John Herson
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Labouring families in the Famine’s aftermath, 1852 onwards
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More labouring families settled in Stafford after the Famine than arrived during it and this chapter examines those who arrived after 1852. There are four case studies. The McDermott family were poor but despite marital problems they integrated into the local community and descendants achieved modest status. Jane Duffy illustrates the problems faced by lone female migrants. She experienced widowhood, single-motherhood and desertion. The Walsh family were unique in identifying with Irish nationalism, and they rejected Stafford. The McMahon/Mitchell/Shiel family shows how some members had a strategy towards respectability within local society whereas others integrated into Stafford’s poor working class.

The chapter shows how the prime factors conditioning the divergent paths taken by labouring families were the character of family relationships and interactions with their environment. These families often conform to the common image of Irish migrants but the family history evidence demonstrates the complexity and variability of their lives and undermines simple ethnic stereotypes.

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Divergent paths

Family histories of Irish emigrants in Britain, 1820–1920

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