The
Story Behind The Island
Blarney Island is located one mile off shore,
inspiring our slogan "A Mile Away From
Reality". A legend on
the Chain O'Lakes dating back to the early
1900's when Jack O'Connor and Shorty Shobin
wagered their competing businesses during
a poker game. Blarney Island has evolved
to accommodate more people and activities
than any other establishment on the Chain
O' Lakes while remaining the most recognizable
landmark. Blarney Island has been called "The
Key West of The Midwest".
How It Began
In the beginning, Blarney Island was a houseboat
sitting on the edge of the Fox River
owned by Jack O'Connor. Across from Blarney Island
was Shorty Shobin's place known as "Shorty"s.
It was no secret that the two were competing
for the same business less then 100 yards
away from each other. As one could imagine
there was a heated feud between the two.
The long standing feud came to a head one
night over a high stakes game of poker. In
the last hand Shorty and Jack wagered their
businesses and Shorty came out on the short
end. Folklore has it that Shorty, having
lost his business, left the poker table and
took his life in the backroom of the bar.
One night not long after Shorty's death,
Jack O'Connor's house boat burned down forcing
him to move " Blarney Island" over
to Shorty's place.
Jack O'Connor continued to run his business
over the years until he sold it in
the 1930's to Jack Pigensor. In 1939, the
Stratton Lock
and Dam was put up in McHenry, which
flooded the existing riverbanks. The
Dam created
what is now known as Grass Lake. Once
the lake took hold it cut off Blarney
Island
from any dry land access and made Blarney
an official island.
Jack Pigensor owned Blarney Island until
the 1950's when Ed Walters bought him
out. Walters would also experience
something extreme during his tenure as Blarney
Island's
owner
when the whole bar was nearly destroyed
in the spring thaw of 1952. Instead
of cutting
his losses and leaving everything behind,
Walters decided to rebuild Blarney
Island. Not wanting to lose all of the tangible
evidence of the turn of the century
business,
Walters
used pieces of the destroyed building
to erect the new Blarney Island that
spring.
Blarney Island would meet yet another
owner a few years later when Bud Holtz
bought
it from Walters around 1963. Holtz
bought Blarney
Island after selling another tavern
in Antioch, IL, known as Bud's Tavern. He
owned and operated
Blarney Island for almost 9 years until
he sold it to the Haley family in October
of
1971.
The Legend Lives On
The Haley family began the process of
expanding the business to accommodate
more people
and more activities. To make the
Island more
successful, the Haley's started a
shuttle service to and from shore in 1972.
In 1975 "Nancy
K. and the Associates" became the first
band to ever play at Blarney Island. Then
another tradition was born in 1978 when Blarney
Island held it's very first Boat Races.
Over the years that the family owned
the business, many members have held
the role
of General Manager/Owner. In 1988,
one of the younger brothers, John
Haley, bought out his remaining family
members.
In 1992, the business expanded to
what is now the land base of operations
for Blarney
Island known as Port of Blarney.
The
Port of Blarney is a year 'round
restaurant and during the summer
is an active
marina, plus
the home to Blarney Island's shuttle
service.
In 2003, John Haley and close friend
and business partner Rob Hardman
formed Blarney
Enterprises, LLC to bring in partners/investors
to help manage and operate the
expanding business, with the promise
to keep
the history and the legend of the
Island alive.
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