Whereas, For four centuries, Americans of Irish Heritage have contributed their
lives and fortunes to their adopted country; and,
Whereas, The Irish were the largest European group to inhabit the thirteen
colonies in the 75 years leading to the 1776 Revolution and played a significant
role in the War for Independence; and,
Whereas, Irish Americans have excelled in all professions and occupations—education,
science, medicine, the arts, politics and in all aspects of human endeavors;
and,
Whereas, The Irish American Cultural Institute and other Irish organizations
seek to preserve and promote Irish traditions, heritage and fellowship of Irish
and Irish American descendants in the State of Michigan; and,
Whereas, Mackinaw Island Fur Trader Charles O’Malley promoted a large-scale
immigration of families from his native Mayo, Ireland to Michigan in 1834; and,
Whereas, Henry Ford, founder of the Ford Motor Company in Michigan, was the
grandson of an immigrant from County Cork, Ireland; and,
Whereas, Highland Park, Michigan was the birthplace of Irish-American crooner
Bill Haley who, along with the Comets, took the country by storm with hits such
as “Summertime Blues,” “Shake, Rattle and Roll,” and
“Rock Around the Clock”; and,
Whereas, According to the 2000 census, 1,067,474 Michigan residents, or 10.7%
of our state’s population claimed Irish ancestry; and now therefore be
it
Resolved, That I, Jennifer M. Granholm, Governor of the State of Michigan,
do hereby proclaim March 2004, as Irish Heritage Month in Michigan.