Books - "Before the famine struck"; ""A starving people"
Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 6:09 pm
In another thread Mike (mcreed) and Michael (moc66) flagged Fr. Ignatius Murphy's books
"Before the famine struck: life in west Clare, 1834-1845" and
"A starving people : life and death in west Clare, 1845-1851".
Thank you, Mike and Michael, for giving me this leg-up at the bookshelves.
I've just finished reading them and would emphatically say that they are required reading for anyone doing family history research on ancestors who were in the West of Ireland in the 19th century. They are focussed on the parish of Kilfearagh but the stories match with the accounts from elsewhere. They catalogue a breathtaking degree of callousness on the part of wealthy landowners and merchants and politicians as, over a period of five years, a large part of the population was exterminated by hunger whilst simultaneously grain was being exported from local ports.
I won't go on about the books - you have to read them - but here's a couple of snippets to give you an idea of the powerful stuff they contain.
In 1855, when most of the population was still desperate for a roof over their heads and something to eat, the Limerick Chronicle reported (referring to the fashionable resort of Kilkee which was bang in the middle of the disaster area) "On Monday a large assemblage of the rank, beauty and fashion of the neighbourhood attended in Merton Square to take part in the new and popular game of croquet and to enjoy the delightful strains of a band, hired for the occasion".
In another part of the book we learn that the Reverend Sidney Godolphin Osborne was comforted by the fact that few of the starving children seemed to be in great pain ("....I have seen many in the very act of death, still not a tear, not a cry.....").
It's kind of unhinged.
Anyway, if you are wondering why your ancestors emigrated, well, they may have been listening to the delightful strains of that band, the rustling of the expensive crinolines and the click of the croquet balls mingling with the rumbling of their empty stomachs and the crying of their children and said to themselves "Time to leave........".
Paddy
"Before the famine struck: life in west Clare, 1834-1845" and
"A starving people : life and death in west Clare, 1845-1851".
Thank you, Mike and Michael, for giving me this leg-up at the bookshelves.
I've just finished reading them and would emphatically say that they are required reading for anyone doing family history research on ancestors who were in the West of Ireland in the 19th century. They are focussed on the parish of Kilfearagh but the stories match with the accounts from elsewhere. They catalogue a breathtaking degree of callousness on the part of wealthy landowners and merchants and politicians as, over a period of five years, a large part of the population was exterminated by hunger whilst simultaneously grain was being exported from local ports.
I won't go on about the books - you have to read them - but here's a couple of snippets to give you an idea of the powerful stuff they contain.
In 1855, when most of the population was still desperate for a roof over their heads and something to eat, the Limerick Chronicle reported (referring to the fashionable resort of Kilkee which was bang in the middle of the disaster area) "On Monday a large assemblage of the rank, beauty and fashion of the neighbourhood attended in Merton Square to take part in the new and popular game of croquet and to enjoy the delightful strains of a band, hired for the occasion".
In another part of the book we learn that the Reverend Sidney Godolphin Osborne was comforted by the fact that few of the starving children seemed to be in great pain ("....I have seen many in the very act of death, still not a tear, not a cry.....").
It's kind of unhinged.
Anyway, if you are wondering why your ancestors emigrated, well, they may have been listening to the delightful strains of that band, the rustling of the expensive crinolines and the click of the croquet balls mingling with the rumbling of their empty stomachs and the crying of their children and said to themselves "Time to leave........".
Paddy