|

by Joel O'Connor
It began with a blight of the potato crop that left acre
upon acre of Irish farmland covered with black rot. As harvests across Europe failed, the
price of food soared. Subsistence-level Irish farmers found their food stores rotting in
their cellars, the crops they relied on to pay the rent to their British and Protestant
landlords destroyed. Peasants who ate the rotten produce sickened and entire villages were
consumed with cholera and typhus. Parish priests desperate to provide for their
congregations were forced to forsake buying coffins in order to feed starving families,
with the dead going unburied or buried only in the clothes they wore when they died.

Landlords evicted hundreds of thousands of peasants, who
then crowded into disease-infested workhouses. Other landlords paid for their tenants to
emigrate, sending hundreds of thousands of Irish to America and other English-speaking
countries. But even emigration was no panacea -- ship owners often crowded hundreds of
desperate Irish onto rickety vessels labeled "coffin ships." In many cases,
these ships reached port only after losing a third of their passengers to disease, hunger
and other causes. While Britain provided much relief for Ireland's starving populace, many
Irish criticized Britain's delayed response -- and further blamed centuries of British
political oppression on the underlying causes of the famine.

The Irish Famine of 1846-50 took as many as one million
lives from hunger and disease, and changed the social and cultural structure of Ireland in
profound ways. The Famine also spurred new waves of immigration, thus shaping the
histories of the United States and Britain as well.
The combined forces of famine, disease and emigration depopulated the island;
Ireland's population dropped from 8 million before the Famine to 5 million years after. If
Irish nationalism was dormant for the first half of the nineteenth-century, the Famine
convinced Irish citizens and Irish-Americans of the urgent need for political change. The
Famine also changed centuries-old agricultural practices, hastening the end of the
division of family estates into tiny lots capable of sustaining life only with a potato
crop.
The
Irish Potato Famine
by J. O'Connor
The
First Saint Patrick's Cathedral
by Robert Sheedy
The Fighting 69th
by Joe Hourigan
www.hourigan.com

©2000 J.O'Connor. All rights reserved.
|