Dropkick Murphys opening McGreevy’s bar tomorrow
Music News | May 7th, 2008

Source:link
From the Dropkick Murphys:
As announced a few weeks ago DKM are opening a new bar in Boston called McGreevy’s at 911 Boylston St. We know some of you came in on marathon Monday for a sneak preview but this Thursday May 8th at 5.00pm the doors will officially open for good.
The bar will be open daily for lunch, dinner and all around good times until 2.00am every night.
We are in the process of launching the McGreevy’s website and Myspace page and will be notifying everyone early next week when they are ready. Please be sure to sign up for our mailing list or become a McGreevy’s Myspace friend because we won’t be mailing out information about the bar via the DKM website for much longer.
Thanks for you time and for everyone that has stopped by the bar already we hope to see you all there soon!
Websites:
www.mcgreevysboston.com (still under construction)
www.myspace.com/mcgreevysboston
going.com/mcgreevysboston
MCGREEVY’S 3RD BASE SALOON – “AMERICA’S FIRST SPORTS BAR” AND “THE BIRTHPLACE OF RED SOX NATION”
In 1894, “Nuf Ced” McGreevy opened his “3rd Base Saloon” in Boston. By the turn of the century, it was the place to be for ball players, politicians, gamblers, Tin-Pan Alley stars and die-hard fans known as the “Royal Rooters”. “Nuf Ced” was “King of the Rooters” and “3rd Base” was the center of the sporting and political worlds. It was America’s first baseball museum, with every inch of wall space decorated with historic pictures from Nuf Ced’s own collection and memorabilia he got from friends like Cy Young; the light fixtures were made from bats used by Red Sox stars; the painted portrait of McGreevy hanging above the bar looked down upon customers like Babe Ruth, boxing champ John L. Sullivan, “Royal Rooters” like Mayor “Honey Fitz” Fitzgerald (JFK’s granddad) and “Sport” Sullivanthe Boston gambler infamous for masterminding the fix of the 1919 World Series.
McGreevy presided over all arguments between fans ending the battles by pounding his fist on the bar exclaiming, “Nuf-Ced”! McGreevy’s was America’s first documented sports theme bar and “Nuf Ced” was the game’s most celebrated fan. “Nuf Ced” and his Rooters cheered on the Red Sox singing the fight song “Tessie” for their first World Series win in 1903 and continuing the tradition for world titles at Fenway in 1912,’15,’16 and 18. Looking back, there’s no doubt “McGreevy’s” was the birthplace of “Red Sox Nation”.
Today, history repeats itself in a new golden age for Red Sox fans. In 2004, the Dropkick Murphys revived the ghost of McGreevy by singing his name in their revival and rewriting of the Sox fight song “Tessie”. Performing inside Fenway and bringing good luck with dramatic wins every time they played, the Dropkicks carried on the “Royal Rooter” tradition as they cheered on the Sox to their first world title since 1918.
During the playoffs of 2007, the story of “Nuf Ced” made it to the big screen in the award-winning film “Rooters: The Birth of Red Sox Nation”. It featured the Dropkicks 2004 story and a replica of “McGreevy’s 3rd Base Saloon” built as a movie set. Soon after the film’s premiere, the band helped the Sox win another World Series and Jonathan Papelbon danced a jig to the Dropkick’s new hit as they led the victory paradejust like the “Rooters” had done a century ago.
In 2008, Dropkick’s, Ken Casey, teamed up with producer and historian Peter Nash to officially reopen “McGreevy’s 3rd Base” at 911 Boylston St. Eighty-eight years after Prohibition, “Nuf Ced” lives on in a replica of his original bar featuring a baseball museum dedicated to Boston’s history. The collection features originals and reproductions of McGreevy’s pictures on the walls. Nuf Ced’s own grand-niece can be found pouring drinks behind an original 19th century back bar. The new McGreevy’s even has on display the original glass portrait of the founder that greeted the likes of the Bambino and George M. Cohan.
Like a modern day McGreevy, Ken Casey even got closer Papelbon to pitch in some game bats of Sox sluggers to make into new light fixtures for the bar. Back then and now, McGreevy’s is a place where players and fans go to blow off steam after a big win. It’s a place where every picture on the wall tells a story about Boston’s baseball legacy and the characters who defined an era. Babe Ruth, mobsters, big-shot bosses and the founding fathers of Red Sox Nation made the scene back in the day. Today it’s Papelbon, punk-rockers, Boston’s movers-and-shakers and a legion of Red Sox Rooters, young and old, who call “McGreevy’s 3rd Base”, their “last stop before home”- Nuf Ced