A glitzy gala dinner at the top of the Rockefeller Centre with sweeping views of the Manhattan skyline is certainly a symbol of the success of many Irish immigrants to America.
Among the 40 or so recipients of Morrison Visas in the room, there are many tales to be shared.
"I came to New York knowing that it was the melting pot of letting and helping our dreams come true," said Orla Maguire, founder of beauty brand Lash Star.
These days every country has the same global platform, she said, but back then, the opportunities afforded here in New York, would not have been possible in Ireland.
"I just thank my lucky stars that I was blessed to get the opportunity because I know it's just so difficult nowadays," she said.
Elaine Brennan, executive director at Northwell Health said that she never saw herself as an immigrant.
"I saw myself as an explorer.
"You know, we were in our early 20s, and the world is our oyster, and we happened to have won the lotto - which was the Morrison visa," she said.
Fergal O’Brien from Dublin agreed that it was random luck that brought him here.
"It wasn't even that I was selected for my degree or some sort of IQ test or any metric at all," he said, "it was a complete lottery".
"America did that for over a million people over the past 25 years, and it's led to events like this, where you see the success that people have gotten out of it and what they've contributed back into the country," he said.
A total of 45,000 Irish people from all 32 counties came to America under the Morrison Visa programme between 1992 and 1995.
"It has been a rip-roaring success, the Morrison program and the 1990 Immigration Act, and we are very grateful to Bruce Morrison for having shepherded it through Congress back in the day," Mr O’Brien said.

For the former congressman himself, it is the stories of hope that struck him the most over the years.
"Many people were just hanging on by the fingertips when this came along," he said.
"They were here, they weren't supposed to be here, they couldn't work legally here," he said, "and this was a beacon of light".
What did he think Irish immigrants brought to America?
"Optimism and success," he said, "believing in the American dream, believing that they could make a life here for themselves and their families".
It was for the good of America, he said.
While the celebration of immigration goes on at New York’s Rockefeller Centre, there is also recognition of the fact that times have changed.

"It's certainly a difficult environment right now for immigration, that's just a fact," said Geraldine Byrne Nason, Ambassador of Ireland to the United States as the sun set over the skyline.
"We understand that," she added, "but I think in the medium term, looking to the value added, that immigrants, like the Irish immigrants who came here, who are creating jobs in the United States".
"I meet people on Capitol Hill every who see that bringing fresh blood into the United States, offering opportunity in the medium term will continue to build this country," she said.
"At the moment, the politics of this moment clearly don't allow that and so I think we need a second coming of a Bruce Morrison," she added.