The tradition of bagpipes
played at fire department and police department funerals in the
United States goes back over one hundred fifty years. When the Irish
and Scottish immigrated to this country, they brought many of their
traditions with them. One of these was the bagpipe, often played at
Celtic weddings, funerals and ceilis (dances).
Those who have been to
funerals when bagpipes play, know how haunting and mournful the
sound of the pipes can be. Before too long, families and friends of
non-Irish firefighters began asking for the piper to play for these
fallen heroes. The pipes add a special air and dignity to the solemn
occasion.
Associated with cities such as Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and
Chicago, pipe bands representing both fire and police often have
more than 60 uniformed playing members. They are also traditionally
known as Emerald Societies after Ireland - the Emerald Isle. Many
bands wear traditional Scottish dress while others wear the simpler
Irish uniform. All members wear the kilt and tunic, whether it is a
Scottish clan tartan or Irish single color kilt.
Today, the tradition is universal and not just for the Irish or
Scottish. The pipes have come to be a distinguishing feature of a
fallen hero’s funeral.
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Our mission is to provide distinguished tribute to our
fallen comrades, and to be of service to the family,
friends and co-workers of public safety employees of the
Carolinas; where heroes are never forgotten. We desire
to strengthen relations between the protective services
and the public and to preserve cultural heritage and
enrich our community by providing traditional Bagpipe
and Drum music. |
The Wake &
District Public Safety Pipes & Drums are patterned after the
well-known “Black Watch” regiment, the 42nd Highland Light Infantry.
Although it has evolved to a modern-day military unit, the Black
Watch was Scotland’s first duly-constituted public safety
organization. As part of our tradition, we aim to preserve that
connection that extends over 2,000 miles and nearly 300 years.
Black Watch
(Royal Highland Regiment) was the first kilted regiment in the
British Army, and the first to introduce the bagpipe. It's the
oldest Highland regiment and can trace a line back to 1624 when the
government of the day started raising Independent Companies to keep
a check on the wild clansmen. In the wake of 1715 Jacobite rebellion
in Scotland, companies of trustworthy Highlanders were raised from
local clans, Campbells, Grants, Frasers and Munros. Six companies
were formed from 1725 and stationed in small detachments across the
Highlands to prevent fighting between clans, deter raiding and
assist in enforcing the laws against the carrying of weapons. Their
name is traced to two sources: the dark pattern of the tartan worn
(also known as the Government Tartan), and to their early charge –
the prevention of “blackmail,” the extraction of money under threat
of death.
It wasn't
until the great potato famine and massive Irish immigration to the
East Coast of the United States that the tradition of the pipes
really took hold in fire and police departments on this side of the
Atlantic.. Factories and shops had signs reading "NINA"-No Irish
Need Apply. The only jobs they could get were the ones no one else
wanted -jobs that were dirty, dangerous or both - fire-fighting and
law enforcement. It was not an uncommon event to have several
firefighters killed at a working fire, and police officers were
often killed in the line of duty. Irish firefighter and police
officer funerals were typical of all Irish funerals-the pipes were
played. It was somehow okay for a hardened firefighter or police
officer to cry at the sound of pipes when his dignity would not let
him weep for a fallen comrade.
Those who
have been to funerals when the pipers play know how haunting and
mournful the sound of the pipes can be. Before too long, families
and friends of non-Irish firefighters and police officers began
asking for the piper to play for these fallen heroes. The pipes add
a special air and dignity to the solemn occasion. Today, the
tradition is universal and not just for the Irish or Scottish. The
pipes have come to be a distinguishing feature of a fallen hero's
funeral.

Our
continuing mission includes participation in the National Law
Enforcement Memorial, the National Fallen Firefighters Memorial and
any honors funeral ceremony for Carolina’s fallen heroes.