Axios Finish Line

January 15, 2026
Welcome back! Axios Pro managing editor George Moriarty is helming Finish Line tonight, diving into the magic of hometowns.
- Smart Brevityβ’ count: 562 words β¦ 2 mins. Copy edited by Amy Stern.
1 big thing: Stay home
Books, movies and songs celebrate the mobility of America, cheering on the striver who wants to leave home and find their riches somewhere... else.
- Those inspirational stories often overlook the power of the people who choose to stay home and devote their skills and strengths to the town that made them, George Moriarty writes.
Why it matters: Dreamers make good main characters, but every city, town, hamlet and township has families (it's rarely just one) that set deep, multi-generational roots.
π Case in point: Holyoke, Mass., a mill town on the Connecticut River, was incorporated in 1873. It lays claim to being the first planned industrial city in America, and within 10 years of its incorporation, the Moriarty family arrived, via my great grandfather Daniel "Satchel" Moriarty, formerly of County Kerry in Ireland.
- He worked in those new mills, built a family and became an active member of early Irish organizations in the city.
Daniel's oldest son, Cornelius, started his career as a local journalist before going to Catholic University law school in D.C. He came home, got married and raised his family (two sons and a daughter) in town. Very active politically, he helped create the first Holyoke St. Patrick's Day parade in 1952.
- That parade, in this small city, has grown to become a massive annual event that generates more than $20 million each year.
- This generation laid the foundation for an event that infuses itself in every Holyoker, wherever they live. It's truly the tie that binds.
π Cornelius' two sons, Jack and Neil Jr., joined him in his law practice in Holyoke, married and raised their families (11 and 5 children, respectively). Jack became a Massachusetts Superior Court judge in 1971, and served on the bench to his retirement. Neil practiced in town his whole life, and served with particular distinction on the Holyoke Gas & Electric Commission.
- Both were members of the parade committee, and in 1979, Jack was honored as grand marshal of the same parade his dad "Nelius" helped create.
Mike, Neil's oldest son (and my brother), is the executive director of Holyoke's community development corporation, and he's spent years on the parade committee.
- This year, he joins his Uncle Jack as the second of Satchel's heirs to be grand marshal of the St. Patrick's Day parade.
π My life took me away from Holyoke, and I don't regret that. But it's special to go back and show my kids their grandparents' and great-grandparents' homes.
- And then we go past their uncle's office, and the public library that their grandma helped rehabilitate. My kids' won't be Holyokers, but they will know Holyoke, from its early days until today.
The bottom line: Cities across the country have families like this, and this is just one example. I'd love to hear from you about the families that provide an eminent backbone to your hometown.
- Tell George your town's story at [email protected].
β³ Parting shot!

"A rainbow brightens an early morning round for golfers at Eagle Trace Golf Club in Coral Springs, Fla., on Friday," reader Harvey Greene β of Parkland, Fla. β tells us.
- Harvey took this photo at the third hole.
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