In the late 1820's and into the 1830's Irish immigrants were treated as second class peoples for a number of reason. At that time in the US, the people were a Protestant majority, and the Irish, mainly poor and Catholic, were a cause for concern among the Americans, in the cities where the Irish settled which were at first in Boston and New York City. During this Immigration period, the US was in the midst of the Second Great Awakening, which was a spark to an evangelical resurgence of Protestants.As an example, the antagonism of Protestants to Irish Catholics came to a point in Boston where Protestant workingmen stoned the homes of Irish people in the main immigrant locations in the city,
There were frequent clashes between each groups throughout Boston, actually.
The Protestant working classes saw the new Irish people as ones willing to take low wages and thus, they took jobs away from the settled in Protestants.
There was fear that Catholics owed their allegiance to the Pope in Rome rather than to US governments.
This prejudice lasted quite a long time. In fact, at the beginning of the Mexican War, Irish US soldiers took offers from Catholic Mexican commanders to join the Mexican army. In Illinois, the politically radical Republicans saw that slavery and Catholicism as the two great threats to the liberties of America.
Bottom line the results were discrimination in hiring and street violence. As an aside, much was made of the fact in 1960, that John F. Kennedy, if elected would be the first Catholic president the US ever had. He was and it remains that Kennedy has been the only Catholic president in US history.
There were many ships that brought Irish immigrants to the USA. The most well-known was the Titanic. Third Class passengers were on the lower decks and did not have anywhere near the luxurious amenities that the First Class passengers had. After the Titanic sank some steerage passengers were rescued, along with other passengers, and eventually made it to the USA, but many more died.
Well many of them were criminals who had no choice. They were exported to get the riff raff out of the English homeland. Many were also thrill seekers and folks looking for gold and other riches. The land down under gave off a certain allure which drew the restless who were tired of the straitlaced way of the regular society.
coz they think Irish immigrants are cannible
Some Irish Catholic immigrants gravitated to Delaware partly because it was one of only four revolutionary states with constitutional protection for Catholics. (Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia were the others that gave Catholics constitutional equality with other Christians.) One of the many online surveys of Irish Catholic immigration to the U.S.A. and of the plight of Irish Catholics once they arrived here is at http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/immig/irish2.html
there are many reasons why people could have immigrated in the 1920s. it was probably because the economy in the USA was very good, but the economy wasn't very good in Europe. Alone with that answer, some immigrants (such as the Irish) came to the U.S. because of famines, or because of religious persecution.
Many immigrants were discriminated against , particularly the Irish in Amarica where job appliclations commonly said "no Irish need apply"
Most Irish people did not want slavery. The Irish culture teaches a respect for all human beings. Some Irish immigrants fought for the south with the agreement that their entire family could become citizens if one man of the family joined the Confederate Army. (New York and Baltimore did the same to attract Irish immigrants and fill draft quotas). Some Irish immigrants (like some of many other cultures) were attracted to the slave-keeper mentality because of profit motivations or because they wanted to dominate others the way that England had dominated Ireland for centuries. But keep in mind that most Irish immigrants (and most immigrants from other poor lands) did not want slavery.
Some of the political machines in cities were controlled by people who were immigrants themselves a generation or so ago. An example would be the Irish in Boston.
Many immigrants were discriminated against , particularly the Irish in Amarica where job appliclations commonly said "no Irish need apply"
Some of the political machines in cities were controlled by people who were immigrants themselves a generation or so ago. An example would be the Irish in Boston.
Some prefer to name the Irish, many claim that it is the Dutch.
Many immigrants were discriminated against , particularly the Irish in Amarica where job appliclations commonly said "no Irish need apply"
Yes, all immigrants were welcomed. There was a large percentage from Germany. Ireland, Scotland, and even a few from Sweden. Later some did find discrimination like the Irish in the 1860's, but the early Irish were the ones who looked down on the new immigrant Irish.
Most immigrants into the United States between 1880 and 1920 came from Europe. Some of the most popular nationalities were Irish, Italian, Greek, and British.
There were many ships that brought Irish immigrants to the USA. The most well-known was the Titanic. Third Class passengers were on the lower decks and did not have anywhere near the luxurious amenities that the First Class passengers had. After the Titanic sank some steerage passengers were rescued, along with other passengers, and eventually made it to the USA, but many more died.
Eventually some went back but mostly they stayed where they moved to and spread.
The bulk of Irish immigrants came to America based on famine and poverty in Ireland. They continued to feel a strong connection to and love of their country. Once domiciled in the sprawling metropolises of America, many missed the lush Irish countryside as well as the friends and family they had left behind. Though the Irish ghettos in America ,in many ways, kept aspects of Irish culture alive, it was not â??homeâ?? and the nostalgia was unbearable enough for some to return to Ireland despite its troubles.