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CausesIn the 16th century plantations of the country were undertaken under Mary I and Elizabeth I. The plantations in Laois, Offaly and Munster did not survive, but the plantation of Ulster fundamentally established an English Protestant presence. In 1649 Oliver Cromwell's forces defeated the Confederate and Royalist coalition in Ireland and occupied the country, bringing to an end the Irish Confederate Wars. Cromwell passed a very harsh series of Penal laws against Roman Catholics and confiscated almost all of their land. Consolidation of lands into large estates was widespread in Europe, but in Ireland consolidation occurred via different laws applied to Presbyterians and Roman Catholics, favoring the Anglicans of the Church of Ireland, a state religion under the British Crown. Lands owned by Catholics were instead subdivided. By the time of The Great Hunger these discriminatory laws were gone, but had biased large land-ownership to mostly Protestant, English, and often non-resident, or "absentee", landlords. English control lasted until Irish independence — the Irish Free State, the Irish War of Independence and the Anglo-Irish Treaty.
Tenants, subdivisions, and bankruptcy"Subdivision" resulted from The Popery Act which was one of the Penal Laws (Ireland) [1] enacted to discriminate against Roman Catholics). The Act divided lands and property equally among male heirs (instead of being inherited by the first-born son); over generations. tenant farm size shrank, split between all living sons. By the 1840s, subdivision resulted in Catholics working the smallest farms and so becoming ever poorer. In 1845, for example, 24% of all Irish tenant farms were of 0.4 to 2 hectares (one to five acres) in size, while 40% were of two to six hectares (five to fifteen acres). Holdings were so small that only potatoes--no other crop-- would suffice to feed a family. The British Government reported, shortly before the Great Hunger, that poverty was so wide-spread that one third of all Irish small holdings could not support their families, after paying their rent, except by earnings of seasonal migrant labour in England and Scotland.[1] So Irish landholding system was by the 1840s in serious trouble. Many big estates already carried heavy mortgages, from earlier farm crises. Ten percent went bankrupt due to the Great Hunger.[citation needed] Smaller mass tenancies, lacking long-term leases, rent control and security of tenure, shrank so small--through subdivision--that tenants struggled to survive even in good years, and depended on potatoes because only potatoes would grow enough to provide nutrition on such small farms; still, the large estates--owned by absentee Britons, exported many tons of cattle and other foodstuffs to foreign markets. Also, any tenant attempt to increase productivity of their land was actively discouraged by threats of disproportionately high increase in rent--even eviction. EvictionsRelief of Ireland's poor people was then directed by Poor Law legislation. The Poor Law Union raised money from rates (local taxes) on landlords, based on how many tenants farmed that estate. Renting small farms to subsistence farmers was unprofitable; the Irish Government used the rating system to encourage consolidation of holdings--thought more profitable and, theoretically, able to pay for those no longer able to farm. Food exports to EnglandFood production and distribution are economic issues affecting the Famine. Records show Irish lands exported food, even during the worst years. When Ireland experienced a famine in 1782-83, ports were closed to keep Irish-grown food in Ireland to feed the Irish. Local food prices promptly dropped. Merchants lobbied against the export ban, but government in the 1780s overrode their protests; that export ban did not happen in the 1840s. Cecil Woodham-Smith, an authority on the Irish Famine, wrote in The Great Hunger; Ireland 1845-1849 that, "...no issue has provoked so much anger or so embittered relations between the two countries (England and Ireland) as the indisputable fact that huge quantities of food were exported from Ireland to England throughout the period when the people of Ireland were dying of starvation." Almost throughout the five-year famine, Ireland remained a net exporter of food. Christine Kinealy, a University of Liverpool fellow and author of two texts on the Irish Famine: This Great Calamity and A Death-Dealing Famine, writes that Irish exports of calves,livestock (except pigs), bacon and ham actually increased during the famine. The food was shipped under guard from the most famine-stricken parts of Ireland. But the poor had no money to buy food and the government then did not ban exports. Irish meteorologist Austin Bourke, in The use of the potato crop in pre-famine Ireland disputes some of Woodham-Smith's calculations, and notes that during December 1846 imports almost doubled. He opines that "it is beyond question that the deficiency arising from the loss of the potato crop in 1846 could not have been met by the simple expedient of prohibiting the export of grain from Ireland." The Quakers came to Ireland during the Great Famine and set up soup kitchens. Claims of potato dependencyMany people say that the Irish depended too much on potatoes as a food. If so, Ireland was not unique in its single-crop dependency, common among exporting nations.(For example, China with rice.) Ireland's rapid shift to potato cultivation about 1790 helped Ireland's population grow despite political upheaval and warfare. Soldiers and wars tend to disrupt most farming; not so for the sub-surface potato. By the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, potatoes were a staple for most Europeans. The blight spread across Europe, but only in Ireland were its consequences so drastic. Subdivision, small tenant farms, and reliance on a single crop for home consumption [not export], are just a few of many potential reasons why Ireland suffered so much more than the Continent. Death TollImage:Irish population change (1841-1851).png Fall in Irish population (1841–1851) No one knows for certain how many people died in the Famine. State registration of births, marriages or deaths had not yet begun, while records kept by the Roman Catholic Church are incomplete. Many of the Church of Ireland's records (which included records of local Catholics due to the collection of Tithes (10% of income) from Catholics to finance the Church of Ireland) were destroyed by irregular IRA troops in 1922. One possible estimate has been reached by comparing the expected population with the eventual numbers in the 1850s (see Irish Population Analysis). Earlier predictions expected that by 1851, Ireland would have a population of eight to nine million. This calculation is based on numbers contained in the ten year census results compiled since 1821. However, a recent re-examination of those returns raise questions as to their accuracy; the 1841 Census, for example, incorrectly classed farm children as labourers, affecting later calculations on how many adults capable of childbearing existed to produce children between 1841 and 1851.[citation needed] In 1851 the actual population was 6.6 million. Making straightforward calculations is complicated by a secondary effect of famine, a key side-effect of malnutrition, namely plummeting fertility and sexual activity rates. The scale of that effect on population numbers was not fully recognized until studies done during African famines in the twentieth century. As a result, corrections based on inaccuracies in census returns and on the previous unrealized decline in births due to malnourishment have led to an overall reduction in the presumed death numbers. Modern historians and statisticians estimate that between 500,000 and 2,000,000 died. Some historians suggest the death toll was in the region of 700,000 to 800,000.[2] One website claims a figure of over five million - no serious historian endorses a figure of even half this size.[3] In addition, in excess of one million Irish emigrated to the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere, while more than one million emigrated over following decades; by 1911, a combination of emigration and an abnormally high number of unmarried men and women in the population, had reduced the population of Ireland to 4.4 million. The vast majority of the famine deaths were because of disease.
Detailed statistics into the population of Ireland since 1841 are available at Irish Population Analysis. Reactions1848 rebellionMain article: Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848 In 1847 William Smith O'Brien, the leader of the Young Ireland party founded the Irish Confederation to campaign for famine relief. The following year he tried to incite rebellion in County Tipperary, leading peasants in a battle against the police. The incident subsequently became known as the "battle for widow Mc Cormack's cabbage patch'" due to the farcical nature of the uprising. Response of United Kingdom GovernmentThe initial British government policy towards the famine was, in the view of historians such as F.S.L. Lyons, "very delayed and slow".[4] Professor Joe Lee contends: "There was nothing unique (by the standards of pre-industrial subsistence crisis) about the [Irish] famine. The death rate had been frequently equalled in earlier European famines, including, possibly, in Ireland itself during the famine of 1740–41".[5] This 1740–1741 famine is commonly referred to as The Forgotten Famine. Commonly, the government would encourage land owners to evict their tenants. During the 1846–49 Irish Famine, Tory government head Sir Robert Peel bought some foreign maize for delivery to Ireland, and repealed the Corn Laws, which prohibited imports of cheaper foreign grain to Ireland. The Irish called the maize imported by the government 'Peel's brimstone' — partly because of maize's yellow colour, partly that it had to be ground twice, partly that maize does not have--as potatoes do have--Vitamin C. Repeal of the Corn Laws during 1846 to 1849, came too late to help the starving Irish, and was politically unpopular, ending Sir Robert's ministry. Succeeding him was a Whig ministry under Lord John Russell, later Earl Russell. Lord John's ministry focused on providing support through "public works" projects. Such projects mainly consisted of the government employing Irish peasantry on wasteful projects, such as filling in valleys and flattening hills, so the government could justify the cash payments. Such projects proved counterproductive, as starving labourers expended the energy gained from low rations on the heavy labour. Furthermore, prospects of paid labour influenced Irish peasants to remain at work, far from their farmlands. So they did not farm, which fact worsened the famine. Eventually, a soup-kitchen network, which fed three million people, replaced the public works projects. In the autumn of 1847, the soup-kitchens were shut down and responsibility for famine relief was transferred to the Poor Laws unions. The Irish Poor Laws were even harsher on the poor than their English counterparts; those paupers with over a quarter-acre of land were expected to abandon it before entering a workhouse — something many of the poor would not do. Furthermore, Ireland had too few workhouses. Many of the workhouses that existed were closed due to financial problems; authorities in London refused to give large amounts of aid to bankrupt Poor Laws unions. As a result, disaster became inevitable; only about a million people were on workhouse relief rolls on any given day. Britain tried in turn government direct aid, reliance on private charities (some to be financed by taxes on landlords), public works programs, soup kitchens, workhouses, and a laissez-faire policy backed by military force. Nothing worked, or, if something did work, it was not funded sufficiently. Discussions then on how to solve this problem so closely mirror modern-day arguments as to suggest that close study of the Potato Famine might yet help the modern world. CharityLarge sums of money were donated by charities; Calcutta is credited with making the first donation of £14,000. The money was raised by Irish soldiers serving there and Irish people employed by the East India Company. Pope Pius IX sent funds, Queen Victoria donated the equivalent of €70,000 in today's money, while the Choctaw Indians themselves victims of the genocidal Trail of Tears famously sent $710 and grain, an act of generosity still remembered to this day, and publicly commemorated by President Mary Robinson on the 150th anniversary of the famine. AftermathPotato blights continued in Ireland, especially in 1872 and 1879–1880. These killed few people, partly because they were less severe, but mainly for a complex range of reasons. But, on the other hand, the population in Ireland soon shrank from over 8 million to about 6 million due to starvation and exodus from the famine. The growth in the numbers of railways made the importation of foodstuffs easier; in 1834, Ireland had 9.7 km (6 miles) of railway tracks; by 1912, the total was 5 480 km (3,403 miles). The banning of subdivision, coupled with emigration, increased the average farm size; greater acrage let farmers grow crops other than potatoes alone. The increasing wealth in urban areas meant alternative sources of food, grain, potatoes and seed were available in towns and villages. The 1870s agricultural economy thus was more efficient and less dependent on potatoes, as well as having access to new farm machinery and product control. After the famine the Encumbered Estates Act completely reorganized agriculture during 1870s–1900s, as small owned farms replaced mass estates and multiple tenants. Many of the large estates in the 1840s were debt-ridden and heavily mortgaged. In contrast, estates in the 1870s, many of them under new Irish middle class owners thanks to the Encumbered Estates Act, were on a better economic footing, and so capable of reducing rents and providing locally organized relief, as was the Roman Catholic Church, which was better organised and funded than it had been in 1847–49. If subdivision produced earlier marriage and larger families, its abolition produced the opposite effect; the 'inheriting' child would wait until they found the 'right' partner, preferably one with a large dowry to bring to the farm. Other children, no longer with the possibility of inheriting a farm (or part of it at least) had no economic attraction and no financial resources to consider an early marriage. As a result, later mini-famines made only minimal effect and are generally forgotten, except by historians. By the 1911 census, the island of Ireland's population had fallen to 4.4 million, about the same as the population in 1800 and 2000 and only a half of its peak population. The same water mold (Phytophthora infestans) was responsible for the 1847–51 and later famines. When people speak of "the Irish famine", or "an Gorta Mór", they nearly always mean the one of the 1840s, even though a similar Great Famine did in fact hit in the early 18th century. The fact that only four types of potato were brought from the Americas was a fundamental cause of the famine, as the lack of genetic diversity made it possible for a single oomycete to have much more devastating consequences than it might otherwise have had. EmigrationThe famine forced many Irish to emigrate. By 1854, between 1½ and 2 million Irish left their country due to evictions, starvation, and harsh living conditions. In America, most Irish became city-dwellers: with little money, many had to settle in the cities that the ships they came on landed in. By 1850, the Irish made up a quarter of the population in Boston, Massachusetts; New York City; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Baltimore, Maryland. In addition, Irish populations became prevalent in some American mining communities. The 1851 census reported that more than half the inhabitants of Toronto, Ontario were Irish, and in 1847 alone, 38,000 famine Irish flooded a city with less than 20,000 citizens. Other Canadian cities such as Saint John, New Brunswick; Quebec City and Montreal, Quebec; Ottawa, Kingston and Hamilton, Ontario also received large numbers of Famine Irish since Canada, as part of the British Empire, could not close its ports to Irish ships (unlike the United States) and they could passage cheaply (or free in the case of tenant evictions) on returning empty lumber holds. The largest Famine grave site outside of Ireland is at Grosse-Ile, Quebec, an island used to quarantine ships near Quebec City. In 1851, about a quarter of Liverpool's population was Irish-born. The Famine is often seen as an initiator in the steep depopulation of Ireland in the 19th century; however, it is likely that real population began to fall in 1841 with the Famine accelerating any population changes already occurring. Some may argue the Famine was necessary to restore population equilibrium to Ireland given that population increased by 13–14% in the first three decades of the 19th century (using Thomas Malthus's idea of population expanding geometrically, resources increasing arithmetically) nonetheless there is a tendency among Irish historians to dispute this. Statistics show that between 1831 and 1841 population grew by only 5% so this gives more value to those who argue that population was already falling by 1844. The mass exodus in the years following the famine must be seen in the context of overpopulation, industrial stagnation, land shortages, religious discrimination, declining agricultural employment and inadequate diet. These factors were already combining to choke off population growth by the 1830s. It would be wrong, therefore, to attribute all the population loss during the famine to the potato blight alone. Suggestions of genocideImage:Ireland's Holocaust mural in The Falls, Belfast.jpg "Ireland's Holocaust" mural in The Falls, Belfast. "An Gorta Mór, Britain's genocide by starvation, Ireland's holocaust 1845-1849." That the Famine "amounted to genocide" by the British against the Irish, few historians--even few Irish historians--accept outright, as "genocide" implies a deliberate policy of extermination. Many agree that the British policies during the Famine, particularly those applied under Lord John Russell, were misguided, ill-informed, and disastrous. Professor Joe Lee called what happened a holocaust. Others, however, note that over three million people were fed through soup kitchens (though much of it through non-governmental aid), and that factors such as poor communication, primitive retail distribution networks and the inefficiencies of local government had exacerbated the situation.[citation needed] The debate is largely moral one, attempting to ascertain whether within the policies of the British Empire lay a nationalist, forgetful, laissez-faire, economic or religious discriminatory policy, or simply inconsiderate mentality that, despite its power, made it impotent to handle a humanitarian crisis in its own backyard, or whether most British voters actually wanted a large reduction in Ireland's population and then decided to deny them effective aid. Some Irish, British and US historians (F.S.L. Lyons, John A. Murphy, Joe Lee, Roy Foster, and James S. Donnelly, Jr.), as well as historians Cecil Woodham-Smith, Peter Gray, Ruth Dudley Edwards and many others have long dismissed claims of a deliberate policy of extermination. ]].[citation needed] Some historians shift in emphasis from English causes to Irish ones. In essence the argument is that the English system was not wrong, it was simply natural misfortune and a convergence of ill circumstance that befell the Irish. Such Irish "causes" include topics like excess dependence on potato crops, Catholic social values that led to overpopulation, and the practice of subdivision that made small parcels of land that limited crop diversity and maximised risk of failure. These arguments are equally controversial, but for the inverse reason that they gloss over or ignore the basic facts of English rule through the growing Protestant Ascendancy. What is claimed by some is that while the mostly poor, Catholic, lower-class Irish peasants met severe misfortune, landowners — most of whom were Anglican — continued to prosper.[citation needed] "Genocide" is in essence a misnomer for the continuing debate over culpability and blame. Central to this issue of blame are that British pro-Anglican rule, society, capitalism, and even culture came to take control of Ireland (continuing to the early 20th century). The economic, class, and social systems that England instituted exceedingly favored the English over the Irish, Anglicans over Catholics and Presbyterians, and landowners over peasants and the rich over the poor. With discrimination entrenched into law, society, and religion, this favouritism meant preserving the English economic system took priority over even this humanitarian crisis. British rule in Ireland ultimately meant denying to the Irish poor even basic provisions of shelter and food - food that was being produced and available in Ireland but exported for sale by wealthy absentee landlords. Still, Britain tried in many ways--government aid, soup kitchens, workhouses, private charities, public work projects, and laissez-faire policies backed by military force--to resove the famine's effects ... always without success, or, if successful, without sufficient funding. Memorials to the famineThe Great Famine is still remembered in many locations throughout Ireland, especially in those regions which suffered the greatest losses, and also in cities overseas with large populations descended from Irish immigrants. In IrelandImage:Famine memorial dublin.jpg Famine Memorial in Dublin
In England
In Wales
In Scotland
In North AmericaImage:AnGortaMor MI.jpg Irish Hills Michigan "An Gorta Mor" top. Image:AnGortaMor Memorialbowl.jpg Irish Hills Michigan "An Gorta Mor" base.
In Australia
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it. See http://www.irishfaminememorial.org
See also
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