by yckatbjywtbiastkamb » Tue Feb 21, 2012 1:51 am
actually last st.patricks day there was a good article in the echo pointing out the links between ireland and liverpool.
i always thought the links really started during the famine (when my own relatives left ireland and came here) but the links go way back further than that, and i mean way back, before recorded history infact.
800 years before king john (he of magna carta fame) awarded liverpool it`s town charter in 1207 a welsh monk called maewyn succat gave a sermon in what now is hatton gardens in liverpool city centre before setting off across the irish sea in order to, as popular belief dictates, drive all the serpents out of ireland.
at the place where maewyn succat, or as we know him these days - st. patrick, delivered the sermon a large wooden cross was erected and it stood for hundreds of years until it fell down in the 1700`s during a violent storm, these days there is a plaque on a wall to denote where it stood.
by the 1200`s the early historians began to notice the large number of irish names within the liverpool community and that was even before the place recieved it`s town, never mind city, charter so the irish in liverpool pre dates it being even a town, there was a large irish community in liverpool when it was just a fishing village and trading post.
the irish continued to emigrate to liverpool right through the centuries and in 1795 a writer noticed the `great influx of irish within the city`.
a census taken in the mid 1800`s before the famine noted that 17% of the cities population was born in ireland (that wasnt including the second / third etc generation irish living in the city)
during the famine the numbers of irish people arriving in liverpool exploded, it`s estimated a million irish people arrived here during the famine years, most left again on ships to america and canada (apparently the u.s wouldnt let them in for some reason which surprised me) and also australia / new zealand but many stayed, some moved inland to manchester and the lancashire mill towns.
in 1846 280,000 irish immigrants arrived in liverpool of which 106,000 sailed to the states etc, in 1847 300,000 arrived of which 170,000 departed on ships elsewhere.
by the turn of the century only dublin and cork had more irish born catholics living there than liverpool, there were more irish born catholics in liverpool than even belfast.
even in the 1930`s the government set up a commision to halt the number of irish arriving in liverpool (after the free state was created in the 1920`s the british government probably started to get a bit arsey and started saying you are all foreigners now you cant just come here whenever you feel like etc)
liverpool is the only city on the british mainland to elect an irish nationalist MP, he was elected to parliament about 6 times and they only stopped voting for irish nationalists when the free state was created, as well as MP`s many politicians on a local level like city councillors etc were elected on an irish nationalist ticket.
the echo mentioned other interesting facts like the irish rebel michael collins played footy on newsham park, plus during the easter rising there were 3 liverpool women who fought with the irish rebels and they were in the post office which apparently was centre stage of the uprising in some way, they only left when they were ordered to by the coup leaders and the british knew about them but never found them.
there were loads of facts like that in the article.
of course the irish national hero james larkin was born in liverpool, nearly forgot that one.
You Can Shoot All The Blue Jays You Want To But Its A Sin To Kill A Mocking Bird