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Remembering the Famine and its impact on the US -- Voices of those who survived still live on

Posted on Sunday, May 13, 2012 at 09:14 AM

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I gave a speech in Drogheda, Ireland, yesterday on the impact of the famine in America. I was one of several speakers, including Prime Minister Enda Kenny, who is speaking today on the occasion of the national commemoration of the greatest European catastrophe of the 19th Century.

Here is an excerpt of some of my remarks:

“Missing Friends was the series every week in John Boyle O’Reilly’s Boston Pilot newspaper which allowed Famine era immigrants to America to seek out families and freidns who had gone before them.

It was the Facebook of its time. Famine emigrants rarely wanted to discuss the horrific nature of the voyage or the awful conditions they had to endure.

On Missing Friends, however, we hear their voices resonate.

It is not surprising  they never wanted to talk about it and who could blame them they were ripped from their families, catapulted across the bitter bowl of tears arrived penniless, many speaking no English.

Here are some of their voices from the past.

“Of JOHN QUILMAN, late of the parish of Inch, co’y Tipperary, who sailed from Waterford with his family last April.  His daughter, Mary Harrington, wishes him to know that her husband, James Harrington, died on their passage to this country; also her two children since. She is now in Troy and wishes to know where her father is.  Any information respecting him will be thankfully received by Mary Harrington, care of S. Duffy, or Mrs. Daly, Fifth street, Troy, N. Y.
27 November 1847

Of ANTHONY and PATRICK WATERS, natives of co. Mayo. They are informed that their sister, Mary, who was married to Patrick Boyle, is anxious to hear from them. Her husband died on the passage.  Should this meet their eye they will write to her immediately, care of the editor of the Pilot,Boston, Ms.
4 December 1847

Of BERNARD MURPHY, who emigrated from Co. Armagh, parish of Grangemore, townland of Aughmagorgan, in April last, with his father and 2 sisters. He was parted from his father at Quarantine Island, below Montreal. It is supposed he went to Kingston. Any information respecting him will be thankfully received by his father who is now living in Dover. If by letter, address Patrick Grimes, Dover, N. H., or John Doran, No. 6 Canal street, Boston, Ms.
11 December 1847

Of CATHERINE GILLEN, who landed in Boston last spring, with her father and family. She was sick and went to hospital and has not been heard from since. Any one knowing anything of her would confer a favor on her father, Hugh Gillen, by writing a letter to him in care of John Devlin, Pawtucket, R.I.
18 December 1847

Of BRIDGET CARROLL, a native of Killacooly, parish of Drumcliff, co. Sligo, who was taken into Grosse Isle hospital, below Quebec, in June last, and has not been heard from since. Any information respecting her will be thankfully received by her brother, Patrick Carroll, care of Mr. Samuel Downer, Second street, South Boston, Ms.
1 January 1848

Of PETER and ELLEN CARR, natives of county Down, parish of Gervathey, who left home in April and landed in St. John, 4th July.  They came in the ship Ambassadress. Ellen had the fever and was taken to Patridge Island, and Peter remained with her.  Any information of them will be thankfully received by their brother, JohnCarr, Lawrence City, Ms.

Of DENNIS MCCARTHY, late of Killmichael, co’y Cork, who sailed from Liverpool on the 1st of last May, and left his wife, Ellen Ahearn, in Quarantine near Quebec, in June.  She is now in Troy, N. Y., and wishes to know his whereabouts.  Any information respecting him will be thankfully received by addressing a line to Ellen McCarthy, care of Stephen Duffy, Troy, N. Y.

'Son  missing' John Fallon ‘had light hair, blue eyes; was about four feet, four inches in height; wore a blue spencer, a new scoop shovel cap, a fancy pants and had a freckled face.'

The voices of these emigrants resonate still.

As we can see many of the emigrants themselves were in despair, their dreams of a new life shattered by the reality of what awaited them. Only the Blacks in chains fare worse than the Irish.

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 care 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. Here we have nothing.'

In April, 1847, Stephen E. De Vere, a compassionate landlord, 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?  Hundreds of 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.'

Yet they changed America, among the famine emigrants Patrick Kennedy, great grandfather of an American presdient, later Micheal Regan ditto, and indeed, Fulmouth Kearney ... William Ford, 1846 father of Henry Ford, the man who changed America, to name but a few.

In the American Civil War, 250,000 fought for the Union. They helped create the American political system, built the Catholic Church, changed the face of Ireland and America. Their legacy is with us all today.

The poet Evan Boland said it best:

“Like oil lamps, we put them out the back —
of our houses, of our minds. We had lights
better than, newer than and then
a time came, this time and now
we need them. Their dread, makeshift example:
they would have thrived on our necessities.
What they survived we could not even live.
By their lights now it is time to
imagine how they stood there, what they stood with,
that their possessions may become our power:
Cardboard. Iron. Their hardships parceled in them.
Patience. Fortitude. Long-suffering
in the bruise-colored dusk of the New World.
And all the old songs. And nothing to lose.”

See more: 4th July


43 comments

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The reps from 30 countries were Ambassadors from other countries in Ireland who were invited to the Commemoration. About 1000 people were there, primarily politicians and their supporters taking the opportunity to promote themselves.
On Saturday the US conducted collections for your food pantries through your Postal Service. You can honor your Famine emigrants by dovetailing with that and helping to alleviate hunger in the US and countries of the world.
It really is ironic that Enda Kenny went to a commemoration about the famine. There is a slow famine occurring in many families in Ireland. Ask the woman who was forced to burn shoes to keep her children warm-or the reported 25% of Irish children who are going to bed hungry. It is all very well commemorating an atrocity that occurred 162 years ago, the real tragedy is today, when our young people are forced to leave to look for work. The elite of this country never go hungry, their children always find jobs-it's who you know not what you know in this corrupt little statelet. I used to blame the British, but it's our own Irish leaders who sold everything out to Europe, I don't know when the Irish people are going to rise up against these corrupt self serving puppets of Europe, but let's hope it is sooner rather than later.
Ireland was England's granary under British rule. The enlightened self interested English landlord of Strokestown Estate in County Roscommon (now 'Famine'(?) (sic) Museum) in Connacht/western Ireland, sponsored his peasant famer tenants to emigrate - because it made more economic sense! The profit to be made from sheep-grazing over share-cropping was greater, with a bigger market for mutton than spuds. Laissez-faire economics prevailed. Sheep ate less, bred less, and were distinctly less revolutionary. The blighted potatoe as the staple-diet of the Irish poor, may well have been deliberately orchestrated as a population cull of the Irish, or at least deliberately unresponded to. Not unlike white some Europeans (many Irish?) who slaughtered buffalo and bison stock to exterminate native Americans, and make way for the railroad. The trouble with the English ruling class specificaly is/was that they gained the whole world (British Empire)and lost their own souls. Understanding English class rule in Ireland goes a long way to explaining the inevitable political violence that was a regrettable consequence of it. Alas, the political economy that inspired the great hunger endures with like consequence globally.
Ciarabythebay: "if you look at the US and Canadian census records from the time you'll see the emigrants spoke English.". More nonsense. It is impossible to tell from the records what was the first language of any individual. Or are you telling us that in a country where half the population spoke Irish that only the English-speakers emigrated? What an idiot.
Actually, there never was a famine in Ireland, only a potato blight that happened at the same time the Irish were evicted and homeless and suffering consequently from disease & starvation. There was plenty of barley and oats and other grains, vegetable, meat, fish and other foods in abundance, all shipped out of Ireland under armed guard whilst the Irish starved or emigrated out of desperation. It's an insult to the Irish, both dead and alive, to call the time of The Hunger (An Gorta Mór) a "Famine." It's wrong to call it a famine, just plain wrong, and disrespectful, and stupid and shameful.
Handsome68, lovely sentiment.
Ireland remembers the Famine constructively by committing one fifth of our overseas budget to hunger relief. The US has 8.5 million people go hungry every day, do something about your own victims of hunger.
KevinKehoe, the British Prime Minister Tony Blair issued an apology for the Famine in 1997. It's well over, move on mate to more constructive activities.
KevinKehoe, there were many deaths during the potato blight of the 1840's in Great Britain and all across Europe.
handsome68, if you look at the US and Canadian census records from the time you'll see the emigrants spoke English.
Had a little computer trouble (earlier). I had meant to write: "I have had two visits to Grosse Ile... (etc.)." Sorry about that.
wo visits to Grosse Ile, a day trip from city of Quebec. The new arrivals, both sick and well, the graves of the famine victims, -- Catholics, Jews, and/or Protestants, -- were well taken care of by the probably mostly French speaking natives. I like to think of the Irish speakers being comforted in every way by the French-speakers. God bless, and God rest them all.
Kevin, if you actually listened to Endas speech today from Drogheda then youd have heard him say that there was plenty of food being exported and plenty of sated full bellies in the country while the poor peasant classes died or migrated.
Definition of famine [noun] “Extreme scarcity of food” Fact there was no scarcity of food in Ireland at the time, it was harvested and shipped out by the Irish elite and there British counterparts under armed guard and the native Irish were deliberately starved to death. The same potato blight spread throughout Europe and Britain and no one died. The forced dependency on the potato could have easily been reversed but the mass murders of the day would have none of it. Good oul Enda and the Irish media keep one of biggest Lies in history going and its an insult to the memory of those who suffered. Shame on all you so called Irish who keep this Lie alive and well. Undo the Lie and then we can move on.
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