INDIVIDUAL

Hall, Maureen

Identifier
NFAI.E.00008290
Preferred Name
Hall, Maureen
Entity Date
1929 - 2017
Biography/History

Maureen Hall was an Irish step dancer. She was a master artist in the 1988 Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program, apprenticing Helen Gannon.

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Rose Mary "Maureen" Hall was born in Cork, Ireland, to Thomas and Rose McTeggart. The fourth of seven children, Maureen spent her childhood immersed in traditional Irish dance, which was to become her lifelong passion. At age 25 she married William Hall. In 1958, with two children and pregnant with her third, they emigrated to Los Angeles, CA. They soon moved to Firebaugh, CA, where they spent ten years before settling in Fresno. Their family grew to include two daughters and five sons. Maureen's commitment to her husband and children was limitless. This deep love found expression in daily kindnesses and a lifetime of great generosity. She valued and taught fairness within the family and for all of society. Her greatest gift to those who knew her was the way in which she modeled a life well lived, one shaped by respect for all, integrity, empathy, a strong will and the courage to follow one's passion. Throughout her long life, Maureen shared these attributes with the many thousands of children she taught in her dance classes, all of whom she addressed as "love". A gifted dancer in a family of highly talented dancers, she discovered teaching was her calling. At the age of 12 she began assisting students in her eldest sister Peggy's classes in Cork. By age 16 Maureen was bicycling to nearby villages to teach classes. This began a pattern of travelling-to-teach that grew to amazing proportions. While still teaching in and around Cork, Maureen soon graduated to borrowing a brother's motorcycle or the family car to start new classes at ever increasing distances, and at one point would teach classes in six different villages on a Saturday. At 21 she founded her own school, The McTeggart Irish Dancers. After settling in Firebaugh she started weekly classes at St. Joseph's Elementary School, Romain Playground in Fresno, and various locations in the San Francisco Bay Area. By 1965 she had six children ranging in age from newborn to nine years old but was teaching every Thursday night in Fresno and every Saturday afternoon in San Francisco, making the roundtrips with all her children. For the students at St. Joseph's, she learned and then taught international folk dances, teaching each grade a different country's traditional dance, including ones from Mexico, Spain, Ukraine, Philippines, Ireland, American square dancing and more. Once a week after school she would conduct an Irish dance class open to everyone. Her seventh child was born just days after the family moved to Fresno in 1971. In Fresno she began teaching international dances at St. Anthony's and Heaton elementary schools, as well as her own private classes. Maureen's Irish dance teams stood out in the 1960s and early 1970s for being racially integrated, a fact she never mentioned to the children because for her race was never a concern. In the next phase of her career, Maureen began travelling annually to Ireland and teaching monthly in Denver, CO. Over the decades she added dance classes in more cities, and the trips to Ireland increased, too. She eventually amassed more than five million miles in the air. After the death of her beloved Bill in 1990, Maureen moved to Denver but returned to Fresno ten years later. In her final years, though well into her 80s, her teaching itinerary still included monthly trips of back-to-back days in Dallas, Houston, New Orleans, Lexington and Oklahoma City. She judged dance competitions throughout the United States, Ireland and Great Britain, and frequently flew to Dublin for meetings of An Coimisiún Le Rincí Gaelacha, the governing board of Irish dancing on which she served for 40 years. She also served as an examiner for new teachers and adjudicators seeking certification. Maureen regarded her greatest career accomplishments as establishing Irish dance classes in cities that had none and mentoring new teachers to carry on the tradition. This includes both of her daughters, Pat and Anne, who teach and adjudicate Irish dancing full-time. Maureen also valued taking her dancers to different parts of the United States and the world. Former students regularly thanked her for the important role she had played in their lives. From driving station wagons jammed with dancers to Vancouver, Denver or Boston, or bringing groups of dancers from the United States to compete in Ireland, she broadened the horizons of countless young lives. Maureen was preceded in death by her husband, Bill, and son Jack. She is survived by her sister, Betty Walsh of Cork; her children, Pat Hall of Tucson, AZ, Christina Hall of Fresno, Kevin Hall and Anne Mosgrove of Fresno, Tom and Jan Hall of Henderson, NV, Bill and Leila Hall of Fullerton, CA, Vince Hall of San Diego, CA, and Anne Hall of Denver, CO; ten grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; and thousands of dancers across the United States and Ireland. She taught us all, on the dance floor and off, to stand straight, stay on our toes, support one another, and most important, to leap as high as we can. A Rosary will be held at Whitehurst Sullivan Burns & Blair Funeral Home in Fresno, CA, on Monday, February 27, 2017, at 7:00 p.m. A Funeral Mass will be held at St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church in Fresno, CA, on Tuesday, February 28, 2017, at 10:00 a.m. Interment will follow at St. Peter's Cemetery. - See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/fresnobee/obituary.aspx?n=maureen-hall&pid=184242110#sthash.WJltDW4e.dpuf

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