Ireland and America: the contrasts
Ireland in 1750, as now, was
a land of lush grass and many cows. But then, the wealth of it was in
the hands of a sophisticated elite who wanted to live and dress as London
did, whatever the cost: an elite of Protestant landlords, officials, and
lawyers, with some rising Catholic merchants pushing to join the party.
The mass of the people were very poor, living upon potatoes and whiskey
in mud cabins (tea and beer had yet to come as cheap drinks). Catholic
and Irish-speaking, they expected little from their masters: “Twenty poor
families, who never taste fresh meat, might be comfortably supplied with
as much Beef and Butter as has been exported to purchase a Headdress for
a Lady” commented an angry Dublin journalist in 1737. A demoralised and
defeated people, who hung their heads, said another.
- General George Washington
- General Richard Irvine
- Charles Thomson
- General Richard Butler
- Matthew Thornton
- Adj. General Edward
Hand
- Commodore John Barry
- General John Shee
- General Stephen Moylan
- Major James McHenry
- Thomas Lynch
- Major General John
Sullivan
- Charles Carroll
- General Richard Montgomery
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The
portrait of George Washington and thirteen of his senior officers
or signers (by Laurence O'Toole, Md.) was commisioned by Robert
D Stewart of New York. It was reproduced in "Ireland of the Welcomes"
by kind permission of Mr. Stewart, a great-great-great grandson
of Brigadier General William Thompson. Edward Hand and Charles Carrol
are of particular to us in Offaly.
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America’s colonies were another
world. Much ruder and simpler than today, of course: with independent
small farmers living largely on salt pork, corn mash breads and porridges,
and also whiskey; but the needs of these men could be met by fresh exertion
and new land:
The prospects were almost breath-taking,
once things were organised. America, too, had its wealthy: planters and
merchants, who also aimed at London style; but their wealth was not based
upon privilege and exploitation, but rather upon constructive business.
. .if one excepts those relying upon slavery. In Ireland, the rich eventually
took it for granted that the debased character of the people was their
own fault, rather than the result of poverty and oppression. One Lord
Roden hoped for the extermination of a million or two of the native poor,
“disgraces to humanity”. In America, on the other hand, the prejudices
of the privileged gave way before the evidence of their own eyes, as simple
men transformed a continent, so that it could become “self-evident” that
all men were equal. “Americans were a mass of husbandmen, merchants, mechanics
and fishermen; but the necessities of the country gave a spring to the
active powers of the inhabitants, and set them on thinking, speaking and
acting, in a line far beyond that to which they had been accustomed”,
admitted David Ramsay, a South Carolina physician. He concluded: “The
difference between nations is not so much owing to nature as to education
and circumstances.”
A common base — the British
Empire
Yet, so different seem Ireland
and America in 1750, where can we begin to connect them? In the beginning,
of course, we were both of us — Irishmen and Americans — part of the same
political empire, that of the Englishman. For over 200 years, the American
adopted and suited to himself the Englishman’s political habits, his language,
his common and commercial law, his business practices, his industrial
technology; even his fashions in poetry and the arts, in sermons (with
some acknowledgment to the Scots) and in journalism. Americans were largely
too busy, argues Daniel Boorstin, to waste the energies needed to build
a continent in throwing away basic lessons the English had already mastered
for them: so, only when their industrial civilisation surpassed England’s
in scale (after the 1860’s), did the Americans begin the systematic innovation
which, by 1944, would completely reverse the situation, with the English
learning in all these fields from America.
Some of the IRISH with WASHINGTON
- General George Washington.
- Richard Irvine was born
in Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh. A surgeon by profession, after a period
in the British Navy he set up practice in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He
was assigned command of the Pennsylvania regiment at Monmouth, NJ, and
was later in command of Fort Pitt.
- Charles Thomson was Secretary
of the Continental Congress during the Revolution, and was the author
of the original draft of the Declaration of Independence. Born in Co
Derry.
- Richard Butler came from
Dublin and set up as an Indian agent. He rose to the rank of Brigadier
General in the Continental Army. After the war he returned to his Indian
activities where he met his death.
- Matthew Thornton from Limerick,
practised medicine in Londonderry N.H., before taking several important
State posts. He sat in the Continental Congress and was the signatory
for Pennsylvania of the Declaration of Independence.
- Edward Hand, another medical
man, practiced in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Born in Co Offaly, he rose
to brevet Major General in the American Army and also sat in Congress.
- John Barry, 'father of the
American Navy', is probably the most celebrated figure of all. He was
born in Tacumshane, Co Wexford. He it was who captured the tender “Edward”
— the first seizure of a British warship by a regularly commissioned
American cruiser. As a commodore he became renowned as a trainer of
naval officers.
- John Shee from Co Meath
commanded the Pennsylvania Line, one of the most effective combat outfits
of the Revolutionary war. These troops came largely from Pennsylvania,
Maryland and Delaware, and included a large number of Irish volunteers.
- Stephen Moylan from Cork
was Washington’s secretary and aide-de-camp, and later Quartermaster
General of the Continental Army. With his red waistcoat, buckskin breeches
and bright green coat he brought a touch of colour to the cavalry.
- James McHenry from Ballymena,
Co Antrim, left his mark as surgeon, military man and political figure,
and is commemorated by name in Fort McHenry at Baltimore. He served
as secretary of war under both George Washington and John Adams.
- Thomas Lynch (of Galway
stock) was an Attorney and planter in South Carolina. He was a member
of the Second Continental Congress and was the youngest signatory to
the Declaration.
- John Sullivan who countersigned
the Washington order was the son of a Corkman. The first President once
wrote of him that he had “a little tincture of vanity but along with
it military genius.”
- Charles Carroll of Carrollton
signed for Maryland. Grandson of a Co. Offaly O’Carroll, he acquired
huge land holdings and was active in canal and road construction. He
died in 1842, the last surviving signatory of the Declaration of Independence.
- Richard Montgomery was slain
in the assault on Quebec in December 1775. Initially fighting with the
British against the French, he was converted to the American cause and
led the forces which captured Montreal. Montgomery County is named in
his honour.
Reproduced courtesy
of Ireland of the Welcomes
Vol. 25 no.1, January – February 1976