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User Name Thread Name Subject Posted
GUEST,JTT Folklore/History: Irish Famine (641* d) RE: Folklore/History: Irish Famine 27 Jul 13


Sample paragraph from that piece, by the way:

In January 1847, the British government smashed Circular #38, which the Irish Board of Public Works had issued, allowing "family task work" under a sensible emergency proposal of some large farmers. It would have paid farm families wages to work their own land, and more wages for also working on drainage projects. ``It is quite impossible," wrote Trevelyan, ``for my lords to give their sanction to parties being paid by public funds for the cultivation of their own land." That same month, Colonel Routh reported on Ireland's poorest county, Skibereen, that 50,000 pounds rent had been paid in 1846; there were only 12 landowners, all British lords and knights. The government also defeated a proposal of Lord George Bentinck in Parliament, for a railroad building act in Ireland funded by the British Treasury.

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(Skibbereen isn't a county, of course, it's a town - very prosperous and chichi during the Celtic Tiger, but completely emptied of population during the Famine; a catch-cry of the succeeding revolutionary years was "Remember Skibbereen!"




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