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Chronicle of Irish Emigration to Saint John, New Brunswick 1847 by J. Elizabeth Cushing, Teresa Casey and Monica Robertson.
Published by the New Brunswick Museum, 1979. The transcripts include obituaries of persons born in Ireland, lists of many deaths and burials on Partridge Island as well as other interesting articles. Also included is an alphabetical list of the vessels carrying emigrants to the Port of Saint John in 1847. Full name index.
Book 8032 $65.00 plus $8.00 shipping within North America - book is in good condition for being published in 1979. Previous owner has name written and stamped in several places - some have been crossed out.
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A resilient people
The Irish arriving in Saint John managed to thrive
despite the hardships they endured
We had waited all week to be able to go coasting and skiing on Saturday but the weatherman ruined our plans as it was a day of freezing rain and high winds.
After breakfast Dad had to go to Fred's store to get a jug of molasses so Cliff and I tagged along. He saw an empty orange crate by the stove and purchased it for a quarter.
Once we returned home, Dad took the hammer, handsaw, nails and some very thin planed pine boards and set to work to make a cover for the orange crate. He asked Cliff to go to the horsebarn to fetch him an old piece of a leather strap that once had been part of the harness. With his jackknife, he cut off two eight inch pieces of leather and made hinges. A couple of other strips were attached to the ends of the crate for handles. I couldn't believe it, as now right before my eyes, was my very own trunk, that I had been wanting.
Cliff and I carried my trunk into the kitchen and placed it on top of last week's newspapers that Mum had spread on the floor. Dad followed with a can of green paint and a brush. Once the paint dried, Mum used black paint to stencil my name on the side. In the evening we wallpapered the interior.
On Sunday morning, I was placing my treasures in the most-beautiful-trunk in the whole wide world, when Gramp walked into the kitchen. He asked me, "Are you packing your foot locker for a sea voyage?"
I don't know why that man had to use phrases that I didn't understand.
Over the years I have figured out that he was referring to packing all your prized possessions in a trunk and then heading to another place to live.
In 1847 about 16,000 Irish emigrants arrived in Saint John. Some were destitute with only the clothes on their back. Others had passage money and brought their trunks filled with possessions and reminders of the homeland they had left behind.
The publication, "A Chronicle of Irish Emigration to Saint John, New Brunswick 1847" was compiled by J. Elizabeth Cushing, Teresa Casey and Monica Roberston using selected transcripts from the newspaper, ‘The New Brunswick Courier' from January 2 to December 25 of 1847. The transcripts include obituaries of persons born in Ireland, lists of many deaths and burials on Partridge Island as well as other interesting articles. Also included is an alphabetical list of the vessels carrying emigrants to the Port of Saint John in 1847 from information given in the ‘Courier's' Marine Journal and from "Papers Relative to Emigration to the British Provinces in North America - Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed, December 20, 1847."
A few excerpts from the newspaper transcripts: Death of Mr. William Lahey, a native of Ballycotton, County Cork, aged 45 years . . . Information wanted of Patrick McQuade who is about 16 and a native of the Parish of Killskerry, County of Tyrone. . .The Charity Ball at the Temperance Hall had between six and seven hundred persons present. . . Married by the Rev. Robert Irvine, John, second son of John Hunter, Esq. M.D. formerly of Litterkenny (Ireland) to Louisa, eldest daughter of the late Lionel Anderson, Esq. of this City. . . Death at Ballibofey of Mrs. Elizabeth King, relict of Dr. King of Donegal at the advanced age of 70 years . . .Listing of the names and ages of one hundred or more passengers who died in hospital at Partridge Island during the month of July, 1847.
History documents the cold hard facts of the struggles, sufferings and sacrifices made by many Irish settlers to New Brunswick yet they rose above their afflictions. On March 17, their descendants will remember them.