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Paperback The Famine Ships: The Irish Exodus to America Book

ISBN: 0805058443

ISBN13: 9780805058444

The Famine Ships: The Irish Exodus to America

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Between 1846 and 1851, more than one-million people--the potato famine emigrants--sailed from Ireland to America. Now, 150 years later, The Famine Ships tells of the courage and determination of those... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

IRISH HOLOCAUST AT THE HANDS OF THE ENGLISH;IRISH SUFFERING RECOGNIZED

The Irish suffered horribly under the English. The great Famine is just a synonym for the Irish Holocaust commited by the English. Irish suffering needs more attention and respect. Forget the mechanics and enjoy a real book - this one; Dia Duit!!!

The message is what matters?

I make no apologies for the structural defects of this book, nor do I mean to suggest they should be ignored. They deserve criticism. Grammatical errors and poor editing are never welcome, however with History a factual mistake or contradiction is at best never acceptable, and at its worst can cause credibility to be questioned. I still recommend this book as the errors do not negate the events that took place, and as frustrating as they may be, they do not detract from the horror that was The Famine, nor the conduct of those involved. That the book did not gain a wider audience, possibly because of these faults is sad.Ireland has been fertile ground for reprehensible behavior by England for over 700 years. Ireland too, at times has committed acts of violence via a variety of Catholic and Protestant groups. The dead, wounded, and the mutilated are all that either side has gained. The hatred exists to this day, and while violence has been calmer of late, a great period of time must pass before memories fade and forgiveness is accepted for apologies offered.Prior to the ships in this book becoming "Famine Ships" many plied another trade as "Slave Ships", it is true that there were structural changes made, but beyond a certain point conditions become inhuman, period. The Potato Blight is often the only, or the primary reason given for the mass immigration that devastated the island. The truth is always more complex, it is no different here.While starvation was rampant the food that was available, food grown right there next to those that were starving was exported to England. The English Landowners often paid for the cost of passage on these ships where so many died. These ships did carry the victims of Famine like they had carried the victims of slavery before. Transportation was almost secondary, how can it be anything else when conditions are created that are deadly by definition. It was cheaper to pay for transit than keep people alive on their ancestral land. And if they left they no longer had any use for land, so it was bought and accumulated by the same individuals that often paid for its owner's permanent eviction.Ireland today is experiencing the return of some of the descendants of those that made that terrifying crossing. As a nation it has become one of the most prosperous in Europe by many economic standards, but that is not enough. Tolerance is not good enough, nor are plans of peace that neither party believes in their heart to be fair. It would be pleasant to site examples of hatred hardened by centuries of pain that have been put aside and new beginnings made. Perhaps the newfound economic health will help the process, perhaps not.I hope for those who live there, be they Catholic or Protestant, that a way is found in a comparatively brief span of time to pause, heal, for apologies to be made, and accepted.

If you have a drop of Irish blood in you, read this book.

Anyone interested in their family history, the treatment of the Irish by the English Crown and the resultant holacaust called the Great Famine, should study this book. Well-documented and well-illustrated, it provides the history of the circumstances leading to the famine, the exodus and the horrors suffered by the emigres -- not only in their homeland, but aboard the ships. For someone researching Irish family names, this is the book to read, if for no other reason than to provide excellent background information and conditions of daily life.

A must-read

In researching my Irish ancestry I came upon this book. It is a completely amazing tale of the millions of Irish and their journey to America. I believe that anyone who is Irish should read this book. If this does not lead to an apology from the guilty party I don't know what will.

Tells the human stories of the Irish Famine tragedy.

In 1840's Ireland, the Potato Blight was the immediate cause of the departure of thousands of ships, carrying the nearly one million emigrants escaping the Irish Famine to America. In The Famine Ships, Laxton narrates the stories of these emigrants and the many ships that brought them to the New World. It is a fascinating compilation derived from family histories handed down through the generations, describing the tragedies of the American Wakes (the morbid farewell "parties" for the emigrants), the horrible conditions aboard the ships, and the boundless optimism concerning the freedom of America. This is a well-written supplement to the various works on the Irish famine exodus, finally drawing attention to the human tragedy and the ships that defined a moment in Irish and American history.
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