Community Corner
Western Springs Resident Named Queen of Chicago St. Patrick's Day Parade
Bridget Fitzgerald was a top-five finisher last year and is the second St. Patrick's Day Parade queen from Western Springs in the past eleven years.
For the second time in just over a decade, the Chicago St. Patrickβs Day Parade will be led by a Western Springs woman as Bridget McMahon Fitzgerald, a lifetime resident of the Village, was named parade queen at a contest in Chicago last week.
Fitzgerald, 24, was competing for the third straight year, having placed in the top 25 in 2011 and the βQueenβs Courtβ top-five in 2012. At the announcementβa video of which is available on the parade websiteβshe can be seen wiping away joyous tears.
βI was just so honored, and thatβs why I started crying for a second,β said Fitzgerald. βIβve worked so hard for thisβIβve gone to every single event with the word βIrishβ in it in Chicago for three years, rubbing elbows, shaking handsβ¦ I just honestly love being Irish and from Chicago.βΒ
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She follows in the footsteps of 2002 queen Megan Eileen Connelly, also a Village of Western Springs resident. (She is also the second Western Springs Chicago culture-parade winner in a year afterΒ .)
Fitzgerald said she was inspired to start participating by 2005 queen Bridget McLaughlin, who got her interested in the Young Irish Fellowship of Chicago.
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Her duties have already begun, the major highlight being last Fridayβs personal invitation tour to dignitaries like Governor Pat Quinn and Stateβs Attorney Anita Alvarez. And there are many more to comic.Β
βWeβre doing so many fundraisers and appearances and have the opportunity to go to all these really nice parties for these really nice causes,β she said. βThe morning of the parade is really the last day of a big [campaign] to invite everybody.βΒ
Professionally a consultant for HumanaVitality, Fitzgerald graduated from St. John of the Cross in Western Springs in 2002 and from Fenwick High School in Oak Park in 2006. As part of a newer family Irish-pride tradition, she regularly wears a gold shamrock necklace.
She said the hardest question in the contestβnot a pageant, she emphasized, all business-casual attireβwas Cubs versus White Sox. (Sheβs wonβt take a side and cheers both, but gives U.S. Cellular Field an edge for their churros.)Β
The contest is trickier for west-side contestants, Fitzgerald added, than for those who grew up and are recognized in south Chicagoβs highly Irish neighborhoods. But, she added, βI like to think that my passion for Chicago history and for Chicago Irish was what was deserving of the win.
βIβm just honestly so happy to know that hard work and dedication still pays off in this day and age.β
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