Fine Radar
The News Hub

Beloved Berkeley Irish pub celebrates life of co-founder

Frances Hughes, a co-founder of the Starry Plough, an iconic Irish pub in Berkeley, and the matriarch of the family that still owns and operates it, died at the age of 83 on Dec. 30, 2022, in Oakland.

Born in County Clare, Ireland, in 1939, Hughes emigrated to the United States when she was 19 years old. After a stop in Boston, Hughes moved to the Bay Area and helped found the Starry Plough in 1973. 

In the decades since, the pub became a South Berkeley institution, filling many roles from arts center to nightclub to a sort of unofficial Irish consulate. According to a Berkeleyside obituary, the Starry Plough was the first stop for many Irish immigrants in the Bay Area, and Hughes would do everything she could to make these new Americans feel at home.

“She would open her home, keep you, feed you and use all her resources and connections to help you get settled,” Eileen Hughes wrote in the Berkeleyside obituary.

The Starry Plough in Berkeley, Calif., has played a special role in many lives, in large part because of the hospitality of co-founder Frances Hughes, who died in December 2022.

The Starry Plough in Berkeley, Calif., has played a special role in many lives, in large part because of the hospitality of co-founder Frances Hughes, who died in December 2022.

Kevin Kelleher/Special to SFGATE

But it wasn’t just Irish immigrants who felt at home at the Starry Plough. Funk Night, a raucous dance party with live music that takes place every Thursday, has become a rite of passage for many Cal students.

“For me, the Starry Plough was integral to my experience as a UC Berkeley student, whether I was dancing the night away with my friends at Funk Night or nervously taking the stage to sing at open mic nights,” wrote SFGATE’s Madeline Wells when the bar reopened after a long pandemic hiatus. “For the past two years, I kept anxiously returning to the bar’s Facebook page, hoping to god the pandemic wouldn’t snatch away one of the Bay Area institutions that most felt like home.”

Jason Pollack and Louis Santer perform at the Starry Plough on St. Patrick's Day 2022. A memorial service is being held for co-founder Frances Hughes at the pub on Sunday.

Jason Pollack and Louis Santer perform at the Starry Plough on St. Patrick’s Day 2022. A memorial service is being held for co-founder Frances Hughes at the pub on Sunday.

Kevin Kelleher/Special to SFGATE

The Starry Plough, and by extension, Hughes, meant many things to many different people. 

“Some people come to the Plough for the music, or some people just come because they love the atmosphere and they just come to drink beer here. Some people just love the food,” said Shahin Naima, the Starry Plough’s manager and Hughes’ grandson.

Others came for the Starry Plough’s well-known connection to radical politics. Named after the flag of the Irish Citizen Army, an Irish socialist movement, the Starry Plough has served as a home base for political action.

“With deep roots as an Irish Revolutionary watering hole, the history of protest runs as deep today as it did when we opened four decades ago,” reads a banner on the pub’s website.

According to those who knew her, Hughes embodied these beliefs. The Berkeleyside obituary noted that Hughes taught her family to be generous, share anything they had and stand up to injustices.



Hughes was a constant at the pub, telling jokes and sharing stories with regulars. She was even known to stand in as a bouncer if any unsavory characters made appearances. 

When Hughes’ death was announced on social media, condolences came pouring in from longtime patrons, most of whom seemed to have personal connections to her. Many gave examples of Hughes’ legendary hospitality to strangers.

“Thank you for all your love and support and taking me in and feeding me as a young kid,” wrote one Facebook user.

“She … brought us 4 scallywags from Belfast into her house, watered and fed us and made us very welcome,” wrote another. 

Well-wishers are invited to the Starry Plough (3101 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley) for a celebration of Hughes’ life at 3 p.m. on Sunday.

For more latest Food & Drinks News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! FineRadar is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.
Leave A Reply

Your email address will not be published.