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Divergent paths

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Documents for the first time a representative sample of Irish immigrant families and uses the techniques of family and digital history to explore their long-term fate.
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  • 26 September 2016
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This book is unique in adopting a family history approach to Irish immigrants in nineteenth century Britain. It shows that the family was central to the migrants’ lives and identities. The techniques of family and digital history are used for the first time to reveal the paths followed by a representative body of Irish immigrant families, using the town of Stafford in the West Midlands as a case study.

The book contains vital evidence about the lives of ordinary families. In the long term many intermarried with the local population, but others moved away and some simply died out. The book investigates what forces determined the paths they followed and why their ultimate fates were so varied.

A fascinating picture is revealed of family life and gender relations in nineteenth-century England which will appeal to scholars of Irish history, social history, genealogy and the history of the family.

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Price: £35.00
Pages: 360
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 26 September 2016
ISBN: 9781526107268
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Emigration & Immigration, European history, HISTORY / Europe / Ireland, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / General, Relationships and families: advice and issues, Migration, immigration and emigration

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'In this remarkable book, the author gives colour and life to this non-descript place, and voice to generations of the type of people that do not ordinarily feature in history writing. A micro-study of 22 out of a total of 206 Irish families who settled in Stafford in 1820-1920, what emerges from this collective family biography is unlike anything else in the canon of Irish migrant studies...The depth of research on show here is, at times, extraordinary.'
Ciaran O'Neill, Trinity College Dublin , Economic History Review, 69,2 (2016)

1. Irish emigrants and family history: a new approach
2. The context: Irish emigration and Stafford
3. Stafford’s Irish families: the overall picture
4. Pathfinders: labouring families before the Famine
5. Refugees from the Famine
6. Labouring families in the Famine's aftermath, 1852+
7. Lace curtain Irish? The families of craft, clerical & service workers
8. Old soldiers and their families
9. The Irish in the shoe trade
10. The forgotten Irish: entrepreneurs and professionals
11. Divergent paths: the conclusions to be drawn
Bibliography
Index