BRIA 26 2 The Potato Famine and Irish Immigration to America - Constitutional Rights Foundation
The Potato Famine and Irish Immigration to America
Between 1845 and 1855 more than 1.5 million adults and children left Ireland to seek refuge in America. Most were desperately poor, and many were suffering from starvation and disease. They left because disease had devastated Ireland’s potato crops, leaving millions without food. The Potato Famine killed more than 1 million people in five years and generated great bitterness and anger at the British for providing too little help to their Irish subjects. The immigrants who reached America settled in Boston, New York, and other cities where they lived in difficult conditions. But most managed to survive, and their descendants have become a vibrant part of American culture.
Even before the famine, Ireland was a country of extreme poverty. A Frenchman named Gustave de Beaumont traveled the country in the 1830s and wrote about his travels. He compared the conditions of the Irish to those of “the Indian in his forest and the Negro in chains. . . . In all countries, . . . paupers may be discovered, but an entire nation of paupers is what was never seen until it was shown in Ireland.”
In most of Ireland, housing conditions were terrible. A census report in 1841 found that nearly half the families in rural areas lived in windowless mud cabins, most with no furniture other than a stool. Pigs slept with their owners and heaps of manure lay by the doors. Boys and girls married young, with no money and almost no possessions. They would build a mud hut, and move in with no more than a pot and a stool. When asked why they married so young, the Bishop of Raphoe (a town in Ireland) replied: “They cannot be worse off than they are and . . . they may help each other.”
The Dolan's Family Tree
Saturday, June 30, 2012
He we go!!
So what is this all about?? Another blog to follow? My name is Stephanie and I am a decendent of Patrick "Paddy" Dolan from County Mayo, Ireland. There are many Dolan's out there and I am trying to connect us all, so we will be able to share stories, photos, etc.
The Dolan's for years with the help of Ambrose Dolan had a typed newsletter that he would mail out to all Patrick Thomas Dolan and Bridgett "Mamio" McNamee realatives. I am hoping we might have another way of communicating vis this blog!
Unfortunately, I do not have a picture of Patrick "Paddy" Dolan to post or of his wife Jane Hynes. What we do know is that he was b. 7 Mar 1820 in Leckanvy, Mayo, Ireland and d. 11 Jul 1895 in Clinton County, Ireland. His wife Jane Hynes was b. 8 Dec 1833 in Mayo, Ireland and d. 10 Dec 1908 in Clinton County, Ireland. So by starting here maybe together we can trace their past as well as the future of the Dolan's.
We know that a majority of Irish immigrated to the United States around 1847, will have a post later that describes the plight of the Irish.
Would appreciate any information you might have to help on our journey!!
The Dolan's for years with the help of Ambrose Dolan had a typed newsletter that he would mail out to all Patrick Thomas Dolan and Bridgett "Mamio" McNamee realatives. I am hoping we might have another way of communicating vis this blog!
Unfortunately, I do not have a picture of Patrick "Paddy" Dolan to post or of his wife Jane Hynes. What we do know is that he was b. 7 Mar 1820 in Leckanvy, Mayo, Ireland and d. 11 Jul 1895 in Clinton County, Ireland. His wife Jane Hynes was b. 8 Dec 1833 in Mayo, Ireland and d. 10 Dec 1908 in Clinton County, Ireland. So by starting here maybe together we can trace their past as well as the future of the Dolan's.
We know that a majority of Irish immigrated to the United States around 1847, will have a post later that describes the plight of the Irish.
Would appreciate any information you might have to help on our journey!!
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