Background
Connolly was born in Milltown, County Galway, to Liam Dáll Connolly (whose grandson was piper John Burke).
Connolly was born in Milltown, County Galway, to Liam Dáll Connolly (whose grandson was piper John Burke).
He had a brother, John, who was also a piper. William travelled on to Canada, playing "in that country for an unusually long time" on steamers up and down the Saint Lawrence River. Having made a great deal of money, he relocated to Brooklyn, New York, where he bought a house.
This was sold in 1863 as Connolly feared he would be drafted into the Union army as a result of the ongoing American Civil War.
"Besides, he realized that it was much easier for him to handle a chanter than a rifle, so he lost no time in getting back to Liverpool, in which cosmopolitan city he remained four years."
He returned to Milltown after leaving Liverpool and before sailing again to the United States of America, "Modesty evidently was not his most conspicuous virtue, for we are told that he engaged a boy to carry his set of bagpipes through Milltown, with a view to impress the people with a due sense of his importance."
He settled this time in Waltham, Massachusetts, where he built a dance hall. Restless, he made San Francisco his home for a time, returning to Waltham, then back to San Francisco.
He then moved to Pittsburgh, where he died sometime in the 1870s or perhaps 1880s. According to fellow piper, Patsy Touhey, John Connolly died about 1895 at Milford, Massachusetts.
O"Neill reported that "Mr.
Burke, to whom we are indebted for the above information, says “William Connolly was the best general player on the Irish pipes on either side of the Atlantic.” Michael Egan, the famous maker of the Irish or Union pipes, who knew all the best pipers of his day, was of the same opinion.".