Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie

Was the Irish famine a famine or genocide

Options
123468

Comments

  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    CDfm wrote: »
    Numbers ?

    All I am saying is that if you sat down with Wellington and his brother Mornington and took tea,you would have had a hard time convincing them that famine on a major scale was not on its way from 1832.

    Wellington was the more conservative of them.

    A medieval farmer would have been against monoculture and pro crop rotation etc. So to expect anything else would take a fundamental shift in belief systems. No surprise for him either.

    There may have been surprise at the blight but there was no surprise at the famine.

    So I think it would have been much harder to convince the Wellselley brothers and the excuses are a bit lame in that context.

    Once you accept that the Establishment were very aware that a major famine was due and that the death toll would be large , all you are left with is debating numbers.

    Of all generations, the Victorians were more aware of public health than previous generations so famine fever would have been forseeable.




    When people have to resort to french it is bad.

    But there were already famine's happening in Ireland -1830–34, 1836, and 1839 so if one sat down for tea with the Wellesley Bros in 1832 - that was 2 years into an existing famine in Ireland.

    Wellington was old school Tory - deeply conservative with, as pedroeibar1 has said a sense of noblesse oblige - a paternalistic bent not uncommon among the landed gentry which was beginning to die out at the time rendering Wellington one of a dying breed.
    In his world view one looked after one's people, be they troops or peasants. But, and it is a big but, they were and could never be equal to you (so the chances of you ever having tea with either of the Wellesley Bros was slim to none). One kept a firm but fair (by the standards of the time) eye on the lower orders and supplied the strong hand of the father figure they needed to to control their lives - one couldn't expect them to, well, act independently now could one? Of course the lower orders 'required' very little to survive and needed few personal possessions being simple folk.

    But during the mid 19th C there was a shift in power as the laissez Faire philosophy of the Industrialist Whigs began to gain the upper hand. The source of money was moving away from land and towards manufacturing. Factory owners rarely felt any obligations towards their employees so that paternalistic attitude was dying out to be replaced by an attitude of 'eh, if I can do it any bugger can' that Dicken's describes in Hard Times. Self made men became the rage.
    Later on in the century during the Gladstone/Disraeli years there was a bit of an ideological shift again - with by the end of the 19th/ beginning of the 20th the Whigs abandoned laissez faire to a great extent and began to regulate industry and bring in the first welfare policies.

    Now, with the exception of Belfast and Dublin there was little industry in Ireland and land was still the main source of wealth. The problem was that the farm labouring class did not tend to emigrate and also routinely sub divided their already small allotments of land equally among their sons until the plots were so small the only life sustaining crop they could produce was the potato.

    So were Wellington to have acted - what could he do?

    Over population was the main problem - too many poverty stricken people trying to scratch a living from too little land. How could he realistically have dealt with that problem? To ease the pressure on the land would have necessitated the removal of some of those dirt poor farm labourers from that land - how would that be achieved?

    There was little industry in the cities so unlike in England the rural poor had not migrated to the likes of Cork, Limerick etc to get factory work.

    They could have adopted a policy similar to the Highland Clearances - forced evictions - but that could easily have resulted in shifting the problems associated with poverty to Belfast and Dublin or across the Irish sea to cities such as Manchester, Glasgow, Sheffield -all of which were already overflowing with urban poor and newly arrived rural poor.

    Or forcing people to go to the colonies.

    One option would have been the redistribution of land - but even suggesting that would have been be considered anarchist insanity. Whose land exactly would one redistribute? - not the landed gentry's that's for sure!!

    There was a horrible inertia in place - sympathetic landowners who felt they had an obligation to even their lowliest tenants knew overcrowding was a serious issue but were reluctant to evict and throw their 'people' on the mercy of an unmerciful world - so many of them went bankrupt.

    Those land owners who were less sympathetic to the plight of the poor and their ties to the land - or were just pragmatic, hardnosed businessmen - and did evict are cast as the villains in Irish history - yet, how else was the cycle of chronic over crowding and a fragile subsistence level of food production to be stopped?

    In the end, a landlord was damned if he did and damned if he didn't and nothing changed until nature provided a horrible solution to the endemic overcrowding and killed off the most vulnerable.

    Everyone knew there was a problem, everyone knew a disaster was bound to happen. But no-one knew what the scale of that disaster would be or how to avoid it without mass evictions - which would have created a whole new set of problems.

    Pourquoi?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,649 ✭✭✭✭CDfm


    Bannasidhe wrote: »

    So were Wellington to have acted - what could he do?

    The idea I am challenging is that it somehow was a surprise and that you can't judging it by today's standards.

    So setting it at Wellington's standards seems objective.

    John Mitchell may not have been so far out after all or so dismissible.

    The woeful underdevelopment of the country, such as its fishing down to what Wellington called its "proprietors".

    Accept that & you have to accept what happened afterwards.
    Pourquoi?

    Pourquoi -pas ?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    CDfm wrote: »
    The idea I am challenging is that it somehow was a surprise and that you can't judging it by today's standards.

    So setting it at Wellington's standards seems objective.

    John Mitchell may not have been so far out after all or so dismissible.

    The woeful underdevelopment of the country, such as its fishing down to what Wellington called its "proprietors".

    Accept that & you have to accept what happened afterwards.



    Pourquoi -pas ?

    I don't think the fact that a famine happened was a surprise at all, they were a regular feature of life and death in Europe, they even happened in Gaelic Ireland - but the scale was unexpected as was the duration.

    In terms of 'under development' by which I think you mean lack of industrialisation - that made sense in the context of the times. Most of the Industrial Revolution was steam driven. That required coal and Ireland simply didn't have any. The coal fields in the north of England, and in Wales played a large role in why most heavy industry was situated in a band running from Manchester to Newcastle - the raw materials were situated locally.

    No - one was going to build a factory in the Irish midlands or west as the cost of transporting the raw materials required would be prohibitive. Dublin had long been a trading port and had close ties with Bristol, Cork came into it's own as a trading port in the late 17th C - aided in no small part by the arrival of Huguenots and their trading contacts in Holland. Cork also became involved in ship building.


    What Ireland did have was excellent soil and a moderate climate (even Gerald of Wales was impressed by the fact that Irish cattle could feed on grass in the winter) so agriculture was the obvious use for the land. Ireland's role was to produce the food to supply the industrial cities of England, Wales gave them coal, Cornwall supplied tin etc.

    Now there were native Irish light industries such as linen production that could not compete with the cheap cotton coming out of Manchester - but it was never more than a cottage industry and could never have competed on the economies of scale.


    We still manufacture very little in this country and have little or no heavy industries plus most native exports are derived from agriculture - so little has changed in terms of industrial development.

    As for judging by today's standards I really don't think one can or should. Or at least no historian can or should - that is a slippery slope to subjective judgement.

    Wellington (I am beginning to suspect you may have a slight crush on the noble nosed one :p) couldn't have begun an industrialisation process - that was down to market forces, neither could he had magically produced the raw materials to feed such manufacturing.
    Infrastructure was being dealt with -1757 the Grand Canal was begun to link Dublin to the Shannon - it was completed in 1803 (officially opened in 1804 due to leaks and drought!)
    The Royal Canal was begun in 1790 and opened in 1817.
    1834 the first train line was opened - Dublin to Kingstown (DKR)
    The first section of the Cork, Bandon and South Coast Railway (CB&SCR) opened in 1851 but was incorporated in 1845.

    There were too many people living below the poverty level - it is really hard to see what could have been done short of mass evictions and enforced emigration to avert the disaster that was, from our perspective, inevitable but from theirs not necessarily so.

    It's like WWI - we look back and marvel that it took the various European 'superpowers' that long to kick off on a war that had been threatening since German unification. And many people at the time did feel a war was inevitable - but no-one imagined for a second the sheer scale and horror of a mechanised, global conflict.

    parce que!


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 5,218 Mod ✭✭✭✭slowburner


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    That required coal and Ireland simply didn't have any. The coal fields in the north of England, and in Wales played a large role in why most heavy industry was situated in a band running from Manchester to Newcastle - the raw materials were situated locally.
    Here's a bit of niche history for you :p
    The Avoca mines were powered by steam from around 1860 - two massive Cornish engines which pumped water out of the levels.
    The mines actually saw an increase in production of Sulphur from 1840 to 1865 when Britain's supply from Sicily was 'interrupted'.
    Around two thousand people were directly employed by the mine companies at the time (the Associated Mine Company and the Hibernian Mine company).


    lpsm_avoca.jpg
    Williams' Engine houses in Avoca today.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    slowburner wrote: »
    Here's a bit of niche history for you :p
    The Avoca mines were powered by steam from around 1860 - two massive Cornish engines which pumped water out of the levels.
    The mines actually saw an increase in production of Sulphur from 1840 to 1865 when Britain's supply from Sicily was 'interrupted'.
    Around two thousand people were directly employed by the mine companies at the time (the Associated Mine Company and the Hibernian Mine company).


    lpsm_avoca.jpg
    Williams' Engine houses in Avoca today.

    Was it water powered before that?

    I assume the woollen mill that first opened around 1723 was using the same hydro technology as the grain mill that had been there?


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 5,218 Mod ✭✭✭✭slowburner


    It was, but slightly different technology - the Handweavers was powered by a wheel on a millstream.
    You've caught me out a bit here
    I know that prior to the rams being powered by steam they were referred to as being 'powered entirely by water'.
    The problem is that the mines are on the sides of a steep valley and there are no rivers or streams to power a wheel - I don't know how the water powered the rams or if the water referred to was steam.
    I'd better read up.
    :o

    By the way, a Cornish Historian (Sharron Schwartz) and her geologist partner (Martin Critchley) are writing a book about the mines of Wicklow - I personally guarantee that it will be fascinating.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    slowburner wrote: »
    It was, but slightly different technology - the Handweavers was powered by a wheel on a millstream.
    You've caught me out a bit here
    I know that prior to the rams being powered by steam they were referred to as being 'powered entirely by water'.
    The problem is that the mines are on the sides of a steep valley and there are no rivers or streams to power a wheel - I don't know how the water powered the rams or if the water referred to was steam.
    I'd better read up.
    :o

    By the way, a Cornish Historian (Sharron Schwartz) and her geologist partner (Martin Critchley) are writing a book about the mines of Wicklow - I personally guarantee that it will be fascinating.

    A mill related interesting fact (well I think it's interesting anyway) the horizontal water mill was favoured in Gaelic Ireland.

    I t took me ages to find a source I could link to - but never fear:
    The horizontal watermill was the preferred form in early medieval Ireland, probably because it was better suited to small, fast-flowing steams and, also, because of the absence of gears, it was comparatively simple and cheap to build. Typically the horizontal mill was housed within a two-story, rectangular structure consisting of an upper and a lower room. The upper room contained the grinding stones and the hopper mechanism for the grain, while a vertical shaft connected the upper grinding stone with a horizontal water-wheel, composed of paddles, in the chamber below. Water was channeled by means of a millrace and a chute so that it fell onto the horizontal wheel causing it to turn. One revolution of the waterwheel produced one revolution of the upper rotary stone, which was usually no more than about three feet across.
    http://what-when-how.com/medieval-ireland/mills-and-milling-medieval-ireland/

    I just LOVE the stuff one can find on the interweb :D


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 5,218 Mod ✭✭✭✭slowburner


    They say a picture's worth a thousand words (pinched from your wonderful link)

    tmpD18_thumb_thumb.jpg


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    slowburner wrote: »
    They say a picture's worth a thousand words (pinched from your wonderful link)

    tmpD18_thumb_thumb.jpg
    Wrong picture!

    Try this link: http://www.top-alternative-energy-sources.com/water-wheel-design.html


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,108 ✭✭✭pedroeibar1


    slowburner wrote: »
    They say a picture's worth a thousand words (pinched from your wonderful link)


    That's a vertical wheel, with gears


  • Advertisement
  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    That's a vertical wheel, with gears

    I also LOVE how pedantic history buffs are...My kinda people. :D


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 5,218 Mod ✭✭✭✭slowburner


    Just to educate you all, this is what a horizontal water wheel looks like :p
    water-wheel-horiz400x350.jpg


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,108 ✭✭✭pedroeibar1


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    I also LOVE how pedantic history buffs are...My kinda people. :D
    Oh Lord no, not pedantic, just horizontally challenged:D


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 5,218 Mod ✭✭✭✭slowburner


    I came across this interesting snippet on dietary analysis. It got a bit garbled in the process of pasting and it reverts back to gobbledygook after tidying it up - I hope it is half way legible.
    TABLE 1. NUTRITIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE AVERAGE DAILY DIET OF AN IRISH LABOURER, 1839
    Quantity Protein Fat Carbo- Energy Ca. Fe. Vit A Vit D
    hydrate Value
    g/ml g g g kcal mg mg gg RE** pg
    Potatoes 5113* 71.6 Tr 1007.3 4090 220 24.5 Tr
    Buttermilk 1800 63.0 3.6 91.8 630 2178 Tr Tr
    134.6 3.6 1099.1 4720 2398 24.5 Tr

    This exercise clearly demonstrates exceptionally high values of protein, carbohydrates, energy value (calories), and minerals, but also grossly deficient vitamin A
    and vitamin D levels.
    The diet was, however, partially redeemed at the season when
    whole milk was available.
    One pint of milk would have provided about 225 mg RE of
    vitamin A, still below the recommended intake, yet better than a diet devoid of the vitamin.
    When the potato crop was a success, the Irish labourer was on the whole well nourished; but when the potato harvest failed, this dependence on one crop which was so susceptible to the vagaries of weather and disease resulted in distress.
    It can be read properly here
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1139421/

    On the subject of horizontal/vertical challenges; I remember hearing that the average height in Ireland, prior to the famine, was around six feet - any truth in this?


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    slowburner wrote: »
    I came across this interesting snippet on dietary analysis. It got a bit garbled in the process of pasting and it reverts back to gobbledygook after tidying it up - I hope it is half way legible.

    It can be read properly here
    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1139421/

    On the subject of horizontal/vertical challenges; I remember hearing that the average height in Ireland, prior to the famine, was around six feet - any truth in this?

    And the spud of choice was the Apple potato but the reality of life was the Lumper
    The Lumper Indicted
    Several recent contributions to pre-famine Irish economic history have drawn attention to the apparent contrast between the abject poverty of the Irish masses and their relatively high nutritional status. Poverty, they argue, was mitigated by a potato-dominated diet which, while monotonous, was adequate in terms of calories and protein. Modern nutritional analysis indeed concedes that potatoes are good food - according to one well-known account ‘the potato is the only single cheap food that can support human life when fed as the sole article of diet’. But this raises a question-mark about the potato, since the potatoes consumed in pre-famine Ireland differ from those common today. The poor reputation of the kind most closely linked to the Famine, the notorious Lumper, makes the question all the more apposite. Thus, in assessing calorie intake before the Famine, knowing the acreage under potatoes and the average yield per acre is not enough: potato quality is also important.
    In 1810 the Cork agriculturist Horatio Townsend noted that Irish potatoes were ‘pleasant, mealy, and nourishing’ compared to the ‘watery and ill-flavoured’ varieties prevalent in England. Potato quality declined in Ireland thereafter, however, and on the eve of the Famine the very poor were often forced to rely almost exclusively on inferior varieties, notably the Lumper. Thus in 1832 a Kerry campaigner against tithes complained of ‘gan do bhiadh againn ach lompers agus an nídh nach ar bfiudh leis na ministéirighe d’ithead (our only food being lumpers and what the ministers would not eat)’. When the English radical William Cobbett visited Waterford in 1834, he was told that ‘when men or women are employed, at six-pence a day and their board, to dig Minions or Apple-potatoes, they are not suffered to taste them, but are sent to another field to dig Lumpers to eat’.

    The Lumper as a food source
    For the poor, who evidently preferred the premium Apple potato and even the Cup (hardy but coarser than the Apple), the spread of the Lumper indicated impoverishment. It was tasteless, but was it also poor food? The dry matter content (i.e. starch) in any crop of potatoes is quite variable: climate, pests, soil and agricultural practices all play a role. Variety is also crucial and, given its poor press, the watery and ungainly Lumper probably contained less dry matter than other cultivated varieties. But did it also contain less than modern varieties ? And how widely was it consumed? We cannot assume that the nutritional quality of pre-Famine foods matched that of modern varieties.
    http://www.historyireland.com/volumes/volume1/issue1/features/?id=99

    I read that the Irish peasant in the 19th C was notably taller, fitter and healthier then his/her European counterparts - but can't for the life of me remember where - it was about 20 years ago...

    I do remember reading in the Sunday Times last year where their gardening person, who is involved in trying to revive 'extinct' varieties of potatoes, grew Lumpers. He dreaded eating them as he heard all his life they were both tasteless and nasty- in fact he said it was one of the nicest variety of spud he had eaten in many a long year. I'm thinking of giving it a go if I can get some Lumper seed potatoes.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    And the spud of choice was the Apple potato...
    La pomme pomme de terre.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 122 ✭✭Nitochris


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    And the spud of choice was the Apple potato but the reality of life was the Lumper

    http://www.historyireland.com/volumes/volume1/issue1/features/?id=99

    I read that the Irish peasant in the 19th C was notably taller, fitter and healthier then his/her European counterparts - but can't for the life of me remember where - it was about 20 years ago...

    I do remember reading in the Sunday Times last year where their gardening person, who is involved in trying to revive 'extinct' varieties of potatoes, grew Lumpers. He dreaded eating them as he heard all his life they were both tasteless and nasty- in fact he said it was one of the nicest variety of spud he had eaten in many a long year. I'm thinking of giving it a go if I can get some Lumper seed potatoes.

    I took part in a bit of planting of Lumpers at Strokestown using loys and digging lazybeds. It wasn't easy (the digging part - one of the group seemed to find it easy I didn't). Didn't get to taste them.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    La pomme pomme de terre.

    Sounds waaay more sophisticated then Práta Úll.


    je voudrais une*pomme pomme de terre avec beurre?:cool:

    Ca Bhfuil mo Práta úll? ;)





    * (un? - dammit what gender is a French spud?) Edit to say- sigh - La pomme pomme de terre - tis a wenchy spud and no mistake.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,649 ✭✭✭✭CDfm


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    I don't think the fact that a famine happened was a surprise at all, they were a regular feature of life and death in Europe, they even happened in Gaelic Ireland - but the scale was unexpected as was the duration.
    In terms of 'under development' by which I think you mean lack of industrialisation - that made sense in the context of the times.

    Lots of the emigration from the Wexford/Waterford area was recruitment for the saltfish industries in Newfoundland which themselves were underdeveloped to supply the French market.

    So the skilled workers were targeted leading to under development of the Irish industry.
    No - one was going to build a factory in the Irish midlands or west as the cost of transporting the raw materials required would be prohibitive.

    But what was there was stiffled by British politics - it would use protectionism for the UK but not do it for Ireland when it was needed to promote development.
    What Ireland did have was excellent soil and a moderate climate (even Gerald of Wales was impressed by the fact that Irish cattle could feed on grass in the winter)

    First horses now cattle I worry about Gerald.
    Now there were native Irish light industries such as linen production that could not compete with the cheap cotton coming out of Manchester - but it was never more than a cottage industry and could never have competed on the economies of scale.

    Ireland was not a cash economy
    We still manufacture very little in this country and have little or no heavy industries plus most native exports are derived from agriculture - so little has changed in terms of industrial development.

    As for judging by today's standards I really don't think one can or should. Or at least no historian can or should - that is a slippery slope to subjective judgement.

    Agreed, we did not have natural resourses.
    Wellington (I am beginning to suspect you may have a slight crush on the noble nosed one :p)

    Oh the meaness of it :D
    couldn't have begun an industrialisation process - that was down to market forces, ..............opened in 1851 but was incorporated in 1845.

    British protectionism stiffled efforts.
    There were too many people living below the poverty level - it is really hard to see what could have been done short of mass evictions and enforced emigration to avert the disaster that was, from our perspective, inevitable but from theirs not necessarily so.

    I refer to the FCNK nature of the Union.

    parce que!

    Ainsi


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    Bannasidhe wrote: »
    ...
    * (un? - dammit what gender is a French spud?) Edit to say- sigh - La pomme pomme de terre - tis a wenchy spud and no mistake.
    You have the methods of the historian perfected: hoover up all the available resources, starting with whatever is nearest to hand!

    Yes the French pomme de terre is female, as is her more informal sibling, la patate. The Irish práta is male. The English potato is a sexless thing.


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,108 ✭✭✭pedroeibar1


    The English potato is a sexless thing.

    Possibly ......... they do have a very popular variety called Queens. Potatoes arrived in the US in 1719 via Ireland* and they have developed a variety known as the ‘potatoe’ that is male and Vice Presidential.

    A couple of years ago Heston Blumenthal did a TV programme on potatoes, in search of the perfect variety for specific dishes and visited a potato research facility. From memory they had lumpers there; disappointingly he selected the Maris Piper as the best overall variety. The French rave about a variety named ‘ratte’ that is equally characterless.
    In a solution one part salt to eleven of water a waxy potato will float, a mealy one sink.

    Do bheadh na prátaí nite brúite agus ithe ag an gConnachtach muna mbéidís ráite ag an Muimhneach. (sp?)

    *On Food, Harold McGee. (No doubt a tip of the hat to von Clausewitz:D)


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,255 ✭✭✭getz


    Possibly ......... they do have a very popular variety called Queens. Potatoes arrived in the US in 1719 via Ireland* and they have developed a variety known as the ‘potatoe’ that is male and Vice Presidential.

    A couple of years ago Heston Blumenthal did a TV programme on potatoes, in search of the perfect variety for specific dishes and visited a potato research facility. From memory they had lumpers there; disappointingly he selected the Maris Piper as the best overall variety. The French rave about a variety named ‘ratte’ that is equally characterless.
    In a solution one part salt to eleven of water a waxy potato will float, a mealy one sink.

    Do bheadh na prátaí nite brúite agus ithe ag an gConnachtach muna mbéidís ráite ag an Muimhneach. (sp?)

    *On Food, Harold McGee. (No doubt a tip of the hat to von Clausewitz:D)
    the full name for the queens potato is the british queen,its seedling is called victoria


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,089 ✭✭✭✭P. Breathnach


    ... Do bheadh na prátaí nite brúite agus ithe ag an gConnachtach muna mbéidís ráite ag an Muimhneach. (sp?)
    From Dinneen (older spelling): bheadh na fataí nighte, bruidhte, ithte ag an gConnachtach fhaid is béadh an Muimhheach ag rádh "prátaí".


  • Registered Users Posts: 34 thadiisgirl


    Thanks everyone, for a very interesting and enlightening thread.

    I still can't get my head around every day life for most people at this time though. For example, one of my GG-Grandfathers married in the November of 1848, at the height of the disaster - as per Griffiths a few years later, he was only a co-tenant of 21 acres in Co Roscommon, an area badly hit, so was hardly a wealthy man.

    Surely, he must have been near to starving during these years - I really can't imagine he could've mustered up enough cash to pay the parish priest, much less find the energy, inclination (and a decent set of clothes) to get hitched...I have this terrible image of these two emaciated frames, dragging themselves up the aisle in rags - but it can't have been like this, can it?

    I suppose those who survived (and all of use descend from them, wherever we are in the world) were/are of a hardier breed? Or just a bit luckier than the unfortunates who perished....?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,434 ✭✭✭Jolly Red Giant


    Thanks everyone, for a very interesting and enlightening thread.

    I still can't get my head around every day life for most people at this time though. For example, one of my GG-Grandfathers married in the November of 1848, at the height of the disaster - as per Griffiths a few years later, he was only a co-tenant of 21 acres in Co Roscommon, an area badly hit, so was hardly a wealthy man.

    Surely, he must have been near to starving during these years - I really can't imagine he could've mustered up enough cash to pay the parish priest, much less find the energy, inclination (and a decent set of clothes) to get hitched...I have this terrible image of these two emaciated frames, dragging themselves up the aisle in rags - but it can't have been like this, can it?
    The vast majority of those affected by the famine were landless labourers, cottiers and tenant with less than 5 acres - tenants with 15 acres and over generally survived with little difficulty during the famine and those on more than 25 acres were relatively comfortable (for the mid-19 century). Many of these tenant farmers actually exploited the famine by hoarding food supplies and then selling it to forestallers for urban markets and/or export.

    As a co-tenant of 21 acres - your ancestor would probably have been in a borderline position struggling to survive.
    I suppose those who survived (and all of use descend from them, wherever we are in the world) were/are of a hardier breed? Or just a bit luckier than the unfortunates who perished....?
    The deaths during the famine were all down to money - the poor died.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,255 ✭✭✭getz


    Thanks everyone, for a very interesting and enlightening thread.

    I still can't get my head around every day life for most people at this time though. For example, one of my GG-Grandfathers married in the November of 1848, at the height of the disaster - as per Griffiths a few years later, he was only a co-tenant of 21 acres in Co Roscommon, an area badly hit, so was hardly a wealthy man.

    Surely, he must have been near to starving during these years - I really can't imagine he could've mustered up enough cash to pay the parish priest, much less find the energy, inclination (and a decent set of clothes) to get hitched...I have this terrible image of these two emaciated frames, dragging themselves up the aisle in rags - but it can't have been like this, can it?

    I suppose those who survived (and all of use descend from them, wherever we are in the world) were/are of a hardier breed? Or just a bit luckier than the unfortunates who perished....?
    mine married and left ireland for chester about the same time ,he was from galway and she from mayo they ended up having 12 kids.


  • Registered Users Posts: 34 thadiisgirl


    I hardly think a third share of 21 acres constitutes 'relative comfort' in those marginal times JRG, but that is your view, I suppose and you seem keen to put me in my place.

    FWIW, his son ended up working as a labourer in the dire chemical factories of North-West England from around 1881 - this is what leads me suppose they were not well off by any stretch.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,255 ✭✭✭getz


    I hardly think a third share of 21 acres constitutes 'relative comfort' in those marginal times JRG, but that is your view, I suppose and you seem keen to put me in my place.

    FWIW, his son ended up working as a labourer in the dire chemical factories of North-West England from around 1881 - this is what leads me suppose they were not well off by any stretch.
    from what i can gather[in those times] any land inherited would only go the oldest son,the rest have to find their own way in the world .i think thats what happend to my ancestor


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators Posts: 19,219 Mod ✭✭✭✭Bannasidhe


    getz wrote: »
    from what i can gather[in those times] any land inherited would only go the oldest son,the rest have to find their own way in the world .i think thats what happend to my ancestor

    Not so - one of the major problems was the plots of land were usually divided equally between the sons. So more and more people were trying to survive from smaller and smaller amounts of land.
    By the 1840s this was reaching the point where is was becoming increasing difficult for enough food to be grown - even if that food was just potatoes - as the plots were becoming too small.
    Every available scrap of land was being used. If you walk along the Galway shore of Killary fjord you can still see the remains of the potato beds on the Mayo side - not an inch of land was wasted, but it still wasn't enough.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 34 thadiisgirl


    I'd understood that these sort of tenancies were precarious to say the least - and this particular landlord in Roscommon, quite a harsh one.

    I also believe that 'inheritance' of land or tenancy didn't play much of a part at this level of society - the land technically belonged to someone else who could dipose of it whenever they liked to whoever they liked.

    Interestingly, the descendants of GG-Grandfather's co-tenants from the Griffiths survey now own this land and some still live there. I've been in touch with one of them, after I sent an email to the Leitrim Observer and they replied, but they didn't even know of his existence - well, why would they? I suppose, to some, it is a long time ago..

    I'd love to know what happened there and why we left - I may well still have distant rellies in the area, but have not been able to find any as yet.


Advertisement