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Niall O'Dowd is founder of Irishcentral.com,Irish America Magazine and Irish Voice newspaper. He specializes in Irish America and American politics and raising hell.
Irish Famine's awful impact is now crystal clear
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The new statistics from the Irish Census about post-Famine Ireland are an extraordinary treasure trove.

Every Census from 1926 is now online at  this URL. Most important, however, the statistics also quote extensively from previous Census material, dating back to 1831.

Since practically every Census from the 19th century was destroyed by the authorities or in the great blaze that happened at the Four Courts in Dubin on the outbreak of the civil war in 1921, these are the only documents that can show an Ireland that was profoundly different to what we have today.

They reveal in cold numbers the impact of the Irish Famine, the greatest human disaster to afflict any country in Europe in the 19th Century.

Town by town, village by village, we can track the declining population, the death of communities and the rapid extinguishing of the Irish language as the first tongue of the nation's people. 

Imagine America going from 300 million people to 100 million, and English dying out overnight as the first language -- and you get a sense of the scale of the catastrophe.

From 1821 to 1831, the new figures show the population leaped by over 14 percent in what is now the Irish Republic. Ireland was approaching its' all-time high total of 8 million people on the cusp of the Famine.

Ironically, it was the growth of the potato as the staple crop that created this incredible growth. The potato provides enough nutrients on its own to sustain large populations, and Ireland thrived on the alien import from the Andes first brought in as a luxury food for the rich, but soon adopted by the masses.

From 1831 to 1841 the population continued to grow, up by over 5 percent as the island reached the historic eight million mark. Then came 1845.

The Famine blight almost certainly came from an American ship. There had been similar crop failures in parts of America in the two years before, but nothing like what was going to befall Ireland. That winter was wet and extraordinarily long. In the spring the potato crop failed. The potatoes in the fields were black and rotten.

"A fearful malady has broken out among the potato crop...  the fields are said to be completely desolated. There is hardly a sound sample in. As for cure for this distemper, there is none.." reported one newspaper. That year, one-third of the crop failed. In 1846 one half and then in Black '47, the entire crop failed.

The Census from 1851 reveals the sad facts. The population had dropped by over 21 percent. Entire villages were depopulated, the countryside laid waste. The great trek to  America is well underway.

It is the hinge of history.

Without the Famine, we would never have come to this land, no antecedents of John F. Kennedy, or Ronald Reagan, or Eugene O'Neill. We would have become a European people, with no far-flung outposts from Australia to Canada to the U.S . Our history as a people revolved around those four years from 1845 to 1848, the worst years of the Famine.

The decline begins in the Census figures. From 1861 to 1871 the population slumps a further 8 percent, followed by 5 percent in the following ten years to 1881 and then over ten percent to 1891 and over 7 per cent by 1901. All in all from 1851 to 1901 the population drops an astounding 63 percent. 

In that same time the language dies, side by side with the harvest. The number of Gaelic speakers dropped by over 80 percent. A traveler who visited in 1844 and came back in 1900 would have seen an utterly different  land.

What the British could not accomplish -- the death of the old Gaelic order -- the Famine did. The new Census figures are an extraordinary account of that historic and awful event.
Tags: Irishfaminebritish
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PatriciaHarty wrote:
We must not forget also those who died in earlier "famines" including crop failures in 1741 that scholars say was comparable to the Great Famine, and 1822 and 1820
6/18/2009 12:24 PM EDT
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kerry086 wrote:


"In that same time the language dies, side by side with the harvest."

And so it goes -everyday people lost control of their ability to fully express, organize and articulate their deepest feelings and most fervent concerns in their native irish tongue...And they were rendered literally powerless and unable to fight for their children...

Meta paralysis sets in when you are staring down
2 overwhelmingly all powerful, cohersive and maniacally threatening Imperial forces while trying to hold onto your children, family land, pride and sanity.

That would be of course the royal british empire and holy roman vatican
empires.
6/18/2009 5:26 PM EDT
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noseymama45 wrote:
I loved the phrase... "in the same time the language dies, side by side with the harvest".... I believe it could be beautiful, yet had there been a harvest, the language would have lived on... perhaps, to send the message home, it should have read, "in the same time the language dies, side by side with the evening's misty blight"...

Harvest is a catch-all word for bountiful. Hope you don't mind the critique! It has been documented that a family would go to bed at night with a harvest in mind for the morning, only to find their potatos rotting in their beds.

6/19/2009 7:28 PM EDT
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belfast wrote:
the english did not go hungery in ireland
thy had all the chickens cows sheep ect ect
6/20/2009 6:30 PM EDT
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brennanirish wrote:
Niall, another wonderful commmentary and insightful article. Please accept this little crtique knowing that I am greatful for the work you do on behalf of the Irish.

A few weeks ago you mentioned your support for the view that the current "clergy-sex scandal" that rocked Ireland was, "Irelands holocaust"

The famine was Ireland's holocaust. The sex scandal, while an immense tragedy, does not compare to the famine.

Thanks
6/23/2009 11:45 AM EDT
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manhattan wrote:
Germany has accepted the guilt for the crimes against the Jews. England will never take blame for the holocaust in Ireland under there watch. Tony Blair bless his heart was the only Englishman to do so. Remember also what those those poor starving people endured when they reached our shores and found the same people in charge that had as much hatefor catholics as there cousins in England. How they all survived is a tribute to them all. May they rest in peace because they never had any in there lifetime. Niall your the best. Pat (manhattan)
6/23/2009 12:53 PM EDT
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Maureeng wrote:
The famines in Ireland were somewhat the result of the potato crop failure. But, as a Belfast reader said, the English Protestants living in Ireland then, didn't go hungry. There was food in Ireland. So, what happened to the fisheries, the island of Ireland's sea bounty? What did the English do to help? They ate the fish and anything else that was available, and they got food from England. The English did NOTHING!!!! Our fcriend from Manhattan references how badly the Irish were treated who lived to cross the Atlantic. God love them, they never had peace in their lives.
6/23/2009 1:38 PM EDT
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azirishmusic wrote:
As far as I can tell, the English landlord class did not "ignore" what happened, but instead reacted with disbelief. The may have initially welcomed the blight because it would help to drive the Irish off the land much as the enclosure movement worked in England in 17the century. The govenment hated the Irish because they couldn't tax their production.

Taking all productive land did not drive all the Irish away until the blight because the Irisih could survive on potatoes and then just s single strain of potatoes. The time bomb of Irish land seixures had bee ticking for decades. It was not an unintended tragedy, but the logical extension of the English policies.
6/23/2009 3:13 PM EDT
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tomomalley wrote:
God bless the irish, Ilove them and part of heritage is Irish and I am proud of it. They helped to make America great and still are doing that. God will always bless them.
6/24/2009 10:56 AM EDT
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brannybrew wrote:
I am a McDonnell our family came over in the 1700s they had mixed with presbyterians and came over as that. They went to the hills of Tennessee. My uncle is a Major in The Salvation Army I am trying to connect the dots as my history is pretty much nothing. He recently opened up a Kroc Center named after the family who built McDonald's fast food. They donated 1.6 billion to the salvation army. im guessing fast food is the plantation part is salvation army their indifference towards the suffering of others in other words the relief effort wasnt enough? im a mcdonnell he is not does that make him a hero for explaining the problem?
6/24/2009 11:25 AM EDT
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