Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Because many people were already sick when they got on them as a result of the famine and many died while on the ships.
Ireland had a massive famine between 1845 and 1852, even though 4000 ships filled with food grown in Ireland were exported to cities in England. British landlords in Ireland wanted to be able to make profit at the expense of starving Irish people. Those that left Ireland in "coffin" ships traveled to Canada, the United States, and even Australia.
The shamrock was the symbol flown on US relief ships during the Irish potato famine.
Like millions of other Europeans the reasons were three-fold: poverty (the principal cause, from 1847 onwards), political and religious persecution - begun mostly by Scots/Irish presbyterians from 1700 to 1800, and finally the sense of adventure, exploration, etc. ...there was also hundreds of thousands of survivors of the cromwellian reconquest of Ireland shipped to british America and the west indies as slaves. how much of that survives in the current make up of the states is debateable
its in the bottom of a pyramid in the center but if youre trying to go there, there are traps and false walls
The Irish immigrated because they were in poverty and they barely had any food. They went to U.S.A or Canada.
Coffin ships were called coffin ships because lots of people died on them
Coffin ships are called coffin ships cause lots of people died on them
thousands of Irish people went to America on coffin ships with disease
The term coffin ship is used to refer to the ships that carried Irish immigrants escaping the Great Irish Famine as well as displaced Highlanders due to the Highland Clearances.These ships, crowded and disease ridden, with poor access to food and water, resulted in the deaths of many people as they crossed the Atlantic, and led to the Typhus epidemic of 1847 at quarantine stations in Canada.Owners of coffin ships provided as little food, water, and living space as was legally possible - if they obeyed the law at all. While coffin ships were the cheapest way to cross the Atlantic, mortality rates of 30% aboard the coffin ships were common. It was said that sharks could be seen following the ships, because so many bodies were thrown overboard.
the ships carrying emigrants were called "coffin" ships
They emigrated to places like Canada Britain Australia and America on coffin ships
Some of the ships were called coffin ships. These ships, crowded and disease ridden, with poor access to food and water, resulted in the deaths of many people as they crossed the Atlantic. Owners of coffin ships provided as little food, water, and living space as was legally possible - if they obeyed the law at all. While coffin ships were the cheapest way to cross the Atlantic, mortality rates of 30% aboard the coffin ships were common.
typhus from the water
Coffin ship captains were often seen as unscrupulous and profit-driven individuals who prioritized cramming as many passengers onboard as possible, often at the expense of safety and welfare. Their ships were notoriously overcrowded, poorly provisioned, and lacked adequate sanitation, leading to high mortality rates among passengers during the Irish Famine. Despite the desperate conditions onboard, some captains exploited the situation for financial gain, contributing to the tragic legacy of the coffin ships.
Well at the moment there's lots of ways to America. Just because the people are Irish it doesn't mean that they have like a special way of getting to America or anything. They go like any other people would. By planes, ships, jets or whatever else there is. Long ago though, when there was The Great Famine in Ireland, lots of people in Ireland fleed to America to get a job there and start families there etc. At that time people used ships to get America. However, about 1 million people died on those ships in total. Hence the nickname: The Coffin Ship.
Tristram Coffin went by Tris.
Ships.