Flight from Famine: The Coming of the Irish to Canada

by Donald MacKay

59 Members ½ (3.33) 1 Award

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Winner of the 1991 QSPELL Prize for Non-fiction One of Canada's founding peoples, the Irish arrived in the Newfoundland fishing stations as early as the seventeenth century. By the eighteenth century they were establishing farms and settlements from Nova Scotia to the Great Lakes. Then, in the 1840s, came the failures of Ireland's potato crop, which people in the west of Ireland had depended on for survival. "And that," wrote a Sligo countryman, "was the beginning of the great trouble and show more famine that destroyed Ireland." Flight from Famine is the moving account of a Victorian-era tragedy that has echoes in our own time but seems hardly credible in the light of Ireland's modern prosperity. The famine survivors who helped build Canada in the years that followed Black '47 provide a testament to courage, resilience, and perseverance. By the time of Confederation, the Irish population of Canada was second only to the French, and four million Canadians can claim proud Irish descent. show less

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Genres
History, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
971.0049162History & geographyHistory of North AmericaCanadaCanada
LCC
F1035 .I6 .M15Local History of the United States, Canada and Latin AmericaCanadaMaritime provinces. Atlantic coast of Canada
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59
Popularity
520,779
Rating
½ (3.33)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
5