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Irish Americans

Irish Americans or Hiberno-Americans (Irish: Gael-Mheiriceánaigh)[9] are Americans who have full or partial ancestry from Ireland. About 32 million Americans — 9.7% of the total population — identified themselves as being Irish in the 2020 American Community Survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau.[10][11]

Irish Americans
Irish: Gael-Mheiriceánaigh
Irish Americans, % of population by state
Total population
Including Scotch-Irish Americans:

36,115,472 (10.9%) alone or in combination
10,899,442 (3.3%) Irish alone
Excluding Scotch-Irish Americans:
33,618,500 (10.1%) alone or in combination
9,919,263 (3.0%) Irish alone

2021 estimates, self-reported[1]
Regions with significant populations
Boston  • New York City  • Scranton  • Philadelphia  • New Orleans  • Pittsburgh  • Cleveland  • Chicago  • Baltimore  • Detroit  • Milwaukee  • Louisville  • New England  • Delaware Valley  • Coal Region  • Los Angeles  • Las Vegas  • Atlanta  • Sacramento  • San Diego  • Houston  • Dallas  • San Francisco  • Palm Springs, California  • Fairbanks and most urban areas[2][3]
Languages
English (American English dialects); a scant speak Irish
Religion
Protestant (51%)  • Catholic (36%)  • Other (3%)  • No religion (10%) (2006)[4]
Related ethnic groups
Anglo-Irish people  • Breton Americans  • Cornish Americans  • English Americans  • Irish Australians  • Irish Canadians  • Irish Catholics  • Manx Americans  • Scotch-Irish Americans  • Scottish Americans  • Scottish Canadians  • Ulster Protestants  • Ulster Scots people  • Welsh Americans
Number of Irish Americans
Year Number
1980[5]
40,165,702
1990[6]
38,735,539
2000[7]
30,528,492
2010[8]
34,670,009

Irish immigration to the United States

From the 17th century to the mid-19th century

 
U.S. counties by the percentage of their population self-identifying Scotch-Irish or American ancestry according to the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey 2013–2017 5-Year Estimates.[11] Counties where Scotch-Irish and American ancestry combined are greater than the United States as a whole are in full orange.
 
U.S. states by the percentage of their population self-identifying Irish ancestry according to the U.S. Census Bureau.[11] States where Irish ancestry is greater than the United States as a whole are in full green.
 
U.S. states where self-identified Irish Americans are overrepresented by the percentage of self-identified Catholics according to the Pew Research Center.[12] States where the percentage of Catholics is greater than the United States as a whole are in full red.
 
U.S. states where self-identified Irish Americans are overrepresented by the percentage of self-identified Protestants (Evangelical or Mainline) according to the Pew Research Center.[13][14] States where the percentage of Protestants is greater than the United States as a whole are in full blue.

Some of the first Irish people to travel to the New World did so as members of the Spanish garrison in Florida during the 1560s, and small numbers of Irish colonists were involved in efforts to establish colonies in the Amazon region, in Newfoundland, and in Virginia between 1604 and the 1630s. According to historian Donald Akenson, there were "few if any" Irish forcibly transported to the Americas during this period.[15]

Irish immigration to the Americas was the result of a series of complex causes. The Tudor conquest and subsequent colonization during the 16th and 17th centuries had led to widespread social upheaval in Ireland, and drove many Irish people to try and seek a better life elsewhere; this coincided with the rapid establishment of European colonies in the Americas, offering a source of emigration for prospective migrants. Most Irish immigrants to the Americas came as indentured servants, though others were merchants and landowners who served as key players in a variety of different mercantile and colonizing enterprises.[15]

Significant numbers of Irish laborers began traveling to English colonies such as Virginia, the Leeward Islands, and Barbados in the 1620s.[16]: 56–7 

Half of the Irish immigrants to the United States in its colonial era (1607–1775) came from the Irish province of Ulster, while the other half came from the other three provinces (Leinster, Munster, and Connacht).[17] In the 17th century, immigration from Ireland to the Thirteen Colonies was minimal,[18][19] confined mostly to male Irish indentured servants who were primarily Catholic[19][20] and peaked with 8,000 prisoner-of-war penal transports to the Chesapeake Colonies from the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the 1650s (out of a total of approximately 10,000 Catholic immigrants from Ireland to the United States prior to the American Revolutionary War in 1775).[19][21][22][23]

Indentured servitude in British America emerged in part due to the high cost of passage across the Atlantic Ocean,[24][25] and as a consequence, which colonies indentured servants immigrated to depended upon which colonies their patrons chose to immigrate to.[26] While the Colony of Virginia passed laws prohibiting the free exercise of Catholicism during the colonial period,[27] the General Assembly of the Province of Maryland enacted laws in 1639 protecting freedom of religion (following the instructions of a 1632 letter from Cecil Calvert, 2nd Baron Baltimore to his brother Leonard Calvert, the 1st Proprietary-Governor of Maryland), and the Maryland General Assembly later passed the 1649 Maryland Toleration Act explicitly guaranteeing those privileges for Catholics.[28]

Like the rest of the indentured servant population in the Chesapeake Colonies at the time, 40 to 50 percent died before completing their contracts. This was due in large part to the Tidewater region's highly malignant disease environment, with most not establishing families and dying childless because the population of the Chesapeake Colonies, like the Thirteen Colonies in the aggregate, was not sex-balanced until the 18th century, as three-quarters of the immigrants to the Chesapeake Colonies were male (and in some periods, 4:1 or 6:1 male-to-female) and fewer than 1 percent were over the age of 35. As a consequence, the population only grew due to sustained immigration rather than natural increase, and many of those who survived their indentured servitude contracts left the region.[29][30][31]

In 1650, all five Catholic churches with regular services in the eight British American colonies were located in Maryland.[32]

In contrast to 17th century Maryland, the Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay and Connecticut Colonies restricted suffrage to members of the established Puritan church, while the Province of Carolina did not restrict suffrage to members of the established Anglican church. The Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations had no established church, while the former New Netherland colonies (New York, New Jersey, and Delaware) also had no established church under the Duke's Laws, and the Frame of Government in William Penn's 1682 land grant established free exercise of religion for all Christians in the Province of Pennsylvania.[33][34]

Following the Glorious Revolution (1688–1689), Catholics were disenfranchised in Maryland, New York, Rhode Island, Carolina, and Virginia,[33] although in Maryland, suffrage was restored in 1702.[35] In 1692, the Maryland General Assembly established the Church of England as the official state church.[36] In 1698 and 1699, Maryland, Virginia, and Carolina passed laws specifically limiting immigration of Irish Catholic indentured servants.[37] In 1700, the estimated population of Maryland was 29,600,[38] about 2,500 of which were Catholic.[39]

In the 18th century, emigration from Ireland to the Thirteen Colonies shifted from being primarily Catholic to being primarily Protestant, and with the exception of the 1790s it would remain so until the mid-to-late 1830s,[40][41] with Presbyterians constituting the absolute majority until 1835.[42][43] These Protestant immigrants were principally descended from Scottish and English pastoralists and colonial administrators (often from the South/Lowlands of Scotland and the bordering North of England) who had in the previous century settled the Plantations of Ireland, the largest of which was the Plantation of Ulster,[44][45][46] and these Protestant immigrants primarily migrated as families rather than as individuals.[47] Most of these Irish Protestants were Ulster Protestants.

In 1704, the Maryland General Assembly passed a law which banned the Jesuits from proselytizing, baptizing children other than those with Catholic parents, and publicly conducting Catholic Mass. Two months after its passage, the General Assembly modified the legislation to allow Mass to be privately conducted for an 18-month period. In 1707, the General Assembly passed a law which permanently allowed Mass to be privately conducted. During this period, the General Assembly also began levying taxes on the passage of Irish Catholic indentured servants. In 1718, the General Assembly required a religious test for voting that resumed disenfranchisement of Catholics.[48]

However, lax enforcement of penal laws in Maryland (due to its population being overwhelmingly rural) enabled churches on Jesuit-operated farms and plantations to grow and become stable parishes.[49] In 1750, of the 30 Catholic churches with regular services in the Thirteen Colonies, 15 were located in Maryland, 11 in Pennsylvania, and 4 in the former New Netherland colonies.[50] By 1756, the number of Catholics in Maryland had increased to approximately 7,000,[51] which increased further to 20,000 by 1765.[49] In Pennsylvania, there were approximately 3,000 Catholics in 1756 and 6,000 by 1765 (the large majority of the Pennsylvania Catholic population was from Germany).[49][51][52]

From 1717 to 1775, though scholarly estimates vary, the most common approximation is that 250,000 immigrants from Ireland emigrated to the Thirteen Colonies.[list 1] By the beginning of the American Revolutionary War in 1775, approximately only 2 to 3 percent of the colonial labor force was composed of indentured servants, and of those arriving from Britain from 1773 to 1776, fewer than 5 percent were from Ireland (while 85 percent remained male and 72 percent went to the Southern Colonies).[62] Immigration during the war came to a standstill except by 5,000 German mercenaries from Hesse who remained in the country following the war.[41] Out of the 115 killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill, 22 were Irish-born. Their names include Callaghan, Casey, Collins, Connelly, Dillon, Donohue, Flynn, McGrath, Nugent, Shannon, and Sullivan[63]

By the end of the war in 1783, there were approximately 24,000 to 25,000 Catholics in the United States (including 3,000 slaves) out of a total population of approximately 3 million (or less than 1 percent).[38][21][64][65] The majority of the Catholic population in the United States during the colonial period came from England, Germany, and France, not Ireland,[21] despite failed academic efforts by Irish historiographers to demonstrate Irish Catholics as being more numerous in the colonial period than previous scholarship had indicated.[66] By 1790, approximately 400,000 people of Irish birth or ancestry lived in the United States (or greater than 10 percent of the total population of approximately 3.9 million).[17][67] The U.S. Bureau of the Census estimates 2% of the United States population in 1776 was of native Irish heritage.[68] The Catholic population grew to approximately 50,000 by 1800 (or less than 1 percent of the total population of approximately 5.3 million) due to increased Catholic emigration from Ireland during the 1790s.[41][65][69][70]

In the 18th century Thirteen Colonies and the independent United States, while interethnic marriage among Catholics remained a dominant pattern, Catholic-Protestant intermarriage became more common (notably in the Shenandoah Valley where intermarriage among Ulster Protestants and the significant minority of Irish Catholics in particular was not uncommon or stigmatized),[71] and while fewer Catholic parents required that their children be disinherited in their wills if they renounced Catholicism, it remained more common among Catholic parents to do so if their children renounced their parents faith in proportion to the rest of the U.S. population.[64]

Despite this, many Irish Catholics that immigrated to the United States from 1770 to 1830 converted to Baptist and Methodist churches during the Second Great Awakening (1790–1840).[72][73] In between the end of the American Revolutionary War in 1783 and the War of 1812, 100,000 immigrants came from Ulster to the United States.[42] During the French Revolutionary Wars (1792–1802) and Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815), there was a 22-year economic expansion in Ireland due to increased need for agricultural products for British soldiers and an expanding population in England. Following the conclusion of the War of the Seventh Coalition and Napoleon's exile to Saint Helena in 1815, there was a six-year international economic depression that led to plummeting grain prices and a cropland rent spike in Ireland.[42][74]

From 1815 to 1845, 500,000 more Irish Protestant immigrants came from Ireland to the United States,[42][75] as part of a migration of approximately 1 million immigrants from Ireland from 1820 to 1845.[74] In 1820, following the Louisiana Purchase in 1804 and the Adams–Onís Treaty in 1819, the Catholic population of the United States had grown to 195,000 (or approximately 2 percent of the total population of approximately 9.6 million).[76][77] By 1840, along with resumed immigration from Germany by the 1820s,[78] the Catholic population grew to 663,000 (or approximately 4 percent out of the total population of 17.1 million).[79][80] Following the potato blight in late 1845 that initiated the Great Famine in Ireland, from 1846 to 1851, more than 1 million more Irish immigrated to the United States, 90 percent of whom were Catholic.[40][81]

Many of the Famine immigrants to New York City required quarantine on Staten Island or Blackwell's Island and thousands died from typhoid fever or cholera for reasons directly or indirectly related to the Famine.[82] Despite the small increase in Catholic-Protestant intermarriage following the American Revolutionary War,[64] Catholic-Protestant intermarriage remained uncommon in the United States in the 19th century.[83]

Historians have characterized the etymology of the term "Scotch-Irish" as obscure,[84] and the term itself as misleading and confusing to the extent that even its usage by authors in historic works of literature about the Scotch-Irish (such as The Mind of the South by W. J. Cash) is often incorrect.[85][86][87] Historians David Hackett Fischer and James G. Leyburn note that usage of the term is unique to North American English and it is rarely used by British historians, or in Ireland or Scotland, where Scots-Irish is a term used by Irish Scottish people to describe themselves.[88][89] The first recorded usage of the term was by Elizabeth I of England in 1573 in reference to Gaelic-speaking Scottish Highlanders who crossed the Irish Sea and intermarried with the Irish Catholic natives of Ireland.[84]

While Protestant immigrants from Ireland in the 18th century were more commonly identified as "Anglo-Irish," and while some preferred to self-identify as "Anglo-Irish,"[88] usage of "Scotch-Irish" in reference to Ulster Protestants who immigrated to the United States in the 18th century likely became common among Episcopalians and Quakers in Pennsylvania, and records show that usage of the term with this meaning was made as early as 1757 by the Anglo-Irish philosopher Edmund Burke.[90][91]

However, multiple historians have noted that from the time of the American Revolutionary War until 1850, the term largely fell out of usage, because most Ulster Protestants self-identified as "Irish" until large waves of immigration by Irish Catholics both during and after the 1840s Great Famine in Ireland led those Ulster Protestants in America who lived in proximity to the new immigrants to change their self-identification from "Irish" to "Scotch-Irish,"[list 2] while those Ulster Protestants who did not live in proximity to Irish Catholics continued to self-identify as "Irish," or as time went on, to start self-identifying as being of "American ancestry."[94]

While those historians note that renewed usage of "Scotch-Irish" after 1850 was motivated by anti-Catholic prejudices among Ulster Protestants,[92][93] considering the historically low rates of intermarriage between Protestants and Catholics in both Ireland and the United States,[list 3] as well as the relative frequency of interethnic and interdenominational marriage amongst Protestants in Ulster,[list 4] and despite the fact that not all Protestant migrants from Ireland historically were of Scottish descent,[55] James G. Leyburn argued for retaining its usage for reasons of utility and preciseness,[101] while historian Wayland F. Dunaway also argued for retention for historical precedent and linguistic description.[102]

During the colonial period, Irish Protestant immigrants settled in the southern Appalachian backcountry and in the Carolina Piedmont.[103] They became the primary cultural group in these areas, and their descendants were in the vanguard of westward movement through Virginia into Tennessee and Kentucky, and thence into Arkansas, Missouri and Texas. By the 19th century, through intermarriage with settlers of English and German ancestry, their descendants lost their identification with Ireland. "This generation of pioneers...was a generation of Americans, not of Englishmen or Germans or Scots-Irish."[104] The two groups had little initial interaction in America, as the 18th-century Ulster immigrants were predominantly Protestant and had become settled largely in upland regions of the American interior, while the huge wave of 19th-century Catholic immigrant families settled primarily in the Northeast and Midwest port cities such as Boston, Philadelphia, New York, Buffalo, or Chicago. However, beginning in the early 19th century, many Irish migrated individually to the interior for work on large-scale infrastructure projects such as canals and, later in the century, railroads.[105]

The Irish Protestants settled mainly in the colonial "back country" of the Appalachian Mountain region, and became the prominent ethnic strain in the culture that developed there.[106] The descendants of Irish Protestant settlers had a great influence on the later culture of the Southern United States in particular and the culture of the United States in general through such contributions as American folk music, country and western music, and stock car racing, which became popular throughout the country in the late 20th century.[107]

 
Charles Carroll, the sole Catholic signer of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, was the descendant of Irish nobility in County Tipperary. Signers Matthew Thornton, George Taylor were born in Ireland and were "Ulster" Scots, while Thomas Lynch Jr., for example, was Protestant; he was of Irish ancestry and retained a strong Irish identity.

Irish immigrants of this period participated in significant numbers in the American Revolution, leading one British Army officer to testify at the House of Commons that "half the rebels (referring to soldiers in the Continental Army) were from Ireland."[108] Irish Americans signed the foundational documents of the United States—the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution—and, beginning with Andrew Jackson, served as president.

1790 population of Irish origin by state

 Estimated Irish American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census [109]

State or Territory
  Ireland   Irish
Total
  Ulster   Free State
# % # % # %
  Connecticut 4,180 1.80% 2,555 1.10% 6,735 2.90%
  Delaware 2,918 6.30% 2,501 5.40% 5,419 11.70%
  Georgia 6,082 11.50% 2,010 3.80% 8,092 15.30%
  Kentucky &  Tenn. 6,513 7.00% 4,838 5.20% 11,351 12.20%
  Maine 7,689 8.00% 3,556 3.70% 11,245 11.70%
  Maryland 12,102 5.80% 13,562 6.50% 25,664 12.30%
  Massachusetts 9,703 2.60% 4,851 1.30% 14,554 3.90%
  New Hampshire 6,491 4.60% 4,092 2.90% 10,583 7.50%
  New Jersey 10,707 6.30% 5,439 3.20% 16,146 9.50%
  New York 16,033 5.10% 9,431 3.00% 25,464 8.10%
  North Carolina 16,483 5.70% 15,616 5.40% 32,099 11.10%
  Pennsylvania 46,571 11.00% 14,818 3.50% 61,389 14.50%
  Rhode Island 1,293 2.00% 517 0.80% 1,810 2.80%
  South Carolina 13,177 9.40% 6,168 4.40% 19,345 13.80%
  Vermont 2,722 3.20% 1,616 1.90% 4,338 5.10%
  Virginia 27,411 6.20% 24,316 5.50% 51,727 11.70%
  1790 Census Area 190,075 5.99% 115,886 3.65% 305,961 9.64%
  Northwest Territory 307 2.92% 190 1.81% 497 4.73%
  French America 220 1.10% 135 0.68% 355 1.78%
  Spanish America 60 0.25% 37 0.15% 97 0.40%
  United States 190,662 5.91% 116,248 3.60% 306,910 9.51%

Irish Catholics in the South

In 1820 Irish-born John England became the first Catholic bishop in the mainly Protestant city of Charleston, South Carolina. During the 1820s and 1830s, Bishop England defended the Catholic minority against Protestant prejudices. In 1831 and 1835, he established free schools for free African American children. Inflamed by the propaganda of the American Anti-Slavery Society, a mob raided the Charleston post office in 1835 and the next day turned its attention to England's school. England led Charleston's "Irish Volunteers" to defend the school. Soon after this, however, all schools for "free blacks" were closed in Charleston, and England acquiesced.[110]

Two pairs of Irish empresarios founded colonies in coastal Texas in 1828. John McMullen and James McGloin honored the Irish saint when they established the San Patricio Colony south of San Antonio; James Power and James Hewetson contracted to create the Refugio Colony on the Gulf Coast. The two colonies were settled mainly by Irish, but also by Mexicans and other nationalities. At least 87 Irish-surnamed individuals settled in the Peters Colony, which included much of present-day north-central Texas, in the 1840s. The Irish participated in all phases of Texas' war of independence against Mexico. Among those who died defending the Alamo in March 1836 were 12 who were Irish-born, while an additional 14 bore Irish surnames. About 100 Irish-born soldiers participated in the Battle of San Jacinto – about one-seventh of the total force of Texians in that conflict.[111]

The Irish Catholics concentrated in a few medium-sized cities, where they were highly visible, especially in Charleston, Savannah and New Orleans.[112][113] They often became precinct leaders in the Democratic Party Organizations, opposed abolition of slavery, and generally favored preserving the Union in 1860, when they voted for Stephen Douglas.[114]

After secession in 1861, the Southern Irish Catholic community supported the Confederate States of America and 20,000 Irish Catholics served in the Confederate States Army. Gleason says:

Support for Irish Confederate soldiers from home was vital both for encouraging them to stay in the army and to highlight to native white southerners that the entire Irish community was behind the Confederacy. Civilian leaders of the Irish and the South did embrace the Confederate national project and most became advocates of a 'hard-war' policy.[115][116]

Irish nationalist John Mitchel lived in Tennessee and Virginia during his exile from Ireland and was one of the Southern United States' most outspoken supporters during the American Civil War through his newspapers the Southern Citizen and the Richmond Enquirer.[117]

Although most began as unskilled laborers, Irish Catholics in the South achieved average or above average economic status by 1900. David T. Gleeson emphasizes how well they were accepted by society:

Native tolerance, however, was also a very important factor in Irish integration [into Southern society].... Upper-class southerners, therefore, did not object to the Irish, because Irish immigration never threatened to overwhelm their cities or states.... The Irish were willing to take on potentially high-mortality occupations, thereby sparing valuable slave property. Some employers objected not only to the cost of Irish labor but also to the rowdiness of their foreign-born employees. Nevertheless, they recognized the importance of the Irish worker to the protection of slavery.... The Catholicism practiced by Irish immigrants was of little concern to Southern natives.[118]

Mid-19th century and later

Irish immigration to the United States (1820–1975)[17]
Period Number of
immigrants
Period Number of
immigrants
1820–1830 54,338 1911–1920 146,181
1831–1840 207,381 1921–1930 220,591
1841–1850 780,719 1931–1940 13,167
1851–1860 914,119 1941–1950 26,967
1861–1870 435,778 1951–1960 57,332
1871–1880 436,871 1961–1970 37,461
1881–1890 655,482 1971–1975 6,559
1891–1900 388,416
1901–1910 399,065
Total : 4,720,427

Before the 1800s, Irish immigrants to North America often moved to the countryside. Some worked in the fur trade, trapping and exploring, but most settled in rural farms and villages. They cleared the land of trees, built homes, and planted fields. Many others worked in coastal areas as fishers, on ships, and as dockworkers. In the 1800s, Irish immigrants in the United States tended to stay in the large cities where they landed.[119]

 
"Leacht Cuimhneacháin na nGael", Irish famine memorial located on Penn's Landing, Philadelphia

From 1820 to 1860, 1,956,557 Irish arrived, 75% of these after the Great Irish Famine (or The Great Hunger, Irish: An Gorta Mór) of 1845–1852, struck.[120] According to a 2019 study, "the sons of farmers and illiterate men were more likely to emigrate than their literate and skilled counterparts. Emigration rates were highest in poorer farming communities with stronger migrant networks."[121]

Of the total Irish immigrants to the U.S. from 1820 to 1860, many died crossing the ocean due to disease and dismal conditions of what became known as coffin ships.[122] Irish immigration had greatly increased beginning in the 1830s due to the need for unskilled labor in canal building, lumbering, and construction works in the Northeast.[122] The large Erie Canal project was one such example where Irishmen were many of the laborers. Small but tight communities developed in growing cities such as Philadelphia, Boston, and New York.

Most Irish immigrants to the United States during this period favored large cities because they could create their own communities for support and protection in a new environment.[123] Cities with large numbers of Irish immigrants included Boston, Philadelphia, and New York, as well as Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, St. Louis, St. Paul, San Francisco, and Los Angeles.

 
Gravestone in Boston Catholic cemetery erected in memory of County Roscommon native born shortly before the Great Famine

While many Irish did stay near large cities, countless others were part of westward expansion. They were enticed by tales of gold, and by the increasing opportunities for work and land. In 1854, the government opened Kansas Territory to settlers.[124] While many people in general moved to take advantage of the unsettled land, Irish were an important part. Many Irish men were physical laborers. In order to colonize the west, many strong men were needed to build the towns and cities. Kansas City was one city that was built by Irish immigrants.[124] Much of its population today is of Irish descent. Another reason for Irish migration west was the expansion of railroads. Railway work was a common occupation among immigrant men because workers were in such high demand. Many Irish men followed the expansion of railroads, and ended up settling in places that they built in.[125] Since the Irish were a large part of those Americans moving west, much of their culture can still be found today.

Between 1851 and 1920, 3.3 to 3.7 million Irish immigrated to the United States,[126][17] including more than 90 percent of the more than 1 million Ulster Protestant emigrants out of Ireland from 1851 to 1900.[127][81] Following the Great Famine (1845–1852), emigration from Ireland came primarily from Munster and Connacht,[127] while 28 percent of all immigrants from Ireland from 1851 to 1900 continued to come from Ulster. Ulster immigration continued to account for as much as 20 percent of all immigration from Ireland to the United States in the 1880s and 1890s,[81] and still accounted for 19 percent of all immigration from Ireland to the United States from 1900 to 1909 and 25 percent from 1910 to 1914.[128] The Catholic population in the United States grew to 3.1 million by 1860 (or approximately 10 percent of the total U.S. population of 31.4 million),[129][130] to 6.3 million by 1880 (or approximately 13 percent of the total U.S. population of 50.2 million),[131][132] and further to 19.8 million by 1920 (or approximately 19 percent of the total U.S. population of 106 million).[131][133]

The 309 Connemara emigrants, selected by their local clergy as suitable for a new life in America, arrived at Boston June 14, 1880, 11 days after departure from Galway Bay on the SS Austrian, an Allen Line ship. The settling of 'The Connemaras', as they became known, was a new venture prompted by a Liverpool priest, Fr Patrick Nugent renowned for his 'philanthropic and truly patriotic exertions to alleviate the social conditions of his fellow countrymen in England'; and Archbishop John Ireland, of St Paul, Minnesota, who was already settling thousands of Irish Catholics who were trapped in the ghettoes of New York and elsewhere, on rich prairie lands. [134][135]

 
Thomas Ambrose Butler, an Irish Catholic priest, was a leading voice in urging Irish immigrants to colonize Kansas

However, due to continued immigration from Germany,[136] and beginning in the 1880s, waves of immigration from Italy, Poland, and Canada (by French Canadians) as well as from Mexico from 1900 to 1920,[137] Irish Catholics never accounted for a majority of the Catholic population in the United States through 1920.[138][139] In the 1920s, an additional 220,000 immigrants from Ireland came to the United States,[17] with emigration from Ulster falling off to 10,000 of 126,000 immigrants from Ireland (or less than 10 percent) between 1925 and 1930.[128] Following the Immigration Act of 1924 and the Great Depression,[140][141] from 1930 to 1975, only 141,000 more immigrants came from Ireland to the United States.[17] Improving economic conditions during the Post–World War II economic expansion and the passage of the restrictive Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 contributed to the decline in mass immigration from Ireland.[141] Due to the early 1980s recession, 360,000 Irish emigrated out of the country, with the majority going to England and many to the United States (including approximately 40,000 to 150,000 on overstayed travel visas as undocumented aliens).[142]

Beginning in the 1970s, surveys of self-identified Irish Americans found that consistent majorities of Irish Americans also self-identified as being Protestant.[143][144] While there was a greater total number of immigrants after immigration from Ireland transitioned to being primarily Catholic in the mid-to-late 1830s,[40][47][42][43] fertility rates in the United States were lower from 1840 to 1970 after immigration from Ireland became primarily Catholic than they were from 1700 to 1840 when immigration was primarily Protestant.[145][146][147] Also, while Irish immigrants to the United States in the early 20th century had higher fertility rates than the U.S. population as a whole, they had lower fertility rates than German immigrants to the United States during the same time period and lower fertility rates than the contemporaneous population of Ireland, and subsequent generations had lower fertility rates than the emigrant generation.[148] This is due to the fact that despite coming from the rural regions of an agrarian society, Irish immigrants in the post-Famine migration generally immigrated to the urban areas of the United States because by 1850 the costs of moving to a rural area and establishing a farm was beyond the financial means of most Irish immigrants.[149] In the 1990s, the Irish economy began to boom again, and by the turn of the 21st century, immigration to Ireland from the United States began to consistently exceed immigration from Ireland to the United States.[150]

Civil War through to the early 20th century

 
Concentration of people born in Ireland in 1870 Census

During the American Civil War, Irish Americans volunteered for the Union Army and at least 38 Union regiments had the word "Irish" in their titles. 144,221 Union soldiers were born in Ireland; additionally, perhaps an equal number of Union soldiers were of Irish descent.[151] Many immigrant soldiers formed their own regiments, such as the Irish Brigade.[152][153][154] However, in proportion to the general population, the Irish were the most underrepresented immigrant group fighting for the Union.[155]

However, conscription was resisted by many Irish as an imposition.[153][154] Two years into the war, the conscription law was passed in 1863, and major draft riots erupted in New York. It coincided with the efforts of the city's dominant political machine, Tammany Hall, to enroll Irish immigrants as citizens so they could vote in local elections.[156] Many such immigrants suddenly discovered they were now expected to fight for their new country.[157] The Irish, employed primarily as laborers, were usually unable to afford the $300 "commutation fee" to procure a replacement for service.[158] Many of the Irish viewed blacks as competition for scarce jobs, and as the reason why the Civil War was being fought.[159] African Americans who fell into the mob's hands were often beaten or killed.[160][161] The Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue, which provided shelter for hundreds of children, was attacked by a mob. It was seen as a "symbol of white charity to blacks and of black upward mobility," reasons enough for its destruction at the hands of a predominantly Irish mob which looked upon African Americans as direct social and economic competitors.[162] Fortunately, the largely Irish-American police force was able to secure the orphanage for enough time to allow orphans to escape.[160][163]

30,000 Irish or Irish-descended men joined the Confederate Army.[155] Interestingly, Gleeson wrote that they had higher desertion rates than non-Irish, and sometimes switched sides, suggesting that their support for the Confederacy was tepid.[164] During the Reconstruction era, however, some Irish took a strong position in favor of white supremacy, and some played major roles in attacking blacks in riots in Memphis.[165]

In 1871, New York's Orange Riots broke out when Irish Protestants celebrated the Williamite victory at the Battle of the Boyne by parading through Irish Catholic neighborhoods, taunting the residents who then responded with violence. Police Superintendent James J. Kelso, a Protestant, ordered the parade cancelled as a threat to public safety. Kelso was overruled by the governor, who ordered 5000 militia to protect the marchers.[166] The Catholics attacked but were stopped by the militia and police, who opened fire killing about 63 Catholics.[167]

 
U.S. President Grover Cleveland twisting the tail of the British Lion as Americans cheer in the Venezuelan crisis of 1895; cartoon in Puck by J.S. Pughe

Relations between the U.S. and Britain were chilly during the 1860s as Americans resented instances of British and Canadian support for the Confederacy during the Civil War. After the war American authorities looked the other way as Irish Catholic "Fenians" plotted and even attempted an invasion of Canada.[168] The Fenians proved a failure,[clarification needed] but Irish Catholic politicians (Who were a growing power in the Democratic Party) demanded more independence for Ireland and made anti-British rhetoric—called "twisting the lion's tail"—a staple of election campaign appeals to the Irish Catholic vote.[169]

 
American political cartoon by Thomas Nast titled "The Usual Irish Way of Doing Things", depicting a drunken Irishman lighting a powder keg and swinging a bottle. Published 2 September 1871 in Harper's Weekly

Later immigrants mostly settled in industrial towns and cities of the Northeast and Midwest where Irish American neighborhoods had previously been established.[170][171]

The Irish were having a huge impact on America as a whole. In 1910, there were more people in New York City of Irish ancestry than Dublin's whole population, and even today, many of these cities still retain a substantial Irish-American community.[172] The best urban economic opportunities for unskilled Irish women and men included "factory and millwork, domestic service, and the physical labor of public work projects."[173]

During the mid-1900s, immigrants from Ireland were coming to the U.S. for the same reasons as those before them; they came looking for jobs.[174]

Social history in the United States

Religion and society

Religion has been important to the Irish American identity in America, and continues to play a major role in their communities. Surveys conducted since the 1970s have shown consistent majorities or pluralities of those who self-identify as being of Irish ancestry in the United States as also self-identifying as Protestants.[143][144] The Protestants' ancestors arrived primarily in the colonial era, while Catholics are primarily descended from immigrants of the 19th century. Irish leaders have been prominent in the Catholic Church in the United States for over 150 years. The Irish have been leaders in the Presbyterian and Methodist traditions, as well.[175]

Surveys in the 1990s show that of Americans who identify themselves as "Irish", 51% said they were Protestant and 36% identified as Catholic. In the Southern United States, Protestants account for 73% of those claiming Irish origins, while Catholics account for 19%. In the Northern United States, 45% of those claiming Irish origin are Catholic, while 39% are Protestant.[175]

Irish Catholic and Ulster Protestant relations

Between 1607 and 1820, the majority of emigrants from Ireland to America were Protestants [176] who were described simply as "Irish".[177] The religious distinction became important after 1820,[178] when large numbers of Irish Catholics began to emigrate to the United States. Some of the descendants of the colonial Irish Protestant settlers from Ulster began thereafter to redefine themselves as "Scotch Irish", to stress their historic origins, and distanced themselves from Irish Catholics;[179] others continued to call themselves Irish, especially in areas of the South which saw little Irish Catholic immigration. By 1830, Irish diaspora demographics had changed rapidly, with over 60% of all Irish settlers in the U.S. being Catholics from rural areas of Ireland.[180]

Some Protestant Irish immigrants became active in explicitly anti-Catholic organizations such as the Orange Institution and the American Protective Association. However, participation in the Orange Institution was never as large in the United States as it was in Canada.[181] In the early nineteenth century, the post-Revolutionary republican spirit of the new United States attracted exiled United Irishmen such as Theobald Wolf Tone and others, with the presidency of Andrew Jackson exemplifying this attitude.[182] Most Protestant Irish immigrants in the first several decades of the nineteenth century were those who held to the republicanism of the 1790s, and who were unable to accept Orangeism. Loyalists and Orangemen made up a minority of Irish Protestant immigrants to the United States during this period. Most of the Irish loyalist emigration was bound for Upper Canada and the Canadian Maritime provinces, where Orange lodges were able to flourish under the British flag.[181]

By 1870, when there were about 930 Orange lodges in the Canadian province of Ontario, there were only 43 in the entire eastern United States. These few American lodges were founded by newly arriving Protestant Irish immigrants in coastal cities such as Philadelphia and New York.[183] These ventures were short-lived and of limited political and social impact, although there were specific instances of violence involving Orangemen between Catholic and Protestant Irish immigrants, such as the Orange Riots in New York City in 1824, 1870 and 1871.[184]

The first "Orange riot" on record was in 1824, in Abingdon Square, New York, resulting from a 12 July march. Several Orangemen were arrested and found guilty of inciting the riot. According to the State prosecutor in the court record, "the Orange celebration was until then unknown in the country." The immigrants involved were admonished: "In the United States the oppressed of all nations find an asylum, and all that is asked in return is that they become law-abiding citizens. Orangemen, Ribbonmen, and United Irishmen are alike unknown. They are all entitled to protection by the laws of the country."[185]

 
The Orange riot of 1871 as depicted in Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. The view is at 25th Street in Manhattan looking south down Eighth Avenue.

The later Orange Riots of 1870 and 1871 killed nearly 70 people, and were fought out between Irish Protestant and Catholic immigrants. After this the activities of the Orange Order were banned for a time, the Order dissolved, and most members joined Masonic orders. After 1871, there were no more riots between Irish Catholics and Protestants.[186]

America offered a new beginning, and "...most descendents of the Ulster Presbyterians of the eighteenth century and even many new Protestant Irish immigrants turned their backs on all associations with Ireland and melted into the American Protestant mainstream."[187]

Catholics

Irish priests (especially Dominicans, Franciscans, Augustinians and Capuchins) came to the large cities of the East in the 1790s, and when new dioceses were erected in 1808 the first bishop of New York was an Irishman in recognition of the contribution of the early Irish clergy.[188]

 
St. Augustine's Church on fire. Anti-Irish, anti-Catholic Nativist riots in Philadelphia in 1844.

Saint Patrick's Battalion (San Patricios) was a group of several hundred immigrant soldiers, the majority Irish, who deserted the U.S. Army during the Mexican–American War because of ill treatment or sympathetic leanings to fellow Mexican Catholics. They joined the Mexican army.[189]

In Boston between 1810 and 1840 there had been serious tensions between the bishop and the laity who wanted to control the local parishes. By 1845, the Catholic population in Boston had increased to 30,000 from around 5,000 in 1825, due to the influx of Irish immigrants. With the appointment of John B. Fitzpatrick as bishop in 1845, tensions subsided as the increasingly Irish Catholic community grew to support Fitzpatrick's assertion of the bishop's control of parish government.[190]

 
The mass hanging of Irish Catholic soldiers who joined the Mexican army

In New York, Archbishop John Hughes (1797–1864), an Irish immigrant himself, was deeply involved in "the Irish question"—Irish independence from British rule. Hughes supported Daniel O'Connell's Catholic emancipation movement in Ireland, but rejected such radical and violent societies as the Young Irelanders and the National Brotherhood. Hughes also disapproved of American Irish radical fringe groups, urging immigrants to assimilate themselves into American life while remaining patriotic to Ireland "only individually".[191] In Hughes's view, a large-scale movement to form Irish settlements in the western United States was too isolationist and ultimately detrimental to immigrants' success in the New World.[192]

In the 1840s, Hughes campaigned for publicly funded schools for Catholic immigrants from Ireland modelled after the successful Irish public school system in Lowell, Massachusetts. Hughes made speeches denouncing the Public School Society of New York, which mandated that all educational institutions use the King James Bible, an unacceptable proposition to Catholics. The dispute between Catholics and Protestants over the funding of schools led the New York Legislature to pass the Maclay Act in 1842, giving New York City an elective Board of Education empowered to build and supervise schools and distribute the education fund—but with the proviso that none of the money should go to schools which taught religion. Hughes responded by building an elaborate parochial school system that stretched to the college level, setting a policy followed in other large cities. Efforts to get city or state funding failed because of vehement Protestant opposition to a system that rivaled the public schools.[193]

In the west, Catholic Irish were having a large effect as well. The open west attracted many Irish immigrants. Many of these immigrants were Catholic. When they migrated west, they would form "little pockets" with other Irish immigrants.[124] Irish Catholic communities were made in "supportive, village style neighborhoods centered around a Catholic church and called 'parishes'".[124] These neighborhoods affected the overall lifestyle and atmosphere of the communities. Other ways religion played a part in these towns was the fact that many were started by Irish Catholic priests. Father Bernard Donnelly started "Town of Kansas" which would later become Kansas City. His influence over early stages Kansas City was great, and so the Catholic religion was spread to other settlers who arrived.[124] While not all settlers became Catholics, a great number of the early settlers were Catholic. In other western communities, Irish priests wanted to convert the Native Americans to Catholicism.[124] These Catholic Irish would contribute not only to the growth of Catholic population in America, but to the values and traditions in America.

 
Officers and men of the Irish-Catholic 69th New York Volunteer Regiment attend church services at Fort Corcoran in 1861.

Jesuits established a network of colleges in major cities, including Boston College, Fordham University in New York, and Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. Fordham was founded in 1841 and attracted students from other regions of the United States, and even South America and the Caribbean. At first exclusively a liberal arts institution, it built a science building in 1886, lending more legitimacy to science in the curriculum there. In addition, a three-year Bachelor of Science degree was created.[194] Boston College, by contrast, was established over twenty years later in 1863 to appeal to urban Irish Catholics. It offered a rather limited intellectual curriculum, however, with the priests at Boston College prioritizing spiritual and sacramental activities over intellectual pursuits. One consequence was that Harvard Law School would not admit Boston College graduates to its law school. Modern Jesuit leadership in American academia was not to become their hallmark across all institutions until the 20th century.[195]

The Irish became prominent in the leadership of the Catholic Church in the U.S. by the 1850s—by 1890 there were 7.3 million Catholics in the U.S. and growing, and most bishops were Irish.[196] As late as the 1970s, when Irish were 17% of American Catholics, they were 35% of the priests and 50% of the bishops, together with a similar proportion of presidents of Catholic colleges and hospitals.[197]

Protestants

The Scots-Irish who settled in the back country of colonial America were largely Presbyterians.[198] The establishment of many settlements in the remote back-country put a strain on the ability of the Presbyterian Church to meet the new demand for qualified, college-educated clergy.[199] Religious groups such as the Baptists and Methodists did not require higher education of their ministers, so they could more readily supply ministers to meet the demand of the growing Scots-Irish settlements.[199] By about 1810, Baptist and Methodist churches were in the majority, and the descendants of the Scotch-Irish today remain predominantly Baptist or Methodist.[200] They were avid participants in the revivals taking place during the Great Awakening from the 1740s to the 1840s.[201] They take pride in their Irish heritage because they identify with the values ascribed to the Scotch-Irish who played a major role in the American Revolution and in the development of American culture.[175]

Presbyterians

The first Presbyterian community in America was established in 1640 in Southampton, Long Island New York.[202] Francis Makemie, an Irish Presbyterian immigrant later established churches in Maryland and Virginia.[203] Makemie was born and raised near Ramelton, County Donegal, to Ulster Scots parents. He was educated in the University of Glasgow and set out to organize and initiate the construction of several Presbyterian Churches throughout Maryland and Virginia. By 1706, Makemie and his followers constructed a Presbyterian Church in Rehobeth, Maryland.[204][205] In 1707, after traveling to New York to establish a presbytery, Francis Makemie was charged with preaching without a license by the English immigrant and Governor of New York, Edward Hyde.[206] Makemie won a vital victory for the fight of religious freedom for Scots-Irish immigrants when he was acquitted and gained recognition for having "stood up to Anglican authorities". Makemie became one of the wealthiest immigrants to colonial America, owning more than 5,000 acres and 33 slaves.[207][208]

New Light Presbyterians founded the College of New Jersey, later renamed Princeton University, in 1746 in order to train ministers dedicated to their views. The college was the educational and religious capital of Scots-Irish America.[209] By 1808, loss of confidence in the college within the Presbyterian Church led to the establishment of the separate Princeton Theological Seminary, but deep Presbyterian influence at the college continued through the 1910s, as typified by university president Woodrow Wilson.[210]

Out on the frontier, the Scots-Irish Presbyterians of the Muskingum Valley in Ohio established Muskingum College at New Concord in 1837. It was led by two clergymen, Samuel Wilson and Benjamin Waddle, who served as trustees, president, and professors during the first few years. During the 1840s and 1850s the college survived the rapid turnover of very young presidents who used the post as a stepping stone in their clerical careers, and in the late 1850s it weathered a storm of student protest. Under the leadership of L. B. W. Shryock during the Civil War, Muskingum gradually evolved from a local and locally controlled institution to one serving the entire Muskingum Valley. It is still affiliated with the Presbyterian church.[211]

Brought up in a Scots-Irish Presbyterian home, Cyrus McCormick of Chicago developed a strong sense of devotion to the Presbyterian Church. Throughout his later life, he used the wealth gained through invention of the mechanical reaper to further the work of the church. His benefactions were responsible for the establishment in Chicago of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Northwest (after his death renamed the McCormick Theological Seminary of the Presbyterian Church). He assisted the Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, Virginia. He also supported a series of religious publications, beginning with the Presbyterian Expositor in 1857 and ending with the Interior (later called The Continent), which his widow continued until her death.[212]

Methodists

Irish immigrants were the first immigrant group to America to build and organize Methodist churches. Many of the early Irish immigrants who did so came from a German-Irish background. Barbara Heck, an Irish woman of German descent from County Limerick, Ireland, immigrated to America in 1760, with her husband, Paul. She is often considered to be the "Mother of American Methodism."[213] Heck guided and mentored her cousin, Philip Embury, who was also an "Irish Palatine" immigrant.[214] Heck and Embury constructed the John Street Methodist Church, which today is usually recognized as the oldest Methodist Church in the United States.[215] However, another church constructed by prominent Irish Methodist immigrant, Robert Strawbridge, may have preceded the John Street Methodist Church.[216]

Women

 
Irish Lass depiction in 1885.

The Irish people were the first of many to immigrate to the U.S. in mass waves, including large groups of single young women between the ages of 16 and 24.[217] Up until this point, free women who settled in the colonies mostly came after their husbands had already made the journey and could afford their trip, or were brought over to be married to an eligible colonist who paid for their journey. Many Irish fled their home country to escape unemployment and starvation during the Great Irish Famine.[218] The richest of the Irish resettled in England, where their skilled work was greatly accepted, but lower class Irish and women could find little work in Western Europe, leading them to cross the Atlantic in search of greater financial opportunities.[219]

Some Irish women resorted to prostitution in large cities such as Boston and New York City. They were often arrested for intoxication, public lewdness, and petty larceny.[220] Most of the single Irish women preferred service labor as a form of income. These women made a higher wage than most by serving the middle and high-class in their own homes as nannies, cooks and cleaners.[original research?] The wages for domestic service were higher than that of factory workers and they lived in the attics of upscale mansions.[citation needed] By 1870, forty percent of Irish women worked as domestic servants in New York City, making them over fifty percent of the service industry at the time.[221]

Prejudices ran deep in the north and could be seen in newspaper cartoons depicting Irish men as hot-headed, violent drunkards.[222] The initial backlash the Irish received in America lead to their self-imposed seclusion, making assimilation into society a long and painful process.[218]

Language

Down to the end of the 19th century a large number of Irish immigrants arrived speaking Irish as their first language. This continued to be the case with immigrants from certain counties even in the 20th century. The Irish language was first mentioned as being spoken in North America in the 17th century. Large numbers of Irish emigrated to America throughout the 18th century, bringing the language with them, and it was particularly strong in Pennsylvania.[223] It was also widely spoken in such places as New York City, where it proved a useful recruiting tool for Loyalists during the American Revolution.[224][225]

Irish speakers continued to arrive in large numbers throughout the 19th century, particularly after the Famine. There was a certain amount of literacy in Irish, as shown by the many Irish-language manuscripts which immigrants brought with them. In 1881 An Gaodhal was founded, being the first newspaper in the world to be largely in Irish. It continued to be published into the 20th century,[226] and now has an online successor in An Gael, an international literary magazine.[227] A number of Irish immigrant newspapers in the 19th and 20th centuries had Irish language columns.

Irish immigrants fell into three linguistic categories: monolingual Irish speakers, bilingual speakers of both Irish and English, and monolingual English speakers.[228] Estimates indicate that there were around 400,000 Irish speakers in the United States in the 1890s, located primarily in New York City, Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago and Yonkers.[229] The Irish-speaking population of New York reached its height in this period, when speakers of Irish numbered between 70,000 and 80,000.[230] This number declined during the early 20th century, dropping to 40,000 in 1939, 10,000 in 1979, and 5,000 in 1995.[231]

According to the 2000 census, the Irish language ranks 66th out of the 322 languages spoken today in the U.S., with over 25,000 speakers. New York state has the most Irish speakers of the 50 states, and Massachusetts the highest percentage.[232]

Daltaí na Gaeilge, a nonprofit Irish language advocacy group based in Elberon, New Jersey, estimated that about 30,000 people spoke the language in America as of 2006. This, the organization claimed, was a remarkable increase from only a few thousand at the time of the group's founding in 1981.[233]

Occupations

Before 1800, significant numbers of Irish Protestant immigrants became farmers; many headed to the frontier where land was cheap or free and it was easier to start a farm or herding operation.[234] Many Irish Protestants and Catholics alike were indentured servants, unable to pay their own passage or sentenced to servitude.[235]

After 1840, most Irish Catholic immigrants went directly to the cities, mill towns, and railroad or canal construction sites on the East Coast. In upstate New York, the Great Lakes area, the Midwest and the Far West, many became farmers or ranchers. In the East, male Irish laborers were hired by Irish contractors to work on canals, railroads, streets, sewers and other construction projects, particularly in New York state and New England. The Irish men also worked in these labor positions in the mid-west. They worked to construct towns where there had been none previously. Kansas City was one such town, and eventually became an important cattle town and railroad center.[124]

Labor positions were not the only occupations for Irish, though. Some moved to New England mill towns, such as Holyoke, Lowell, Taunton, Brockton, Fall River, and Milford, Massachusetts, where owners of textile mills welcomed the new, low-wage workers. They took the jobs previously held by Yankee women known as Lowell girls.[236][237][238] A large percentage of Irish Catholic women took jobs as maids in hotels and private households.[112]

Large numbers of unemployed or very poor Irish Catholics lived in squalid conditions in the new city slums and tenements.[239]

Single, Irish immigrant women quickly assumed jobs in high demand but for very low pay. The majority of them worked in mills, factories, and private households and were considered the bottommost group in the female job hierarchy, alongside African American women. Workers considered mill work in cotton textiles and needle trades the least desirable because of the dangerous and unpleasant conditions. Factory work was primarily a worst-case scenario for widows or daughters of families already involved in the industry.[240]

Unlike many other immigrants, Irish women preferred domestic work because it was constantly in great demand among middle- and upper-class American households.[241] Although wages differed across the country, they were consistently higher than those of the other occupations available to Irish women and could often be negotiated because of the lack of competition. Also, the working conditions in well-off households were significantly better than those of factories or mills, and free room and board allowed domestic servants to save money or send it back to their families in Ireland.[242]

Despite some of the benefits of domestic work, Irish women's job requirements were difficult and demeaning. Subject to their employers around the clock, Irish women cooked, cleaned, babysat and more. Because most servants lived in the home where they worked, they were separated from their communities. Most of all, the American stigma on domestic work suggested that Irish women were failures who had "about the same intelligence as that of an old grey-headed negro." This quote illustrates how, in a period of extreme racism towards African Americans, society similarly viewed Irish immigrants as inferior beings.[243]

 
Irish immigrants in Kansas City, Missouri, c. 1909

Although the Irish Catholics started very low on the social status scale, by 1900 they had jobs and earnings about equal on average to their neighbors. This was largely due to their ability to speak English when they arrived. The Irish were able to rise quickly within the working world, unlike non-English speaking immigrants.[244] Yet there were still many shanty and lower working class communities in Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston, New York, and other parts of the country.[245]

After 1945, the Catholic Irish consistently ranked at the top of the social hierarchy, thanks especially to their high rate of college attendance, and due to that many Irish American men have risen to higher socio-economic table.[246]

Local government

In the 19th century, jobs in local government were distributed by politicians to their supporters, and with significant strength in city hall the Irish became candidates for positions in all departments, such as police departments, fire departments, public schools and other public services of major cities. In 1897 New York City was formed by consolidating its five boroughs. That created 20,000 new patronage jobs. New York invested heavily in large-scale public works. This produced thousands of unskilled and semi-skilled jobs in subways, street railroads, waterworks, and port facilities. Over half the Irish men employed by the city worked in utilities. Across all ethnic groups In New York City, municipal employment grew from 54,000 workers in 1900 to 148,000 in 1930.[247] In New York City, Albany, and Jersey City, about one third of the Irish of the first and second generation had municipal jobs in 1900.[248]

Police

By 1855, according to New York Police Commissioner George W. Matsell (1811–1877),[249] almost 17 percent of the police department's officers were Irish-born (compared to 28.2 percent of the city) in a report to the Board of Aldermen;[250] of the NYPD's 1,149 men, Irish-born officers made up 304 of 431 foreign-born policemen.[112] In the 1860s more than half of those arrested in New York City were Irish born or of Irish descent but nearly half of the city's law enforcement officers were also Irish. By the turn of the 20th century, five out of six NYPD officers were Irish born or of Irish descent. As late as the 1960s, 42% of the NYPD were Irish Americans.[251]

Up to the 20th and early 21st century, Irish Catholics continue to be prominent in the law enforcement community, especially in the Northeastern United States. The Emerald Society, an Irish American fraternal organization, was founded in 1953 by the NYPD.[252] When the Boston chapter of the Emerald Society formed in 1973, half of the city's police officers became members.

Teachers

Towards the end of the 19th century, schoolteaching became the most desirable occupation for the second generation of female Irish immigrants. Teaching was similar to domestic work for the first generation of Irish immigrants in that it was a popular job and one that relied on a woman's decision to remain unmarried.[253] The disproportionate number of Irish-American Catholic women who entered the job market as teachers in the late 19th century and early 20th century from Boston to San Francisco was a beneficial result of the Irish National school system. Irish schools prepared young single women to support themselves in a new country, which inspired them to instill the importance of education, college training, and a profession in their American-born daughters even more than in their sons.[254]

Evidence from schools in New York City illustrate the upward trend of Irish women as teachers: "as early as 1870, twenty percent of all schoolteachers were Irish women, and...by 1890 Irish females comprised two-thirds of those in the Sixth Ward schools." Irish women attained admirable reputations as schoolteachers, which enabled some to pursue professions of even higher stature.[254]

Nuns

Upon arrival in the United States, many Irish women became Catholic nuns and participated in the many American sisterhoods, especially those in St. Louis in Missouri, St. Paul in Minnesota, and Troy in New York. Additionally, the women who settled in these communities were often sent back to Ireland to recruit. This kind of religious lifestyle appealed to Irish female immigrants because they outnumbered their male counterparts and the Irish cultural tendency to postpone marriage often promoted gender separation and celibacy. Furthermore, "the Catholic church, clergy, and women religious were highly respected in Ireland," making the sisterhoods particularly attractive to Irish immigrants.[255]

Nuns provided extensive support for Irish immigrants in large cities, especially in fields such as nursing and teaching but also through orphanages, widows' homes, and housing for young, single women in domestic work.[256] Although many Irish communities built parish schools run by nuns, the majority of Irish parents in large cities in the East enrolled their children in the public school system, where daughters or granddaughters of Irish immigrants had already established themselves as teachers.[257]

Discrimination

 
1862 song (Female versian)
 
1862 song that used the "No Irish Need Apply" slogan. It was copied from a similar London song.[258]

Anti-Irish sentiment was rampant in the United States during the 19th and early 20th Centuries.[259] Rising anti-Catholic and Nativist sentiments among Protestant Americans led to increasing discrimination against Irish Americans in the 1850s. Prejudice against Irish Catholics in the U.S. reached a peak in the mid-1850s with the founding of the Know Nothing Movement, which tried to oust Catholics from public office. After a year or two of local success, the Know Nothing Party vanished.[260]

Catholics and Protestants kept their distance; intermarriage between Catholics and Protestants was uncommon, and strongly discouraged by both Protestant ministers and Catholic priests. As Dolan notes, "'Mixed marriages', as they were called, were allowed in rare cases, though warned against repeatedly, and were uncommon."[261] Rather, intermarriage was primarily with other ethnic groups who shared their religion. Irish Catholics, for example, would commonly intermarry with German Catholics or Poles in the Midwest and Italians in the Northeast.

Irish-American journalists "scoured the cultural landscape for evidence of insults directed at the Irish in America." Much of what historians know about hostility to the Irish comes from their reports in Irish and in Democratic newspapers.[262]

While the parishes were struggling to build parochial schools, many Catholic children attended public schools. The Protestant King James Version of the Bible was widely used in public schools, but Catholics were forbidden by their church from reading or reciting from it.[263] Many Irish children complained that Catholicism was openly mocked in the classroom. In New York City, the curriculum vividly portrayed Catholics, and specifically the Irish, as villainous.[264]

The Catholic archbishop John Hughes, an immigrant to America from County Tyrone, Ireland, campaigned for public funding of Catholic education in response to the bigotry. While never successful in obtaining public money for private education, the debate with the city's Protestant elite spurred by Hughes' passionate campaign paved the way for the secularization of public education nationwide. In addition, Catholic higher education expanded during this period with colleges and universities that evolved into such institutions as Fordham University and Boston College providing alternatives to Irish who were not otherwise permitted to apply to other colleges.

 
New York Times want ad 1854—the only New York Times ad with NINA for men.

Many Irish work gangs were hired by contractors to build canals, railroads, city streets and sewers across the country.[112] In the South, they underbid slave labor.[265] One result was that small cities that served as railroad centers came to have large Irish populations.[266]

In 1895, the Knights of Equity was founded, to combat discrimination against Irish Catholics in the U.S., and to assist them financially when needed.[citation needed]

Stereotypes

Irish Catholics were popular targets of stereotyping in the 19th century. According to historian George Potter, the media often stereotyped the Irish in America as being boss-controlled, violent (both among themselves and with those of other ethnic groups), voting illegally, prone to alcoholism and dependent on street gangs that were often violent or criminal. Potter quotes contemporary newspaper images:

You will scarcely ever find an Irishman dabbling in counterfeit money, or breaking into houses, or swindling; but if there is any fighting to be done, he is very apt to have a hand in it." Even though Pat might "'meet with a friend and for love knock him down,'" noted a Montreal paper, the fighting usually resulted from a sudden excitement, allowing there was "but little 'malice prepense' in his whole composition." The Catholic Telegraph of Cincinnati in 1853, saying that the "name of 'Irish' has become identified in the minds of many, with almost every species of outlawry," distinguished the Irish vices as "not of a deep malignant nature," arising rather from the "transient burst of undisciplined passion," like "drunk, disorderly, fighting, etc., not like robbery, cheating, swindling, counterfeiting, slandering, calumniating, blasphemy, using obscene language, &c.[267]

 
1882 illustration from Puck depicting Irish immigrants as troublemakers, as compared to those of other nationalities

The Irish had many humorists of their own, but were scathingly attacked in political cartoons, especially those in Puck magazine from the 1870s to 1900; it was edited by secular Germans who opposed the Catholic Irish in politics. In addition, the cartoons of Thomas Nast were especially hostile; for example, he depicted the Irish-dominated Tammany Hall machine in New York City as a ferocious tiger.[268]

The stereotype of the Irish as violent drunks has lasted well beyond its high point in the mid-19th century. For example, President Richard Nixon once told advisor Charles Colson that "[t]he Irish have certain — for example, the Irish can't drink. What you always have to remember with the Irish is they get mean. Virtually every Irish I've known gets mean when he drinks. Particularly the real Irish."[269]

Discrimination against Irish Americans differed depending on gender. For example, Irish women were sometimes stereotyped as "reckless breeders" because some American Protestants feared high Catholic birth rates would eventually result in a Protestant minority. Many native-born Americans claimed that "their incessant childbearing [would] ensure an Irish political takeover of American cities [and that] Catholicism would become the reigning faith of the hitherto Protestant nation."[270] Irish men were also targeted, but in a different way than women were. The difference between the Irish female "Bridget" and the Irish male "Pat" was distinct; while she was impulsive but fairly harmless, he was "always drunk, eternally fighting, lazy, and shiftless". In contrast to the view that Irish women were shiftless, slovenly and stupid (like their male counterparts), girls were said to be "industrious, willing, cheerful, and honest—they work hard, and they are very strictly moral".[271][272]

There were also Social Darwinian-inspired excuses for the discrimination of the Irish in America. Many Americans believed that since the Irish were Celts and not Anglo-Saxons, they were racially inferior and deserved second-class citizenship. The Irish being of inferior intelligence was a belief held by many Americans. This notion was held due to the fact that the Irish topped the charts demographically in terms of arrests and imprisonment. They also had more people confined to insane asylums and poorhouses than any other group. The racial supremacy belief that many Americans had at the time contributed significantly to Irish discrimination.[273]

From the 1860s onwards, Irish Americans were stereotyped as terrorists and gangsters, although this stereotyping began to diminish by the end of the 19th century.[274]

Contributions to American culture

The annual celebration of Saint Patrick's Day is a widely recognized symbol of the Irish presence in America. The largest celebration of the holiday takes place in New York, where the annual St. Patrick's Day Parade draws an average of two million people. The second-largest celebration is held in Boston. The South Boston Parade is one of the United States's oldest, dating back to 1737. Savannah, Georgia, also holds one of the largest parades in the United States.[citation needed]

Since the arrival of nearly two million Irish immigrants in the 1840s, the urban Irish police officer and firefighter have become virtual icons of American popular culture. In many large cities, the police and fire departments have been dominated by the Irish for over 100 years, even after the ethnic Irish residential populations in those cities dwindled to small minorities. Many police and fire departments maintain large and active "Emerald Societies", bagpipe marching groups, or other similar units demonstrating their members' pride in their Irish heritage.[citation needed]

While these archetypal images are especially well known, Irish Americans have contributed to U.S. culture in a wide variety of fields: the fine and performing arts, film, literature, politics, sports, and religion. The Irish-American contribution to popular entertainment is reflected in the careers of figures such as James Cagney, Bing Crosby, Walt Disney, John Ford, Judy Garland,[275] Gene Kelly, Grace Kelly, Tyrone Power, Chuck Connors, Ada Rehan, Jena Malone, and Spencer Tracy. Irish-born actress Maureen O'Hara,[276] who became an American citizen, defined for U.S. audiences the archetypal, feisty Irish "colleen" in popular films such as The Quiet Man and The Long Gray Line. More recently, the Irish-born Pierce Brosnan gained screen celebrity as James Bond. During the early years of television, popular figures with Irish roots included Gracie Allen, Art Carney, Joe Flynn, Jackie Gleason, Luke Gordon and Ed Sullivan.

Since the late days of the film industry, celluloid representations of Irish Americans have been plentiful. Famous films with Irish-American themes include social dramas such as Little Nellie Kelly and The Cardinal, labor epics like On the Waterfront, and gangster movies such as Angels with Dirty Faces, The Friends of Eddie Coyle, and The Departed. Irish-American characters have been featured in popular television series such as Ryan's Hope, Rescue Me and Blue Bloods.[citation needed]

Prominent Irish-American literary figures include Pulitzer and Nobel Prize–winning playwright Eugene O'Neill, Jazz Age novelist F. Scott Fitzgerald, author and poet Edgar Allan Poe,[277] social realist James T. Farrell, Southern Gothic writers Flannery O'Connor and Cormac McCarthy. The 19th-century novelist Henry James was also of partly Irish descent. While Irish Americans have been underrepresented in the plastic arts, two well-known American painters claim Irish roots. 20th-century painter Georgia O'Keeffe was born to an Irish-American father, and 19th-century trompe-l'œil painter William Harnett emigrated from Ireland to the United States.[citation needed]

The Irish-American contribution to politics spans the entire ideological spectrum. Two prominent American socialists, Mary Harris "Mother" Jones and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, were Irish Americans. In the 1960s, Irish-American writer Michael Harrington became an influential advocate of social welfare programs. Harrington's views profoundly influenced President John F. Kennedy and his brother, Robert F. Kennedy. Meanwhile, Irish-American political writer William F. Buckley emerged as a major intellectual force in American conservative politics in the latter half of the 20th century. Buckley's magazine, National Review, proved an effective advocate of successful Republican candidates such as Ronald Reagan.[citation needed]

Notorious Irish Americans include the legendary New Mexico outlaw Billy the Kid.[278][279] Many historians believe he was born in New York City to Famine-era immigrants from Ireland.[278][279] Mary Mallon, also known as Typhoid Mary, was an Irish immigrant, as was madam Josephine Airey, who also went by the name of "Chicago Joe" Hensley. New Orleans socialite and murderer Delphine LaLaurie, whose maiden name was Macarty, was of partial paternal Irish ancestry. Irish-American mobsters include, amongst others, Dean O'Banion, Jack "Legs" Diamond, Buddy McLean, Howie Winter and Whitey Bulger. Lee Harvey Oswald, the assassin of John F. Kennedy, had an Irish-born great-grandmother by the name of Mary Tonry.[280] Colorful Irish Americans also include Margaret Tobin of RMS Titanic fame, scandalous model Evelyn Nesbit, dancer Isadora Duncan, San Francisco madam Tessie Wall, and Nellie Cashman, nurse and gold prospector in the American West.

Music

The wide popularity of Celtic music has fostered the rise of Irish-American bands that draw heavily on traditional Irish themes and music. Such groups include New York City's Black 47, founded in the late 1980s, blending punk rock, rock and roll, Irish music, rap/hip-hop, reggae, and soul; and the Dropkick Murphys, a Celtic punk band formed in Quincy, Massachusetts, nearly a decade later. The Decemberists, a band featuring Irish-American singer Colin Meloy, released "Shankill Butchers", a song that deals with the Ulster Loyalist gang of the same name. The song appears on their album The Crane Wife. Flogging Molly, led by Dublin-born Dave King, are relative newcomers building upon this new tradition.[citation needed]

Food

Irish immigrants brought many traditional Irish recipes with them when they emigrated to the United States, which they adapted to meet the different ingredients available to them there. Irish Americans introduced foods like soda bread and colcannon to American cuisine.[281] The famous Irish American meal of corned beef and cabbage was developed by Irish immigrants in the U.S., who adapted it from the traditional Irish recipe for bacon and cabbage.[282] Irish beer such as Guinness is widely consumed in the United States, including an estimated 13 million pints on Saint Patrick's Day alone.[283]

Sports

Starting with the sons of the famine generation, the Irish dominated baseball and boxing, and played a major role in other sports.

 
Logo of the Boston Celtics basketball team

Famous in their day were NFL quarterbacks and Super Bowl champions John Elway and Tom Brady, NBA forward Rick Barry,[284] tennis greats Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe, baseball pitcher Nolan Ryan, baseball shortstop Derek Jeter, basketball point guard Jason Kidd, boxing legend Jack Dempsey and Muhammad Ali,[285] world champion pro surfer Kelly Slater, national champion skier Ryan Max Riley, and legendary golfer Ben Hogan.

 
The Philadelphia Phillies started the tradition of wearing green uniforms on St. Patrick's day.

The Irish dominated professional baseball in the late 19th century, making up a third or more of the players and many of the top stars and managers. The professional teams played in northeastern cities with large Irish populations that provided a fan base, as well as training for ambitious youth.[286] Casway argues that:

Baseball for Irish kids was a shortcut to the American dream and to self-indulgent glory and fortune. By the mid-1880s these young Irish men dominated the sport and popularized a style of play that was termed heady, daring, and spontaneous.... Ed Delahanty personified the flamboyant, exciting spectator-favorite, the Casey-at-the-bat, Irish slugger. The handsome masculine athlete who is expected to live as large as he played.[287]

Irish stars included Charles Comiskey, Connie Mack, Michael "King" Kelly, Roger Connor, Eddie Collins, Roger Bresnahan, Ed Walsh and New York Giants manager John McGraw. The large 1945 class of inductees enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown included nine Irish Americans.

The Philadelphia Phillies always play at home during spring training on St. Patrick's Day. The Phillies hold the distinction of being the first baseball team to wear green uniforms on St. Patricks Day. The tradition was started by Phillies pitcher Tug McGraw, who dyed his uniform green the night before March 17, 1981.[288]

 
Two Irish stars: "Gentleman Jim" Corbett licks John L. Sullivan in 1892

John L. Sullivan (1858–1918), The heavyweight boxing champion, was the first of the modern sports superstars, winning scores of contests – perhaps as many as 200—with a purse that reached the fabulous sum of one million dollars.[289][290]

The Irish brought their native games of handball, hurling and Gaelic football to America. Along with camogie, these sports are part of the Gaelic Athletic Association. The North American GAA organization is still strong, with 128 clubs across its ten divisions.[291]

Entertainment

 
Actor Tom Cruise descends from paternal Irish ("Cruise" and "O'Mara") lineage around County Dublin.[292][293]

Irish Americans have been prominent in comedy. Notable comedians of Irish descent include Jimmy Dore, Jackie Gleason, George Carlin, Bill Burr, Bill Murray, Will Ferrell, Bryan Callen, Pete Holmes, Joe Rogan, Ben Stiller, Chris Farley, Stephen Colbert, Conan O'Brien, Denis Leary (holds dual American and Irish citizenship),[294] Colin Quinn, Charles Nelson Reilly, Bill Maher, Molly Shannon, John Mulaney, Kathleen Madigan, Jimmy Fallon, Des Bishop, and Jim Gaffigan, among others.

Musicians of Irish descent include Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, Kurt Cobain, Bing Crosby, Tori Kelly, Tim McGraw, Mandy Moore, Hilary Duff, Fergie, Jerry Garcia, Judy Garland, Katy Perry, Tom Petty, Pink, Bruce Springsteen, Gwen Stefani, Lindsay Lohan, Post Malone, Trippie Redd and others.[citation needed]

Fictional Irish Americans: In the Comic Strips:

Sense of heritage

 
Irish Republican mural in South Boston, Massachusetts

Many people of Irish descent retain a sense of their Irish heritage. Article 2 of the Constitution of Ireland formally recognizes and embraces this fact:

...the Irish Nation cherishes its special affinity with people of Irish ancestry living abroad who share its cultural identity and heritage.

 
The Chicago River, dyed green for the 2005 St. Patrick's Day celebration

Irish independence from the United Kingdom encouraged the hope that descendants of Irish abroad who had retained a cultural connection and identified with Ireland would resettle there, as opposed to attracting immigrants from other cultures in other countries. One member of an Irish government of the Irish Free State expressed his hope as follows:

I do not think [the Irish Free State] will afford sufficient allurements to the citizens of other States ... The children of Irish parents born abroad are sometimes more Irish than the Irish themselves, and they would come with added experience and knowledge to our country....|4=Sen. Patrick Kenny, Seanad Éireann 1924, [296]

A sense of exile, diaspora, and (in the case of songs) even nostalgia is a common theme.[297][298] The modern term "Plastic Paddy" generally refers to someone who was not born in Ireland and is separated from his closest Irish-born ancestor by several generations but still considers themselves "Irish". It is occasionally used in a derogatory fashion towards Irish Americans, in an attempt to cast doubt the "Irishness" of the Irish diaspora based on nationality and (citizenship) rather than ethnicity.[299][300][301] The term is freely applied to relevant people of all nationalities, not solely Irish Americans.

Some Irish Americans were enthusiastic supporters of Irish independence; the Fenian Brotherhood movement was based in the United States and in the late 1860s launched several unsuccessful attacks on British-controlled Canada known as the "Fenian Raids".[302] The Irish American fund-raising organization NORAID (founded by Irish immigrant and former IRA veteran Michael Flannery) received money from Irish American donators, officially stated to support the families of imprisoned or dead Provisional Irish Republican Army members—in 1984, the U.S. Department of Justice succeeded in forcing NORAID to acknowledge the Provisional IRA as its "foreign principal" under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.[303]

Cities

 
Population density of people born in Ireland, 1870; these were mostly Catholics; the older Scots Irish immigration is not shown.

The vast majority of Irish Catholic Americans settled in large and small cities across the North, particularly railroad centers and mill towns. They became perhaps the most urbanized group in America, as few became farmers.[304] Areas that retain a significant Irish American population include the metropolitan areas of Boston, New York City, Philadelphia, Providence, Hartford, Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Albany, Syracuse, Baltimore, St. Louis, Chicago, Cleveland, San Francisco, Savannah, and Los Angeles, where most new arrivals of the 1830–1910 period settled. As a percentage of the population, Massachusetts is the most Irish state, with about a fifth, 21.2%, of the population claiming Irish descent.[305]

The most Irish American towns in the United States are Scituate, Massachusetts, with 47.5% of its residents being of Irish descent; Milton, Massachusetts, with 44.6% of its 26,000 being of Irish descent; and Braintree, Massachusetts, with 46.5% of its 34,000 being of Irish descent. (Weymouth, Massachusetts, at 39% of its 54,000 citizens, and Quincy, Massachusetts, at 34% of its population of 90,000, are the two most Irish cities in the country. Squantum, a peninsula in the northern part of Quincy, is the most Irish neighborhood in the country, with close to 60% of its 2600 residents claiming Irish descent.)[306]

Philadelphia, Boston, New York, and Chicago have historically had neighborhoods with higher percentages of Irish American residents. Regionally, the most Irish American states are Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, Vermont, Rhode Island, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Connecticut, according to the U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey in 2013.[307] In consequence of its unique history as a mining center, Butte, Montana, is also one of the country's most thoroughly Irish American cities.[308] Smaller towns, such as Greeley, Nebraska (population 466), with an estimated 51.7% of the residents identifying as Irish American as of 2009–13[309][310] were part of the Irish Catholic Colonization effort of Bishop O'Connor of New York in the 1880s.[311]

The states with the top percentages of Irish:

2020 population of Irish ancestry by state

As of 2020, the distribution of Irish Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table:

 Estimated Irish American population by state [312][10]
State Number Percentage
  Alabama 392,052 8.01%
  Alaska 71,425 9.69%
  Arizona 617,231 8.60%
  Arkansas 283,345 9.41%
  California 2,331,714 5.93%
  Colorado 619,321 10.89%
  Connecticut 537,144 15.04%
  Delaware 137,609 14.22%
  District of Columbia 49,498 7.05%
  Florida 1,776,586 8.37%
  Georgia 738,036 7.02%
  Hawaii 62,439 4.40%
  Idaho 159,301 9.08%
  Illinois 1,401,831 11.02%
  Indiana 697,417 10.41%
  Iowa 409,015 12.98%
  Kansas 329,541 11.31%
  Kentucky 500,792 11.22%
  Louisiana 305,477 6.55%
  Maine 223,464 16.67%
  Maryland 594,307 9.84%
  Massachusetts 1,354,532 19.71%
  Michigan 1,017,747 10.20%
  Minnesota 560,185 10.00%
  Mississippi 201,669 6.76%
  Missouri 750,732 12.26%
  Montana 144,683 13.63%
  Nebraska 229,468 11.93%
  Nevada 246,595 8.14%
  New Hampshire 278,913 20.58%
  New Jersey 1,181,301 13.29%
  New Mexico 127,440 6.08%
  New York 2,167,420 11.11%
  North Carolina 832,880 8.02%
  North Dakota 56,241 7.40%
  Ohio 1,480,335 12.68%
  Oklahoma 400,967 10.15%
  Oregon 460,088 11.02%
  Pennsylvania 1,978,043 15.46%
  Rhode Island 182,012 17.21%
  South Carolina 435,703 8.56%
  South Dakota 88,957 10.12%
  Tennessee 628,562 9.28%
  Texas 1,745,532 6.10%
  Utah 185,927 5.90%
  Vermont 103,241 16.54%
  Virginia 767,238 9.02%
  Washington 759,024 10.10%
  West Virginia 232,834 12.88%
  Wisconsin 615,730 10.60%
  Wyoming 66,585 11.45%
  United States 31,518,129 9.65%

Irish-American communities

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the city of Butte, Montana has the highest percentage of Irish Americans per capita of any city in the United States, with around one-quarter of the population reporting Irish ancestry.[313][314] Butte's Irish Catholic population originated with the waves of Irish immigrants who arrived in the city in the late-nineteenth century to work in the industrial mines. By population Boston and Philadelphia have the two largest Irish American populations in the country.

There are Irish neighborhoods scattered all throughout Boston, most notably South Boston. Many of Philadelphia's Irish neighborhoods are located in the Northeast Philadelphia section of the city, particularly in the Fishtown, Mayfair, and Kensington neighborhoods, as well as the South Philadelphia section, most notably the Pennsport ("Two Street" to the locals) neighborhood. There are large Irish populations in the Boston and Philadelphia metropolitan areas as well. The South Side of Chicago, Illinois also has a large Irish community, who refer to themselves as the South Side Irish.[citation needed]

People

In politics and government

 
1928 Democratic Presidential Nominee Al Smith was the first Irish Catholic nominee of a major political party.

The United States Declaration of Independence contained 56 delegate signatures. Of the signers, eight were of Irish descent. Three signers, Matthew Thornton, George Taylor and James Smith, were born in Ireland; the remaining five Irish Americans, George Read, Thomas McKean, Thomas Lynch Jr., Edward Rutledge, and Charles Carroll, were the sons or grandsons of Irish immigrants. Though not a delegate but the secretary at the Congress, Charles Thomson, also Irish American, signed as well. The United States Constitution was created by a convention of 36 delegates. Of these, at least six were of Irish ancestry. George Read and Thomas McKean had already worked on the Declaration, and were joined by John Rutledge, William Paterson, Pierce Butler, Daniel Carroll, and Thomas Fitzsimons. The Carrolls and Fitzsimons were Irish Catholic, while Thomas Lynch Jr., James Smith, Pierce Butler and George Read were Irish Protestants they were descended from Irish Normans Anglo-Irish and native Irish who had intermarried for several centuries not ulster-Scots. The remainder were Scotch-Irish.[315][316]

By the 1850s, the Irish were already a major presence in the police departments of large cities. In New York City in 1855, of the city's 1,149 policemen, 305 were natives of Ireland. Within 30 years, Irish Americans in the NYPD were almost twice their proportion of the city's population.[112] Both Boston's police and fire departments provided many Irish immigrants with their first jobs. The creation of a unified police force in Philadelphia opened the door to the Irish in that city. By 1860 in Chicago, 49 of the 107 on the police force were Irish. Chief O'Leary headed the police force in New Orleans, and Malachi Fallon was chief of police of San Francisco.[317]

The Irish Catholic diaspora are very well-organized[clarification needed] and since 1850 have produced a majority of the leaders of the U.S. Catholic Church, labor unions, the Democratic Party in larger cities, and Catholic high schools, colleges and universities.[318]

The cities of Milwaukee (Tom Barrett; 2004-) and Detroit (Mike Duggan; 2012-) currently (as of 2018) have Irish American mayors. Pittsburgh mayor Bob O'Connor died in office in 2006. New York City has had at least three Irish-born mayors and over eight Irish American mayors. The most recent one was County Mayo native William O'Dwyer, first elected in 1945.[319][320] Beginning in the 1909 mayoral election, every Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City was a man of Irish descent until 1950, when a special election saw three Italian Americans as the top vote getters.[321]

The Irish Protestant vote has not been studied nearly as much. Historian Timothy J. Meagher argues that by the late 19th century, most of the Protestant Irish "turned their backs on all associations with Ireland and melted into the American Protestant mainstream." A minority insisted on a "Scots-Irish" identity.[322]

In Canada, by contrast, Irish Protestants remained a political force, with many belonging to the Orange Order.[323] It was an anti-Catholic social organization with chapters across Canada. It was most powerful during the late 19th century.[324][325]

Political leanings

Al Smith and later John F. Kennedy were political heroes for American Catholics.[326] Al Smith, who had an Irish mother and an Italian-German father, in 1928 became the first Catholic to run for president.[327] From the 1830s to the 1960s, Irish Catholics voted heavily Democratic, with occasional exceptions like the 1920 United States presidential election. Their precincts showed average support levels of 80%.[328] As historian Lawrence McCaffrey notes, "until recently they have been so closely associated with the Democratic party that Irish, Catholic, and Democrat composed a trinity of associations, serving mutual interests and needs. "[329]

The great majority of Irish Catholic politicians were Democrats, with a few exceptions before 1970 such as Connecticut Senator John A. Danaher and Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy.[315] Today, Irish politicians are associated with both parties. Ronald Reagan boasted of his Irishness. Historically, Irish Catholics controlled prominent Democratic city organizations.[330] Among the most prominent were New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Boston, San Francisco, Pittsburgh, Jersey City, and Albany.[331] Many served as chairmen of the Democratic National Committee, including County Monaghan native Thomas Taggart, Vance McCormick, James Farley, Edward J. Flynn, Robert E. Hannegan, J. Howard McGrath, William H. Boyle, Jr., John Moran Bailey, Larry O'Brien, Christopher J. Dodd, Terry McAuliffe and Tim Kaine. In Congress, the Irish are represented in both parties; currently, Susan Collins of Maine, Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania, Bob Casey, Jr. of Pennsylvania, Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Dan Sullivan of Alaska, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Dick Durbin of Illinois, Patrick Leahy of Vermont, and Maria Cantwell of Washington are Irish Americans serving in the United States Senate. Former Speaker of the House of Representatives and Vice Presidential Candidate Paul Ryan is another prominent Irish-American Republican. Exit polls show that in recent presidential elections Irish Catholics have split about 50–50 for Democratic and Republican candidates.[332] The pro-life faction in the Democratic party includes many Irish Catholic politicians, such as the former Boston mayor and ambassador to the Vatican Ray Flynn and senator Bob Casey, Jr., who defeated Senator Rick Santorum in a high visibility race in Pennsylvania in 2006.[333]

 
Distribution of Irish Americans according to the 2000 Census

In New York State where fusion voting is practiced, Irish Americans were instrumental in the founding of the Conservative party in opposition to Nelson Rockefeller and other liberal Republicans who dominated the state GOP during the 1960s and 70s.[334] The party, founded by Irish American lawyers J. Daniel Mahoney and Kieran O'Doherty would serve as a vehicle for William F. Buckley when he ran for mayor of New York in 1965 against liberal WASP Republican John V. Lindsay and establishment Democrat Abe Beame. Elsewhere, significant majorities of the local Irish stayed with the Democratic party, such as in Massachusetts and in other parts of Southern New England.[335]

In some heavily Irish small towns in northern New England and central New Jersey the Irish vote is quite Republican, but other places like Gloucester, New Jersey and Butte, Montana retain strongly liberal and Democratic-leaning Irish populations. In the 1984 United States Presidential Election Irish Catholics in Massachusetts voted 56% to 43% for Walter Mondale while their cousins in New York State voted 68% to 32% for Ronald Reagan.[336]

The voting intentions of Irish Americans and other white ethnic groups attracted attention in the 2016 U.S. election. In the Democratic primaries, Boston's Irish were said to break strongly for Hillary Clinton, whose victories in Irish-heavy Boston suburbs may have helped her narrowly carry the state over Bernie Sanders.[337] A 2016 March survey by Irish Central [338] showed that 45% of Irish Americans nationwide supported Donald Trump, although the majority of those in Massachusetts supported Hillary Clinton. An October poll by Buzzfeed showed that Irish respondents nationwide split nearly evenly between Trump (40%) and Clinton (39%), with large numbers either undecided or supporting other candidates (21%), and that the Irish were more supportive of Clinton than all the other West European-descended Americans including fellow Catholic Italian Americans.[339]

In early November 2016, six days before the election, another poll by IrishCentral showed Clinton ahead at 52% among Irish Americans, while Trump was at 40% and the third-party candidates together had 8%; Irish respondents in Massachusetts similarly favored Clinton by majority.[340] In 2017, a survey with 3,181 Irish American respondents (slightly over half being beyond third generation) by Irish Times found that 41% identified as Democrats while 23% identified as Republicans; moreover, 45% used NBC (typically considered left-leaning) for their news while 36% used Fox News (considered right-leaning).[341]

The presence of supporters of Trump among Irish and other white ethnic communities which had once themselves been marginalized immigrants generated controversy, with progressive Irish American media figures admonishing their co-ethnics against "myopia" and "amnesia".[342] However, such criticisms by left leaning pundits were frequently leveled against Irish-American conservatives prior to Trump's presidential run, with one columnist from the liberal online magazine Salon calling Irish-American conservatives "disgusting".[343] In New York City, ongoing trends of suburbanization, gentrification, and the increased tendency of Irish-Americans to vote Republican, as well as the increasingly left wing politics of the Democrat Party, led to the collapse of Irish political power in the city during the 2010s.[344] This trend was exemplified by the defeat of Queens Representative and former House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley by democratic socialist Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the 2018 Democratic primary.[345][346]

American presidents with Irish ancestry

 
President John F. Kennedy in motorcade in Cork on June 27, 1963
 
President Ronald Reagan speaking to a large crowd in his ancestral home in Ballyporeen, Ireland, in 1984.
 
President Barack Obama greets local residents on Main Street in Moneygall, Ireland, May 23, 2011.

A large number of the presidents of the United States have Irish origins.[347] The extent of Irish heritage varies. For example, Chester Arthur's father and both of Andrew Jackson's parents were Irish-born of British ancestry, while George W. Bush has distant Irish ancestry. Ronald Reagan's father was of Irish ancestry,[348] while his mother also had some Irish ancestors. John F. Kennedy and Joe Biden had Irish lineage on both sides and both are the only practicing Roman Catholics. Barack Obama's Irish heritage originates from his Kansas-born mother, Ann Dunham, whose ancestry is Irish and English.[349]

Andrew Johnson

17th president, 1865–69: Although he was Protestant, he had native Irish ancestry on his mother's side. His Mother was Mary "Polly" McDonough of Irish ancestry 1782[350]

William Howard Taft

27th president 1909–13: His great-great-great-grandfather, Robert Taft was born in 1640 in Ireland and immigrated to America, during the mid 17th century. Robert Taft was from County Louth in the republic of Ireland, his ancestry was both native Irish and Anglo-Irish[351][352]

Woodrow Wilson

28th president 1913-1921: His paternal grandfather, an Ulster Protestant, immigrated from Strabane, County Tyrone, in 1807.

Grover Cleveland

22nd and 24th president, 1885–89 and 1893–97: although personally Protestant, Cleveland had native Ulster Irish ancestry. He was the maternal grandson of merchant Abner O'Neal, who emigrated from County Antrim in the 1790s[353]

Ulysses S. Grant

18th president, 1869–77: His grandmother was Rachel Kelley, the daughter of an Irish pioneer[354] Surname Kelly within Ulster is almost entirely of Irish origin[355]

John F. Kennedy
35th president, 1961–1963 (Limerick and County Wexford) First Irish Catholic president.
Richard M. Nixon
37th president, 1969-1974 (County Kildare) Richard Milhouse Nixon was descended from a Quaker family who had emigrated to the United States from Timahoe, County Kildare in 1729. Nixon visited his ancestral home in 1972.[356]
Ronald Reagan
40th president, 1981–1989: He was the great-grandson, on his father's side, of Irish migrants from County Tipperary who came to America via Canada and England in the 1840s. His mother was of Scottish and English ancestry.[357]
George H. W. Bush
41st president, 1989–1993 (County Wexford): historians have found that his now apparent ancestor, Richard de Clare, Earl of Pembroke, shunned by Henry II, offered his services as a mercenary in the 12th-century Norman invasion of Wexford in exchange for power and land. Strongbow married Aoife, daughter of Dermot MacMurrough, the Gaelic king of Leinster.[358][359]
George W. Bush
43rd president, 2001–2009: One of his five times great-grandfathers, William Holliday (a British merchant living in Ireland), was born in Rathfriland, County Down, about 1755 and died in Kentucky about 1811–12. One of the President's seven times great-grandfathers, William Shannon, was born somewhere in County Cork about 1730, and died in Pennsylvania in 1784.[359]
Barack Obama
44th president, 2009–2017: Some of his maternal ancestors came to America from a small village called Moneygall, in County Offaly.[349][360][361] His ancestors lived in New England and the South and, by the 1800s, most were in the Midwest.
Joe Biden
46th and current president, 2021–present. Biden is of Irish ancestry; of his 16 great-great-grandparents, 10 were born in Ireland. He is descended from the Blewitts of County Mayo and the Finnegans of County Louth.[362]
Vice presidents of Irish descent
Mike Pence
48th vice president 2017–2021

Speakers of the U.S. House of Representatives

Irish-American justices of the Supreme Court

See also

Notes

References

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  17. ^ a b c d e f Blessing, Patrick J. (1980). "Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 528. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  18. ^ Boyer, Paul S.; Clark, Clifford E.; Halttunen, Karen; Kett, Joseph F.; Salisbury, Neal; Sitkoff, Harvard; Woloch, Nancy (2013). The Enduring Vision: A History of the American People (8th ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 99. ISBN 978-1133944522.
  19. ^ a b c Miller, Kerby A.; Schrier, Arnold; Boling, Bruce D.; Doyle, David N. (2003). Irish Immigrants in the Land of Canaan: Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1675–1815. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0195045130. In the seventeenth century, southern Irish Catholics probably constituted a large majority of the relatively few emigrants from Ireland, perhaps 30,000–50,000 in all, who crossed the Atlantic and settled primarily in the West Indies and Chesapeake.
  20. ^ Swingen, Abigail L. (2015). Competing Visions of Empire: Labor, Slavery, and the Origins of the British Atlantic Empire. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. p. 21. ISBN 978-0300187540.
  21. ^ a b c Dunaway, Wayland F. (1944). The Scots-Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 41. ...there were only 24,000 Catholics in the entire United States in 1783, and this number included many, perhaps a majority, from countries other than Ireland. It appears probable that Ireland furnished no more than 10,000 Catholics in America during the colonial period, and the largest segment of the Catholic population came from England, Germany, and France.
  22. ^ Blackburn, Robin (1997). The Making of New World Slavery: From the Baroque to the Modern 1492-1800 (1st ed.). London: Verso Books. p. 317. ISBN 978-1844676316. In the 1650s about eight thousand Irish captives were sent to the American colonies, many of them on ten-year penal contracts.
  23. ^ Newman, Simon P. (2015). "'In Great Slavery and Bondage': White Labor and the Development of Plantation Slavery in British America". In Gallup-Diaz, Ignacio; Shankman, Andrew; Silverman, David J.; Murrin, John M. (eds.). Anglicizing America: Empire, Revolution, Republic. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0812246988. One contemporary estimated that some thirty-four thousand men were sent to the Americas, close to one-sixth of Ireland's adult male population, and more of them went to Barbados than to any other colony.
  24. ^ Galenson, David W. (March 1984). "The Rise and Fall of Indentured Servitude in the Americas: An Economic Analysis". The Journal of Economic History. Cambridge University Press. 44 (1): 1–26. doi:10.1017/s002205070003134x. JSTOR 2120553. S2CID 154682898.
  25. ^ Whaples, Robert (March 1995). "Where Is There Consensus Among American Economic Historians? The Results of a Survey on Forty Propositions" (PDF). The Journal of Economic History. Cambridge University Press. 55 (1): 140–144. doi:10.1017/S0022050700040602. JSTOR 2123771. S2CID 145691938.
  26. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 73. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  27. ^ Fogarty, Gerald P. (1999). "Virginia". In Glazier, Michael (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. p. 928. ISBN 978-0268027551.
  28. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. pp. 74–77. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  29. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. p. 153. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  30. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. pp. 162–163. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  31. ^ Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press. pp. 229–231. ISBN 978-0195069051.
  32. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. p. 179. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  33. ^ a b Barck, Oscar T.; Lefler, Hugh T. (1958). Colonial America. New York: Macmillan. pp. 258–259.
  34. ^ Barck, Oscar T.; Lefler, Hugh T. (1958). Colonial America. New York: Macmillan. p. 398.
  35. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. p. 182. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  36. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 75. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  37. ^ Blessing, Patrick J. (1980). "Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 525–527. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  38. ^ a b "Colonial and Pre-Federal Statistics" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. p. 1168.
  39. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 79. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  40. ^ a b c Blessing, Patrick J. (1980). "Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 529. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  41. ^ a b c Purvis, Thomas L. (1995). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800. New York: Facts on File. p. 180. ISBN 978-0816025282.
  42. ^ a b c d e Jones, Maldwyn A. (1980). "Scotch-Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 904. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  43. ^ a b Dunaway, Wayland F. (1944). The Scots-Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 42.
  44. ^ Robinson, Philip (2000) [1984]. The Plantation of Ulster: British Settlement in an Irish Landscape, 1600-1670 (2nd ed.). Ulster Historical Foundation. pp. 52–55. ISBN 978-1903688007.
  45. ^ Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press. p. 16. ISBN 978-0195069051.
  46. ^ Duffy, Sean (2005). The Concise History of Ireland. Gill & MacMillan. p. 107. ISBN 978-0717138104. ...the number of Protestants in Ireland remained small throughout [Queen Elizabeth's] reign, being mostly confined to government officials and new settlers.
  47. ^ a b Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 129. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  48. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  49. ^ a b c Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. pp. 87–89. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  50. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. p. 181. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  51. ^ a b Taylor, Dale (1997). The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in Colonial America: From 1607-1783. Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books. p. 273. ISBN 978-0898799422. In 1756, a Maryland Father Superior estimated 7,000 practicing Catholics in Maryland and 3,000 in Pennsylvania.
  52. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1999). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Colonial America to 1763. New York: Facts on File. p. 183. ISBN 978-0816025275.
  53. ^ Fischer, David Hacket (1989). Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 606. ISBN 978-0195069051. more than a quarter-million
  54. ^ Rouse, Parke S. Jr. (1973). The Great Wagon Road: From Philadelphia to the South. New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 32. 200,000
  55. ^ a b Blethen, H. Tyler; Wood, Curtis W. (1998). From Ulster to Carolina: The Migration of the Scotch-Irish to Southwestern North Carolina. Raleigh, NC: North Carolina Division of Archives and History. p. 22. ISBN 978-0865262799. ...250,000 people left for America between 1717 and 1800...20,000 were Anglo-Irish, 20,000 were Gaelic Irish, and the remainder Ulster-Scots...
  56. ^ Griffin, Patrick (2001). The People with No Name: Ireland's Ulster Scots, America's Scots Irish, and the Creation of a British Atlantic World, 1689-1764. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. p. 1. more than 100,000
  57. ^ Leyburn, James G. (1962). The Scotch-Irish: A Social History. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 180. 200,000
  58. ^ Barck, Oscar T.; Lefler, Hugh T. (1958). Colonial America. New York: Macmillan. p. 285. 300,000
  59. ^ Jones, Maldwyn A. (1980). "Scotch-Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 896. ISBN 978-0674375123. 250,000
  60. ^ Blaney, Roger (1996). Presbyterians and the Irish Language. Belfast: Ulster Historical Foundation. p. 4. 100,000, and possibly as many as 250,000
  61. ^ Webb, Jim (2004). Born Fighting: How the Scots-Irish Shaped America. New York: Broadway Books. p. front flap. ISBN 978-0767916899. Between 250,000 to 400,000 Scots-Irish migrated to America in the eighteenth century...
  62. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1995). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800. New York: Facts on File. p. 120. ISBN 978-0816025282.
  63. ^ "Rebels in Arms: The Irishmen of Bunker Hill".
  64. ^ a b c Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 86. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  65. ^ a b Purvis, Thomas L. (1995). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800. New York: Facts on File. p. 204. ISBN 978-0816025282.
  66. ^ Carroll, Michael P. (Winter 2006). "How the Irish Became Protestant in America". Religion and American Culture. University of California Press. 16 (1): 28. doi:10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. JSTOR 10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. S2CID 145240474.
  67. ^ "1790 Fast Facts - History - U.S. Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau.
  68. ^ "Diversity in Colonial Times - U.S. Census Bureau" (PDF). United States Census Bureau.
  69. ^ Purvis, Thomas L. (1995). Balkin, Richard (ed.). Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800. New York: Facts on File. p. 197. ISBN 978-0816025282.
  70. ^ "1800 Fast Facts - History - U.S. Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau.
  71. ^ a b Miller, Kerby A. (2000). "'Scotch-Irish' Myths and 'Irish' Identities". In Fanning, Charles (ed.). New Perspectives on the Irish Diaspora (1st ed.). Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 80–81. ISBN 978-0809323449.
  72. ^ Carroll, Michael P. (Winter 2006). "How the Irish Became Protestant in America". Religion and American Culture. University of California Press. 16 (1): 32. doi:10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. JSTOR 10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. S2CID 145240474.
  73. ^ Carroll, Michael P. (Winter 2006). "How the Irish Became Protestant in America". Religion and American Culture. University of California Press. 16 (1): 38. doi:10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. JSTOR 10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. S2CID 145240474.
  74. ^ a b Blessing, Patrick J. (1980). "Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 528–529. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  75. ^ Faragher, John Mack (1996). The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America. Da Capo Press. p. 385. ISBN 978-0306806872.
  76. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. pp. 160–161. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  77. ^ "1820 Fast Facts - History - U.S. Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau.
  78. ^ Conzen, Kathleen Neils (1980). "Germans". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 409. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  79. ^ Dolan, Jay P. (2008). The Irish Americans: A History. New York: Bloomsbury Press. pp. 55–56. ISBN 978-1596914193. By 1840 the Catholic population had increased to 663,000. The increase was due mainly to the large numbers of immigrants from Ireland and Germany.
  80. ^ "1840 Fast Facts - History - U.S. Census Bureau". United States Census Bureau.
  81. ^ a b c Jones, Maldwyn A. (1980). "Scotch-Irish". In Thernstrom, Stephan (ed.). Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. 905. ISBN 978-0674375123.
  82. ^ Ridge, John (1999). "New York City". In Glazier, Michael (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press. p. 681. ISBN 978-0268027551.
  83. ^ a b Dolan, Jay P. (1985). The American Catholic Experience: A History from Colonial Times to the Present. New York: Doubleday. p. 228. ISBN 978-0385152068.
  84. ^ a b Leyburn, James G. (1989) [1962]. The Scotch-Irish: A Social History (Reprint ed.). University of North Carolina Press. pp. 328–329. ISBN 978-0807842591.
  85. ^ Barck, Oscar T.; Lefler, Hugh T. (1958). Colonial America. New York: Macmillan. p. 285.
  86. ^ a b Dunaway, Wayland F. (1944). The Scots-Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. pp. 9–11. 'I have sometimes noticed a little confusion of mind in relation to the phrase 'Scotch-Irish,' as if it meant that the Scotch people had come over and intermarried with the Irish, and thus a combination of two races, two places, two nationalities had taken place. This is by no means the state of the case.'... This does not mean to say, of course... that there was never an instance of marriage between the Ulster Scots and the Irish, for such unions undoubtedly occurred; but all the evidence points to the conclusion that these were rare...
  87. ^ Carroll, Michael P. (Winter 2006). "How the Irish Became Protestant in America". Religion and American Culture. University of California Press. 16 (1): 46. doi:10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. JSTOR 10.1525/rac.2006.16.1.25. S2CID 145240474.
  88. ^ a b Fischer, David Hackett (1989). Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America. Oxford University Press. p. 618. ISBN 978-0195069051.
  89. ^ Leyburn, James G. (1989) [1962]. The Scotch-Irish: A Social History (Reprint ed.). University of North Carolina Press. p. xi. ISBN 978-0807842591.
  90. ^ Dunaway, Wayland F. (1944). The Scots-Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. p. 8. ...it is evident that the Scotch-Irish were being very generally so called soon after they had begun to arrive in Pennsylvania in large numbers, and it is probable that the name was first applied to them by the Episcopalians and Quakers, who by no means intended it to be complimentary.
  91. ^ Burke, Edmund (1835) [1757]. An Account Of The European Settlements In America. Vol. 2. J. H. Wilkins & Company and Hilliard, Gray, & Co. p. 285. They are chiefly Presbyterians from the northern part of Ireland, who in America are generally called Scotch-Irish.
  92. ^ a b Leyburn, James G. (1989) [1962]. The Scotch-Irish: A Social History (Reprint ed.). University of North Carolina Press. p. 331. ISBN 978-0807842591.
  93. ^ a b Dolan, Jay P. (2008). The Irish Americans: A History. Bloomsbury Press. p. x. ISBN 978-1596914193. The term [Scotch-Irish] had been in use during the eighteenth century to designate Ulster Presbyterians who had emigrated to the United States. From the mid-1700s through the early 1800s, however, the term Irish was more widely used to identify both Catholic and Protestant Irish... as political and religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants both in Ireland and the United States became more frequent, and as Catholic emigrants began to outnumber Protestants, the term Irish became synonymous with Irish Catholics. As a result, Scotch-Irish became the customary term to describe Protestants of Irish descent... The famine migration of the 1840s and '50s that sent waves of poor Irish Catholics to the United States together with the rise in anti-Catholicism intensified this attitude. In no way did Irish Protestants want to be identified with these ragged newcomers.
  94. ^ Elliott Robert Barkan (2013). Immigrants in American History: Arrival, Adaptatio

irish, americans, this, article, require, cleanup, meet, wikipedia, quality, standards, specific, problem, repetitive, redundant, information, many, sections, well, contradictions, please, help, improve, this, article, november, 2021, learn, when, remove, this. This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is repetitive and or redundant information in many sections as well as contradictions Please help improve this article if you can November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Irish Americans or Hiberno Americans Irish Gael Mheiriceanaigh 9 are Americans who have full or partial ancestry from Ireland About 32 million Americans 9 7 of the total population identified themselves as being Irish in the 2020 American Community Survey conducted by the U S Census Bureau 10 11 Irish AmericansIrish Gael MheiriceanaighIrish Americans of population by stateTotal populationIncluding Scotch Irish Americans 36 115 472 10 9 alone or in combination10 899 442 3 3 Irish aloneExcluding Scotch Irish Americans 33 618 500 10 1 alone or in combination9 919 263 3 0 Irish alone 2021 estimates self reported 1 Regions with significant populationsBoston New York City Scranton Philadelphia New Orleans Pittsburgh Cleveland Chicago Baltimore Detroit Milwaukee Louisville New England Delaware Valley Coal Region Los Angeles Las Vegas Atlanta Sacramento San Diego Houston Dallas San Francisco Palm Springs California Fairbanks and most urban areas 2 3 LanguagesEnglish American English dialects a scant speak IrishReligionProtestant 51 Catholic 36 Other 3 No religion 10 2006 4 Related ethnic groupsAnglo Irish people Breton Americans Cornish Americans English Americans Irish Australians Irish Canadians Irish Catholics Manx Americans Scotch Irish Americans Scottish Americans Scottish Canadians Ulster Protestants Ulster Scots people Welsh AmericansNumber of Irish Americans Year Number1980 5 40 165 7021990 6 38 735 5392000 7 30 528 4922010 8 34 670 009 Contents 1 Irish immigration to the United States 1 1 From the 17th century to the mid 19th century 1 1 1 1790 population of Irish origin by state 1 1 2 Irish Catholics in the South 1 2 Mid 19th century and later 1 2 1 Civil War through to the early 20th century 2 Social history in the United States 2 1 Religion and society 2 1 1 Irish Catholic and Ulster Protestant relations 2 1 2 Catholics 2 1 3 Protestants 2 1 3 1 Presbyterians 2 1 3 2 Methodists 2 1 4 Women 2 1 5 Language 2 2 Occupations 2 2 1 Local government 2 2 2 Police 2 2 3 Teachers 2 2 4 Nuns 2 3 Discrimination 2 3 1 Stereotypes 2 4 Contributions to American culture 2 4 1 Music 2 4 2 Food 2 4 3 Sports 2 4 4 Entertainment 2 5 Sense of heritage 2 5 1 Cities 2 5 2 2020 population of Irish ancestry by state 2 5 3 Irish American communities 3 People 3 1 In politics and government 3 2 Political leanings 3 2 1 American presidents with Irish ancestry 3 2 1 1 Vice presidents of Irish descent 3 2 2 Speakers of the U S House of Representatives 3 2 3 Irish American justices of the Supreme Court 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Other sources 8 Further reading 8 1 General surveys 8 2 Catholic Irish 8 3 Protestant Irish 9 External linksIrish immigration to the United States EditMain article Irish diaspora See also Irish Catholics Ulster Protestants Ulster Scots people and Anglo Irish people From the 17th century to the mid 19th century Edit Main articles Scotch Irish Americans Irish indentured servants and Great Famine Ireland See also Kingdom of Ireland Plantations of Ireland Plantation of Ulster Irish slaves myth and History of Ireland 1801 1923 U S counties by the percentage of their population self identifying Scotch Irish or American ancestry according to the U S Census Bureau American Community Survey 2013 2017 5 Year Estimates 11 Counties where Scotch Irish and American ancestry combined are greater than the United States as a whole are in full orange U S states by the percentage of their population self identifying Irish ancestry according to the U S Census Bureau 11 States where Irish ancestry is greater than the United States as a whole are in full green U S states where self identified Irish Americans are overrepresented by the percentage of self identified Catholics according to the Pew Research Center 12 States where the percentage of Catholics is greater than the United States as a whole are in full red U S states where self identified Irish Americans are overrepresented by the percentage of self identified Protestants Evangelical or Mainline according to the Pew Research Center 13 14 States where the percentage of Protestants is greater than the United States as a whole are in full blue Some of the first Irish people to travel to the New World did so as members of the Spanish garrison in Florida during the 1560s and small numbers of Irish colonists were involved in efforts to establish colonies in the Amazon region in Newfoundland and in Virginia between 1604 and the 1630s According to historian Donald Akenson there were few if any Irish forcibly transported to the Americas during this period 15 Irish immigration to the Americas was the result of a series of complex causes The Tudor conquest and subsequent colonization during the 16th and 17th centuries had led to widespread social upheaval in Ireland and drove many Irish people to try and seek a better life elsewhere this coincided with the rapid establishment of European colonies in the Americas offering a source of emigration for prospective migrants Most Irish immigrants to the Americas came as indentured servants though others were merchants and landowners who served as key players in a variety of different mercantile and colonizing enterprises 15 Significant numbers of Irish laborers began traveling to English colonies such as Virginia the Leeward Islands and Barbados in the 1620s 16 56 7 Half of the Irish immigrants to the United States in its colonial era 1607 1775 came from the Irish province of Ulster while the other half came from the other three provinces Leinster Munster and Connacht 17 In the 17th century immigration from Ireland to the Thirteen Colonies was minimal 18 19 confined mostly to male Irish indentured servants who were primarily Catholic 19 20 and peaked with 8 000 prisoner of war penal transports to the Chesapeake Colonies from the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the 1650s out of a total of approximately 10 000 Catholic immigrants from Ireland to the United States prior to the American Revolutionary War in 1775 19 21 22 23 Indentured servitude in British America emerged in part due to the high cost of passage across the Atlantic Ocean 24 25 and as a consequence which colonies indentured servants immigrated to depended upon which colonies their patrons chose to immigrate to 26 While the Colony of Virginia passed laws prohibiting the free exercise of Catholicism during the colonial period 27 the General Assembly of the Province of Maryland enacted laws in 1639 protecting freedom of religion following the instructions of a 1632 letter from Cecil Calvert 2nd Baron Baltimore to his brother Leonard Calvert the 1st Proprietary Governor of Maryland and the Maryland General Assembly later passed the 1649 Maryland Toleration Act explicitly guaranteeing those privileges for Catholics 28 Like the rest of the indentured servant population in the Chesapeake Colonies at the time 40 to 50 percent died before completing their contracts This was due in large part to the Tidewater region s highly malignant disease environment with most not establishing families and dying childless because the population of the Chesapeake Colonies like the Thirteen Colonies in the aggregate was not sex balanced until the 18th century as three quarters of the immigrants to the Chesapeake Colonies were male and in some periods 4 1 or 6 1 male to female and fewer than 1 percent were over the age of 35 As a consequence the population only grew due to sustained immigration rather than natural increase and many of those who survived their indentured servitude contracts left the region 29 30 31 In 1650 all five Catholic churches with regular services in the eight British American colonies were located in Maryland 32 In contrast to 17th century Maryland the Plymouth Massachusetts Bay and Connecticut Colonies restricted suffrage to members of the established Puritan church while the Province of Carolina did not restrict suffrage to members of the established Anglican church The Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations had no established church while the former New Netherland colonies New York New Jersey and Delaware also had no established church under the Duke s Laws and the Frame of Government in William Penn s 1682 land grant established free exercise of religion for all Christians in the Province of Pennsylvania 33 34 Following the Glorious Revolution 1688 1689 Catholics were disenfranchised in Maryland New York Rhode Island Carolina and Virginia 33 although in Maryland suffrage was restored in 1702 35 In 1692 the Maryland General Assembly established the Church of England as the official state church 36 In 1698 and 1699 Maryland Virginia and Carolina passed laws specifically limiting immigration of Irish Catholic indentured servants 37 In 1700 the estimated population of Maryland was 29 600 38 about 2 500 of which were Catholic 39 In the 18th century emigration from Ireland to the Thirteen Colonies shifted from being primarily Catholic to being primarily Protestant and with the exception of the 1790s it would remain so until the mid to late 1830s 40 41 with Presbyterians constituting the absolute majority until 1835 42 43 These Protestant immigrants were principally descended from Scottish and English pastoralists and colonial administrators often from the South Lowlands of Scotland and the bordering North of England who had in the previous century settled the Plantations of Ireland the largest of which was the Plantation of Ulster 44 45 46 and these Protestant immigrants primarily migrated as families rather than as individuals 47 Most of these Irish Protestants were Ulster Protestants In 1704 the Maryland General Assembly passed a law which banned the Jesuits from proselytizing baptizing children other than those with Catholic parents and publicly conducting Catholic Mass Two months after its passage the General Assembly modified the legislation to allow Mass to be privately conducted for an 18 month period In 1707 the General Assembly passed a law which permanently allowed Mass to be privately conducted During this period the General Assembly also began levying taxes on the passage of Irish Catholic indentured servants In 1718 the General Assembly required a religious test for voting that resumed disenfranchisement of Catholics 48 However lax enforcement of penal laws in Maryland due to its population being overwhelmingly rural enabled churches on Jesuit operated farms and plantations to grow and become stable parishes 49 In 1750 of the 30 Catholic churches with regular services in the Thirteen Colonies 15 were located in Maryland 11 in Pennsylvania and 4 in the former New Netherland colonies 50 By 1756 the number of Catholics in Maryland had increased to approximately 7 000 51 which increased further to 20 000 by 1765 49 In Pennsylvania there were approximately 3 000 Catholics in 1756 and 6 000 by 1765 the large majority of the Pennsylvania Catholic population was from Germany 49 51 52 From 1717 to 1775 though scholarly estimates vary the most common approximation is that 250 000 immigrants from Ireland emigrated to the Thirteen Colonies list 1 By the beginning of the American Revolutionary War in 1775 approximately only 2 to 3 percent of the colonial labor force was composed of indentured servants and of those arriving from Britain from 1773 to 1776 fewer than 5 percent were from Ireland while 85 percent remained male and 72 percent went to the Southern Colonies 62 Immigration during the war came to a standstill except by 5 000 German mercenaries from Hesse who remained in the country following the war 41 Out of the 115 killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill 22 were Irish born Their names include Callaghan Casey Collins Connelly Dillon Donohue Flynn McGrath Nugent Shannon and Sullivan 63 By the end of the war in 1783 there were approximately 24 000 to 25 000 Catholics in the United States including 3 000 slaves out of a total population of approximately 3 million or less than 1 percent 38 21 64 65 The majority of the Catholic population in the United States during the colonial period came from England Germany and France not Ireland 21 despite failed academic efforts by Irish historiographers to demonstrate Irish Catholics as being more numerous in the colonial period than previous scholarship had indicated 66 By 1790 approximately 400 000 people of Irish birth or ancestry lived in the United States or greater than 10 percent of the total population of approximately 3 9 million 17 67 The U S Bureau of the Census estimates 2 of the United States population in 1776 was of native Irish heritage 68 The Catholic population grew to approximately 50 000 by 1800 or less than 1 percent of the total population of approximately 5 3 million due to increased Catholic emigration from Ireland during the 1790s 41 65 69 70 In the 18th century Thirteen Colonies and the independent United States while interethnic marriage among Catholics remained a dominant pattern Catholic Protestant intermarriage became more common notably in the Shenandoah Valley where intermarriage among Ulster Protestants and the significant minority of Irish Catholics in particular was not uncommon or stigmatized 71 and while fewer Catholic parents required that their children be disinherited in their wills if they renounced Catholicism it remained more common among Catholic parents to do so if their children renounced their parents faith in proportion to the rest of the U S population 64 Despite this many Irish Catholics that immigrated to the United States from 1770 to 1830 converted to Baptist and Methodist churches during the Second Great Awakening 1790 1840 72 73 In between the end of the American Revolutionary War in 1783 and the War of 1812 100 000 immigrants came from Ulster to the United States 42 During the French Revolutionary Wars 1792 1802 and Napoleonic Wars 1803 1815 there was a 22 year economic expansion in Ireland due to increased need for agricultural products for British soldiers and an expanding population in England Following the conclusion of the War of the Seventh Coalition and Napoleon s exile to Saint Helena in 1815 there was a six year international economic depression that led to plummeting grain prices and a cropland rent spike in Ireland 42 74 From 1815 to 1845 500 000 more Irish Protestant immigrants came from Ireland to the United States 42 75 as part of a migration of approximately 1 million immigrants from Ireland from 1820 to 1845 74 In 1820 following the Louisiana Purchase in 1804 and the Adams Onis Treaty in 1819 the Catholic population of the United States had grown to 195 000 or approximately 2 percent of the total population of approximately 9 6 million 76 77 By 1840 along with resumed immigration from Germany by the 1820s 78 the Catholic population grew to 663 000 or approximately 4 percent out of the total population of 17 1 million 79 80 Following the potato blight in late 1845 that initiated the Great Famine in Ireland from 1846 to 1851 more than 1 million more Irish immigrated to the United States 90 percent of whom were Catholic 40 81 Many of the Famine immigrants to New York City required quarantine on Staten Island or Blackwell s Island and thousands died from typhoid fever or cholera for reasons directly or indirectly related to the Famine 82 Despite the small increase in Catholic Protestant intermarriage following the American Revolutionary War 64 Catholic Protestant intermarriage remained uncommon in the United States in the 19th century 83 Historians have characterized the etymology of the term Scotch Irish as obscure 84 and the term itself as misleading and confusing to the extent that even its usage by authors in historic works of literature about the Scotch Irish such as The Mind of the South by W J Cash is often incorrect 85 86 87 Historians David Hackett Fischer and James G Leyburn note that usage of the term is unique to North American English and it is rarely used by British historians or in Ireland or Scotland where Scots Irish is a term used by Irish Scottish people to describe themselves 88 89 The first recorded usage of the term was by Elizabeth I of England in 1573 in reference to Gaelic speaking Scottish Highlanders who crossed the Irish Sea and intermarried with the Irish Catholic natives of Ireland 84 While Protestant immigrants from Ireland in the 18th century were more commonly identified as Anglo Irish and while some preferred to self identify as Anglo Irish 88 usage of Scotch Irish in reference to Ulster Protestants who immigrated to the United States in the 18th century likely became common among Episcopalians and Quakers in Pennsylvania and records show that usage of the term with this meaning was made as early as 1757 by the Anglo Irish philosopher Edmund Burke 90 91 However multiple historians have noted that from the time of the American Revolutionary War until 1850 the term largely fell out of usage because most Ulster Protestants self identified as Irish until large waves of immigration by Irish Catholics both during and after the 1840s Great Famine in Ireland led those Ulster Protestants in America who lived in proximity to the new immigrants to change their self identification from Irish to Scotch Irish list 2 while those Ulster Protestants who did not live in proximity to Irish Catholics continued to self identify as Irish or as time went on to start self identifying as being of American ancestry 94 While those historians note that renewed usage of Scotch Irish after 1850 was motivated by anti Catholic prejudices among Ulster Protestants 92 93 considering the historically low rates of intermarriage between Protestants and Catholics in both Ireland and the United States list 3 as well as the relative frequency of interethnic and interdenominational marriage amongst Protestants in Ulster list 4 and despite the fact that not all Protestant migrants from Ireland historically were of Scottish descent 55 James G Leyburn argued for retaining its usage for reasons of utility and preciseness 101 while historian Wayland F Dunaway also argued for retention for historical precedent and linguistic description 102 During the colonial period Irish Protestant immigrants settled in the southern Appalachian backcountry and in the Carolina Piedmont 103 They became the primary cultural group in these areas and their descendants were in the vanguard of westward movement through Virginia into Tennessee and Kentucky and thence into Arkansas Missouri and Texas By the 19th century through intermarriage with settlers of English and German ancestry their descendants lost their identification with Ireland This generation of pioneers was a generation of Americans not of Englishmen or Germans or Scots Irish 104 The two groups had little initial interaction in America as the 18th century Ulster immigrants were predominantly Protestant and had become settled largely in upland regions of the American interior while the huge wave of 19th century Catholic immigrant families settled primarily in the Northeast and Midwest port cities such as Boston Philadelphia New York Buffalo or Chicago However beginning in the early 19th century many Irish migrated individually to the interior for work on large scale infrastructure projects such as canals and later in the century railroads 105 The Irish Protestants settled mainly in the colonial back country of the Appalachian Mountain region and became the prominent ethnic strain in the culture that developed there 106 The descendants of Irish Protestant settlers had a great influence on the later culture of the Southern United States in particular and the culture of the United States in general through such contributions as American folk music country and western music and stock car racing which became popular throughout the country in the late 20th century 107 Charles Carroll the sole Catholic signer of the U S Declaration of Independence was the descendant of Irish nobility in County Tipperary Signers Matthew Thornton George Taylor were born in Ireland and were Ulster Scots while Thomas Lynch Jr for example was Protestant he was of Irish ancestry and retained a strong Irish identity Irish immigrants of this period participated in significant numbers in the American Revolution leading one British Army officer to testify at the House of Commons that half the rebels referring to soldiers in the Continental Army were from Ireland 108 Irish Americans signed the foundational documents of the United States the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution and beginning with Andrew Jackson served as president 1790 population of Irish origin by state Edit Estimated Irish American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census 109 State or Territory Ireland Irish Total Ulster Free State Connecticut 4 180 1 80 2 555 1 10 6 735 2 90 Delaware 2 918 6 30 2 501 5 40 5 419 11 70 Georgia 6 082 11 50 2 010 3 80 8 092 15 30 Kentucky amp Tenn 6 513 7 00 4 838 5 20 11 351 12 20 Maine 7 689 8 00 3 556 3 70 11 245 11 70 Maryland 12 102 5 80 13 562 6 50 25 664 12 30 Massachusetts 9 703 2 60 4 851 1 30 14 554 3 90 New Hampshire 6 491 4 60 4 092 2 90 10 583 7 50 New Jersey 10 707 6 30 5 439 3 20 16 146 9 50 New York 16 033 5 10 9 431 3 00 25 464 8 10 North Carolina 16 483 5 70 15 616 5 40 32 099 11 10 Pennsylvania 46 571 11 00 14 818 3 50 61 389 14 50 Rhode Island 1 293 2 00 517 0 80 1 810 2 80 South Carolina 13 177 9 40 6 168 4 40 19 345 13 80 Vermont 2 722 3 20 1 616 1 90 4 338 5 10 Virginia 27 411 6 20 24 316 5 50 51 727 11 70 1790 Census Area 190 075 5 99 115 886 3 65 305 961 9 64 Northwest Territory 307 2 92 190 1 81 497 4 73 French America 220 1 10 135 0 68 355 1 78 Spanish America 60 0 25 37 0 15 97 0 40 United States 190 662 5 91 116 248 3 60 306 910 9 51 Irish Catholics in the South Edit In 1820 Irish born John England became the first Catholic bishop in the mainly Protestant city of Charleston South Carolina During the 1820s and 1830s Bishop England defended the Catholic minority against Protestant prejudices In 1831 and 1835 he established free schools for free African American children Inflamed by the propaganda of the American Anti Slavery Society a mob raided the Charleston post office in 1835 and the next day turned its attention to England s school England led Charleston s Irish Volunteers to defend the school Soon after this however all schools for free blacks were closed in Charleston and England acquiesced 110 Two pairs of Irish empresarios founded colonies in coastal Texas in 1828 John McMullen and James McGloin honored the Irish saint when they established the San Patricio Colony south of San Antonio James Power and James Hewetson contracted to create the Refugio Colony on the Gulf Coast The two colonies were settled mainly by Irish but also by Mexicans and other nationalities At least 87 Irish surnamed individuals settled in the Peters Colony which included much of present day north central Texas in the 1840s The Irish participated in all phases of Texas war of independence against Mexico Among those who died defending the Alamo in March 1836 were 12 who were Irish born while an additional 14 bore Irish surnames About 100 Irish born soldiers participated in the Battle of San Jacinto about one seventh of the total force of Texians in that conflict 111 The Irish Catholics concentrated in a few medium sized cities where they were highly visible especially in Charleston Savannah and New Orleans 112 113 They often became precinct leaders in the Democratic Party Organizations opposed abolition of slavery and generally favored preserving the Union in 1860 when they voted for Stephen Douglas 114 After secession in 1861 the Southern Irish Catholic community supported the Confederate States of America and 20 000 Irish Catholics served in the Confederate States Army Gleason says Support for Irish Confederate soldiers from home was vital both for encouraging them to stay in the army and to highlight to native white southerners that the entire Irish community was behind the Confederacy Civilian leaders of the Irish and the South did embrace the Confederate national project and most became advocates of a hard war policy 115 116 Irish nationalist John Mitchel lived in Tennessee and Virginia during his exile from Ireland and was one of the Southern United States most outspoken supporters during the American Civil War through his newspapers the Southern Citizen and the Richmond Enquirer 117 Although most began as unskilled laborers Irish Catholics in the South achieved average or above average economic status by 1900 David T Gleeson emphasizes how well they were accepted by society Native tolerance however was also a very important factor in Irish integration into Southern society Upper class southerners therefore did not object to the Irish because Irish immigration never threatened to overwhelm their cities or states The Irish were willing to take on potentially high mortality occupations thereby sparing valuable slave property Some employers objected not only to the cost of Irish labor but also to the rowdiness of their foreign born employees Nevertheless they recognized the importance of the Irish worker to the protection of slavery The Catholicism practiced by Irish immigrants was of little concern to Southern natives 118 Mid 19th century and later Edit Irish immigration to the United States 1820 1975 17 Period Number ofimmigrants Period Number ofimmigrants1820 1830 54 338 1911 1920 146 1811831 1840 207 381 1921 1930 220 5911841 1850 780 719 1931 1940 13 1671851 1860 914 119 1941 1950 26 9671861 1870 435 778 1951 1960 57 3321871 1880 436 871 1961 1970 37 4611881 1890 655 482 1971 1975 6 5591891 1900 388 4161901 1910 399 065Total 4 720 427Before the 1800s Irish immigrants to North America often moved to the countryside Some worked in the fur trade trapping and exploring but most settled in rural farms and villages They cleared the land of trees built homes and planted fields Many others worked in coastal areas as fishers on ships and as dockworkers In the 1800s Irish immigrants in the United States tended to stay in the large cities where they landed 119 Leacht Cuimhneachain na nGael Irish famine memorial located on Penn s Landing Philadelphia From 1820 to 1860 1 956 557 Irish arrived 75 of these after the Great Irish Famine or The Great Hunger Irish An Gorta Mor of 1845 1852 struck 120 According to a 2019 study the sons of farmers and illiterate men were more likely to emigrate than their literate and skilled counterparts Emigration rates were highest in poorer farming communities with stronger migrant networks 121 Of the total Irish immigrants to the U S from 1820 to 1860 many died crossing the ocean due to disease and dismal conditions of what became known as coffin ships 122 Irish immigration had greatly increased beginning in the 1830s due to the need for unskilled labor in canal building lumbering and construction works in the Northeast 122 The large Erie Canal project was one such example where Irishmen were many of the laborers Small but tight communities developed in growing cities such as Philadelphia Boston and New York Most Irish immigrants to the United States during this period favored large cities because they could create their own communities for support and protection in a new environment 123 Cities with large numbers of Irish immigrants included Boston Philadelphia and New York as well as Pittsburgh Baltimore Detroit Chicago Cleveland St Louis St Paul San Francisco and Los Angeles Gravestone in Boston Catholic cemetery erected in memory of County Roscommon native born shortly before the Great Famine While many Irish did stay near large cities countless others were part of westward expansion They were enticed by tales of gold and by the increasing opportunities for work and land In 1854 the government opened Kansas Territory to settlers 124 While many people in general moved to take advantage of the unsettled land Irish were an important part Many Irish men were physical laborers In order to colonize the west many strong men were needed to build the towns and cities Kansas City was one city that was built by Irish immigrants 124 Much of its population today is of Irish descent Another reason for Irish migration west was the expansion of railroads Railway work was a common occupation among immigrant men because workers were in such high demand Many Irish men followed the expansion of railroads and ended up settling in places that they built in 125 Since the Irish were a large part of those Americans moving west much of their culture can still be found today Between 1851 and 1920 3 3 to 3 7 million Irish immigrated to the United States 126 17 including more than 90 percent of the more than 1 million Ulster Protestant emigrants out of Ireland from 1851 to 1900 127 81 Following the Great Famine 1845 1852 emigration from Ireland came primarily from Munster and Connacht 127 while 28 percent of all immigrants from Ireland from 1851 to 1900 continued to come from Ulster Ulster immigration continued to account for as much as 20 percent of all immigration from Ireland to the United States in the 1880s and 1890s 81 and still accounted for 19 percent of all immigration from Ireland to the United States from 1900 to 1909 and 25 percent from 1910 to 1914 128 The Catholic population in the United States grew to 3 1 million by 1860 or approximately 10 percent of the total U S population of 31 4 million 129 130 to 6 3 million by 1880 or approximately 13 percent of the total U S population of 50 2 million 131 132 and further to 19 8 million by 1920 or approximately 19 percent of the total U S population of 106 million 131 133 The 309 Connemara emigrants selected by their local clergy as suitable for a new life in America arrived at Boston June 14 1880 11 days after departure from Galway Bay on the SS Austrian an Allen Line ship The settling of The Connemaras as they became known was a new venture prompted by a Liverpool priest Fr Patrick Nugent renowned for his philanthropic and truly patriotic exertions to alleviate the social conditions of his fellow countrymen in England and Archbishop John Ireland of St Paul Minnesota who was already settling thousands of Irish Catholics who were trapped in the ghettoes of New York and elsewhere on rich prairie lands 134 135 Thomas Ambrose Butler an Irish Catholic priest was a leading voice in urging Irish immigrants to colonize Kansas However due to continued immigration from Germany 136 and beginning in the 1880s waves of immigration from Italy Poland and Canada by French Canadians as well as from Mexico from 1900 to 1920 137 Irish Catholics never accounted for a majority of the Catholic population in the United States through 1920 138 139 In the 1920s an additional 220 000 immigrants from Ireland came to the United States 17 with emigration from Ulster falling off to 10 000 of 126 000 immigrants from Ireland or less than 10 percent between 1925 and 1930 128 Following the Immigration Act of 1924 and the Great Depression 140 141 from 1930 to 1975 only 141 000 more immigrants came from Ireland to the United States 17 Improving economic conditions during the Post World War II economic expansion and the passage of the restrictive Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 contributed to the decline in mass immigration from Ireland 141 Due to the early 1980s recession 360 000 Irish emigrated out of the country with the majority going to England and many to the United States including approximately 40 000 to 150 000 on overstayed travel visas as undocumented aliens 142 Beginning in the 1970s surveys of self identified Irish Americans found that consistent majorities of Irish Americans also self identified as being Protestant 143 144 While there was a greater total number of immigrants after immigration from Ireland transitioned to being primarily Catholic in the mid to late 1830s 40 47 42 43 fertility rates in the United States were lower from 1840 to 1970 after immigration from Ireland became primarily Catholic than they were from 1700 to 1840 when immigration was primarily Protestant 145 146 147 Also while Irish immigrants to the United States in the early 20th century had higher fertility rates than the U S population as a whole they had lower fertility rates than German immigrants to the United States during the same time period and lower fertility rates than the contemporaneous population of Ireland and subsequent generations had lower fertility rates than the emigrant generation 148 This is due to the fact that despite coming from the rural regions of an agrarian society Irish immigrants in the post Famine migration generally immigrated to the urban areas of the United States because by 1850 the costs of moving to a rural area and establishing a farm was beyond the financial means of most Irish immigrants 149 In the 1990s the Irish economy began to boom again and by the turn of the 21st century immigration to Ireland from the United States began to consistently exceed immigration from Ireland to the United States 150 Civil War through to the early 20th century Edit Main article Irish Americans in the American Civil War Concentration of people born in Ireland in 1870 Census During the American Civil War Irish Americans volunteered for the Union Army and at least 38 Union regiments had the word Irish in their titles 144 221 Union soldiers were born in Ireland additionally perhaps an equal number of Union soldiers were of Irish descent 151 Many immigrant soldiers formed their own regiments such as the Irish Brigade 152 153 154 However in proportion to the general population the Irish were the most underrepresented immigrant group fighting for the Union 155 However conscription was resisted by many Irish as an imposition 153 154 Two years into the war the conscription law was passed in 1863 and major draft riots erupted in New York It coincided with the efforts of the city s dominant political machine Tammany Hall to enroll Irish immigrants as citizens so they could vote in local elections 156 Many such immigrants suddenly discovered they were now expected to fight for their new country 157 The Irish employed primarily as laborers were usually unable to afford the 300 commutation fee to procure a replacement for service 158 Many of the Irish viewed blacks as competition for scarce jobs and as the reason why the Civil War was being fought 159 African Americans who fell into the mob s hands were often beaten or killed 160 161 The Colored Orphan Asylum on Fifth Avenue which provided shelter for hundreds of children was attacked by a mob It was seen as a symbol of white charity to blacks and of black upward mobility reasons enough for its destruction at the hands of a predominantly Irish mob which looked upon African Americans as direct social and economic competitors 162 Fortunately the largely Irish American police force was able to secure the orphanage for enough time to allow orphans to escape 160 163 30 000 Irish or Irish descended men joined the Confederate Army 155 Interestingly Gleeson wrote that they had higher desertion rates than non Irish and sometimes switched sides suggesting that their support for the Confederacy was tepid 164 During the Reconstruction era however some Irish took a strong position in favor of white supremacy and some played major roles in attacking blacks in riots in Memphis 165 In 1871 New York s Orange Riots broke out when Irish Protestants celebrated the Williamite victory at the Battle of the Boyne by parading through Irish Catholic neighborhoods taunting the residents who then responded with violence Police Superintendent James J Kelso a Protestant ordered the parade cancelled as a threat to public safety Kelso was overruled by the governor who ordered 5000 militia to protect the marchers 166 The Catholics attacked but were stopped by the militia and police who opened fire killing about 63 Catholics 167 U S President Grover Cleveland twisting the tail of the British Lion as Americans cheer in the Venezuelan crisis of 1895 cartoon in Puck by J S Pughe Relations between the U S and Britain were chilly during the 1860s as Americans resented instances of British and Canadian support for the Confederacy during the Civil War After the war American authorities looked the other way as Irish Catholic Fenians plotted and even attempted an invasion of Canada 168 The Fenians proved a failure clarification needed but Irish Catholic politicians Who were a growing power in the Democratic Party demanded more independence for Ireland and made anti British rhetoric called twisting the lion s tail a staple of election campaign appeals to the Irish Catholic vote 169 American political cartoon by Thomas Nast titled The Usual Irish Way of Doing Things depicting a drunken Irishman lighting a powder keg and swinging a bottle Published 2 September 1871 in Harper s WeeklyLater immigrants mostly settled in industrial towns and cities of the Northeast and Midwest where Irish American neighborhoods had previously been established 170 171 The Irish were having a huge impact on America as a whole In 1910 there were more people in New York City of Irish ancestry than Dublin s whole population and even today many of these cities still retain a substantial Irish American community 172 The best urban economic opportunities for unskilled Irish women and men included factory and millwork domestic service and the physical labor of public work projects 173 During the mid 1900s immigrants from Ireland were coming to the U S for the same reasons as those before them they came looking for jobs 174 Social history in the United States EditReligion and society Edit Religion has been important to the Irish American identity in America and continues to play a major role in their communities Surveys conducted since the 1970s have shown consistent majorities or pluralities of those who self identify as being of Irish ancestry in the United States as also self identifying as Protestants 143 144 The Protestants ancestors arrived primarily in the colonial era while Catholics are primarily descended from immigrants of the 19th century Irish leaders have been prominent in the Catholic Church in the United States for over 150 years The Irish have been leaders in the Presbyterian and Methodist traditions as well 175 Surveys in the 1990s show that of Americans who identify themselves as Irish 51 said they were Protestant and 36 identified as Catholic In the Southern United States Protestants account for 73 of those claiming Irish origins while Catholics account for 19 In the Northern United States 45 of those claiming Irish origin are Catholic while 39 are Protestant 175 Irish Catholic and Ulster Protestant relations Edit Further information Orange Institution Anti Catholicism in the United States and Anti Protestantism Between 1607 and 1820 the majority of emigrants from Ireland to America were Protestants 176 who were described simply as Irish 177 The religious distinction became important after 1820 178 when large numbers of Irish Catholics began to emigrate to the United States Some of the descendants of the colonial Irish Protestant settlers from Ulster began thereafter to redefine themselves as Scotch Irish to stress their historic origins and distanced themselves from Irish Catholics 179 others continued to call themselves Irish especially in areas of the South which saw little Irish Catholic immigration By 1830 Irish diaspora demographics had changed rapidly with over 60 of all Irish settlers in the U S being Catholics from rural areas of Ireland 180 Some Protestant Irish immigrants became active in explicitly anti Catholic organizations such as the Orange Institution and the American Protective Association However participation in the Orange Institution was never as large in the United States as it was in Canada 181 In the early nineteenth century the post Revolutionary republican spirit of the new United States attracted exiled United Irishmen such as Theobald Wolf Tone and others with the presidency of Andrew Jackson exemplifying this attitude 182 Most Protestant Irish immigrants in the first several decades of the nineteenth century were those who held to the republicanism of the 1790s and who were unable to accept Orangeism Loyalists and Orangemen made up a minority of Irish Protestant immigrants to the United States during this period Most of the Irish loyalist emigration was bound for Upper Canada and the Canadian Maritime provinces where Orange lodges were able to flourish under the British flag 181 By 1870 when there were about 930 Orange lodges in the Canadian province of Ontario there were only 43 in the entire eastern United States These few American lodges were founded by newly arriving Protestant Irish immigrants in coastal cities such as Philadelphia and New York 183 These ventures were short lived and of limited political and social impact although there were specific instances of violence involving Orangemen between Catholic and Protestant Irish immigrants such as the Orange Riots in New York City in 1824 1870 and 1871 184 The first Orange riot on record was in 1824 in Abingdon Square New York resulting from a 12 July march Several Orangemen were arrested and found guilty of inciting the riot According to the State prosecutor in the court record the Orange celebration was until then unknown in the country The immigrants involved were admonished In the United States the oppressed of all nations find an asylum and all that is asked in return is that they become law abiding citizens Orangemen Ribbonmen and United Irishmen are alike unknown They are all entitled to protection by the laws of the country 185 The Orange riot of 1871 as depicted in Frank Leslie s Illustrated Newspaper The view is at 25th Street in Manhattan looking south down Eighth Avenue The later Orange Riots of 1870 and 1871 killed nearly 70 people and were fought out between Irish Protestant and Catholic immigrants After this the activities of the Orange Order were banned for a time the Order dissolved and most members joined Masonic orders After 1871 there were no more riots between Irish Catholics and Protestants 186 America offered a new beginning and most descendents of the Ulster Presbyterians of the eighteenth century and even many new Protestant Irish immigrants turned their backs on all associations with Ireland and melted into the American Protestant mainstream 187 Catholics Edit Irish priests especially Dominicans Franciscans Augustinians and Capuchins came to the large cities of the East in the 1790s and when new dioceses were erected in 1808 the first bishop of New York was an Irishman in recognition of the contribution of the early Irish clergy 188 St Augustine s Church on fire Anti Irish anti Catholic Nativist riots in Philadelphia in 1844 Saint Patrick s Battalion San Patricios was a group of several hundred immigrant soldiers the majority Irish who deserted the U S Army during the Mexican American War because of ill treatment or sympathetic leanings to fellow Mexican Catholics They joined the Mexican army 189 In Boston between 1810 and 1840 there had been serious tensions between the bishop and the laity who wanted to control the local parishes By 1845 the Catholic population in Boston had increased to 30 000 from around 5 000 in 1825 due to the influx of Irish immigrants With the appointment of John B Fitzpatrick as bishop in 1845 tensions subsided as the increasingly Irish Catholic community grew to support Fitzpatrick s assertion of the bishop s control of parish government 190 The mass hanging of Irish Catholic soldiers who joined the Mexican army In New York Archbishop John Hughes 1797 1864 an Irish immigrant himself was deeply involved in the Irish question Irish independence from British rule Hughes supported Daniel O Connell s Catholic emancipation movement in Ireland but rejected such radical and violent societies as the Young Irelanders and the National Brotherhood Hughes also disapproved of American Irish radical fringe groups urging immigrants to assimilate themselves into American life while remaining patriotic to Ireland only individually 191 In Hughes s view a large scale movement to form Irish settlements in the western United States was too isolationist and ultimately detrimental to immigrants success in the New World 192 In the 1840s Hughes campaigned for publicly funded schools for Catholic immigrants from Ireland modelled after the successful Irish public school system in Lowell Massachusetts Hughes made speeches denouncing the Public School Society of New York which mandated that all educational institutions use the King James Bible an unacceptable proposition to Catholics The dispute between Catholics and Protestants over the funding of schools led the New York Legislature to pass the Maclay Act in 1842 giving New York City an elective Board of Education empowered to build and supervise schools and distribute the education fund but with the proviso that none of the money should go to schools which taught religion Hughes responded by building an elaborate parochial school system that stretched to the college level setting a policy followed in other large cities Efforts to get city or state funding failed because of vehement Protestant opposition to a system that rivaled the public schools 193 In the west Catholic Irish were having a large effect as well The open west attracted many Irish immigrants Many of these immigrants were Catholic When they migrated west they would form little pockets with other Irish immigrants 124 Irish Catholic communities were made in supportive village style neighborhoods centered around a Catholic church and called parishes 124 These neighborhoods affected the overall lifestyle and atmosphere of the communities Other ways religion played a part in these towns was the fact that many were started by Irish Catholic priests Father Bernard Donnelly started Town of Kansas which would later become Kansas City His influence over early stages Kansas City was great and so the Catholic religion was spread to other settlers who arrived 124 While not all settlers became Catholics a great number of the early settlers were Catholic In other western communities Irish priests wanted to convert the Native Americans to Catholicism 124 These Catholic Irish would contribute not only to the growth of Catholic population in America but to the values and traditions in America Officers and men of the Irish Catholic 69th New York Volunteer Regiment attend church services at Fort Corcoran in 1861 Jesuits established a network of colleges in major cities including Boston College Fordham University in New York and Georgetown University in Washington D C Fordham was founded in 1841 and attracted students from other regions of the United States and even South America and the Caribbean At first exclusively a liberal arts institution it built a science building in 1886 lending more legitimacy to science in the curriculum there In addition a three year Bachelor of Science degree was created 194 Boston College by contrast was established over twenty years later in 1863 to appeal to urban Irish Catholics It offered a rather limited intellectual curriculum however with the priests at Boston College prioritizing spiritual and sacramental activities over intellectual pursuits One consequence was that Harvard Law School would not admit Boston College graduates to its law school Modern Jesuit leadership in American academia was not to become their hallmark across all institutions until the 20th century 195 The Irish became prominent in the leadership of the Catholic Church in the U S by the 1850s by 1890 there were 7 3 million Catholics in the U S and growing and most bishops were Irish 196 As late as the 1970s when Irish were 17 of American Catholics they were 35 of the priests and 50 of the bishops together with a similar proportion of presidents of Catholic colleges and hospitals 197 Protestants Edit Main article Scotch Irish Americans The Scots Irish who settled in the back country of colonial America were largely Presbyterians 198 The establishment of many settlements in the remote back country put a strain on the ability of the Presbyterian Church to meet the new demand for qualified college educated clergy 199 Religious groups such as the Baptists and Methodists did not require higher education of their ministers so they could more readily supply ministers to meet the demand of the growing Scots Irish settlements 199 By about 1810 Baptist and Methodist churches were in the majority and the descendants of the Scotch Irish today remain predominantly Baptist or Methodist 200 They were avid participants in the revivals taking place during the Great Awakening from the 1740s to the 1840s 201 They take pride in their Irish heritage because they identify with the values ascribed to the Scotch Irish who played a major role in the American Revolution and in the development of American culture 175 Presbyterians Edit The first Presbyterian community in America was established in 1640 in Southampton Long Island New York 202 Francis Makemie an Irish Presbyterian immigrant later established churches in Maryland and Virginia 203 Makemie was born and raised near Ramelton County Donegal to Ulster Scots parents He was educated in the University of Glasgow and set out to organize and initiate the construction of several Presbyterian Churches throughout Maryland and Virginia By 1706 Makemie and his followers constructed a Presbyterian Church in Rehobeth Maryland 204 205 In 1707 after traveling to New York to establish a presbytery Francis Makemie was charged with preaching without a license by the English immigrant and Governor of New York Edward Hyde 206 Makemie won a vital victory for the fight of religious freedom for Scots Irish immigrants when he was acquitted and gained recognition for having stood up to Anglican authorities Makemie became one of the wealthiest immigrants to colonial America owning more than 5 000 acres and 33 slaves 207 208 New Light Presbyterians founded the College of New Jersey later renamed Princeton University in 1746 in order to train ministers dedicated to their views The college was the educational and religious capital of Scots Irish America 209 By 1808 loss of confidence in the college within the Presbyterian Church led to the establishment of the separate Princeton Theological Seminary but deep Presbyterian influence at the college continued through the 1910s as typified by university president Woodrow Wilson 210 Out on the frontier the Scots Irish Presbyterians of the Muskingum Valley in Ohio established Muskingum College at New Concord in 1837 It was led by two clergymen Samuel Wilson and Benjamin Waddle who served as trustees president and professors during the first few years During the 1840s and 1850s the college survived the rapid turnover of very young presidents who used the post as a stepping stone in their clerical careers and in the late 1850s it weathered a storm of student protest Under the leadership of L B W Shryock during the Civil War Muskingum gradually evolved from a local and locally controlled institution to one serving the entire Muskingum Valley It is still affiliated with the Presbyterian church 211 Brought up in a Scots Irish Presbyterian home Cyrus McCormick of Chicago developed a strong sense of devotion to the Presbyterian Church Throughout his later life he used the wealth gained through invention of the mechanical reaper to further the work of the church His benefactions were responsible for the establishment in Chicago of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of the Northwest after his death renamed the McCormick Theological Seminary of the Presbyterian Church He assisted the Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond Virginia He also supported a series of religious publications beginning with the Presbyterian Expositor in 1857 and ending with the Interior later called The Continent which his widow continued until her death 212 Methodists Edit Irish immigrants were the first immigrant group to America to build and organize Methodist churches Many of the early Irish immigrants who did so came from a German Irish background Barbara Heck an Irish woman of German descent from County Limerick Ireland immigrated to America in 1760 with her husband Paul She is often considered to be the Mother of American Methodism 213 Heck guided and mentored her cousin Philip Embury who was also an Irish Palatine immigrant 214 Heck and Embury constructed the John Street Methodist Church which today is usually recognized as the oldest Methodist Church in the United States 215 However another church constructed by prominent Irish Methodist immigrant Robert Strawbridge may have preceded the John Street Methodist Church 216 Women Edit Irish Lass depiction in 1885 The Irish people were the first of many to immigrate to the U S in mass waves including large groups of single young women between the ages of 16 and 24 217 Up until this point free women who settled in the colonies mostly came after their husbands had already made the journey and could afford their trip or were brought over to be married to an eligible colonist who paid for their journey Many Irish fled their home country to escape unemployment and starvation during the Great Irish Famine 218 The richest of the Irish resettled in England where their skilled work was greatly accepted but lower class Irish and women could find little work in Western Europe leading them to cross the Atlantic in search of greater financial opportunities 219 Some Irish women resorted to prostitution in large cities such as Boston and New York City They were often arrested for intoxication public lewdness and petty larceny 220 Most of the single Irish women preferred service labor as a form of income These women made a higher wage than most by serving the middle and high class in their own homes as nannies cooks and cleaners original research The wages for domestic service were higher than that of factory workers and they lived in the attics of upscale mansions citation needed By 1870 forty percent of Irish women worked as domestic servants in New York City making them over fifty percent of the service industry at the time 221 Prejudices ran deep in the north and could be seen in newspaper cartoons depicting Irish men as hot headed violent drunkards 222 The initial backlash the Irish received in America lead to their self imposed seclusion making assimilation into society a long and painful process 218 Language Edit Down to the end of the 19th century a large number of Irish immigrants arrived speaking Irish as their first language This continued to be the case with immigrants from certain counties even in the 20th century The Irish language was first mentioned as being spoken in North America in the 17th century Large numbers of Irish emigrated to America throughout the 18th century bringing the language with them and it was particularly strong in Pennsylvania 223 It was also widely spoken in such places as New York City where it proved a useful recruiting tool for Loyalists during the American Revolution 224 225 Irish speakers continued to arrive in large numbers throughout the 19th century particularly after the Famine There was a certain amount of literacy in Irish as shown by the many Irish language manuscripts which immigrants brought with them In 1881 An Gaodhal was founded being the first newspaper in the world to be largely in Irish It continued to be published into the 20th century 226 and now has an online successor in An Gael an international literary magazine 227 A number of Irish immigrant newspapers in the 19th and 20th centuries had Irish language columns Irish immigrants fell into three linguistic categories monolingual Irish speakers bilingual speakers of both Irish and English and monolingual English speakers 228 Estimates indicate that there were around 400 000 Irish speakers in the United States in the 1890s located primarily in New York City Philadelphia Boston Chicago and Yonkers 229 The Irish speaking population of New York reached its height in this period when speakers of Irish numbered between 70 000 and 80 000 230 This number declined during the early 20th century dropping to 40 000 in 1939 10 000 in 1979 and 5 000 in 1995 231 According to the 2000 census the Irish language ranks 66th out of the 322 languages spoken today in the U S with over 25 000 speakers New York state has the most Irish speakers of the 50 states and Massachusetts the highest percentage 232 Daltai na Gaeilge a nonprofit Irish language advocacy group based in Elberon New Jersey estimated that about 30 000 people spoke the language in America as of 2006 This the organization claimed was a remarkable increase from only a few thousand at the time of the group s founding in 1981 233 Occupations Edit Before 1800 significant numbers of Irish Protestant immigrants became farmers many headed to the frontier where land was cheap or free and it was easier to start a farm or herding operation 234 Many Irish Protestants and Catholics alike were indentured servants unable to pay their own passage or sentenced to servitude 235 After 1840 most Irish Catholic immigrants went directly to the cities mill towns and railroad or canal construction sites on the East Coast In upstate New York the Great Lakes area the Midwest and the Far West many became farmers or ranchers In the East male Irish laborers were hired by Irish contractors to work on canals railroads streets sewers and other construction projects particularly in New York state and New England The Irish men also worked in these labor positions in the mid west They worked to construct towns where there had been none previously Kansas City was one such town and eventually became an important cattle town and railroad center 124 Labor positions were not the only occupations for Irish though Some moved to New England mill towns such as Holyoke Lowell Taunton Brockton Fall River and Milford Massachusetts where owners of textile mills welcomed the new low wage workers They took the jobs previously held by Yankee women known as Lowell girls 236 237 238 A large percentage of Irish Catholic women took jobs as maids in hotels and private households 112 Large numbers of unemployed or very poor Irish Catholics lived in squalid conditions in the new city slums and tenements 239 Single Irish immigrant women quickly assumed jobs in high demand but for very low pay The majority of them worked in mills factories and private households and were considered the bottommost group in the female job hierarchy alongside African American women Workers considered mill work in cotton textiles and needle trades the least desirable because of the dangerous and unpleasant conditions Factory work was primarily a worst case scenario for widows or daughters of families already involved in the industry 240 Unlike many other immigrants Irish women preferred domestic work because it was constantly in great demand among middle and upper class American households 241 Although wages differed across the country they were consistently higher than those of the other occupations available to Irish women and could often be negotiated because of the lack of competition Also the working conditions in well off households were significantly better than those of factories or mills and free room and board allowed domestic servants to save money or send it back to their families in Ireland 242 Despite some of the benefits of domestic work Irish women s job requirements were difficult and demeaning Subject to their employers around the clock Irish women cooked cleaned babysat and more Because most servants lived in the home where they worked they were separated from their communities Most of all the American stigma on domestic work suggested that Irish women were failures who had about the same intelligence as that of an old grey headed negro This quote illustrates how in a period of extreme racism towards African Americans society similarly viewed Irish immigrants as inferior beings 243 Irish immigrants in Kansas City Missouri c 1909 Although the Irish Catholics started very low on the social status scale by 1900 they had jobs and earnings about equal on average to their neighbors This was largely due to their ability to speak English when they arrived The Irish were able to rise quickly within the working world unlike non English speaking immigrants 244 Yet there were still many shanty and lower working class communities in Chicago Philadelphia Boston New York and other parts of the country 245 After 1945 the Catholic Irish consistently ranked at the top of the social hierarchy thanks especially to their high rate of college attendance and due to that many Irish American men have risen to higher socio economic table 246 Local government Edit In the 19th century jobs in local government were distributed by politicians to their supporters and with significant strength in city hall the Irish became candidates for positions in all departments such as police departments fire departments public schools and other public services of major cities In 1897 New York City was formed by consolidating its five boroughs That created 20 000 new patronage jobs New York invested heavily in large scale public works This produced thousands of unskilled and semi skilled jobs in subways street railroads waterworks and port facilities Over half the Irish men employed by the city worked in utilities Across all ethnic groups In New York City municipal employment grew from 54 000 workers in 1900 to 148 000 in 1930 247 In New York City Albany and Jersey City about one third of the Irish of the first and second generation had municipal jobs in 1900 248 Police Edit By 1855 according to New York Police Commissioner George W Matsell 1811 1877 249 almost 17 percent of the police department s officers were Irish born compared to 28 2 percent of the city in a report to the Board of Aldermen 250 of the NYPD s 1 149 men Irish born officers made up 304 of 431 foreign born policemen 112 In the 1860s more than half of those arrested in New York City were Irish born or of Irish descent but nearly half of the city s law enforcement officers were also Irish By the turn of the 20th century five out of six NYPD officers were Irish born or of Irish descent As late as the 1960s 42 of the NYPD were Irish Americans 251 Up to the 20th and early 21st century Irish Catholics continue to be prominent in the law enforcement community especially in the Northeastern United States The Emerald Society an Irish American fraternal organization was founded in 1953 by the NYPD 252 When the Boston chapter of the Emerald Society formed in 1973 half of the city s police officers became members Teachers Edit Towards the end of the 19th century schoolteaching became the most desirable occupation for the second generation of female Irish immigrants Teaching was similar to domestic work for the first generation of Irish immigrants in that it was a popular job and one that relied on a woman s decision to remain unmarried 253 The disproportionate number of Irish American Catholic women who entered the job market as teachers in the late 19th century and early 20th century from Boston to San Francisco was a beneficial result of the Irish National school system Irish schools prepared young single women to support themselves in a new country which inspired them to instill the importance of education college training and a profession in their American born daughters even more than in their sons 254 Evidence from schools in New York City illustrate the upward trend of Irish women as teachers as early as 1870 twenty percent of all schoolteachers were Irish women and by 1890 Irish females comprised two thirds of those in the Sixth Ward schools Irish women attained admirable reputations as schoolteachers which enabled some to pursue professions of even higher stature 254 Nuns Edit Upon arrival in the United States many Irish women became Catholic nuns and participated in the many American sisterhoods especially those in St Louis in Missouri St Paul in Minnesota and Troy in New York Additionally the women who settled in these communities were often sent back to Ireland to recruit This kind of religious lifestyle appealed to Irish female immigrants because they outnumbered their male counterparts and the Irish cultural tendency to postpone marriage often promoted gender separation and celibacy Furthermore the Catholic church clergy and women religious were highly respected in Ireland making the sisterhoods particularly attractive to Irish immigrants 255 Nuns provided extensive support for Irish immigrants in large cities especially in fields such as nursing and teaching but also through orphanages widows homes and housing for young single women in domestic work 256 Although many Irish communities built parish schools run by nuns the majority of Irish parents in large cities in the East enrolled their children in the public school system where daughters or granddaughters of Irish immigrants had already established themselves as teachers 257 Discrimination Edit 1862 song Female versian 1862 song that used the No Irish Need Apply slogan It was copied from a similar London song 258 Anti Irish sentiment was rampant in the United States during the 19th and early 20th Centuries 259 Rising anti Catholic and Nativist sentiments among Protestant Americans led to increasing discrimination against Irish Americans in the 1850s Prejudice against Irish Catholics in the U S reached a peak in the mid 1850s with the founding of the Know Nothing Movement which tried to oust Catholics from public office After a year or two of local success the Know Nothing Party vanished 260 Catholics and Protestants kept their distance intermarriage between Catholics and Protestants was uncommon and strongly discouraged by both Protestant ministers and Catholic priests As Dolan notes Mixed marriages as they were called were allowed in rare cases though warned against repeatedly and were uncommon 261 Rather intermarriage was primarily with other ethnic groups who shared their religion Irish Catholics for example would commonly intermarry with German Catholics or Poles in the Midwest and Italians in the Northeast Irish American journalists scoured the cultural landscape for evidence of insults directed at the Irish in America Much of what historians know about hostility to the Irish comes from their reports in Irish and in Democratic newspapers 262 While the parishes were struggling to build parochial schools many Catholic children attended public schools The Protestant King James Version of the Bible was widely used in public schools but Catholics were forbidden by their church from reading or reciting from it 263 Many Irish children complained that Catholicism was openly mocked in the classroom In New York City the curriculum vividly portrayed Catholics and specifically the Irish as villainous 264 The Catholic archbishop John Hughes an immigrant to America from County Tyrone Ireland campaigned for public funding of Catholic education in response to the bigotry While never successful in obtaining public money for private education the debate with the city s Protestant elite spurred by Hughes passionate campaign paved the way for the secularization of public education nationwide In addition Catholic higher education expanded during this period with colleges and universities that evolved into such institutions as Fordham University and Boston College providing alternatives to Irish who were not otherwise permitted to apply to other colleges New York Times want ad 1854 the only New York Times ad with NINA for men Many Irish work gangs were hired by contractors to build canals railroads city streets and sewers across the country 112 In the South they underbid slave labor 265 One result was that small cities that served as railroad centers came to have large Irish populations 266 In 1895 the Knights of Equity was founded to combat discrimination against Irish Catholics in the U S and to assist them financially when needed citation needed Stereotypes Edit Irish Catholics were popular targets of stereotyping in the 19th century According to historian George Potter the media often stereotyped the Irish in America as being boss controlled violent both among themselves and with those of other ethnic groups voting illegally prone to alcoholism and dependent on street gangs that were often violent or criminal Potter quotes contemporary newspaper images You will scarcely ever find an Irishman dabbling in counterfeit money or breaking into houses or swindling but if there is any fighting to be done he is very apt to have a hand in it Even though Pat might meet with a friend and for love knock him down noted a Montreal paper the fighting usually resulted from a sudden excitement allowing there was but little malice prepense in his whole composition The Catholic Telegraph of Cincinnati in 1853 saying that the name of Irish has become identified in the minds of many with almost every species of outlawry distinguished the Irish vices as not of a deep malignant nature arising rather from the transient burst of undisciplined passion like drunk disorderly fighting etc not like robbery cheating swindling counterfeiting slandering calumniating blasphemy using obscene language amp c 267 1882 illustration from Puck depicting Irish immigrants as troublemakers as compared to those of other nationalities The Irish had many humorists of their own but were scathingly attacked in political cartoons especially those in Puck magazine from the 1870s to 1900 it was edited by secular Germans who opposed the Catholic Irish in politics In addition the cartoons of Thomas Nast were especially hostile for example he depicted the Irish dominated Tammany Hall machine in New York City as a ferocious tiger 268 The stereotype of the Irish as violent drunks has lasted well beyond its high point in the mid 19th century For example President Richard Nixon once told advisor Charles Colson that t he Irish have certain for example the Irish can t drink What you always have to remember with the Irish is they get mean Virtually every Irish I ve known gets mean when he drinks Particularly the real Irish 269 Discrimination against Irish Americans differed depending on gender For example Irish women were sometimes stereotyped as reckless breeders because some American Protestants feared high Catholic birth rates would eventually result in a Protestant minority Many native born Americans claimed that their incessant childbearing would ensure an Irish political takeover of American cities and that Catholicism would become the reigning faith of the hitherto Protestant nation 270 Irish men were also targeted but in a different way than women were The difference between the Irish female Bridget and the Irish male Pat was distinct while she was impulsive but fairly harmless he was always drunk eternally fighting lazy and shiftless In contrast to the view that Irish women were shiftless slovenly and stupid like their male counterparts girls were said to be industrious willing cheerful and honest they work hard and they are very strictly moral 271 272 There were also Social Darwinian inspired excuses for the discrimination of the Irish in America Many Americans believed that since the Irish were Celts and not Anglo Saxons they were racially inferior and deserved second class citizenship The Irish being of inferior intelligence was a belief held by many Americans This notion was held due to the fact that the Irish topped the charts demographically in terms of arrests and imprisonment They also had more people confined to insane asylums and poorhouses than any other group The racial supremacy belief that many Americans had at the time contributed significantly to Irish discrimination 273 From the 1860s onwards Irish Americans were stereotyped as terrorists and gangsters although this stereotyping began to diminish by the end of the 19th century 274 Contributions to American culture Edit Further information List of Irish Americans This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message St Patrick s Cathedral New York The annual celebration of Saint Patrick s Day is a widely recognized symbol of the Irish presence in America The largest celebration of the holiday takes place in New York where the annual St Patrick s Day Parade draws an average of two million people The second largest celebration is held in Boston The South Boston Parade is one of the United States s oldest dating back to 1737 Savannah Georgia also holds one of the largest parades in the United States citation needed Since the arrival of nearly two million Irish immigrants in the 1840s the urban Irish police officer and firefighter have become virtual icons of American popular culture In many large cities the police and fire departments have been dominated by the Irish for over 100 years even after the ethnic Irish residential populations in those cities dwindled to small minorities Many police and fire departments maintain large and active Emerald Societies bagpipe marching groups or other similar units demonstrating their members pride in their Irish heritage citation needed While these archetypal images are especially well known Irish Americans have contributed to U S culture in a wide variety of fields the fine and performing arts film literature politics sports and religion The Irish American contribution to popular entertainment is reflected in the careers of figures such as James Cagney Bing Crosby Walt Disney John Ford Judy Garland 275 Gene Kelly Grace Kelly Tyrone Power Chuck Connors Ada Rehan Jena Malone and Spencer Tracy Irish born actress Maureen O Hara 276 who became an American citizen defined for U S audiences the archetypal feisty Irish colleen in popular films such as The Quiet Man and The Long Gray Line More recently the Irish born Pierce Brosnan gained screen celebrity as James Bond During the early years of television popular figures with Irish roots included Gracie Allen Art Carney Joe Flynn Jackie Gleason Luke Gordon and Ed Sullivan Since the late days of the film industry celluloid representations of Irish Americans have been plentiful Famous films with Irish American themes include social dramas such as Little Nellie Kelly and The Cardinal labor epics like On the Waterfront and gangster movies such as Angels with Dirty Faces The Friends of Eddie Coyle and The Departed Irish American characters have been featured in popular television series such as Ryan s Hope Rescue Me and Blue Bloods citation needed Prominent Irish American literary figures include Pulitzer and Nobel Prize winning playwright Eugene O Neill Jazz Age novelist F Scott Fitzgerald author and poet Edgar Allan Poe 277 social realist James T Farrell Southern Gothic writers Flannery O Connor and Cormac McCarthy The 19th century novelist Henry James was also of partly Irish descent While Irish Americans have been underrepresented in the plastic arts two well known American painters claim Irish roots 20th century painter Georgia O Keeffe was born to an Irish American father and 19th century trompe l œil painter William Harnett emigrated from Ireland to the United States citation needed The Irish American contribution to politics spans the entire ideological spectrum Two prominent American socialists Mary Harris Mother Jones and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn were Irish Americans In the 1960s Irish American writer Michael Harrington became an influential advocate of social welfare programs Harrington s views profoundly influenced President John F Kennedy and his brother Robert F Kennedy Meanwhile Irish American political writer William F Buckley emerged as a major intellectual force in American conservative politics in the latter half of the 20th century Buckley s magazine National Review proved an effective advocate of successful Republican candidates such as Ronald Reagan citation needed Notorious Irish Americans include the legendary New Mexico outlaw Billy the Kid 278 279 Many historians believe he was born in New York City to Famine era immigrants from Ireland 278 279 Mary Mallon also known as Typhoid Mary was an Irish immigrant as was madam Josephine Airey who also went by the name of Chicago Joe Hensley New Orleans socialite and murderer Delphine LaLaurie whose maiden name was Macarty was of partial paternal Irish ancestry Irish American mobsters include amongst others Dean O Banion Jack Legs Diamond Buddy McLean Howie Winter and Whitey Bulger Lee Harvey Oswald the assassin of John F Kennedy had an Irish born great grandmother by the name of Mary Tonry 280 Colorful Irish Americans also include Margaret Tobin of RMS Titanic fame scandalous model Evelyn Nesbit dancer Isadora Duncan San Francisco madam Tessie Wall and Nellie Cashman nurse and gold prospector in the American West Music Edit The wide popularity of Celtic music has fostered the rise of Irish American bands that draw heavily on traditional Irish themes and music Such groups include New York City s Black 47 founded in the late 1980s blending punk rock rock and roll Irish music rap hip hop reggae and soul and the Dropkick Murphys a Celtic punk band formed in Quincy Massachusetts nearly a decade later The Decemberists a band featuring Irish American singer Colin Meloy released Shankill Butchers a song that deals with the Ulster Loyalist gang of the same name The song appears on their album The Crane Wife Flogging Molly led by Dublin born Dave King are relative newcomers building upon this new tradition citation needed Food Edit Irish immigrants brought many traditional Irish recipes with them when they emigrated to the United States which they adapted to meet the different ingredients available to them there Irish Americans introduced foods like soda bread and colcannon to American cuisine 281 The famous Irish American meal of corned beef and cabbage was developed by Irish immigrants in the U S who adapted it from the traditional Irish recipe for bacon and cabbage 282 Irish beer such as Guinness is widely consumed in the United States including an estimated 13 million pints on Saint Patrick s Day alone 283 Sports Edit Starting with the sons of the famine generation the Irish dominated baseball and boxing and played a major role in other sports Logo of the Boston Celtics basketball team Famous in their day were NFL quarterbacks and Super Bowl champions John Elway and Tom Brady NBA forward Rick Barry 284 tennis greats Jimmy Connors and John McEnroe baseball pitcher Nolan Ryan baseball shortstop Derek Jeter basketball point guard Jason Kidd boxing legend Jack Dempsey and Muhammad Ali 285 world champion pro surfer Kelly Slater national champion skier Ryan Max Riley and legendary golfer Ben Hogan The Philadelphia Phillies started the tradition of wearing green uniforms on St Patrick s day The Irish dominated professional baseball in the late 19th century making up a third or more of the players and many of the top stars and managers The professional teams played in northeastern cities with large Irish populations that provided a fan base as well as training for ambitious youth 286 Casway argues that Baseball for Irish kids was a shortcut to the American dream and to self indulgent glory and fortune By the mid 1880s these young Irish men dominated the sport and popularized a style of play that was termed heady daring and spontaneous Ed Delahanty personified the flamboyant exciting spectator favorite the Casey at the bat Irish slugger The handsome masculine athlete who is expected to live as large as he played 287 Irish stars included Charles Comiskey Connie Mack Michael King Kelly Roger Connor Eddie Collins Roger Bresnahan Ed Walsh and New York Giants manager John McGraw The large 1945 class of inductees enshrined in the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown included nine Irish Americans The Philadelphia Phillies always play at home during spring training on St Patrick s Day The Phillies hold the distinction of being the first baseball team to wear green uniforms on St Patricks Day The tradition was started by Phillies pitcher Tug McGraw who dyed his uniform green the night before March 17 1981 288 Two Irish stars Gentleman Jim Corbett licks John L Sullivan in 1892 John L Sullivan 1858 1918 The heavyweight boxing champion was the first of the modern sports superstars winning scores of contests perhaps as many as 200 with a purse that reached the fabulous sum of one million dollars 289 290 The Irish brought their native games of handball hurling and Gaelic football to America Along with camogie these sports are part of the Gaelic Athletic Association The North American GAA organization is still strong with 128 clubs across its ten divisions 291 Entertainment Edit Actor Tom Cruise descends from paternal Irish Cruise and O Mara lineage around County Dublin 292 293 Irish Americans have been prominent in comedy Notable comedians of Irish descent include Jimmy Dore Jackie Gleason George Carlin Bill Burr Bill Murray Will Ferrell Bryan Callen Pete Holmes Joe Rogan Ben Stiller Chris Farley Stephen Colbert Conan O Brien Denis Leary holds dual American and Irish citizenship 294 Colin Quinn Charles Nelson Reilly Bill Maher Molly Shannon John Mulaney Kathleen Madigan Jimmy Fallon Des Bishop and Jim Gaffigan among others Musicians of Irish descent include Christina Aguilera Kelly Clarkson Kurt Cobain Bing Crosby Tori Kelly Tim McGraw Mandy Moore Hilary Duff Fergie Jerry Garcia Judy Garland Katy Perry Tom Petty Pink Bruce Springsteen Gwen Stefani Lindsay Lohan Post Malone Trippie Redd and others citation needed Fictional Irish Americans In the Comic Strips Maggie and Jiggs of Bringing Up Father Police Chief Pat Patton of Dick Tracy Beetle Bailey and his sister Lous Bailey Flagston of Beetle Bailey and Hi and Lois 295 Sense of heritage Edit Irish Republican mural in South Boston MassachusettsMany people of Irish descent retain a sense of their Irish heritage Article 2 of the Constitution of Ireland formally recognizes and embraces this fact the Irish Nation cherishes its special affinity with people of Irish ancestry living abroad who share its cultural identity and heritage The Chicago River dyed green for the 2005 St Patrick s Day celebration Irish independence from the United Kingdom encouraged the hope that descendants of Irish abroad who had retained a cultural connection and identified with Ireland would resettle there as opposed to attracting immigrants from other cultures in other countries One member of an Irish government of the Irish Free State expressed his hope as follows I do not think the Irish Free State will afford sufficient allurements to the citizens of other States The children of Irish parents born abroad are sometimes more Irish than the Irish themselves and they would come with added experience and knowledge to our country 4 Sen Patrick Kenny Seanad Eireann 1924 296 A sense of exile diaspora and in the case of songs even nostalgia is a common theme 297 298 The modern term Plastic Paddy generally refers to someone who was not born in Ireland and is separated from his closest Irish born ancestor by several generations but still considers themselves Irish It is occasionally used in a derogatory fashion towards Irish Americans in an attempt to cast doubt the Irishness of the Irish diaspora based on nationality and citizenship rather than ethnicity 299 300 301 The term is freely applied to relevant people of all nationalities not solely Irish Americans Some Irish Americans were enthusiastic supporters of Irish independence the Fenian Brotherhood movement was based in the United States and in the late 1860s launched several unsuccessful attacks on British controlled Canada known as the Fenian Raids 302 The Irish American fund raising organization NORAID founded by Irish immigrant and former IRA veteran Michael Flannery received money from Irish American donators officially stated to support the families of imprisoned or dead Provisional Irish Republican Army members in 1984 the U S Department of Justice succeeded in forcing NORAID to acknowledge the Provisional IRA as its foreign principal under the Foreign Agents Registration Act 303 Cities Edit Main articles History of the Irish in Baltimore History of the Irish in Boston History of the Irish in Indianapolis History of the Irish in Louisville History of the Irish in Milwaukee History of the Irish in Saint Paul History of the Irish in New York City South Side Irish Irish Americans in New York City and History of the Irish Americans in Philadelphia Population density of people born in Ireland 1870 these were mostly Catholics the older Scots Irish immigration is not shown The vast majority of Irish Catholic Americans settled in large and small cities across the North particularly railroad centers and mill towns They became perhaps the most urbanized group in America as few became farmers 304 Areas that retain a significant Irish American population include the metropolitan areas of Boston New York City Philadelphia Providence Hartford Pittsburgh Buffalo Albany Syracuse Baltimore St Louis Chicago Cleveland San Francisco Savannah and Los Angeles where most new arrivals of the 1830 1910 period settled As a percentage of the population Massachusetts is the most Irish state with about a fifth 21 2 of the population claiming Irish descent 305 The most Irish American towns in the United States are Scituate Massachusetts with 47 5 of its residents being of Irish descent Milton Massachusetts with 44 6 of its 26 000 being of Irish descent and Braintree Massachusetts with 46 5 of its 34 000 being of Irish descent Weymouth Massachusetts at 39 of its 54 000 citizens and Quincy Massachusetts at 34 of its population of 90 000 are the two most Irish cities in the country Squantum a peninsula in the northern part of Quincy is the most Irish neighborhood in the country with close to 60 of its 2600 residents claiming Irish descent 306 Philadelphia Boston New York and Chicago have historically had neighborhoods with higher percentages of Irish American residents Regionally the most Irish American states are Massachusetts New Hampshire Maine Vermont Rhode Island Delaware Pennsylvania and Connecticut according to the U S Census Bureau American Community Survey in 2013 307 In consequence of its unique history as a mining center Butte Montana is also one of the country s most thoroughly Irish American cities 308 Smaller towns such as Greeley Nebraska population 466 with an estimated 51 7 of the residents identifying as Irish American as of 2009 13 309 310 were part of the Irish Catholic Colonization effort of Bishop O Connor of New York in the 1880s 311 The states with the top percentages of Irish Massachusetts 22 5 New Hampshire 20 5 Rhode Island 18 4 Maine 18 0 Vermont 18 0 Delaware 16 7 Pennsylvania 16 6 Connecticut 16 6 New Jersey 15 9 West Virginia 14 8 Montana 14 8 Iowa 13 6 Ohio 13 5 Nebraska 13 4 Wyoming 13 3 Missouri 13 2 New York 12 9 Kansas 12 4 Illinois 12 2 Colorado 12 2 Kentucky 12 2 Oregon 12 1 Maryland 11 7 Indiana 11 6 Oklahoma 11 5 Washington 11 4 Minnesota 11 2 Michigan 11 0 Wisconsin 11 0 Nevada 10 9 Alaska 10 8 Arkansas 10 7 Tennessee 10 6 South Dakota 10 4 Florida 10 3 Arizona 10 2 Idaho 10 0 Virginia 9 8 South Carolina 8 8 Georgia 7 9 Alabama 7 8 California 7 7 North Dakota 7 7 North Carolina 7 5 Texas 7 2 Louisiana 7 0 Mississippi 6 9 Utah 5 9 District of Columbia 5 5 2020 population of Irish ancestry by state Edit As of 2020 the distribution of Irish Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table Estimated Irish American population by state 312 10 State Number Percentage Alabama 392 052 8 01 Alaska 71 425 9 69 Arizona 617 231 8 60 Arkansas 283 345 9 41 California 2 331 714 5 93 Colorado 619 321 10 89 Connecticut 537 144 15 04 Delaware 137 609 14 22 District of Columbia 49 498 7 05 Florida 1 776 586 8 37 Georgia 738 036 7 02 Hawaii 62 439 4 40 Idaho 159 301 9 08 Illinois 1 401 831 11 02 Indiana 697 417 10 41 Iowa 409 015 12 98 Kansas 329 541 11 31 Kentucky 500 792 11 22 Louisiana 305 477 6 55 Maine 223 464 16 67 Maryland 594 307 9 84 Massachusetts 1 354 532 19 71 Michigan 1 017 747 10 20 Minnesota 560 185 10 00 Mississippi 201 669 6 76 Missouri 750 732 12 26 Montana 144 683 13 63 Nebraska 229 468 11 93 Nevada 246 595 8 14 New Hampshire 278 913 20 58 New Jersey 1 181 301 13 29 New Mexico 127 440 6 08 New York 2 167 420 11 11 North Carolina 832 880 8 02 North Dakota 56 241 7 40 Ohio 1 480 335 12 68 Oklahoma 400 967 10 15 Oregon 460 088 11 02 Pennsylvania 1 978 043 15 46 Rhode Island 182 012 17 21 South Carolina 435 703 8 56 South Dakota 88 957 10 12 Tennessee 628 562 9 28 Texas 1 745 532 6 10 Utah 185 927 5 90 Vermont 103 241 16 54 Virginia 767 238 9 02 Washington 759 024 10 10 West Virginia 232 834 12 88 Wisconsin 615 730 10 60 Wyoming 66 585 11 45 United States 31 518 129 9 65 Irish American communities Edit Main article List of Irish American communities According to the 2010 U S Census the city of Butte Montana has the highest percentage of Irish Americans per capita of any city in the United States with around one quarter of the population reporting Irish ancestry 313 314 Butte s Irish Catholic population originated with the waves of Irish immigrants who arrived in the city in the late nineteenth century to work in the industrial mines By population Boston and Philadelphia have the two largest Irish American populations in the country There are Irish neighborhoods scattered all throughout Boston most notably South Boston Many of Philadelphia s Irish neighborhoods are located in the Northeast Philadelphia section of the city particularly in the Fishtown Mayfair and Kensington neighborhoods as well as the South Philadelphia section most notably the Pennsport Two Street to the locals neighborhood There are large Irish populations in the Boston and Philadelphia metropolitan areas as well The South Side of Chicago Illinois also has a large Irish community who refer to themselves as the South Side Irish citation needed People EditFurther information List of Irish Americans In politics and government Edit 1928 Democratic Presidential Nominee Al Smith was the first Irish Catholic nominee of a major political party The United States Declaration of Independence contained 56 delegate signatures Of the signers eight were of Irish descent Three signers Matthew Thornton George Taylor and James Smith were born in Ireland the remaining five Irish Americans George Read Thomas McKean Thomas Lynch Jr Edward Rutledge and Charles Carroll were the sons or grandsons of Irish immigrants Though not a delegate but the secretary at the Congress Charles Thomson also Irish American signed as well The United States Constitution was created by a convention of 36 delegates Of these at least six were of Irish ancestry George Read and Thomas McKean had already worked on the Declaration and were joined by John Rutledge William Paterson Pierce Butler Daniel Carroll and Thomas Fitzsimons The Carrolls and Fitzsimons were Irish Catholic while Thomas Lynch Jr James Smith Pierce Butler and George Read were Irish Protestants they were descended from Irish Normans Anglo Irish and native Irish who had intermarried for several centuries not ulster Scots The remainder were Scotch Irish 315 316 By the 1850s the Irish were already a major presence in the police departments of large cities In New York City in 1855 of the city s 1 149 policemen 305 were natives of Ireland Within 30 years Irish Americans in the NYPD were almost twice their proportion of the city s population 112 Both Boston s police and fire departments provided many Irish immigrants with their first jobs The creation of a unified police force in Philadelphia opened the door to the Irish in that city By 1860 in Chicago 49 of the 107 on the police force were Irish Chief O Leary headed the police force in New Orleans and Malachi Fallon was chief of police of San Francisco 317 The Irish Catholic diaspora are very well organized clarification needed and since 1850 have produced a majority of the leaders of the U S Catholic Church labor unions the Democratic Party in larger cities and Catholic high schools colleges and universities 318 The cities of Milwaukee Tom Barrett 2004 and Detroit Mike Duggan 2012 currently as of 2018 update have Irish American mayors Pittsburgh mayor Bob O Connor died in office in 2006 New York City has had at least three Irish born mayors and over eight Irish American mayors The most recent one was County Mayo native William O Dwyer first elected in 1945 319 320 Beginning in the 1909 mayoral election every Democratic candidate for mayor of New York City was a man of Irish descent until 1950 when a special election saw three Italian Americans as the top vote getters 321 The Irish Protestant vote has not been studied nearly as much Historian Timothy J Meagher argues that by the late 19th century most of the Protestant Irish turned their backs on all associations with Ireland and melted into the American Protestant mainstream A minority insisted on a Scots Irish identity 322 In Canada by contrast Irish Protestants remained a political force with many belonging to the Orange Order 323 It was an anti Catholic social organization with chapters across Canada It was most powerful during the late 19th century 324 325 Political leanings Edit Further information Catholic Church and politics in the United States Al Smith and later John F Kennedy were political heroes for American Catholics 326 Al Smith who had an Irish mother and an Italian German father in 1928 became the first Catholic to run for president 327 From the 1830s to the 1960s Irish Catholics voted heavily Democratic with occasional exceptions like the 1920 United States presidential election Their precincts showed average support levels of 80 328 As historian Lawrence McCaffrey notes until recently they have been so closely associated with the Democratic party that Irish Catholic and Democrat composed a trinity of associations serving mutual interests and needs 329 The great majority of Irish Catholic politicians were Democrats with a few exceptions before 1970 such as Connecticut Senator John A Danaher and Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy 315 Today Irish politicians are associated with both parties Ronald Reagan boasted of his Irishness Historically Irish Catholics controlled prominent Democratic city organizations 330 Among the most prominent were New York Philadelphia Chicago Boston San Francisco Pittsburgh Jersey City and Albany 331 Many served as chairmen of the Democratic National Committee including County Monaghan native Thomas Taggart Vance McCormick James Farley Edward J Flynn Robert E Hannegan J Howard McGrath William H Boyle Jr John Moran Bailey Larry O Brien Christopher J Dodd Terry McAuliffe and Tim Kaine In Congress the Irish are represented in both parties currently Susan Collins of Maine Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania Bob Casey Jr of Pennsylvania Ed Markey of Massachusetts Dan Sullivan of Alaska Lisa Murkowski of Alaska Dick Durbin of Illinois Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Maria Cantwell of Washington are Irish Americans serving in the United States Senate Former Speaker of the House of Representatives and Vice Presidential Candidate Paul Ryan is another prominent Irish American Republican Exit polls show that in recent presidential elections Irish Catholics have split about 50 50 for Democratic and Republican candidates 332 The pro life faction in the Democratic party includes many Irish Catholic politicians such as the former Boston mayor and ambassador to the Vatican Ray Flynn and senator Bob Casey Jr who defeated Senator Rick Santorum in a high visibility race in Pennsylvania in 2006 333 Distribution of Irish Americans according to the 2000 Census In New York State where fusion voting is practiced Irish Americans were instrumental in the founding of the Conservative party in opposition to Nelson Rockefeller and other liberal Republicans who dominated the state GOP during the 1960s and 70s 334 The party founded by Irish American lawyers J Daniel Mahoney and Kieran O Doherty would serve as a vehicle for William F Buckley when he ran for mayor of New York in 1965 against liberal WASP Republican John V Lindsay and establishment Democrat Abe Beame Elsewhere significant majorities of the local Irish stayed with the Democratic party such as in Massachusetts and in other parts of Southern New England 335 In some heavily Irish small towns in northern New England and central New Jersey the Irish vote is quite Republican but other places like Gloucester New Jersey and Butte Montana retain strongly liberal and Democratic leaning Irish populations In the 1984 United States Presidential Election Irish Catholics in Massachusetts voted 56 to 43 for Walter Mondale while their cousins in New York State voted 68 to 32 for Ronald Reagan 336 The voting intentions of Irish Americans and other white ethnic groups attracted attention in the 2016 U S election In the Democratic primaries Boston s Irish were said to break strongly for Hillary Clinton whose victories in Irish heavy Boston suburbs may have helped her narrowly carry the state over Bernie Sanders 337 A 2016 March survey by Irish Central 338 showed that 45 of Irish Americans nationwide supported Donald Trump although the majority of those in Massachusetts supported Hillary Clinton An October poll by Buzzfeed showed that Irish respondents nationwide split nearly evenly between Trump 40 and Clinton 39 with large numbers either undecided or supporting other candidates 21 and that the Irish were more supportive of Clinton than all the other West European descended Americans including fellow Catholic Italian Americans 339 In early November 2016 six days before the election another poll by IrishCentral showed Clinton ahead at 52 among Irish Americans while Trump was at 40 and the third party candidates together had 8 Irish respondents in Massachusetts similarly favored Clinton by majority 340 In 2017 a survey with 3 181 Irish American respondents slightly over half being beyond third generation by Irish Times found that 41 identified as Democrats while 23 identified as Republicans moreover 45 used NBC typically considered left leaning for their news while 36 used Fox News considered right leaning 341 The presence of supporters of Trump among Irish and other white ethnic communities which had once themselves been marginalized immigrants generated controversy with progressive Irish American media figures admonishing their co ethnics against myopia and amnesia 342 However such criticisms by left leaning pundits were frequently leveled against Irish American conservatives prior to Trump s presidential run with one columnist from the liberal online magazine Salon calling Irish American conservatives disgusting 343 In New York City ongoing trends of suburbanization gentrification and the increased tendency of Irish Americans to vote Republican as well as the increasingly left wing politics of the Democrat Party led to the collapse of Irish political power in the city during the 2010s 344 This trend was exemplified by the defeat of Queens Representative and former House Democratic Caucus Chairman Joe Crowley by democratic socialist Alexandria Ocasio Cortez in the 2018 Democratic primary 345 346 American presidents with Irish ancestry Edit President John F Kennedy in motorcade in Cork on June 27 1963 President Ronald Reagan speaking to a large crowd in his ancestral home in Ballyporeen Ireland in 1984 President Barack Obama greets local residents on Main Street in Moneygall Ireland May 23 2011 A large number of the presidents of the United States have Irish origins 347 The extent of Irish heritage varies For example Chester Arthur s father and both of Andrew Jackson s parents were Irish born of British ancestry while George W Bush has distant Irish ancestry Ronald Reagan s father was of Irish ancestry 348 while his mother also had some Irish ancestors John F Kennedy and Joe Biden had Irish lineage on both sides and both are the only practicing Roman Catholics Barack Obama s Irish heritage originates from his Kansas born mother Ann Dunham whose ancestry is Irish and English 349 Andrew Johnson17th president 1865 69 Although he was Protestant he had native Irish ancestry on his mother s side His Mother was Mary Polly McDonough of Irish ancestry 1782 350 William Howard Taft27th president 1909 13 His great great great grandfather Robert Taft was born in 1640 in Ireland and immigrated to America during the mid 17th century Robert Taft was from County Louth in the republic of Ireland his ancestry was both native Irish and Anglo Irish 351 352 Woodrow Wilson28th president 1913 1921 His paternal grandfather an Ulster Protestant immigrated from Strabane County Tyrone in 1807 Grover Cleveland22nd and 24th president 1885 89 and 1893 97 although personally Protestant Cleveland had native Ulster Irish ancestry He was the maternal grandson of merchant Abner O Neal who emigrated from County Antrim in the 1790s 353 Ulysses S Grant18th president 1869 77 His grandmother was Rachel Kelley the daughter of an Irish pioneer 354 Surname Kelly within Ulster is almost entirely of Irish origin 355 John F Kennedy 35th president 1961 1963 Limerick and County Wexford First Irish Catholic president Richard M Nixon 37th president 1969 1974 County Kildare Richard Milhouse Nixon was descended from a Quaker family who had emigrated to the United States from Timahoe County Kildare in 1729 Nixon visited his ancestral home in 1972 356 Ronald Reagan 40th president 1981 1989 He was the great grandson on his father s side of Irish migrants from County Tipperary who came to America via Canada and England in the 1840s His mother was of Scottish and English ancestry 357 George H W Bush 41st president 1989 1993 County Wexford historians have found that his now apparent ancestor Richard de Clare Earl of Pembroke shunned by Henry II offered his services as a mercenary in the 12th century Norman invasion of Wexford in exchange for power and land Strongbow married Aoife daughter of Dermot MacMurrough the Gaelic king of Leinster 358 359 George W Bush 43rd president 2001 2009 One of his five times great grandfathers William Holliday a British merchant living in Ireland was born in Rathfriland County Down about 1755 and died in Kentucky about 1811 12 One of the President s seven times great grandfathers William Shannon was born somewhere in County Cork about 1730 and died in Pennsylvania in 1784 359 Barack Obama 44th president 2009 2017 Some of his maternal ancestors came to America from a small village called Moneygall in County Offaly 349 360 361 His ancestors lived in New England and the South and by the 1800s most were in the Midwest Joe Biden 46th and current president 2021 present Biden is of Irish ancestry of his 16 great great grandparents 10 were born in Ireland He is descended from the Blewitts of County Mayo and the Finnegans of County Louth 362 Vice presidents of Irish descent Edit Mike Pence 48th vice president 2017 2021Speakers of the U S House of Representatives Edit Joseph W Martin Jr 44th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1947 1949 amp 1953 1955 House Republican Conference Leader 1939 1959 House Minority Leader 1939 1947 1949 1953 amp 1955 1959 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 15th congressional district 1925 1933 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 14th congressional district 1933 1963 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 10th congressional district 1963 1967 Republican National Committee Chair 1940 1942 John W McCormack 45th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1962 1971 House Democratic Caucus Leader 1962 1971 House Majority Leader 1940 1947 1949 1953 amp 1955 1962 House Minority Whip 1947 1949 amp 1953 1955 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 12th congressional district 1928 1963 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 9th congressional district 1963 1971 Massachusetts State Senator 1923 1928 Tip O Neill 47th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1977 1987 House Democratic Caucus Leader 1977 1987 House Majority Leader 1973 1977 House Minority Whip 1971 1973 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 11th congressional district 1953 1963 U S Representative from Massachusetts s 8th congressional district 1963 1987 Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1949 1953 Minority Leader of the Massachusetts House of Representatives 1947 1949 Jim Wright 48th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1987 1989 House Democratic Caucus Leader 1987 1989 House Majority Leader 1977 1987 U S Representative from Texas s 12th congressional district 1955 1989 U S Army Air Force 2nd Lieutenant 1942 1946 Tom Foley 49th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 1989 1995 House Democratic Caucus Leader 1989 1995 House Majority Leader 1987 1989 House Majority Whip 1981 1987 U S Representative from Washington s 5th congressional district 1965 1995 House Agriculture Committee Chair 1975 1981 President s Intelligence Advisory Board Chair 1996 1997 25th U S Ambassador to Japan 1997 2001 John Boehner 53rd Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 2011 2015 House Republican Conference Leader 2007 2015 House Majority Leader 2006 2007 House Education Committee Chair 2001 2006 U S Representative from Ohio s 8th congressional district 1991 2015 Ohio State Representative 1985 1991 Paul Ryan 54th Speaker of the U S House of Representatives 2015 2019 House Republican Conference Leader 2015 2019 House Ways and Means Committee Chair 2015 House Budget Committee Chair 2011 2015 U S Representative from Wisconsin s 1st congressional district 1999 2019 Irish American justices of the Supreme Court Edit Joseph McKenna Edward D White Pierce Butler Frank Murphy James Francis Byrnes William J Brennan Anthony Kennedy Neil Gorsuch Partial maternal Irish ancestry Brett Kavanaugh Amy Coney BarrettSee also Edit Ireland portal United States portal69th Infantry Regiment New York Ethnocultural politics in the United States Irish American Athletic Club Irish American Cultural Institute Irish American Heritage Month Irish Americans in the American Civil War Irish Brigade U S Irish Mob criminals in large cities Irish Race Conventions 19th century international conventions Irish Whales athletes List of Americans of Irish descent notable individuals List of Irish American Medal of Honor recipients notable individuals List of Scotch Irish Americans notable individuals Saint Patrick s Battalion Mexican American WarNotes Edit 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 71 92 93 95 96 97 86 98 83 95 99 100 96 References Edit IPUMS USA University of Minnesota Retrieved October 12 2022 America s Most Irish Towns Forbes G Scott Thomas Census Pittsburgh more than 10 percent Irish bizjournals March 16 2009 Carroll Michael P Winter 2006 How the Irish Became Protestant in America Religion and American Culture University of California Press 16 1 25 54 doi 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 JSTOR 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 S2CID 145240474 Rank of States for Selected Ancestry Groups with 100 000 or more persons 1980 PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved November 30 2012 1990 Census of Population Detailed Ancestry Groups for States PDF United States Census Bureau September 18 1992 Retrieved November 30 2012 Ancestry 2000 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved November 30 2012 Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2010 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 18 2015 Retrieved November 30 2012 John Devoy Sean o Luing Clo Morainn 1961 page 145 a b Table B04006 People Reporting Ancestry 2020 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 13 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 a b c B04006 PEOPLE REPORTING SINGLE ANCESTRY 2013 2017 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on January 17 2015 Retrieved June 3 2019 Catholics Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center Retrieved June 3 2019 Evangelical Protestants Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center Retrieved June 3 2019 Mainline Protestants Religion in America U S Religious Data Demographics and Statistics Pew Research Center Retrieved June 3 2019 a b Akenson Donald Harman 1997 If the Irish Ran the World Montserrat 1630 1730 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0773516304 Dunn Richard S 1972 Sugar and Slaves The Rise of the Planter Class in the English West Indies 1624 1713 Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807811924 a b c d e f Blessing Patrick J 1980 Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 528 ISBN 978 0674375123 Boyer Paul S Clark Clifford E Halttunen Karen Kett Joseph F Salisbury Neal Sitkoff Harvard Woloch Nancy 2013 The Enduring Vision A History of the American People 8th ed Cengage Learning p 99 ISBN 978 1133944522 a b c Miller Kerby A Schrier Arnold Boling Bruce D Doyle David N 2003 Irish Immigrants in the Land of Canaan Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and Revolutionary America 1675 1815 New York Oxford University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0195045130 In the seventeenth century southern Irish Catholics probably constituted a large majority of the relatively few emigrants from Ireland perhaps 30 000 50 000 in all who crossed the Atlantic and settled primarily in the West Indies and Chesapeake Swingen Abigail L 2015 Competing Visions of Empire Labor Slavery and the Origins of the British Atlantic Empire New Haven CT Yale University Press p 21 ISBN 978 0300187540 a b c Dunaway Wayland F 1944 The Scots Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company p 41 there were only 24 000 Catholics in the entire United States in 1783 and this number included many perhaps a majority from countries other than Ireland It appears probable that Ireland furnished no more than 10 000 Catholics in America during the colonial period and the largest segment of the Catholic population came from England Germany and France Blackburn Robin 1997 The Making of New World Slavery From the Baroque to the Modern 1492 1800 1st ed London Verso Books p 317 ISBN 978 1844676316 In the 1650s about eight thousand Irish captives were sent to the American colonies many of them on ten year penal contracts Newman Simon P 2015 In Great Slavery and Bondage White Labor and the Development of Plantation Slavery in British America In Gallup Diaz Ignacio Shankman Andrew Silverman David J Murrin John M eds Anglicizing America Empire Revolution Republic Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 75 ISBN 978 0812246988 One contemporary estimated that some thirty four thousand men were sent to the Americas close to one sixth of Ireland s adult male population and more of them went to Barbados than to any other colony Galenson David W March 1984 The Rise and Fall of Indentured Servitude in the Americas An Economic Analysis The Journal of Economic History Cambridge University Press 44 1 1 26 doi 10 1017 s002205070003134x JSTOR 2120553 S2CID 154682898 Whaples Robert March 1995 Where Is There Consensus Among American Economic Historians The Results of a Survey on Forty Propositions PDF The Journal of Economic History Cambridge University Press 55 1 140 144 doi 10 1017 S0022050700040602 JSTOR 2123771 S2CID 145691938 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 73 ISBN 978 0385152068 Fogarty Gerald P 1999 Virginia In Glazier Michael ed The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press p 928 ISBN 978 0268027551 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday pp 74 77 ISBN 978 0385152068 Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File p 153 ISBN 978 0816025275 Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File pp 162 163 ISBN 978 0816025275 Fischer David Hackett 1989 Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America Oxford University Press pp 229 231 ISBN 978 0195069051 Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File p 179 ISBN 978 0816025275 a b Barck Oscar T Lefler Hugh T 1958 Colonial America New York Macmillan pp 258 259 Barck Oscar T Lefler Hugh T 1958 Colonial America New York Macmillan p 398 Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File p 182 ISBN 978 0816025275 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 75 ISBN 978 0385152068 Blessing Patrick J 1980 Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 525 527 ISBN 978 0674375123 a b Colonial and Pre Federal Statistics PDF United States Census Bureau p 1168 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 79 ISBN 978 0385152068 a b c Blessing Patrick J 1980 Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 529 ISBN 978 0674375123 a b c Purvis Thomas L 1995 Balkin Richard ed Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800 New York Facts on File p 180 ISBN 978 0816025282 a b c d e Jones Maldwyn A 1980 Scotch Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 904 ISBN 978 0674375123 a b Dunaway Wayland F 1944 The Scots Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company p 42 Robinson Philip 2000 1984 The Plantation of Ulster British Settlement in an Irish Landscape 1600 1670 2nd ed Ulster Historical Foundation pp 52 55 ISBN 978 1903688007 Fischer David Hackett 1989 Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America Oxford University Press p 16 ISBN 978 0195069051 Duffy Sean 2005 The Concise History of Ireland Gill amp MacMillan p 107 ISBN 978 0717138104 the number of Protestants in Ireland remained small throughout Queen Elizabeth s reign being mostly confined to government officials and new settlers a b Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 129 ISBN 978 0385152068 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday pp 84 85 ISBN 978 0385152068 a b c Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday pp 87 89 ISBN 978 0385152068 Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File p 181 ISBN 978 0816025275 a b Taylor Dale 1997 The Writer s Guide to Everyday Life in Colonial America From 1607 1783 Cincinnati OH Writer s Digest Books p 273 ISBN 978 0898799422 In 1756 a Maryland Father Superior estimated 7 000 practicing Catholics in Maryland and 3 000 in Pennsylvania Purvis Thomas L 1999 Balkin Richard ed Colonial America to 1763 New York Facts on File p 183 ISBN 978 0816025275 Fischer David Hacket 1989 Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America New York Oxford University Press p 606 ISBN 978 0195069051 more than a quarter million Rouse Parke S Jr 1973 The Great Wagon Road From Philadelphia to the South New York McGraw Hill p 32 200 000 a b Blethen H Tyler Wood Curtis W 1998 From Ulster to Carolina The Migration of the Scotch Irish to Southwestern North Carolina Raleigh NC North Carolina Division of Archives and History p 22 ISBN 978 0865262799 250 000 people left for America between 1717 and 1800 20 000 were Anglo Irish 20 000 were Gaelic Irish and the remainder Ulster Scots Griffin Patrick 2001 The People with No Name Ireland s Ulster Scots America s Scots Irish and the Creation of a British Atlantic World 1689 1764 Princeton NJ Princeton University Press p 1 more than 100 000 Leyburn James G 1962 The Scotch Irish A Social History Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 180 200 000 Barck Oscar T Lefler Hugh T 1958 Colonial America New York Macmillan p 285 300 000 Jones Maldwyn A 1980 Scotch Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 896 ISBN 978 0674375123 250 000 Blaney Roger 1996 Presbyterians and the Irish Language Belfast Ulster Historical Foundation p 4 100 000 and possibly as many as 250 000 Webb Jim 2004 Born Fighting How the Scots Irish Shaped America New York Broadway Books p front flap ISBN 978 0767916899 Between 250 000 to 400 000 Scots Irish migrated to America in the eighteenth century Purvis Thomas L 1995 Balkin Richard ed Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800 New York Facts on File p 120 ISBN 978 0816025282 Rebels in Arms The Irishmen of Bunker Hill a b c Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 86 ISBN 978 0385152068 a b Purvis Thomas L 1995 Balkin Richard ed Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800 New York Facts on File p 204 ISBN 978 0816025282 Carroll Michael P Winter 2006 How the Irish Became Protestant in America Religion and American Culture University of California Press 16 1 28 doi 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 JSTOR 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 S2CID 145240474 1790 Fast Facts History U S Census Bureau United States Census Bureau Diversity in Colonial Times U S Census Bureau PDF United States Census Bureau Purvis Thomas L 1995 Balkin Richard ed Revolutionary America 1763 to 1800 New York Facts on File p 197 ISBN 978 0816025282 1800 Fast Facts History U S Census Bureau United States Census Bureau a b Miller Kerby A 2000 Scotch Irish Myths and Irish Identities In Fanning Charles ed New Perspectives on the Irish Diaspora 1st ed Southern Illinois University Press pp 80 81 ISBN 978 0809323449 Carroll Michael P Winter 2006 How the Irish Became Protestant in America Religion and American Culture University of California Press 16 1 32 doi 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 JSTOR 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 S2CID 145240474 Carroll Michael P Winter 2006 How the Irish Became Protestant in America Religion and American Culture University of California Press 16 1 38 doi 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 JSTOR 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 S2CID 145240474 a b Blessing Patrick J 1980 Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press pp 528 529 ISBN 978 0674375123 Faragher John Mack 1996 The Encyclopedia of Colonial and Revolutionary America Da Capo Press p 385 ISBN 978 0306806872 Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday pp 160 161 ISBN 978 0385152068 1820 Fast Facts History U S Census Bureau United States Census Bureau Conzen Kathleen Neils 1980 Germans In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 409 ISBN 978 0674375123 Dolan Jay P 2008 The Irish Americans A History New York Bloomsbury Press pp 55 56 ISBN 978 1596914193 By 1840 the Catholic population had increased to 663 000 The increase was due mainly to the large numbers of immigrants from Ireland and Germany 1840 Fast Facts History U S Census Bureau United States Census Bureau a b c Jones Maldwyn A 1980 Scotch Irish In Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Cambridge MA Harvard University Press p 905 ISBN 978 0674375123 Ridge John 1999 New York City In Glazier Michael ed The Encyclopedia of the Irish in America Notre Dame IN University of Notre Dame Press p 681 ISBN 978 0268027551 a b Dolan Jay P 1985 The American Catholic Experience A History from Colonial Times to the Present New York Doubleday p 228 ISBN 978 0385152068 a b Leyburn James G 1989 1962 The Scotch Irish A Social History Reprint ed University of North Carolina Press pp 328 329 ISBN 978 0807842591 Barck Oscar T Lefler Hugh T 1958 Colonial America New York Macmillan p 285 a b Dunaway Wayland F 1944 The Scots Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company pp 9 11 I have sometimes noticed a little confusion of mind in relation to the phrase Scotch Irish as if it meant that the Scotch people had come over and intermarried with the Irish and thus a combination of two races two places two nationalities had taken place This is by no means the state of the case This does not mean to say of course that there was never an instance of marriage between the Ulster Scots and the Irish for such unions undoubtedly occurred but all the evidence points to the conclusion that these were rare Carroll Michael P Winter 2006 How the Irish Became Protestant in America Religion and American Culture University of California Press 16 1 46 doi 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 JSTOR 10 1525 rac 2006 16 1 25 S2CID 145240474 a b Fischer David Hackett 1989 Albion s Seed Four British Folkways in America Oxford University Press p 618 ISBN 978 0195069051 Leyburn James G 1989 1962 The Scotch Irish A Social History Reprint ed University of North Carolina Press p xi ISBN 978 0807842591 Dunaway Wayland F 1944 The Scots Irish of Colonial Pennsylvania Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company p 8 it is evident that the Scotch Irish were being very generally so called soon after they had begun to arrive in Pennsylvania in large numbers and it is probable that the name was first applied to them by the Episcopalians and Quakers who by no means intended it to be complimentary Burke Edmund 1835 1757 An Account Of The European Settlements In America Vol 2 J H Wilkins amp Company and Hilliard Gray amp Co p 285 They are chiefly Presbyterians from the northern part of Ireland who in America are generally called Scotch Irish a b Leyburn James G 1989 1962 The Scotch Irish A Social History Reprint ed University of North Carolina Press p 331 ISBN 978 0807842591 a b Dolan Jay P 2008 The Irish Americans A History Bloomsbury Press p x ISBN 978 1596914193 The term Scotch Irish had been in use during the eighteenth century to designate Ulster Presbyterians who had emigrated to the United States From the mid 1700s through the early 1800s however the term Irish was more widely used to identify both Catholic and Protestant Irish as political and religious conflict between Catholics and Protestants both in Ireland and the United States became more frequent and as Catholic emigrants began to outnumber Protestants the term Irish became synonymous with Irish Catholics As a result Scotch Irish became the customary term to describe Protestants of Irish descent The famine migration of the 1840s and 50s that sent waves of poor Irish Catholics to the United States together with the rise in anti Catholicism intensified this attitude In no way did Irish Protestants want to be identified with these ragged newcomers Elliott Robert Barkan 2013 Immigrants in American History Arrival Adaptatio, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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