Community Corner
Grand Marshal Announced For 2024 Greenwich St. Patrick's Day Parade
The grand marshal will be officially installed by the Greenwich Hibernian Association on March 2.
GREENWICH, CT — Longtime Representative Town Meeting moderator Thomas Byrne has been named grand marshal for the 48th annual Greenwich St. Patrick's Day Parade.
Byrne will be installed as grand marshal of the parade by the Greenwich Hibernian Association on Saturday, March 2, at the organization’s annual St. Patrick’s dinner dance.
The parade will be held on St. Patrick’s Day, Sunday, March 17, at 2 p.m.
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Thomas attended Catholic schools in Westchester, graduating from Saints John & Paul School in Larchmont and Iona Prep. He also graduated from Yale and Stanford Law School, and practiced law in Connecticut for 15 years. He then became a high school teacher and has been teaching AP Physics in Westchester for over 25 years. He and Megan are members of St. Clement Parish in Stamford.
Thomas began serving on the Greenwich RTM in 1988, representing District 6, Old Greenwich. In his first eight years on the RTM, he served on the education committee and served as the chairman of District 6 for six of those years.
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In 1996, Thomas was elected the sixth moderator of the RTM and was elected moderator a total of 13 times. His 26 years as RTM moderator is the longest tenure in the history of the RTM. He retired from the legislative body in December 2023.
For nine years, Thomas coached his two oldest sons in the OGRCC baseball program. He is an active member of the basketball and baseball officials groups in Fairfield County and is currently vice-president of the Connecticut Board of Approved Baseball Umpires. He has officiated all levels of basketball and baseball in Fairfield County for over 25 years.
Tom and his wife Megan have four children and six grandchildren.
Their oldest son, Joseph, lives with his wife Kristi and two children in Ridgefield. Dan, a lieutenant in the Greenwich Fire Department, lives with his wife Mariah and their three girls in Norwalk.
Michael is a former captain of the Sound Beach Volunteer Fire Department and member of the dive team, and will be married in September to Kaitlyn Hubbel.
Their youngest daughter, Kristina, is a Navy helicopter pilot with two deployments to the Middle East who lives in Norfolk, Va. with her husband Scott (also active duty Navy) and their daughter. They are expecting their second child in February.
Thomas's family has deep roots in Ireland.
He was born in Westchester County as one of five children of William W. and Irene K. Byrne. His great great grandparents, Patrick Byrne and Anna Healy, were born in Glendalough, County Wicklow, Ireland.
Glendalough is located in what is now the Wicklow Mountains National Park, one of Ireland’s six national parks. It is also home to one of the most important monastic sites in Ireland, founded by St. Kevin in the 6th century, where the monastic remains include the 30-meter-tall "Round Tower."
Anna Byrne and her children came to New York after Patrick died in 1844. One of their sons, also named Patrick, Thomas's great grandfather who was born in Glendalough, joined the New York City Police Department after coming to New York, rising to the rank of captain.
Capt. Patrick Byrne was one of the first responders to the worst maritime disaster in NYC history. He received a commendation for his conduct during the General Slocum disaster in June 1904.
The General Slocum was a sidewheel steamboat that caught fire in the East River near Rikers Island while carrying over 1300 passengers. More than 1000 passengers died that day, the largest loss of life in NYC from a single event until the Sept. 11, 2001 tragedy nearly 100 years later.
Thomas is also related through his wife Megan to the Reillys of County Mayo.
Mary Maloney, née Reilly, great grandmother to Tom and Megan’s four children, was born in 1903 on the island of Inishkea South, off the Mullet Peninsula in County Mayo, one of the furthest northwest points in Ireland.
Life on the island was hard, and the family subsisted as fishermen, using small Irish curraghs to catch fish in the North Atlantic.
In October 1927, two of Mary’s younger brothers drowned while out fishing, when a hurricane came up suddenly, killing 45 fishermen in all. Mary’s younger brother Pat survived the disaster.
The event was known as "The Drowning," and led to the families on Inishkea North and South abandoning the islands for the mainland near Belmullet, County Mayo.
As the oldest child, Mary Reilly came to New York by herself shortly after the incident to help relieve the pressure on her parents of raising such a large family. After raising her own family with Daniel Maloney of County Clare in Yonkers, Mary ended up living in Greenwich in her last years where she died at the age of 103 in 2007.
Parade information and updates will be posted on the Greenwich Hibernian’s website.
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