to get him into the ironworkers. The
man wept -- and put a loaded pistol on my father's desk.
"If you turned me down again, I was going to kill you," he
said.
Almost every night after the clubhouse closed, he
would spend a couple of hours in the ward's bars, listening
to political opinions, complaints, pleas for promotion at
city hall or on the cops or fire department.
I remember, after he retired, trying to tell him what
a good job I thought he'd done as a leader. How the kind of
work he did kept a city together.
He looked at me as if I'd gone nuts. "But Teddy," he
said. "You had to listen to an awful lot of baloney."
When I was a teenager, I used to go down to the ward
for political rallies. My father wasn't much of a speaker.
He had a short set piece, which mostly consisted of telling
the voters: "You are my people. Never forget that. If you
need something, come to me and I'll try to get it for you."
He meant that too. He was one of the few ward leaders
who was willing to go head to head with Mayor Frank Hague
to get promotions and raises for his people. This often led
to screaming arguments and threats of exchanging punches.
It was one way -- probably the only way -- to win
Mayor Hague's respect. I remember the first time I met the
Mayor, who was about six two, and looked as if he could eat
you for breakfast. He mashed my hand and said: "You're old
man's one in a barrel."
What does it add up to? I think -- or hope -- it's a
kind of window on what being Irish-American was all about
in Jersey City. It's a rather surprising mix of pride and
anger and a kind of ongoing conflict between the two sides
of that hyphen, between Irish and American.
It wasn't always pretty or noble. It was hard to be
pretty or noble when your father made 50 cents a day --
and you had to deny your religion to get a job. Things
happened that made you mad -- that made you want to get
even.
One day when my father was a teenager he came out of
All Saints Church and he met a local Protestant who said:
"Hey Fleming, did you tell the Monsignor what you do to
your sister?"
In ten seconds the guy was on his back in the street
with about a thousand dollars worth of new bridgework
ruined. My father had to leave town for a few weeks while
Monsignor Meehan cooled off the law.
But going to France, commanding men in battle, dealing
with people in the ward made my father and a lot of other
Irish-Americans outgrow that early anger. I'll never forget
the night I realized this.
Answering the doorbell, I confronted a small snubnosed
man in a velvet collared coat that had seen better days. He
asked to speak to my father. I said I would see if he was
at home.
My father was upstairs in his bedroom, dressing to
spend the evening at the Sixth Ward Club. When I told him
the man's name, he frowned. "He's the son of the guy that
owned the old watch factory," he said. "They went bankrupt
last year. He's looking for a job."
My father went downstairs. I hung over the second
floor railing above the stairwell, expecting to hear a
parable of Irish vengeance acted out. I was totally
disappointed. My father greeted the man courteously and
they discussed where he might find work. My father finally
decided his training as an accountant might win him a slot
at the IRS. He promised to put in a word for him at City
Hall.
I asked my father why he hadn't made the ruined
Protestant scion crawl. Had he forgotten what they made him
do at the watch factory? My father looked at me with mild
disapproval. "That happened a long time ago," he said.
Many years later, while I was writing books about the
American Revolution, I came across the motto of the
greatest Irish-American of 1776, Charles Carroll of
Maryland. He said as Irish "We must remember -- and
forgive." I was stunned to realize I had seen my father,
who never got beyond the 8th grade in All Saints School,
act out that profound -- and profoundly difficult advice -
- here in Jersey City.
When I was finishing my novel, Rulers of the City, I
found myself in a bind. The mayor of my imaginary city,
which has strong resemblances to Jersey City, is trying to
cope with a busing crisis. He's the son of one of the old
era's ward leaders. His liberal Protestant wife was giving
him hell from one side and his ethnic Democratic supporters
were doing the same thing from the other side. The mayor
finds himself wishing for the good old days, when the
Organization could settle things with orders from City Hall
and a few nightsticks.
In the book, the mayor digs out his father's papers
and starts to read the letters he got as a ward leader, the
speeches he made. I did the same thing in real time. There
were letters of thanks for favors from cancelling a bill at
the Medical Center and reports on how a son or daughter was
doing in a new job in Trenton or Washington. There were
copies of those speeches, telling the voters of the Sixth
Ward, a mix of Irish, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Italian and
Black, "You are my people."
The Mayor, in concert with the author, realizes the
only thing worth preserving from the old organization was
the caring. The rest of it, the world where all the answers
were written in advance in the Baltimore catechism and the
okay from City Hall -- they were probably well rid of it.
The caring. Caring about people of every race and
creed, because they're fellow Americans -- and hopefully --
but not necessarily -- Democrats.
I like to think that idea, that political and
spiritual reality, is what the Irish-American years have
left as a heritage for Jersey City.