Showing posts with label Genocide in Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Genocide in Ireland. Show all posts

Saturday, May 21, 2022

A day in the life of a Dublin workhouse

A day in the life of a Dublin workhouse: The workhouse was the most feared institution in 19th century Dublin. Though it was to be avoided at all costs, harsh times drove many of the city’s poor through its doors.

Irish Famine workhouse documents highlight the true horror and suffering of the people

Irish Famine workhouse documents highlight the true horror and suffering of the people: An Irish historian has uncovered workhouse documents dating back to the Irish potato famine in 1847 which brutally highlights the horrors of the Great Hunger.  A Kinsale Union Workhouse Register from a two-day period in 1847 highlights the deplorable conditions faced by starving Irish people during the Great Hunger.

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Pilgrimage to Ennistymon Clare Ireland with Pat and Jimmy - The Work House and the Genocide in Ireland

 The Famine in Ireland  

From the memorial in Ennistymon, Clare

 

From the first failure of the Potato crop in 1845 until the year 1852, Ireland was devastated by famine and disease. During these years over a million people died of hunger and disease, mostly from laborer, cottier and smallholder backgrounds; men, women, children.  


Relief provided by the British government was not nearly sufficient to prevent starvation and was given grudgingly;  


landlords callously used the situation to evict tenants wholesale from their farm holdings. As a result countless thousands died in the countryside and in the towns on the public work schemes, in the fields, in their own cabins., on the roadside or in the fever racked wards of the workhouses.  


So many died that the graveyards could not contain them all. Huge numbers were buried in shallow graves on the very ground where they died, their surviving relatives too weak to carry them further.  


Others again were left unburied for having no relatives to bury them 

In Clare the famine shook society to its roots. Three of its Four Poor Law Unions, ScariffKilrush, and Ennistymon became bywords throughout Ireland for the horrific scenes witnessed there. 


more evictions took place in the County here than in any other in Ireland. By the time the Famine had ended, up to eighty thousand souls had perished in Clare.  

Those who survived this holocaust could rarely bring themselves to speak of it to their children and when they did invariably referred to it indirectly as  

An Drochshaol - the Bad Times 







Saturday, September 25, 2021

The Workhouse

 https://www.theirishpotatofamine.com/blogs/blog-1/tagged/the-workhouse


The Workhouse

 

The workhouse was introduced into Ireland as part of the English Poor Law system in 1838. The British government believed it to be the most cost effective way of tackling the desperate state of poverty in Ireland. Some English politicians also believed that it would prevent the Irish destitute from swamping England.

Workhouses were not designed for Famine conditions.

By 1845, 123 workhouses had been constructed, one per district or Poor Law Union. The cost of poor relief was met by the payment of rates (a tax) by owners and occupiers of land and property in that district.

Each Poor law union was overseen by a Board of Guardians which consisted of elected members, magistrates and justices of the peace.

Conditions of entry into the workhouse were very strict and entry was seen as the last resort of a destitute person. Once inside the inmates were forced to work, food was poor, and accommodation was often cold, damp and cramped.

It was in the interests of those who funded the workhouse through taxation, to keep the numbers of inmates as low as possible.

   Kinsale Workhouse Admissions

Kinsale Workhouse Admissions Office Building

 

A roll call was carried out each morning. 

A typical day inside an Irish workhouse was to rise at 6am, breakfast at 6.30am, work until 12noon, lunch break and then work until 6pm. Supper was served at 7pm, with lights out at 8pm.

Meals were served in a communal dining room and held in silence. Husbands, wives and children were separated as they entered the workhouse and could be punished if they attempted to speak to each other. An inmate’s only possessions were his/her uniform, mattress and blanket. Once a week the inmates bathed and the men shaved.

Kinsale Workhouse Graveyard

Kinsale Workhouse Graveyard

 

The Famine caused a crisis in the Irish Workhouse System.

By the end of 1846 many of the workhouses were full and refusing to admit new
applicants. There was widespread shortages of bedding and clothing. Unwashed clothes of inmates who had died from fever or disease were given to the next new inmate arriving at the workhouse. There was often a shortage of coffins and burial grounds were often located close to the workhouse, sometimes next to the water supply.

Kinsale Workhouse Famine Register

Kinsale Workhouse Death Register

 

As panic gripped the country, and with no other options available, there was a great rush to enter the workhouse.

The road to the workhouse became known as ‘cosan na marbh’ or ‘pathway of the dead’, and over a quarter of those admitted died inside the workhouse.

Kinsale Community Hospital

Kinsale Community Hospital (formally Kinsale Workhouse)

The 1847 Soup Kitchens Act gave some relief to the workhouses. However, in the summer of the same year, the newly elected British Government declared the Famine to be over and ceased providing financial relief. The Poor Law Unions were made responsible for future relief measures. There were unable to cope and large numbers of people continued to die.


The workhouse system was abolished in the early 1920s, when Ireland gained independence from Britain.