‘Happy’ Christmas Fund keeps giving, even during pandemic
(AP):
Since the day in 1958 that bartender George ‘Happy’ Irby set out a tip jar at the officers’ club bar on Columbus Air Force Base (CAFB) to provide children with warm clothing at Christmas time, the Happy Irby Christmas Fund has evolved and adapted.
For six decades, the Christmas charity project has grown from one man collecting tips to an enterprise involving dozens of volunteers, including the enthusiastic support of CAFB.
In recent years, The Happy Irby Christmas Fund provided clothing to 300 to 400 children, with CAFB personnel devoting an evening to wrapping the presents.
This year, the programme has adapted again, due to the challenges of COVID-19.
There were no presents of clothing to wrap.
“With COVID, we just weren’t able to do that,” said George Irby Jr, son of the fund’s namesake who has kept the project going. “Instead, we donated the money we raised to Building Bridges for Hope and the United Way for their Christmas programmes. It seemed to be the best way to help.”
Even so, the idea of not reaching out directly to the community was something Irby and the volunteers couldn’t quite accept. There was one part of the programme the group felt like it could continue.
So, last week, Irby, along with CAFB personnel, travelled throughout the city, distributing 100 fruit baskets to older community members.
“It’s just a way of keeping what started over 60 years ago going,” Irby said.
Using the Townsend Center as its staging area, the group fanned out across the community, providing a bit of Christmas cheer.
THEY AREN’T FORGOTTEN
“It’s more than just a fruit basket,” said volunteer Annie Berry, whose Thanksgiving meal programme had to be cancelled this year. “It’s about letting people know they aren’t forgotten, that people care for them. When you see the looks on their faces, you know how much it means to them.”
For Irby, keeping the programme going – even in a much-altered form – is a tribute to his parents and a reflection of the values they passed down to him.
“That was just how my parents were,” Irby said. “As a kid, if there were poor kids in the neighbourhood that were hungry, my parents would feed them. I remember sometimes, they would even let people take a bath. I learned from them about humility and loving people. It’s a joy for us to be able to help, especially this time of year.”
Irby said in one respect, this year’s efforts hark back to the early years of the programme.
“When it started, back in the ‘50s, they gave out fruit baskets. So in a way we’re going back to the original idea this year,” Irby said.

