Posted on 02/06/2018 7:19:26 PM PST by Az Joe
Today, 32 million Americans10 percent of the countrys populationcelebrate their Irish roots. There was a time, however, when the thought of Americans honoring all things Irish was unimaginable. This is the story of the prejudice encountered by refugees from Irelands Great Hunger and how those Irish exiles persevered to become part of the American mainstream.
Did they learn English when they got here?
They were undesirable because they were poor and disease-ridden, bringing with them crime, taking jobs away from Americans, practicing an alien religion, and pledged allegiance to a foreign leader.
The Irish were no allies in WWII. Screw them.
Blazing Saddles.....
L
They were neutral during WWII. I suspect because they hated the British.
Were those the Catholic Irish in the north eastern USA. Or are they talking about the Protestant Scotts-Irish who were the rulers of the South-East?
Lord Haw Haw was an American-born Irishman.
The southerners of whom you speak were not immigrants. They were colonists.
And also of different lineage.
They weren’t planning to kill “the infidels”.
Bump
My ancestors...distant and recent...worked for a living,obeyed the law,served in the Armed Forces,paid their taxes,spoke English,and didn't demand charity of any sort.
I'm an American,through and through.I'm proud of my brave,hard working Irish ancestors but I see the Ireland of today as just another foreign country...and just another European cesspool at that.
Contrast that to today's moslems and Mexicans despoiling ours shores.Assimilate? "RACIST!...NATIVIST!"
“Did they learn English when they got here?”
They tried. Still don’t. :)
The Scotch-Irish arrived here largely in the 17th and 18th centuries, many of whom were indentured servants, who then worked off their term of indenture and headed west into the then-frontier backcountry on the eastern side of the Appalachians, then into the Appalachians and beyond after the US became a nation. Being largely Presbyterian they were not particularly liked by the establishment Church of England types so they had motivation to leave as well as something of a predisposition for hilly country. So west they went.
I was grown before finding out I am Irish through both my parents. St Patrick’s Day was just another day in year. That’s assimilation with a hard nose. My family must have experienced some of this silliness first hand for it to preserver a century.
preserver = persevere
Oh, for crying out loud.
They were shooting Americans of German Descent in Montana during WWI.
The federal government supplied court space for vigilante courts against Americans of German Descent.
Worse, the Irish were mostly (gasp) Catholic. Keep in mind the Catholics and local Kings/ et al in the Eu zone had a very long history of political war-fighting.
Also, this anti-Catholic is a long running meme - remember how JFK was pilloried for being (not much of a ) Catholic?
Crap like "The Pope will run America" and so on was floated in the mass media at the time.
As the second cartoon shows, not all immigrants were unwelcome.
however, it wasn't until the 1960 and the God of the Dems (JFK) and the Dem party opened up immigration into the US. (https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5391395)
Maybe time for "Everything old is new again?"
PING to the Irish!
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