Tipperary_Hill Tipperary_Hill

Tipperary Hill - Definition and Overview

The "Green-on-Top" or "Red-on-Bottom" Traffic Light
Enlarge
The "Green-on-Top" or "Red-on-Bottom" Traffic Light

Tipperary Hill, sometimes known as Tipp Hill, is an area in the city of Syracuse, New York largely settled by immigrants from Ireland, a number it is assumed, from County Tipperary.

In the 1820s, when the Erie Canal first was built from Albany, New York to Buffalo, New York, the Irish were the chief laborers. Syracuse is about the middle of the route, the "hub" of the system. When the canal was finished many of the Irish settled west of Syracuse on a hill overlooking the canal. This area became known as Tipperary Hill.

When the city first started to install traffic signal lights in the 1920s they put one at a major intersection on Tipperary Hill, on the corner of Tompkins Street and Milton Avenue. Some Irish youths, incensed that anyone would dare to put the "British" red above green, broke the light. The city replaced it. The Irish broke the replacement. After a few rounds of this the city decided that if they wanted a light at that intersection, they had better put the green on top, so they did.

In recent years some long time neighborhood residents of Irish ancestry and a local business owner (Coleman's) gathered resources and encouraged the city first to demolish a old run-down commercial building and then to built a small park, the Tipperary Hill Memorial Park, and erected a statue, the Tipperary Hill Heritage Memorial. The memorial is dedicated to those who, in their opinions, were brave sons of Ireland who had stood up to City Hall and won. The statue was created by Dexter Benedict. The park and statue are still there, and so is the light. On the eve of every Saint Patrick's Day, someone goes out and paints the yellow strip in the center of the road green in time for the Saint Patrick's Day parade.

Although most people in Syracuse know about the Tipp hill neighborhood there is little agreement as to the exact boundries of the neighborhood. Before 1886, the entire far west side of what is now Syracuse from Burnet Park north to Milton Avenue in Solvay was known as the Village of Geddes. When the village of Geddes joined the city, there were only two churches in the neighborhood: St. Patrick's Church and The Geddes Methodist Church. Many Irish immigrants were attracted to the neighborhood nearest to St. Patrick's Church and area factories.

External links

Example Usage of Tipperary

AllDublinJobs: Business Grinds Available (Tipperary): Qualified and experienced Business teacher available to give grinds to a.. http://snipurl.com/ti6sq
AllDublinJobs: Qualified Aba Tutor Available To Work With Child or Children With Autism. (Tipperary): Hi I am a fully qualifie.. http://snipurl.com/ti6sp
used_ford: Ford Focus in Tipperary Ireland http://www.ooyyo.com/en/used-cars/ford-focus/
Copyright 2009 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  :: Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the this Wikipedia article.