Emigration Dates in the Context of Irish History
Different groups emigrated at different times - History tells us who and why;
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Being “Irish” means being from the island of Ireland; with Celtic-Irish, Scotch-Irish, and Anglo-Irish heritage; and different people with Protestant and Catholic religious beliefs (with some crossover).
Migration from Ireland to America – 18th Century
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1717 Scottish settlers leave Ulster – poor harvest and rackrents
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1740-1741 Potato Famine - all Ireland except Connacht
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1760’s Agrarian violence – Ulster
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1771-1775 Decline in Belfast linen trade – 10,000 left each year, 1/3 to 1/2 of them Ulster Protestants
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By 1790 1/6 of 3 million “U.S.” were of Irish birth or descent.
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280,000 were Ulster Protestants, 106,000 native Irish Catholics, 61,000 Descendants of Irish Catholics from Ulster and English settlers from Ulster and the South
Migration from Ireland to America – 19th Century
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1815 Immigration and trade resume
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1815-1845 Many more Catholics & from South (could be double considering those who went to Canada first.)
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1815-1825: 28,600
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1826-1835: 118,4000
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1836-1845: 289,700
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1846-1855 1,442,000 (300,000 to Canada)
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1856-1865 582,400
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1866-1875 645,700
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500,000 left Ireland every 10 years until WWI
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