This is the second straight year the parade has been called off due to the COVID-19 pandemic Author: Ryan Dean Updated: 9:12 AM CDT March 17, 2021
ST. LOUIS The COVID-19 pandemic means there is no St. Patrick s Day parade in St. Louis Dogtown neighborhood this year.
The Ancient Order of Hibernians St. Patrick’s Day Parade normally draws thousands of people to the neighborhood. In January, parade organizers made the call to cancel the event for a second straight year.
“We know that the thousands of people that look forward to coming to Dogtown every year to celebrate the Hibernian Parade will be disappointed, said Dennis Pogue, the current chairman of the Hibernian Parade Committee. “But we can assure them that we will be back bigger and better than ever in 2022!”
art enterprise that he began all those centuries ago. joining us is author dennis pogue. a lot of us don t know that our first president had other famous skills. it thy are really whole aspects of his career that people don t know about and one of them is that he was a whiskeymaker. shannon: mount vernon is a beautiful place to visit and a distillery as well, pretty state of the art for back then. historians have always known that washington had a distillery but it wasn t until we started getting involved in the project and doing lots of research we found out not only did he own a distillery but it was one of the largest in america at that time. shannon: was he selling it, gifting it, using it for his family? all of those things. he hired a gentleman by the
news headquarters live starts now. early and deadly blast of winter surprise snow storm slams into the northeast leaving the region frozen. three deaths 2 1/2 million no power. snow more than two feet in some spots that snarled traffic in the air and on the rows. julie banderas is standing by one of the hardest hit areas. but first chief meteorologistç rick reichmuth, any relief in sight? there is a lot of relief. it is october you can handle this type of weather forever long. the storm over the last 48 hours, the storm got going and affected so many across the southeast, much of the mid atlantic into the northeast and the last of it exiting parts of maine. we are pretty much done with it, just a few heavy bans of snow coming across far eastern maine that is almost out of here. still a little wind left where you see this blue winds gusting in excess of 30 miles-an-hour, boston, portland, bangor, maine still. through the afternoon this going to pull out and we llç see ca