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New York's Top 10 Irish historical sites - SEE PHOTOS


Ellis Island in Upper New York Bay
Ellis Island in Upper New York Bay

Photo gallery - NYC's best Irish historical sites

There’s an old joke that asks what’s the biggest difference between Ireland and the United States? The answer is that more Irish people live here.

Joking aside, the truth is the Irish have made their mark on Manhattan for centuries, building the skyscrapers, policing the streets and eventually running city hall.

That’s why when you visit the Big Apple you won’t be short of fascinating historical sites of enduring importance to the Irish.

Here’s a list of New York’s top 10 Irish historical sites.

1. Ellis Island

Ellis Island, located at the mouth of the Hudson River in New York Harbor was from January 1, 1892, until November 12, 1954 the main entry facility for immigrants entering the United States. Its importance to the story of the United States is inestimable.

More than 12 million immigrants passed through Ellis Island between 1892 and 1954 but the very first immigrant to pass through Ellis Island was Annie Moore who arrived here from County Cork aboard the steamship Nevada on January 1, 1892, her fifteenth birthday. As the first person to be processed at the newly opened facility she was presented with an American $10 gold coin.

www.ellisisland.org

2. Irish Hunger Memorial

One and a half million people died between 1846 and 1850 in the famine in Ireland. New York’s new Irish Hunger Memorial, located at is located on a one-half acre site at the corner of Vesey Street and North End Avenue in Manhattan, is a monument to those who perished during An Gorta Mor (The Great Hunger), and is a symbol to highlight areas of the world affected by hunger today.

Comprising in part a quarter-acre of land, arrayed with barren potato furrows, flora from County Mayo, the memorial features rocks from each of Ireland’s 32 counties.

www.batteryparkcity.org/page/page4_6.html

3. The Five Points

The Five Points was a notorious slum centered on the intersection of Anthony (now Worth Street), Orange (now Baxter Street), and Cross (now Mosco Street) in New York City. The swampy, insect-ridden conditions led to most middle and upper class inhabitants fleeing, leaving the neighborhood open to the influx of poor immigrants that started in the early 1820’s and reached a torrent in the 1840’s due to the Irish famine.


Nster.com


5 Comments

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5 Points was a slum full of Irish Criminals. My ancesters by pass New York, and none of them ever set foot in Ellis Island. They worked building the Pennsylvania Canals in the 1840's. They voted Republican, and called themselvies America. Although, one section of my family died in the Great Hunger. That entire family would have been wiped out, if it wasn't for a maternal grandfather. The Maternal Grandfather could only afford passage to America for one child, my Greatgrandfather. That Greatgrandfather was the cornerstone of my family, and built a business. Ironicly in his old age, he starved himself to death from survivor's remorse. My family was Republican, and move out of the city slum into the country.
Yet again, the "fresh" Irish of Irish Central disrepect the legacy of the old Irish. Where's Fordham University - established in 1841 as St. John’s College by the Right Rev. John Hughes, an Irish immgrant. The 69th Regiment Armory, home of the original Fighting Irish. The Bronx Zoo, which was created when Fordham sold the land to the city on the condition that the land be used for a zoo. Fordham made a similar contribution to the Botanical Gardens. West Point, the intellectual hub of America's frist silicon valley (based on iron), led by Dennis Hart Mahan.
There is a mass grave and high cross on Staten Island for those who died in sight of land but perished on coffin ships in the harbor. Wouldn't want to forget that.
Rory Dolans, in Yonkers, the center of Irish conviviality and community for the entire NYC ares.
Wow. You guys REALLY need a proofreader. Sheesh!
 




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