Irish: The Remarkable Saga of a Nation and a City
By (Author) John Burrowes
Transworld Publishers Ltd
Mainstream Publishing
1st July 2005
8th April 2004
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Migration, immigration and emigration
Social and cultural history
941.4430049162
Paperback
448
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 28mm
315g
No bigger story has occurred in the city of Glasgow than the coming of the Irish. "Irish" tells how Glasgow would not have become the powerhouse of the Industrial Revolution had it not been for the labours and skills of the tens of thousands who flooded in during and following Ireland's biggest-ever disaster, the Great Famine. Nor would there have been the legendary Rangers and Celtic had it not been for the arrival of those hard-pressed immigrants, and the real story of the formation of the two clubs is just one of the many episodes uncovered here. The harrowing experiences and suffering of so many throughout Ireland during the Great Famine is brought home, as are the privations faced and sacrifices made by those fleeing impoverished Ireland on board overcrowded, tiny vessels. The author also reveals that one such voyage was one of the most deplorable crimes in maritime history. The acceptance of such a number of immigrants into one city is one of the great social achievements of its kind, but this did not come about without riots and social upheaval, such as what happened in Partick and on the very first Orange Walk.
John Burrowes is a journalist and author of several books including Great Glasgow Stories, Great Glasgow Stories II, Glasgow- Tales of the City and Benny- The life and Times of a Fighting Legend.