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Irish > Timeline: 1750-1849
- 1763: After the defeat of France in the Seven Year's War, King George III
promises that Catholic subjects in Canada can practice their religion.
However, in Puritan New England, Catholic are still considered "subversive
of society."
- 1770: March 5th, Patrick Carr of Ireland is killed during the
Boston Massacre.
- 1775: John Stark, a New Hampshire veteran of the French and
Indian Wars, recognizes that the British are attempting to flank the
American forces at the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17th. He shifts
his regiment just in time to beat back the British and prevent a route
of the American army. Stark, along with half of his regiment, was
Irish.
- 1776: March 17, General George Washington uses the password
"'St. Patrick" as the secret code for American troops on
"Evacuation Day," when the British pulled out of Boston.
Washington's staff officers include: General John Sullivan, of Limerick,
Colonel Stephen Moglan of Cork, Colonel John Fitzgerald of Wicklow,
and Colonel Francis Barber of Longford.
- 1779: Massachusetts Constitution is drafted and includes a
Bill of Rights protecting Catholics
- 1788: First recorded Mass is celebrated by French priest Father
Louis de Rousselet and a French and Irish congregation at the old
Huguenot church on School Street on November 2.
- 1798: Several thousand Irish flee to America.
- 1799: Church wardens John Magner, Patrick Campbell, and Michael
Burns along with Owen Callahan, John Duggan, and Edmund Conner abandon
the French chapel and buy, with the congregation's donations, land
on Franklin Street for their own church.
- 1803: Many Irish flee to Boston in the wake of the Act of Union
joining England. Bishop John Carroll says the first mass at the Franklin
Street Church of the Holy Cross, a building designed by the young
Charles Bulfinch.
- 1807: James Sullivan (1744-1808) is elected Governor of Massachusetts.
He is the son of John of Limerick who immigrated in 1723. His brother
was Major General John Sullivan who conquered the Iroquois.
- 1815-1845: One million Irish emigrate to the United States
and British America.
- 1817-1818: A Famine devastates Ireland prompting emigration
to the United States.
- 1820: Approximately 2,000 Irish live in Boston.
- 1820-30s: Irish laborers work on Mayor Quincy's construction
projects such as rubbish and street cleaning, draining the Town Dock,
moving the sewer outlets to the flats, filling Mill Creek, and Old
Market Place, and construction of the Market House behind Faneuil
Hall.
- 1825: Approximately 5,000 Irish live in Boston. Anti-Irish
gangs attack people and property on Ann and Broad Streets. Mayor Quincy
stations six night watchmen to keep the peace.
- 1828: St. Mary's Church in Charlestown
is established.
- 1829: The Jesuit newspaper, which in 1836 changed its name
to the Pilot, is founded.
- 1830: Over 7,000 Irish live in Boston
- 1830s: Samuel Morse and Reverend Henry Ward Beecher publish
anti-Catholic polemics suggesting that the Irish are secret agents
in a Popish plot to undermine Anglo-Saxon New England.
- 1833: Andrew Jackson visits Boston after his election as President.
He is a favorite of the Boston Roman Catholic Irish who see him as
a champion of the poor and one of their own. Jackson is greeted by
Col. William Prescott, the President of the Boston Charitable Irish
Society.
- 1834: August 8, Ursuline Convent in Charlestown
is burned down by mobs incited by a rash of anti-Catholic newspaper
articles, the vituperative sermons of Reverend Lyman Beecher, and
the stories of Rebecca Reed, a woman who was supposedly held prisoner
in the Ursuline Convent. No one is charged in the episode. A period
of harsh Nativism begins.
- 1835: Patrick Tracy Jackson hires 190 Irishmen and 60 Yankees
to reduce Pemberton Hill, southwest of Beacon Hill. The fill was dumped
north of Causeway Street where North Station was constructed.
- 1837, June 11: The Broad/Bond Street Riot breaks out
after local firemen collide with an Irish funeral procession. All
the city fire engine companies rush to help their co-workers. Mayor
Samuel Eliot eventually brings in militiamen to quell the disturbance.
Three Irishmen are jailed for the incident but no Yankees.
- 1837, September 12: Thousands of Bostonians surround the barracks
of the Montgomery Guards, the Irish Militia Company named after Irish
born General Richard Montgomery who died in the Revolution leading
an attack against the English at Quebec. None of the other militia
companies or police come to the Irish soldiers aid. Only the mayor's
appearance prevents a riot. Six months later, the Irish company is
disbanded "in order to prevent further disturbances."
- 1840: There are 1,000 registered Irish voters in Boston.
- 1845-1849: An Gorta Mor: The Great Hunger. A full 1/3
of the Irish population emigrate and one million die.
- 1846: John Bernard Fitzpatrick becomes Bishop of Boston. He
helps raise approximately $150,000 in aid for Irish victims over the
course of the Famine. The U.S.S. Jamestown sails to Cork to
deliver food from the people of Boston.
- 1846-1855: 37,000 Irish flee the Famine to Boston.
- 1847: 13,235 Irish emigrate to Boston during the worst year
of the Famine known as "Black 47." Boston City Council establishes
a quarantine station on Deer Island in Boston Harbor. Over 5,000 Irish
are quarantined, and 852 are buried there.
- 1849: 28,917 Irish live in Boston.
See 1645-1749 | See 1850-1949
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