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Overview
The Irish Famine of 1845-49 was a major modern catastrophe. The return of the potato blight in 1846 triggered a huge exodus of destitute Irish seeking refuge in British towns and 1847 witnessed an unprecedented inflow of Irish refugees into Britain. This book examines the scale of that refugee immigration, the conditions under which the refugees were carried to Britain, the relief operations mounted, the horrors of the typhus epidemic in Liverpool, Glasgow, Manchester, South Wales and the North-East, and the financial cost to the British ratepayers.
Synopsis
The Irish Famine of 1845-49 was a major modern catastrophe. The return of the potato blight in 1846 triggered a huge exodus of destitute Irish seeking refuge in British towns and 1847 witnessed an unprecedented inflow of Irish refugees into Britain. This book examines the scale of that refugee immigration, the conditions under which the refugees were carried to Britain, the relief operations mounted, the horrors of the typhus epidemic in Liverpool, Glasgow, Manchester, South Wales and the North-East, and the financial cost to the British ratepayers.
Booknews
The appearance of the potato blight in Ireland in August 1845 was the beginning of a disaster during which an estimated one million Irish died. Neal (economics and social history, U. of Salford) examines the experiences of those Famine Irish who sought refuge in Britain during 1847, addressing the urban environment and pre-Famine Irish settlements; escape from Ireland; arrival in Britain; the character of the famine in various regions; survival and dispersal; and the cost of the famine immigration. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.