How a transatlantic flight in 1937 inspired this Irish TikTok sensation to tour Newfoundland - Action News
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How a transatlantic flight in 1937 inspired this Irish TikTok sensation to tour Newfoundland

Gearoid McCarthy grew up in a small town in Ireland surrounded by music and folklore. One of the stories he heard over and over was about the role his town played in a historic flight from Newfoundland. The Irish musician is in Newfoundland this month to explore those connections.

Gearoid McCarthy will be in Newfoundland from mid to late June

A man holding a guitar on a hill.
Gearoid McCarthy is an Irish folk singer who has gained a strong following on social media. (Gearoid McCarthy/Facebook)

Gearoid McCarthy grew up in a small town in County Limerick, surrounded by music and folklore. In a country known for its stories, there was one he heard over and over one that involved a place he saysalways felt mythical as a child.

"When I was a kid and I heard Newfoundland, I guess I thought it was a place they had just found because it was 'newfound land.' I was always fascinated by it," McCarthy told CBC News.

He grew up in Foynes, a village of about 500 people in the middle of a bay that juts in from the sea. It's deep water seaport was deemed an ideal locationin the early days of aviation, when planes took off and landed on water.

Foynes became famous in 1937 when it landed the first transatlantic passenger flight, which took off from Botwood, Newfoundland.

Throughout the rest of the decade, and up until the end of the Second World War, planes would often fly between the two small towns on opposite ends of the Atlantic, carrying some of the richest and most important people in North America and Europe, including then British Prime MinisterWinston Churchill.

McCarthyfollowedin the footsteps of his family members, and became a full-time musician. He's been to 60 countries around the world, but saw his online following begin to gather steam after he started posting on TikTok.

Among the comments, he noticed several requests for him to play in Newfoundland. He had no idea the Canadian province had such a vibrant culture of Irish music, but realized quickly after asking a question on social media.

A four-engine propeller plane sitting on the water.
Flying boats were the latest in aviation technology in the late 1930s, carrying the first passengers across the Atlantic by air. (Foynes Flying Boat Museum)

"I put up a status one day on Facebook to see if there was any interest [in Newfoundland] and within three hours we pretty much had a tour booked," he said.

McCarthy was about to go on stage a few days later in Dublin when he got a text that tickets were about to go on sale for the first show in late June.

"She texted me 90 seconds later and told me it sold out," he laughed.

They kept adding more shows, and they kept selling out. The shows begin June 20, but McCarthy said more will be added this week.

He's now playing shows at Broderick's Pub and Holy Heart of Mary Theatre in St. John's, along with the Princess Sheila Nageira Theatre in Carbonear. There are plans to add shows in Corner Brook andGrand Falls-Windsor.

Along the way, McCarthy plans to pop into Botwood.

"I do want to go see the Flying Boat Museum," he said. "And we're going to get screeched in somewhere. I've heard a lot about the tradition, I'm looking forward to it."

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