‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’
During the worst year of the Great Irish Famine, ‘Black ‘47’, tens of thousands of people fled across the Irish Sea from Ireland to Britain, desperately escaping the starvation and disease plaguing their country. These refugees, crowding unavoidably into the most insalubrious accommodation British t...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
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Cambridge University Press
2020
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Online Access: | https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/4936/1/IHR%20Irish%20Fever%20in%20Britain%20FINAL.pdf |
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author | MacRaild, Donald Darwen, Lewis Gurrin, Brian Kennedy, Liam |
author_facet | MacRaild, Donald Darwen, Lewis Gurrin, Brian Kennedy, Liam |
author_sort | MacRaild, Donald |
collection | LMU |
description | During the worst year of the Great Irish Famine, ‘Black ‘47’, tens of thousands of people fled across the Irish Sea from Ireland to Britain, desperately escaping the starvation and disease plaguing their country. These refugees, crowding unavoidably into the most insalubrious accommodation British towns and cities had to offer, were soon blamed for deadly outbreaks of epidemic typhus which emerged across the country during the first half of 1847. Indeed, they were accused of transporting the pestilence, then raging in Ireland, over with them. Typhus mortality rates in Ireland and Britain soared, and so closely connected with the disease were the Irish in Britain that it was widely referred to as ‘Irish fever’. Much of what we know about this epidemic is based on a handful of studies focussing almost exclusively on major cities along the British west-coast. Moreover, there has been little attempt to understand the legacy of the episode on the Irish in Britain. Taking a national perspective, this article argues that the ‘Irish fever’ epidemic of 1847 spread far beyond the western ports of entry, and that the epidemic, by entrenching the association of the Irish with deadly disease, contributed significantly to the difficulties Britain’s Irish population faced in the 1850s. |
first_indexed | 2024-07-09T03:58:28Z |
format | Article |
id | oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:4936 |
institution | London Metropolitan University |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-07-09T03:58:28Z |
publishDate | 2020 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | eprints |
spelling | oai:repository.londonmet.ac.uk:49362021-07-19T16:05:15Z https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/4936/ ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ MacRaild, Donald Darwen, Lewis Gurrin, Brian Kennedy, Liam 940 History of Europe During the worst year of the Great Irish Famine, ‘Black ‘47’, tens of thousands of people fled across the Irish Sea from Ireland to Britain, desperately escaping the starvation and disease plaguing their country. These refugees, crowding unavoidably into the most insalubrious accommodation British towns and cities had to offer, were soon blamed for deadly outbreaks of epidemic typhus which emerged across the country during the first half of 1847. Indeed, they were accused of transporting the pestilence, then raging in Ireland, over with them. Typhus mortality rates in Ireland and Britain soared, and so closely connected with the disease were the Irish in Britain that it was widely referred to as ‘Irish fever’. Much of what we know about this epidemic is based on a handful of studies focussing almost exclusively on major cities along the British west-coast. Moreover, there has been little attempt to understand the legacy of the episode on the Irish in Britain. Taking a national perspective, this article argues that the ‘Irish fever’ epidemic of 1847 spread far beyond the western ports of entry, and that the epidemic, by entrenching the association of the Irish with deadly disease, contributed significantly to the difficulties Britain’s Irish population faced in the 1850s. Cambridge University Press 2020-11-16 Article PeerReviewed text en https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/4936/1/IHR%20Irish%20Fever%20in%20Britain%20FINAL.pdf MacRaild, Donald, Darwen, Lewis, Gurrin, Brian and Kennedy, Liam (2020) ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’. Irish Historical Studies, 44 (166). pp. 270-294. ISSN 0021-1214 https://doi.org/10.1017/ihs.2020.37 10.1017/ihs.2020.37 10.1017/ihs.2020.37 |
spellingShingle | 940 History of Europe MacRaild, Donald Darwen, Lewis Gurrin, Brian Kennedy, Liam ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title | ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title_full | ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title_fullStr | ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title_full_unstemmed | ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title_short | ‘Irish fever’ in Britain during the Great Famine: immigration, disease and the legacy of ‘Black ‘47’ |
title_sort | irish fever in britain during the great famine immigration disease and the legacy of black 47 |
topic | 940 History of Europe |
url | https://repository.londonmet.ac.uk/4936/1/IHR%20Irish%20Fever%20in%20Britain%20FINAL.pdf |
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