Encyclopedia Dubuque
"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.
IRISH
IRISH. The Irish had many excellent reasons to migrate to the United States. In 1695 after the English had conquered all of Ireland, a separate set of rules, the Penal Laws, were written with the intent of keeping the Irish defeated for generations. The laws took most of the Catholics' property and gave them second class status. If a Protestant wanted a Catholic's home or horse, the courts could be relied upon to take it. Catholic education was forbidden and they were not allowed to hold public office, bear arms, or enter a profession. Catholics who attempted to privately education their children faced the loss of their remaining property, but they could be sent to a state-sponsored school with a curriculum designed to make them Protestant. If an eldest son became Protestant, he gained the right to take over the family's property and do with it whatever he wanted. (1) They had so little agricultural ground of their own that only potatoes would provide enough food. When the Irish potato famine struck, the Irish had not enough to feed themselves because they had to export so much of their produce to England. (1) An exodus of population began that peaked in 1851. Between 1820 and 1950 more than 4.5 million Irish immigrated to the United States. (2)
The Irish-born comprised one of Dubuque's largest ethnic groups as early as 1835 and maintained that distinction until the mid-1850s. For Irish immigrants, eastern Iowa had many appeals. Cheap land-wooded areas cost $4 to $8 an acre, a good yoke of oxen could be purchased for $45 to $55, and for those not interested in farming, plenty of jobs were available in the LEAD mines. (3)
The January 14, 1841, edition of the Philadelphia Catholic Herald includes this letter from Charles Corkery, one of Dubuque, Iowa's first settlers:
My sole desire is to direct the attention of Catholics (Irish Catholics particularly) to the country little known, and less appreciated, in the East...I have had ample opportunities of bearing witness to many respectable writers who unite in giving Iowa the happy (names) of 'The Garden of America' and "The Eldorado of the West'... Irishmen unite in saying that our wheat and oats are nothing inferior to those in Ireland, and I have never seen better potatoes in Ireland...than those raised in the mining district. (4)
Mathias LORAS, bishop of the new Diocese of Dubuque, also had a strong interest in attracting Irish immigrants to Dubuque. In 1843 the SISTERS OF CHARITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (BVM), the first religious community to come to Iowa, and all Irish came to Dubuque. (5) He wrote letters to the Boston Pilot and other Eastern newspapers praising Iowa. In 1854 Loras wrote to the Pilot:
Let good immigrants come in haste to the west of Iowa... they will soon make whole Catholic settlements-some Irish, some German, some French. (6)
The Rev. Terence Donaghue, vicar general of the Diocese of Dubuque, wrote to a priest in County Carlow, Ireland, appealing for more Irish settlers. Donaghue promised to teach the settlers how to grow corn, oats and potatoes and said the new immigrants must "be smart, for we are get-ahead people here." (7)
Those not interested in farming found many reasons to settle in Dubuque. By 1840, 10% of the Irish population in Dubuque was involved in manufacturing. Despite anti-Irish sentiments along the eastern coast of the United States, Irish in Dubuque were exposed to few instances of harassment. (8) An exception to the general tone toward the Irish was the establishment in 1854 of a Know-Nothing newspaper, the Observer, in Dubuque. The paper was opposed to both Irish and Catholic immigrants. (9)
Response to the appeals for Irish settlers was swift. In 1830 James LANGWORTHY led a group of 51 miners-two thirds of them Irish- who settled in Dubuque and stayed until they were driven out by troops after the return of the FOX. These miners drew up a set of rules known as the Miner's Compact-believed to be the first code of law in what is now Iowa. (10) There is substantial evidence to show that the Catholic Church went to great lengths to attract Irish priests and religious communities to the area. Trappist monks from Ireland established the monastery of NEW MELLERAY MONASTERY near what is now Peosta, on land Loras gave to them. (11) In 1874 the SISTERS OF THE PRESENTATION OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (PBVM) arrived in Dubuque from Ireland at the request of Bishop John HENNESSY. (12)
The Irish accounted for approximately one-quarter of the city’s population in the 1850 and 1860 census counts. The Irish enjoyed fairly immediate political power and elected F. K. O'Ferrall mayor for successive three terms, 1844-46. (13) Other examples of Irish political influence can be found in Patrick J. QUIGLEY serving in the Territorial Legislature, Charles Corkery holding the office of public clerk, and Dennis MAHONY being influential in the newspaper business.
As early as 1846, the city was divided into wards. The First Ward, which made up the southern part of Dubuque, was called "Little Dublin," because of its many Irish residents. (14)
Of the 13,045 inhabitants of Dubuque in 1860, 13.9 per cent or 1,800 were born in Ireland. This included 992 married adults, 317 single women, 183 single men, 98 widows, 18 widowers, and 182 children under sixteen. The 992 married adults represented 535 families. (15)
Among the men there were 305 day laborers, most of whom lived in the First Ward. In addition, there were fourteen teamsters and twelve draymen. Nine ran boarding houses or inns while another eleven were saloon keepers. Sixty-three were following the trades-carpenters, tin smiths, painters, bricklayers, plasterers, and stone cutters and masons. There were fifty-six miners. River and rail transportation employed some as mail agents, express drivers, ferrymen, boatmen and baggage men. (16)
There were fifteen merchants and fourteen grocers. Only one Irishman was a butcher, grain dealer, druggist, poultry dealer, or confectioner, although eighteen were shoemakers and sixteen tailors. Only eight were manufacturers of any kind. Their products included glass, carriages and wagons, stoves and cabinets. (17)
Most of the single women, 196 in all, were servants. Some worked in the boarding houses and hotels, while many worked for the wealthier families of Dubuque. Widows were more likely to be wash women, housekeepers and dressmakers. (18)
Fifteen men could be classed as professionals. They were lawyers, printers, teachers and an editor, an architect and an engineer. Only two held government positions. (19)
By 1850 the property owned by Irish settlers had increased so much that it amounted to more than one-third of the total property value in Dubuque County despite the fact that the Irish accounted for less than a quarter of the county's population. (20)
By 1860, 1,800 of Dubuque's 13,000 people were Irish born. They were day laborers, teamsters, draymen, inn and saloon-keepers. Many worked in the mines or on the railroad. There were 15 Irish merchants and 14 grocers. There were fifteen people who would be classified as professionals-lawyers, printers, teachers, an architect, an editor and an engineer. (21)
Several generalization have been made of the early Irish settlers in Dubuque. They were less likely to marry before the age of twenty-one. They were also less likely to divorce and were more likely to have more than three children. (22)
Immigrants to Dubuque wanted to preserve the religious and ethnic traditions of their homelands. This made it difficult for Catholics of different backgrounds to find much in common other than their religion. The missionary priest Samuel MAZZUCHELLI was Italian, and most of the Catholics he served in what is now the tri-state area were Irish, but they seemed to work well together. The relationship between Bishop Loras and Dubuque-area Irish Catholics, however, was often strained. (23) The Irish Catholics in Dubuque often accused Loras of favoring French Catholics; when he first arrived in 1839. He preferred worship with the French because his English was still heavily accented. (24)
In 1852 the Irish were angered when Loras built St. Patrick's Church and proposed it remain a mission congregation and not an independent parish. The Germans had their own church-Holy Trinity. The Irish wanted nothing less even though ST. RAPHAEL'S CATHEDRAL was located in an Irish neighborhood and had a mainly Irish congregation. Loras, however, recognized that the cathedral needed to be replaced. If the Irish left the cathedral, needed revenue would drop. With St. Patrick's as a mission, its income and that of the cathedral could be combined. (25)
The Irish threatened to withholding contributions and accused Loras of demanding more contributions from the Irish Catholics for the cathedral. Loras threatened to remove his priests from Dubuque. (26)
The Irish again showed their interest in politics in the 1880s through the Labor Reform Party formed by the KNIGHTS OF LABOR. The success of the party, however, was short-lived with the Democrats regaining control. In 1892 the local Republican Party played on the Irish hatred of all-things English by promoting a tariff on English imports. (27)
The Irish have continued to hold close ties to their nation of origin. In the 1860s many of them joined the FENIANS. In 1920 an Irish Bond Drive was held across the United States to support the Irish Republic. Although most of the subscriptions were for small amounts--$10-$25--during the ten month campaign a total of $5,123,640 was collected. This was far greater than any other similar activity in the United States. (28) In Dubuque and the immediate area, $10,395 was collected. (29)
Like other ethnic groups, the Irish established a benevolent society to help its members in times of hardship and serve as a social center. This role was served by the Royal Order of Hiberians. Newspapers annually celebrated the occasion of St. Patrick's Day. (30)
The first St. Patrick's Day Parade occurred in Dubuque on March 17, 1979. This event that became an annual occasion was organized by Maureen Siegert and Mary Dunne. (31) For generations, the highlight of Irish social life was the Hooley. Music, dance, song, good conversation and merriment flowed freely as described in the Percy French song, "There's a Hooley on in Hannigan's House Tonight." By 2013 this too had become an annual event in Dubuque.
Irish Hooley--http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BfOXYTZgo0
See also:
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Source:
1. Fialka, John J. Sisters: Catholic Nuns and the Making of America. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2003, p. 21
2. Mahan, Holly. "Irish Citizens in Nineteenth Century Dubuque, Iowa." Ron Roberts ed. Iowa's Ethnic Roots. Dubuque: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, 1993, p. 131
3. Jerde, Lyn. Irish America Magazine March/April 1995, p. 72. Online: http://www.celticcousins.net/irishiniowa/dubuque.htm
4. Ibid.
5. Jerde, Jay. "The Twinkle in the Tri-States: Irish Immigrants in Dubuque," Julien's Journal, March 1996, p. 11
6. Jerde, Lyn.
7. Ibid.
8. Hellert, Susan. "The Luck of the Irish has Always Had a Place in the Dubuque Area," Telegraph Herald, Mar. 20, 2001, p. 22. Online: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=PghaAAAAIBAJ&sjid=WEsNAAAAIBAJ&pg=6518,3647389&dq=irish+dubuque&hl=en
9. Guilfoyle, Laura. "Now They Even Marry Each Other," Telegraph Herald, June 18, 1979, p. 1. Online: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=6BhCAAAAIBAJ&sjid=S6oMAAAAIBAJ&pg=6821,2451025&dq=germans+dubuque&hl=en
10. "The Greening of the Tri-States," Telegraph Herald, Mar. 11, 1994, p. 61. Online: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=oeZYAAAAIBAJ&sjid=7rsMAAAAIBAJ&pg=5375,2744087&dq=irish+dubuque&hl=en
11. Jerde, Jan. p. 11
12. Jacobson, James E. "Dubuque-The Key City, The Architectural and Historical Resources of Dubuque, Iowa 1837-1955, National Register of Historic Places, June 24, 2003. Online: http://www.cityofdubuque.org/DocumentCenter/Home/View/2936
13. Calkin, Dr. Homer L. The Palimpsest, "The Irish in Iowa" Iowa City, Iowa, State Historical Society of Iowa. February, 1964. Online: http://www.celticcousins.net/irishiniowa/dubuque.htm
14. Ibid.
15. Ibid.
16. Ibid.
17. Ibid.
18. Ibid.
19. Jerde, Lyn.
20. Ibid.
21. Gallagher, Mary Kevin, BVM (editor). Seed/Harvest: A History of the Archdiocese of Dubuque, Dubuque, Iowa: Archdiocese of Dubuque Press, 1987, p. 13
22. Mahan, Holly, p. 132
23. Gallagher. p. 13
24. Ibid., p. 14
25. Ibid.
26. Ibid., p. 16
27. Mahan, p. 134
28. Lanier-Vos, Dan. Sinews of the Nation: Constructing Irish and Zionist Bonds in the United States. Cambridge, UK,: Polity Press, 2013. Online: http://books.google.com/books?id=ARW9APtlX_cC&pg=PA82&lpg=PA82&dq=Irish+Bond+Drive+%281920%29&source=bl&ots=ClepKLxHYZ&sig=Ys-7iRWAF6YVOPx53WciSu5AzDA&hl=en&sa=X&ei=V0tXUuOkPMfwyAGz0ICYBQ&ved=0CGQQ6AEwCA#v=onepage&q=Irish%20Bond%20Drive%20%281920%29&f=false
29. "Irish Bond Drive Closes in Dubuque," Telegraph Herald, Nov. 2, 1920, p. 13. Online: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=9hJeAAAAIBAJ&sjid=DGANAAAAIBAJ&pg=6661,4761981&dq=irish+dubuque&hl=en
30. Hellert.
31. McCormick, John. "From Dublin to Dubuque to Dyersville They Will be Snaking Through the Streets, Telegraph Herald, March 15, 1979, p. 7. Online: http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=gPhBAAAAIBAJ&sjid=R6oMAAAAIBAJ&pg=6623,1793703&dq=irish+dubuque&hl=en