Since all those who are, or wish to be, of Irish descent
have just celebrated St Patrick’s Day it seems appropriate that my topic this month is my Irish migration research. While I have Irish ancestors from Clare, Kildare,
Offaly, Wicklow and Wexford, this project broadens the research lens.
This project focuses on the emigrants from East County Clare to Australia in the
mid-late 19th century, from the Famine era to pre-1900. How have I
defined East Clare? Well it is a little subjective, but I’ve used the baronies
of Tulla Upper and Tulla Lower, and visually on the map, the area to the east
of Ennis. It’s worth remembering too, that the people from parishes in the
south-east corner, were part of the Limerick Union so when looking at
workhouses, for example, one needs to look at the Limerick Workhouse rather
than a Clare one.
While the emphasis is on Australia, it doesn’t mean I have no
interest in the emigrants to North America (USA and Canada) but there’s only so
much you can focus on without becoming completely befuddled. What I believe from my research is that the emigrants were
not as powerless as we sometimes tend to think. Perhaps not during the Famine
when survival and just finding a new life were the main goals, but certainly outside that
horrific time.
For the period 1848-1870, Australia has generally excellent
immigration records often (but not always) revealing parents’ names, whether
alive or dead, literacy and whether they had relations in the colony. What it
omits to mention is just how often each ship carried friends and neighbours
from the same place, and it’s all too easy for a novice researcher to not
realise that a brother/sister may also have been on board, because adult single
men and women were listed separately from each other and the family groups.
Of course, inevitably, the very person you’re looking for
may not be among those listed anywhere. This was the case with my Mary O’Brien
(later Kunkel) whose immigration I’ve been pursuing for decades, and for whom I’ve
only recently found
a tentative result.
The bonus of this is that it sent me down many paths trying to find anything about those who emigrated from the same place, Broadford, in the east of County Clare. This kicked off my East Clare project trying to learn more about them and whether they were typical of their age peers at home, or if there were differences.
One of the greatest (nigh impossible?) challenges of
studying migration history is finding why people left their home place. You have
the obvious impetus like the Famine (An Gorta Mór) but why did some siblings depart for
Australia, others for North America, and yet others remain at home. Mostly it
seems it was the older “children” who made the move, and Irish women were
atypical of migration in general in that they were often the migration leaders.
They would go ahead then bring relatives out in what is called chain migration.
© Copyright 2014 Pauleen Cass. Analysis of data from personal database drawn from Australian immigration records. |
So your ancestors came to Australia? Or North America? Please
don’t assume that all of the family who emigrated went to the same place. I’ve
seen many cases where some of the siblings go to Boston or New York while others
came to Australia (or New Zealand). Why would they choose a place so very far
from their homeland? Well, the Australian colonies were offering generous
government subsidies to attract workers to the colony, especially young women
due to the gender imbalance. I have also concluded that the emigrants were more
than capable of deciding that one lifestyle suited them better than another eg
the opportunity to own their own land and farm in Australia vs a more urban
lifestyle in an American city.
I’ve also seen instances where one child in a family is born
in the States and another in Liverpool before the family emigrated to Australia
– an example of stage migration. There are cases where parents are already
living in the USA, or Scotland, yet the young family chooses Australia as their
destination. People are complex and quite capable of making decisions in their
own interest when it comes to migration as to all else.
It’s likely that I’ll be back on this hobby-horse in posts
to come, but today I also wanted to let you know about a new blog I’ve started
(blatant self-promotion?). It’s called East Clare Emigrants and I’m
hoping it will provide a locus for researchers with ancestors who came from the
eastern half of Clare.
I just had to buy one of these badges ...jealousy got the better of me. |
My posts on the blog will predominantly draw on stories and
obituaries from our wonderful digitised newspaper site, Trove. It’s now possible to uncover the
emigrants’ life stories in a way which would have been impossible until just a
few years ago. We could find our own ancestors, or those for whom we had
specific dates of death, but had no hope of this kind of general search. No
wonder Trove is top of the pops for Aussie researchers and it really is a
world-leader with its facilities. I particularly love how these obituaries give
us a sense of their lives post-migration. No doubt a sanitised or glorified
version, as obituaries tend to be, but offering a human depth to the story.
But will it help those from around the world? Well yes, I
think it will because I’ve already come across some obits with references back
to family in Ireland or the States.
I’d also be happy to include guest posts from those who have
East Clare emigrants in their ancestry, wherever they ended up. So if your
ancestors fit the bill, please get in touch via my email, or have a look at some of
the posts. There’s been a time-delay as I regroup after the cruise but
hopefully I’ll be posting at least one a week, and often two.
© Copyright 2014 Pauleen Cass