On the 150th anniversary of the Irish famine which sparked the wave of emigration that forever shaped the course of the American nation, The Irish In America celebrates the comprehensive and vibrant history. Through illuminating essays and contributions from noted Irish American personalities, the audiobook paints a vivid picture of the Irish experience in the United States. This history is told through selections whose themes are taken from the most important institutions of Irish life: the Parish, the Precinct, the Work, the Players and the Family. The Irish identity in America is captured through the personal stories of families workers local churches. entertainers, and many others, culminating in an unusually moving and modulated social, cultural, and political history of Irish Americans.
Ultimate Reading Challenge 2017. A book about immigrants.
Irish have been coming to America since colonial days and continue to come even today, however, there was a mass emigration from 1845 - 1851 as a result of the potato famine. During a period of ten years beginning with the initial incidence of the potato famine, the population of Ireland decreased by 1/4th. About 1/2 of those died and about 1/2 left; many who left died before arriving either in the U.S. or Canada and others died not long after arriving.
Among the more famous Irish Americans who have contributed to the U.S. are: Eugene O'Neill, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, Henry Ford, Daniel Boone, Davey Crockett, Henry Knox, Commodore John Barry, Andrew Jackson, Sinclair Lewis, Andrew Greeley, Matthew Brady, Audie Murphy, Helen Hayes, Walt Disney, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ronald Reagan, Nellie Bly, Gracie Allen, Stephen Foster, George M. Cohan, Walter Brennan, James Cagney, Bing Crosby, Grace Kelly, Gene Kelly, John Wayne, Ellen Burstyn, Carroll O'Connor, Rosemary Clooney, Maureen O'Sullivan and 4 individuals who won the Pulitzer Prize between 1986 and 1997 (Jimmy Breslin, Anna Quindlen, Jim Dwyer, and Eileen McNamara. A great many Irish Catholic bishops, priests, and nuns emigrated to the U.S. Since the inception of the Medal of Honor during the Civil War, more Irish American have won that award than any other ethnic group. Many who came went into politics. A great number of young single females came to work as servants, either cooks or maids. Men helped to build the canals, railroads, and buildings. Many were miners. Police and fire departments were once dominated by Irish Americans. And they did all this DESPITE signs that read NO IRISH NEED APPLY. They have good reason to be proud, yet unlike some other immigrant groups, they readily assimilated and consider themselves Americans.
At one time there were more Irish in New York City than in either Dublin or Belfast. Until recently, all those who left knew they would never seem home or family again. They knew the passage was dangerous. They had no idea what awaited them in North America and many died from cholera or accidents in the dangerous work the men undertook. YET many did survive and more followed them.
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