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Ballykilcline Rising: From Famine Ireland to Immigrant America
 
 
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Ballykilcline Rising: From Famine Ireland to Immigrant America [Paperback]

Mary Lee Dunn (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 1, 2008
In 1847, in the third year of Ireland s Great Famine and the thirteenth year of their rent strike against the Crown, hundreds of tenant farmers in Ballykilcline, County Roscommon, were evicted by the Queen s agents and shipped to New York. Mary Lee Dunn tells their story in this meticulously researched book. Using numerous Irish and U.S. sources and with descendants help, she traces dozens of the evictees to Rutland, Vermont, as railroads and marble quarries transformed the local economy. She follows the immigrants up to 1870 and learns not only what happened to them but also what light American experience and records cast on their Irish rebellion.
Dunn begins with Ireland s pre-Famine social and political landscape as context for the Ballykilcline strike. The tenants had rented earlier from the Mahons of Strokestown, whose former property now houses Ireland s Famine Museum. In 1847, landlord Denis Mahon evicted and sent nearly a thousand tenants to Quebec, where half died before or just after reaching the Grosse Ile quarantine station. Mahon was gunned down months later. His murder provoked an international controversy involving the Vatican. An early suspect in the case was a man from Ballykilcline.
In the United States, many of the immigrants resettled in clusters in several locations, including Vermont, Illinois, Iowa, Maryland, and New York. In Vermont they found jobs in the marble quarries, but some of them lost their homes again in quarry labor actions after 1859. Others prospered in their new lives. A number of Ballykilcline families who stopped in Rutland later moved west; one had a son kidnapped by Indians in Minnesota.
Readers who have Irish Famine roots will gain a sense of their own back story from this account of Ireland and the native Irish, and scholars in the field of immigration studies will find it particularly useful.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A well-researched, compelling narrative. . . . Dunn has scrupulously examined the events leading up to and following the forced evictions . . . she has extended the knowledge of the evictees by investigating their lives in detail on both sides of the Atlantic . . . and she has added significantly to our knowledge, not only of these few hundred, but also of the million emigrants who fled Ireland during the Great Famine. --Marie E. Daly, New England Historic Genealogical Society
Dunn has contributed a valuable, meticulously researched addition to Irish and Irish-American histories and their connections. She has set a strong example to other scholars on how to link specific places in Ireland and the United States and how numerous values and certain conduct transfer, persist, and modify across the Atlantic, an important enterprise. --Irish Literary Supplement
Mary Lee Dunn published her research on the American experiences of immigrants from the Roscommon townland of Ballykilcline. Robert Scally did a terrific, beautifully rendered history of the peasants from Ballykilcline, evicted from their farms and sent to America, but he left them as they sailed to New York City. Dunn picked up the complicated American side of the story in a fascinating account. --Journal of American Ethnic History

Dunn offers a wide-ranging study of Irish migrants who left Ballykicline, County Roscommon, during the mid-19th century. Recent works have characterized these migrants as the victims of premodern isolation. But Dunn links the so-called 'hidden Irish' with British working-class protesters in their resistance to the increasingly dominant political economy, citing a surprising sophistication behind the rent strikes and communal violence that took place in Ballykilcline. . . . The latter chapters these migrants to Rutland, Vermont, where Dunn contests another standard image of the pathetic, passive famine Irish. She points to relatively high rates of literacy among Billykilcline-born residents of the US. . . . Dunn uses genealogies and accounts of a quarry strike to demonstrate the way that Old World connections offered New World utility. Summing Up: Recommended. --Choice, July 2009

May Lee Dunn, a resourceful genealogist and a descendant of Kilglass emigrants . . . successfully challenges [Robert] Scally's overemphasis [in 'The End of Hidden Ireland / Rebellion, Famine, & Emigration'] on the people's debilitating ignorance of the ways of the broader world. . . . Dunn's title, 'Ballykilcline Rising,' encapsulates her basic point - the Crown's minions destroyed the place, but not the people. . . . [Her] work makes a significant contribution because she demonstrates, unequivocally, that at least some Ballykilcline and Kilglass people had the resilience and the heart to establish clusters - the social networks of everyday life and community. --Journal of American Ethnic History, Fall 2011

About the Author

Mary Lee Dunn is a writer and editor affiliated with the graduate Department of Work Environment at the University of Massachusetts Lowell.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Univ. of Massachusetts Press (July 1, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1558496599
  • ISBN-13: 978-1558496590
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,231,982 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very absorbing, August 27, 2008
This review is from: Ballykilcline Rising: From Famine Ireland to Immigrant America (Paperback)
This was an excellent book. Very absorbing. I read it in a few days and was curled up on the sofa with the book so much that my husband finally said, "What ARE you reading? You never put it down."

I've read many books about the Great Famine and about Irish immigration to America. I liked the fact that Mary Lee Dunn's book followed a specific group of Irish evictees not only to the shores of America but through their lives in their places of immigration, particularly Rutland, Vermont.

It is a good companion book to "The End of Hidden Ireland" by Robert Scally. Dunn's research and observations offer alternatives to some of Scally's views, opening up the floor for discussion and further exploration of the immigrant experience.

I think it really is a significant contribution to an historical area that has gained in interest since the opening of the Famine Museum.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Real history, October 24, 2009
By 
Albert Doyle (Sanibel, Florida USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Ballykilcline Rising: From Famine Ireland to Immigrant America (Paperback)
It's difficult if not impossible to write about the past without imposing our present day culture and values on the narrative. Mary Lee Dunn does a fine job in taking us back to mid-nineteenth century Ireland, to the small townland of Ballykilcline in County Roscommon in the undeveloped mid-west of Ireland at the time of the terrible Irish potato famine when landlords were ridding themselves of tenants by paying their emigration costs for America or England. The Ballykilcline landlords had obtained their lease rights from the Crown years before for their service to the Crown in the infamous Irish Parliamentary bribery which resulted in the Act of Union placing Ireland under the British Crown. That lease had expired in 1834 and the tenants, showing more nerve than most other Irish tenants, had seized the opportunity to cease paying their rents - the "rising" of the book's title. Their struggle continued to the famine time, when exhausted, they gave in to English law which was the rent-based, military enforced fist of the English colonial system which had been imposed on Ireland by Britsh conquest and land piracy - the basis of Irish landlordism and "Titles", not ended until modern times.

Ms. Dunn, unlike Robert Scally, whose book on Ballykilcline she relies upon for detailed information (although her own independent research is superb and voluminous)shows sympathy and understanding for the Irish tenants of Ballykilcline and the surrounding area. Although limited in education they were not as ill-informed as Scally thought, as she makes clear. They also showed almost total solidarity in their resistance. Ms. Dunn has a better grasp of the Irish context of the story than does Scally who relies mostly on the English records.

More importantly, whereas Scally left them at the dockside of their boarding of the emigrant ship for America Ms. Dunn follows them across the Atlantic, mainly to the quarry industry towns around Rutland, Vermont where she does a remarkable research job in tracing individual families as the made ther way in the Yankee New England world. A brilliant work of historian's skill.

If I had any criticism of the book it would be that more could have been said about the effects of the famine on the townland people in Ireland, but I know that research on that subject is difficult as the Irish of the time and even later tried their best to forget it themselves, even largely giving up their language.

Would that the famine emigrants from all parts of Ireland had such excellent recorders as Mary Lee Dunn! What a story they have to tell!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
parish census, rent strike, quarry workers, federal censuses
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, West Rutland, Civil War, Kilglass Parish, Denis Mahon, John Hanley, Rutland Courier, Rutland Herald, John Carlon, County Roscommon, Michael Hanley, Penal Laws, Daniel O'Connell, Major Mahon, New England, Bridget's Parish Census, Irish Sea, Rutland's Irish, Grosse Ile, Rhode Island, Patrick Kelly, Rutland Courts, Catherine Finneran, William Barnes
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