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Naughty Santas Pledge To Be Oh So Nice

October 28, 2011

HARTFORD, Conn. – Santa Claus has never been known to loiter around town, wandering from tavern to tavern. After all, he’s everything good and has important work at hand. However, when a few dozen noisy lads don Saint Nick’s signature red coat and cap and then raise a glass or two or more, they’re bound to be deemed a lil’ bit naughty. Still, they say, it’s all in fun and for a very good cause.

On Saturday, Dec. 3, the Hartford Wanderers rugby team will dress up as the jolly, fat man, and belly up to the bar for the sixth annual Santa Charity Pub Tour. The event, which will be held in Hartford, benefits the National Multiple Sclerosis Society, Connecticut Chapter, and the fight against MS.

“Last year, 30 Santas came out to raise more than $3,300 to help in the fight against multiple sclerosis,” said Kevin O’Connell, who coordinates the annual holiday crawl. “We know our event is rather unconventional and, yes, perhaps even a bit rowdy at times, but at heart, we are a bunch of really nice guys for whom charity is a passion.”

santas

O’Connell is a member of the Hartford Wanderers Rugby Club, which in addition to the Santa pub crawl also hosts a rugby tournament each summer to benefit MS. In 2006, the first Santa pub crawl took shape when members of the rugby team, clothed in Santa suits, caroled from tavern to tavern, spreading holiday cheer and goodwill. The event has grown in size every year since, with donations coming from the participating bars and the individual fundraising efforts of the Santa Claus collective.

“I have friends who are battling the effects of multiple sclerosis,” said O’Connell, who resides in West Hartford. “We have found a clever way to celebrate the season and an even more distinctive way to fundraise for a great cause.”

More than 6,000 Connecticut residents live with multiple sclerosis, a chronic and often disabling disease of the central nervous system. There currently is no cure. The progress, severity, and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot be predicted.

The crawl kicks off when the rogue Santas convene at the top of Pratt Street in Hartford. At the ringing of bells and with chants of “Ho! Ho! Ho!,” the Santas dash down Pratt Street toward Trumbull Street. Taverns and pubs include Vaughan’s Public House, McKinnon’s Irish Pub, Pig’s Eye Pub, Black Bear Saloon and City Steam Brewery Cafe.

“The restaurants and pubs have been amazing to us,” said O’Connell, with a wink of an eye. “Each year they contribute generously to ensure a spot on Santa’s nice list.”

Funds raised through events, such as the Santa Charity Pub Tour, ensure ongoing scientific research to find a cause, new treatments and a cure for multiple sclerosis. The funds also provide for the continuation of vital programs and services offered by the chapter to those in Connecticut residents living with multiple sclerosis.

For more information on the Santa pub crawl and a list of participating pubs and taverns, please contact Kevin O’Connell at 860-995-7206, by e-mail at hartfordsantas@yahoo.com.

To learn more about multiple sclerosis and the many ways to create your own National MS Society, Connecticut Chapter, Do It Yourself event, please visit www.ctfightsMS.org.

10/28/11 

About the Connecticut-Rhode Island Chapter of the National Multiple Sclerosis (MS) Society

The Connecticut Chapter strives to provide knowledge and assistance to help people with MS and their families maintain the highest possible quality of life. These goals are achieved through vital national and local programs.

About Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis is an unpredictable, often disabling disease of the central nervous system that disrupts the flow of information within the brain, and between the brain and body. Symptoms range from numbness and tingling to blindness and paralysis. The progress, severity and specific symptoms of MS in any one person cannot yet be predicted, but advances in research and treatment are leading to better understanding and moving us closer to a world free of MS. Most people with MS are diagnosed between the ages of 20 and 50, with at least two to three times more women than men being diagnosed with the disease. MS affects more than 2.3 million people worldwide.

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