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BOOK - Irish Emigration to New England Through the Port of St. John, New Brunswick, 1841-1849
by: Daniel F. Johnson.
New
Brunswick was a magnet for Irish immigration during the decade that
culminated in the Great Famine. A majority of these Irish immigrants
relocated to Boston or elsewhere in New England, sooner or later, in order
to rejoin their family members. Since many of the aforementioned Irish
arrived in Canada in a destitute or infirm condition, however, they were
required to take temporary refuge in the alms and work houses, hospitals,
and asylums of St. John. Many of the records of these institutions have
survived, and it is owing to Mr. Johnson's ingenuity and diligence that we
now have a surrogate record of these persons "missing" from the official
passenger lists. In all, he has identified some 7,000 persons of Irish birth
from the records of alms houses, hospitals, parish houses, etc.
This is a
major contribution to the literature of Irish immigration to North America.
The publication contains numerous lists including but not limited to:
Emigrant Poor of Portland Parish, St. John County 1841
Provincial Lunatic Asylum Records 1841
Emigrant Poor of City of St. John 1842 which includes information on Emigrants in Hospital and Parish Houses,
Emigrants Admitted to Alms and Work Houses from Vessels arriving in 1843
Emigrant Deaths in Hospitals, Partridge Island, St. John, 1846
Emigrant Vessel Tables 1841-1849
Emigrants of Charlotte county, N.B. 1842
264 pgs/index/appendices/softcover.
O R D E R D E S K
1-800-361-5168( 9-5 Tuesday to Saturday )
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