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New Irish Famine documents shed light on incredible nuns and priests in Canada

Many “Grey Nuns”, French Canadian Sisters of Charity, gave their lives saving Famine victims


A screen shot of Irish immigrants arriving on Canadian shores during the famine, from the drama Death or Canada
A screen shot of Irish immigrants arriving on Canadian shores during the famine, from the drama Death or Canada
Photo by Still from deathorcanada.com

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Harrowing tales from The Famine are now available online courtesy of the University of Limerick – and a French Canadian order of nuns.

The new virtual famine archive at the University of Limerick is available online here.

A new collection of stories has been unveiled by the University in an archive featuring translations from the French language of the real life accounts of survivors who landed in Canada and those who helped them.

The collection, launched by Ireland’s Arts Minister Jimmy Deenihan, features historic annals from the French-Canadian Sisters of Charity, or Grey Nuns, who cared for Famine emigrants in Montreal in 1847.

The new data adds information to existing sources such as The Irish Famine and the Atlantic Migration to Canada, archive at Queens University

The accounts of the bravery of the Grey Nuns and the priests of Montreal and all they did to save the starving and typhus ridden Irish pouring off the boats are extraordinary testaments to bravery and love.

The Montreal French Canadians were heroic. They adopted 800 Irish orphans who arrived with parents who had died on board.They looked after the sick and dying at great personal cost to themselves.

There are several heart rending accounts. In one, a grey nun has to separate an orphaned family of several young children from their dead father as they cling to him.

In another an Irishman arrives seeking his wife who had arrived on an earlier ship. Unable to find her alive he finds her dead and refuses to leave her side.

In another a heroic Protestant doctor saves countless lives only to lose his own to the typhus. He dies among those he has helped save.

To read this history is to be back on those quarantine stations in British Canada, the very hell hole on earth as the ships disgorged more and more famine stricken and the local nuns clergy and doctors gave eveything to try and cope and comfort.

“Throughout the grim and eventful year of 1847 Canadian settlers, from the Atlantic seaboard to the remotest parts of Upper Canada, saw with their own eyes the cruelty and suffering of the
Irish famine and the Atlantic Migration.

As one famine emigrant put it plainly 'We thought we could not be worse off than we were; but now to our sorrow we know the difference. At home we had the chance of a doctors car and the certainty of the spiritual administration of a priest. Should death overtake us there we would be buried beside our beloved dead, in consecrated Irish ground, with the prayers and last blessing of our church.'

In April, 1847, Stephen E.De Vere travelled as an emigrant to Canada in a converted lumber and cargo boat.  His description of conditions is appalling.

'Before the emigrant has been a week at sea he is an altered man.  How could it be otherwise?  Hundredsof poor people men, women, and children of all ages from the drivelling idiot of ninety to the babe just born, huddled together without light, without air, wallowing in filth and breathing a fetid atmosphere, sick in body, dispirited in heart, the fever patients lying between the sound, in sleeping places so narrow as almost to deny them the power of indulging, by a change of position, the natural restlessness of the disease.'  The food supply was of the poorest quality.  Drinking water was mixed with vinegar to kill the stench.”


Nster.com


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In 2009, Irish Canadian historian Marianna O'Gallagher donated a stone from the AOH Crosse at Grosse Ile Quebec to The Ireland Canada Monument Society. The stone will be part of the proposed Ireland Canada Monument to be built in Vancouver. Those that perished in 1945-48 in Ireland, on the North Atlantic and in places like Grosse Ile must not be forgotten. http://irelandmonumentvancouver.com/the-irish-in-canada/1845-51
To Maxxparis. ARE YOU SERIOUS?? A new potato and cold weather indeed who has fed you this crap? . Please read The Great Hunger 1845 to 1849 by Cecil Woodham-Smith but only after you read Marcella and Bunkerhill on this blog. One Million Irish people died in this scourge.
Did a Process Oriented Psychology workshop here in Dublin in the late 1990's called Death: The Crazy Wisdom Teacher." During that workshop. I recall one of the American facilitators sayiing that he was convinced that the Irish have not worked through the grief of the famine.
In light of this article, it would seem more appropriate for President Michael D. Higgins to visit Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
WTF is 'comfisicated land'?
My Grand Father, James Fitzpatrick worked as a Shepard( according to the Census of 1901) on the land that was comfisicated from his Fore Fathers,I agree with Mr. Counihan.
Well done, Mr. Counihan.
What a horrible tragedy. However I agree with Marcella and don't understand why the fact that all the Irish land had been confiscated and given to English landlords is never mentioned. It was documented on TV recently in "Who Are You," that there was plenty of food in Ireland that was being transported to England. This genocide had nothing to do with potatoes. Incidentally Smithsonian Magazine last year wrote that the people of Cornwall, England are still tenant farmers with Prince Charles owning everything. That is easily documented.
incredible unselfish unsung real hero,s and heroines, often of a religious persuasion,proving the better side of human nature,should be a film about these terrible and tragic times.
It is good to suss out the details of the famine as too often it is left that the potato crops failed so people starved....yes and a resounding no. The English oppressors took this opportunity to hit the people of Ireland while they were down by continuing to export food items from Ireland to England, rampimg up evictions (violently many times) for those who lost all ability to pay rents and or offered poor houses and soup kitchens often at the price of turning their backs on all they knew. In other words convert from their faith in order to survive - but as we honour those who perish lets carry on a legacy of making a better day today and for the future.
My GG grand father came over to Montreal from Mayo in 1842 with three infant children. He made it against hard odds, many poor souls that came just a few years later did not, they died at sea or were dumped on shore to crawl to a hospital or die like a dog from typhoid fever in a hastily built coffin shack.
One reason about Ireland's great famine was imported new potato species that could not stand the cold climate?
The "Grey Nuns" also followed French Canadians from Quebec and Acadia to Lewiston, Maine, where their countrymen had relocated to work in the textile mills. They opened a fine hospital because, at that time, working men and women, especially Catholics, and especially Francophones, were getting a raw deal. St. Mary's Hospital stands today at a monument to those good sisters and as a fine hospitals that even non-Catholics go to because of the quality of nursing care.
My Aylward, Doherty, and Knox ancestors made it through Canada to McHenry Co. Illinois. No wonder they possessed a long last animosity toward the English, and a very sad remembrance of their arrival in Canada.
My Great, Great Grandmother's family fled to Scotland at this time, because her father knew what the Brit's would do. When they were able they came to America and went through Ellis Island legally!!!




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