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Personal letters and the organisation of Irish migration to and from New Zealand, 1848–1925
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 March 2016
Extract
Between 1840 and 1914 approximately a third of a million people left Ireland for Australasia. Of this total, New Zealand received a comparatively meagre amount. For instance, when the Irish peaked in sheer numbers in New Zealand in 1886, they supplied just 51,408 of the country’s total population of half a million. Despite such low numbers in comparison with those arriving in other destinations in the Irish diaspora, investigation of the Irish in New Zealand has flourished during the last decade or so. This recent historiography, however, lacks the sustained intensity and depth of work exemplified in other regions of settlement in the diaspora from Ireland. Nevertheless, significant advances have been made in central issues such as the critical importance of kin and neighbourhood networks in the processes of relocation and adaptation from Ireland to New Zealand.
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References
1 Fitzpatrick, David, Oceans of consolation: personal accounts of Irish migration to Australia (Cork, 1995), p. 6.Google Scholar
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18 See Akenson, Half the world from home, p. 22, Table 5.,
19 Derived from the annual migration returns found in the Appendices to the journals of the House of Representatives (henceforth cited as A.J.H.R.).
20 Akenson, Half the world from home, p. 21.
21 See Fraser, ‘Irish migration to the west coast’, pp 197-225; Hearn, ‘Irish on the Otago goldfields’, p. 84.
22 The brothers were recorded as Pat and ‘John’, labourers of twenty-four and twenty-one years of age respectively (P.R.O. Laverton, unassisted passengers to Victoria, fiche 130). I am grateful to Professor David Fitzpatrick for this information.
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27 William Lysaght, County Limerick, to his brother Edward, Auckland, 16 Apr. 1866. The Lysaght series was kindly supplied by Reg Brown. I am grateful to Professor David Fitzpatrick for bringing this collection to my attention.
28 N.A.A., register of assisted immigrants (Repro 4711/448), 68/64. Of 369 applications sent from New Zealand between 1859 and 1864, 133 (36 per cent) were directed to Ireland.
29 See Fraser, ‘Irish migration to the west coast’, p. 212; idem, To Tara via Holyhead, p. 47.
30 Idem, To Tara via Holyhead, p. 37.
31 Ibid., p.44.
32 N.A.A. register of assisted immigrants (Repro 4711/448), 68/64; Fraser, ‘Irish migration to the west coast’, p. 212.
33 For instance, if £1 in cash was paid, then the promissory note was for £8. If £4 was paid, then the promissory note was for £2.
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37 McCullough’s and Young’s grants are noted in National Archives, Wellington, IM 17/1, p. 20.
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39 John Gilmore, Tauranga, to his parents, County Down, 16 Sept. 1876 (P.R.O.N.I., T/1611/2).
40 John Gilmore, Tauranga, to his brother, County Down, 3 Apr. 1877. All letters in the Gilmore sequence not attributed to P.R.O.N.I. were kindly supplied by Alice Gemming.
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43 Alasdair Galbraith, ‘The invisible Irish? Re-discovering the Irish Protestant tradition in colonial New Zealand’ in Fraser (ed.), A distant shore, p. 42.
44 Ibid., p. 45.
45 Local agents appointed by the agent general (A.J.H.R., 1873, D-2, p. 18).
46 Two reports about emigration advertisements to New Zealand in Irish newspapers reflect this Ulster bias. The first report, listing fifteen newspapers, shows that all were confined to Ulster (ibid., p. 6). The second report reveals that of seventeen newspapers, fourteen were based in Ulster (ibid., pp 19-20).
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54 These ships were the Asia, Caroline, Carrick Castle, Queen of Nations, Dover Castle, Carisbrooke Castle, Conflict and Lady Jocelyn.
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65 James Mcllrath, Canterbury, to his family, County Down, 8 Sept. 1862.
66 Hamilton Mcllrath, Canterbury, to his brother William, County Down, 15 July 1878.
67 Hamilton Mcllrath, Canterbury, to his brother William, County Down, 2 May 1886.
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69 David McCullough, Otago, to his family, County Down, 21 Dec. 1875. The McCullough letters were kindly supplied by Sandra Gilpin.
70 Margaret Anne Kilpatrick, Auckland, to her brother Thomas Reid, Armagh city, 25 Nov. 1862 (P.R.O.N.I., D/3014/3/3/1).
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73 David Bell, Otago, to his brother, County Antrim, Nov. 1886. The Bell letter was kindly supplied by Tom Bell.
74 Philip Carroll, R.M.S. Arawa, to his wife, Auckland, 19 Apr. 1925. The Carroll letters were kindly supplied by Br. Philip Carroll.
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81 Ibid.
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115 Martin Strong, County Tipperary, to his cousin Daniel Strong, Auckland, 14 Sept. 1895. The Strong letters were kindly supplied by Ginny Dow.
116 William Lysaght, County Limerick, to his brother Edward, Auckland, 19 Dec. 1869.
117 Catherine Colgan, County Antrim, to her daughter Rose Gamble, Otago, 19 Feb. 1901. The Colgan letters were kindly supplied by Richard Herbert.
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119 David McCullough, Waimangaroa, to his parents, County Down, 2 July 1899.
120 Oliver McSparron, Dunedin, to his father Archibald, County Londonderry, 18 Nov. 1865 (P.R.O.N.I., T/2743/2/l).
121 Oliver McSparron, Waiwera, to his father Archibald, County Londonderry, c. 28 Apr. 1868 (ibid., T/2743/2/2).
122 Oliver McSparron, Tuakepa, to his father Archibald, County Londonderry, 26 May 1869 (ibid., T/2743/2/3.
123 James Mcllrath, Canterbury, to his family, County Down, 27 June 1873.
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126 Annie Dempsey, Canterbury, to her sister Eliza Burke, County Kildare, 24 Mar. 1903.
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129 An earlier version of this article was delivered at the thirteenth biennial conference of the Australasian Association for European History in Auckland in July 2001. For comments of this extended version I am grateful to Dr Enda Delaney.
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