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The Luck of the Irish:. The Immigrants' Road to a New Life in America. Ethnic Immigrant Identities. Before 1860 Most immigrants from northern/western Europe England Germany Ireland Scandinavia. Ethnic Immigrant Identities. 1890-1915 18 million immigrants
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The Luck of the Irish: The Immigrants' Road to a New Life in America
Ethnic Immigrant Identities • Before 1860 • Most immigrants from northern/western Europe • England • Germany • Ireland • Scandinavia
Ethnic Immigrant Identities • 1890-1915 • 18 million immigrants • Most from southern/eastern Europe • Austria-Hungary • Italy • Russia • Most • Catholic • Jewish • By 1900, New York City • More Italians than any city in Italy except Rome • More Poles than any city in Poland except Warsaw • As many Irish as in Dublin • More Jews than any other city in the world
Immigration Patterns • To Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa • From the United Kingdom • To South America • From Italy, Portugal, and Spain • To the United States • From all parts of Europe
Reason for Emigrating • Migrant • Usually young men in teens and 20s • Did not emigrate as families • Work temporarily in US, then return to Europe • Came in early spring and worked until late fall • “Birds of passage" • Italians, Poles and Slavs
Reason for Emigrating • Permanent • Fled economic and political oppression • Came with families for permanent settlement • Irish, Jews, and Czechs
Ties • Migration across Atlantic strengthened family ties, didn’t destroy them • Core of immigrants’ transition to new world • Families • Neighborhoods with people from same home village • All major cities had Irish areas • "Irish Town“ • "Shanty Town”
Ties • Help provided • Information about city life • Temporary housing • Help in finding work • Loans • Multiple incomes from several family members • Childcare • Helped during illnesses, unemployment, injury or old age
Castle Garden • 1856-1892
Ellis Island • 1892-1924 • More than 12 million European immigrants • Examination room • Questioned by government officials • Examined by doctors
New York City • Many in the Lower East Side • In 1890, it had highest population density in world • 335,000 people per square mile • Business and recreation took place on streets • Middle-class New Yorkers • In offices and private homes
Restrictions • 1882—Chinese Exclusion Act • Barred entry of Chinese laborers • Set tough conditions for Chinese merchants to enter • 1907—Expatriation Act • US woman lost citizenship if she married foreign national • 1907—Gentleman’s Agreement with Japan • No restriction on Japanese immigration • In exchange for Japan's promise not to give passports to Japanese laborers for travel to continental US
Restrictions • 1917 Immigration Act • Immigration prohibited from Asia • Except from Japan and the Philippines • Excluded people likely to become problems
"Looking Backward“ • Puck, January 11, 1893
Irish Potato Famine, German crop failures and 1848 Revolutions Irish Potato Famine WWI and 1917 Immigration Act
Irish Potato Famines • Early 1800s—Irish population was 8 million • Because potato became staple crop • 1845-1852 • Potato blight (fungus brought from US) • 1 million deaths • 2 million to US, Canada, and British Empire • Became 1/10th of America by 1850 • 1879-1880 • Cheap prices on American corn hurt market for potatoes • Evictions of tenant farmers
February 28, 1880 • American newspapers • Urged Americans to contribute to relief funds • Harper's Weekly, "America is not slow to respond to a call for bread.“ • Contribution • Over $200,000 • Over 3300 barrels of food and clothing
"American Gold. United States--working for it. Ireland--waiting for it.“ Puck May, 1882
Irish Migration • “American Wake” • Would never see Ireland again • But Irish future was more poverty, disease, and English oppression • America became their dream • Letters spoke of abundant land • Urged others to follow them • Read at social events to get young to join them • Free land did not lure them • Rejected land because land had rejected them • Left in droves on “Coffin Ships”
Arrival • Runners • Boarded ships grabbing immigrants and their bags • Forced immigrants to their favorite tenement house • Demanded large fee for their services • Poor immigrants didn’t have money to move on • Almshouses filled with these Irish immigrants • Begged on street
New Home • One immigrant wrote to family in Ireland, • "My master is a great tyrant, he treats me as badly as if I was a common Irishman… Our position in America is one of shame and poverty." • No group was considered lower in 1850s US than Irish
Anti-Irish/Anti-Catholic Sentiment • Forced to live in cellars and shanties • Conditions bred sickness and death • New York City • Approximately 80% of all infants born to Irish immigrants in New York City died • Five Points area
Anti-Irish/Anti-Catholic Sentiment • Brogue and dress provoked ridicule • Poverty and illiteracy provoked scorn • Popular children's game—”Break the Pope's Neck“ • “No Irish Need Apply”
Anti-Irish/Anti-Catholic Sentiment • Know-Nothing Party • Because of great Irish migration in mid-late 1840s • Supported by many native-born white workingmen • Republicans • Irish were core constituency of Democrats • Associated Irish with corrupt urban political machines, like New York's Tammany Hall
Anti-Irish/Anti-Catholic Sentiment • Harper's Weekly • Anti-Catholic fervor intense during 1870s • Irish Catholics more loyal to Pope than other Catholic immigrants • Vatican viewed as foreign power • Declaration of doctrine of Papal infallibility • Papal pronouncements against liberalism/modernism • Chicago Post • The Irish fill our prisons, our poor houses...Scratch a convict or a pauper, and the chances are that you tickle the skin of an Irish Catholic. Putting them on a boat and sending them home would end crime in this country."
Harper’s Weekly • March, 1873
“Look here, you, everybody else is quiet and peaceable, and you're all the time a-kicking up a row!'" • "Uncle Sam's Lodging House“ • Puck, June, 1882
Harper’s Weekly • March, 1888 "An' ye've lift the pirade, Tim?' "Oi have that." "Phwat fur?" "Oi've just been towld as Sint Patrick was a Frinchman, an' the idee of traipsin' roun' the sthraits an' carryin' the American flag fur a furriner is not to me taste, at all at all."
Heeler. "How much d'ye ax, For, ter taich me frind here ter read jist three wurrads?" Professor. "Why only three words?" Heeler. "Well, ye see, Sor, if they're goin' to wurruk this Owstralinn ballit reform racket, I want me frind here to be dead sure of three wurruds, Dem., Rep., and Prohib. It's meself as kin attind to the rest av the taichin'." • Harper’s Weekly • February, 1890
“The Mortar of Assimilation--And the One Element that Won't Mix” • Puck June, 1889
Life, December, 1892, through January, 1893 • “The Salons of New York”
No Irish Need Apply • I'm a decent boy just landed • From the town of Ballyfad • I want a situation, yes, • And want it very bad
I have seen employment advertised • "It's just the thing," says I • But the dirty spalpeen ended with • “No Irish Need Apply.”
"Whoa," says I, “but that's an insult • But to get the place I'll try.” • So I went to see the blackguard • With his “No Irish Need Apply”
Some do think it a misfortune • To be christened Pat or Dan • But to me it is an honor • To be born an Irishman
Well, I started out to find the house, • I got it mighty soon • There I found the old chap seated • He was reading the Tribune
I told him what I came for • When he in a rage did fly • "No!" he says, “You are a Paddy • And no Irish need apply”
Well, I gets my dander rising • And I'd like to black his eye • To tell an Irish gentleman • “No Irish Need Apply”
Some do think it a misfortune • To be christened Pat or Dan • But to me it is an honor • To be born an Irishman
Well, I couldn't stand it longer • So a hold of him I took • And I gave him such a welting • As he'd get at Donnybrook
He hollered, “Milia murther” • And to get away did try • And swore he'd never write again • “No Irish Need Apply”
Well, he made a big apology • I bid him then goodbye • Saying, “When next you want a beating • Write ‘No Irish Need Apply’.”
Some do think it a misfortune • To be christened Pat or Dan • But to me it is an honor • To be born an Irishman
Irish-American Solidarity • Economic • Collective action key to improving their economic position and resisting discrimination • No emphasizing individual upward mobility • Many Irish men found work in egalitarian situations • Labor gangs • Construction crews • Longshoremen • Government employment (especially as police officers) • Insult/Intimidation often met with violence
Irish-American Solidarity • Social • Helped each other survive city life • Prayed together • Drank together • "The Irish have become more Americanized than the Americans." • Political • Supported Democratic party from 1840s on
Employment Options • Irish arrived at time of need for America • Country was growing • Family income which hovered around $600/year • Prejudice against blacks high • Blacks hated Irish • Irish hated Blacks • Needed men to build bridges, canals and railroads • Hard, dangerous work • Common expression among railroad workers was “an Irishman is buried under every tie”