How the Color of St. Patrick’s Day Went From Blue to Green

Outside street view of irish pub decorated with shamrocks for St Patricks Day
Outside street view of irish pub decorated with shamrocks for St Patricks Day
David Prahl/Envato
Share
Outside street view of irish pub decorated with shamrocks for St Patricks Day
Outside street view of irish pub decorated with shamrocks for St Patricks Day
David Prahl/Envato
How the Color of St. Patrick’s Day Went From Blue to Green
Copy

St. Patrick’s Day usually conjures images of partying, Catholicism, Irish nationalism and, perhaps most famously, the color green: green clothes, green shamrocks, green beer and green rivers.

So my students are often surprised when I tell them that St. Patrick’s Day was once a solemn feast day when you’d be far more likely to see the color blue. In fact, there’s even a color known as St. Patrick’s blue.

‘True blue’

Historians don’t know much about St. Patrick. But they believe he was born in the fifth century as Maewyn Succat.

He wasn’t Irish; rather he was born in Wales, the son of a Roman-British official. He was, however, captured by Irish pirates and enslaved in Ireland. After six years he went back to Britain but returned to Ireland as one of the missionaries to convert Irish pagans to Christianity. At some point he adopted the Latin name Patricius. In the 10th century, the first evidence of St. Patrick being a beloved figure in Ireland emerged.

In the early 17th century, Luke Wadding, an Irish priest, persuaded the Catholic Church to make March 17 a feast day for St. Patrick.

Read more on The Conversation.

The legislation comes after a scathing report that detailed decades of clergy abuse and potential cover-ups within the Diocese of Providence
Why is progress on the state’s top hurdles so elusive?
A new state report lays out the numbers behind a familiar problem: fewer doctors, longer waits and growing barriers to care
Wilbury’s ‘Girl from the North Country’ brings Bob Dylan’s music to a moving Great Depression-era story, while the Gamm’s ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ delivers big performances for a towering classic
The Rhode Island Foundation CEO says fixing the state’s school funding formula is urgent for students, the economy and Rhode Island’s future
The case could test whether Rhode Island’s revolving door law applies to appointments to the state’s highest court