Brickell Homeowners Association
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Events

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Family Movie Night Presented by Mercy Hospital (February 2019)

Gathering Brickell families and friends together for a movie under the stars. Good snacks, a great movie and even better conversations.

BRICKELL TREE LIGHTING PRESENTED BY FIRST SERVICE RESIDENTIAL (DECEMBER 2018)

Our 7th Annual Brickell Tree Lighting in the heart of Miami. Here is a recap of this surprise filled night. What was your favorite part?
 
2019 Sponsors

 

Stay up to date with BHA community events, volunteer opportunities, meetings and happenings around the Brickell community including events from our sponsors and Associate Members.

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St. Patrick’s Day

  • Brickell Homeowners Association Brickell Avenue Miami, FL, United States (map)

St. Patrick’s Day, feast day (March 17) of St. Patrick, patron saint of Ireland. Born in Roman Britain in the late 4th century, he was kidnapped at the age of 16 and taken to Ireland as a slave. He escaped but returned about 432 CE to convert the Irish to Christianity. By the time of his death on March 17, 461, he had established monasteries, churches, and schools. Many legends grew up around him—for example, that he drove the snakes out of Ireland and used the shamrock to explain the Trinity. Ireland came to celebrate his day with religious services and feasts.

It was emigrants, particularly to the United States, who transformed St. Patrick’s Day into a largely secular holiday of revelry and celebration of things Irish. Cities with large numbers of Irish immigrants, who often wielded political power, staged the most extensive celebrations, which included elaborate parades. Boston held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1737, followed by New York City in 1762. Since 1962 Chicago has coloured its river green to mark the holiday. (Although blue was the colour traditionally associated with St. Patrick, green is now commonly connected with the day.) Irish and non-Irish alike commonly participate in the “wearing of the green”—sporting an item of green clothing or a shamrock, the Irish national plant, in the lapel. Corned beef and cabbage are associated with the holiday, and even beer is sometimes dyed green to celebrate the day. Although some of these practices eventually were adopted by the Irish themselves, they did so largely for the benefit of tourists.

Earlier Event: February 16
Presidents’ Day
Later Event: April 3
Good Friday