The Irish Potato Famine

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
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Komentáře • 2K

  • @geographicstravel
    @geographicstravel  Před 2 lety +37

    Check out Squarespace: squarespace.com/GEOGRAPHICS
    for 10% off on your first purchase.

    • @fncfantv2006
      @fncfantv2006 Před 2 lety +3

      Genuinely one of the finest videos on this channel. Please do the Highland clearances next 🙏

    • @thegatorhator6822
      @thegatorhator6822 Před 2 lety +3

      @@fncfantv2006 drink the things under the sink.

    • @bill5328
      @bill5328 Před 2 lety +2

      If you ask,"did England help the Irish during the potato famine", you never get a straight "NO"!.

    • @geromelegnome5446
      @geromelegnome5446 Před 2 lety +1

      Simon, you handle Irish history so respectfully!!! Go raibh maith agat!!!

    • @nialldempsey7742
      @nialldempsey7742 Před rokem +1

      14:28 As an Irish person, that's exactly how I feel about the Famine. Excellent analogy, Simon. Thank you.

  • @n00bsalsa42
    @n00bsalsa42 Před 2 lety +1176

    The blight killed the potatoes the British caused the famine

    • @jamesfry8983
      @jamesfry8983 Před 2 lety +21

      Makes sense

    • @ghollidge
      @ghollidge Před 2 lety +33

      Questionable. The single use of one type of potato made the spread of blight even worse, and the reliance on too little type of vegetables . Westminster taking the corn just made everything even worse.

    • @arkadikharovscabinetofcuri3465
      @arkadikharovscabinetofcuri3465 Před 2 lety +153

      The true casualties were those whose crops were shipped off to England whilst the Irish starved. They did so directly under the bootheel of English lords. So yes the British caused the famine

    • @ghollidge
      @ghollidge Před 2 lety +44

      Did you not watch the video? It was rich people not caring about poor people, seeing as even Irish Catholics did the dirty. Also, Peel clearly was trying to help at the start. So instead of the usual anti British sentiment to deny that people tried to help, responsibility lies with a select few.

    • @Kevin-hp5fk
      @Kevin-hp5fk Před 2 lety +53

      @@ghollidge I love it how videos like this bring out the racists/revisonists such as yourself. No doubt you'll play the usual CZcams card and suddenly claim to be a historian working in Trinity whose sole expertise is the Potato Famine and how the Brits didn't do anything wrong.

  • @Yuppa.69
    @Yuppa.69 Před rokem +1142

    Fun fact: Turkey offered to send Ireland food aid to get them through the famine but queen Victoria turned the offer down

    • @malachymccloskey7839
      @malachymccloskey7839 Před rokem +388

      But the ottoman empire did send aid in secret. Boats landed in Drogheda. Their football club s badge has the crescent moon and star as tribute to the generous act.

    • @lucyk.5163
      @lucyk.5163 Před rokem

      Dang. Victoria was nothing like Queen Elizabeth. What a bitch.

    • @conclavecabal.h0rriphic
      @conclavecabal.h0rriphic Před rokem +143

      @@malachymccloskey7839 wow…I was never taught a word of this in school. Things like this restore my faith in humanity

    • @lukeyarasheski5510
      @lukeyarasheski5510 Před rokem +298

      Funner fact. A Native American tribe sent all the money they could to Ireland so they could import food. There's a monument to it and everything

    • @mickgrant4262
      @mickgrant4262 Před rokem

      The British government took all the grain out of Ireland that was the Real cause of Famine Victoria was Scum Heartless Bitch

  • @cathalbrendankelly1892
    @cathalbrendankelly1892 Před 2 lety +1405

    Thank you Simon and the writers for telling this story. One interesting fact was the donation made by a native American tribe called the Choctaw. This tribe heard about the famine in Ireland and sent money to the people of Ireland. It was an amazing gesture of kindness.

    • @paulwoida8249
      @paulwoida8249 Před 2 lety +209

      The Irish remembered this act of kindness and helped out the Choctaw many years later when they were in dire straits.

    • @AndrewSmith-gn1nq
      @AndrewSmith-gn1nq Před 2 lety +42

      I never knew about this, thank you for sharing it.

    • @eedobee
      @eedobee Před 2 lety +9

      @@AndrewSmith-gn1nq and everyone lived happily ever after

    • @gnostic268
      @gnostic268 Před 2 lety +30

      Potatoes are an indigenous food developed in Mesoamerica over thousands of years. There is a common link because potatoes were taken back across the Atlantic and cultivated.

    • @catherinet4002
      @catherinet4002 Před 2 lety +39

      @@paulwoida8249 Many years later being 2020 when they sent food and money to help during the lockdowns.

  • @eireduchess
    @eireduchess Před 2 lety +927

    As an Irish person this hits very close to home. Our language and culture were decimated, people left home never to see it again, anti Irish sentiment was worse than ever. The lasting effects of the famine are still felt to this day and the Irish population still hasn’t recovered from the deaths during the period

    • @Kaiserland111
      @Kaiserland111 Před 2 lety +38

      I feel terrible that my ancestors had to go through that experience, especailly because it wan't just a natural event, but worsened by poor English actions. However, some fortunately managed to escape America and start new lives here. Many of my Irish ancestors fled Ireland before or during the famine and have made great lives for themselves as farmers in America.

    • @anthonyarcanumsanctumregnu9551
      @anthonyarcanumsanctumregnu9551 Před 2 lety

      Must be a weak nation then!

    • @njfish89
      @njfish89 Před 2 lety +66

      This and other atrocities committed by the British government was never taught in school, at least in England it wasn't. I feel ashamed of what my countrymen did to your ancestors and I've nothing but admiration and respect for the people of Ireland. I've lived and worked with people from all over the place and I've never had anything short of good relationships with you guys even after all the awful shit in the past.

    • @antzmcgee
      @antzmcgee Před 2 lety +30

      @@Autisticwanderer may i add we still brought the British empire to it's knees... Tiocfaidh Ar La

    • @antzmcgee
      @antzmcgee Před 2 lety

      @@Autisticwanderer quality come back ya spunk rag

  • @black_hand78
    @black_hand78 Před rokem +176

    There was a Native American tribe that sent Ireland money during the famine to the equivalent of like $100k in todays money I think. And a when that tribe hit hard times a few years ago, the Irish government paid them back by sending money and medical assistance. The Irish and that tribe have a great relationship with each other because of it.

    • @haleyguthrie3113
      @haleyguthrie3113 Před rokem +37

      There is so much more between us. We are the Choctaw, and we are now Kindred Spirits until the next changing of worlds.
      That's how it is taught to us, to you its more like, my ancestors are your ancestors. Any Irish born is also considered Choctaw for how much Ireland has helped us over the years. How all of us can afford college, preserve our Native tongue. Ireland helped us during Covid. We continue to take in any Irish as our own.

    • @ruralliving3024
      @ruralliving3024 Před 10 měsíci +13

      @haleyguthrie3113 what you wrote was lovely! As an Irish person it makes me very proud of my country. 🇮🇪

    • @haleyguthrie3113
      @haleyguthrie3113 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @ruralliving3024 from us to yours. No difference. Our council sent that very little bit of money as a token of goodwill after the US forced us on the "trail of tears" in the middle of winter. You can look that up to understand more if you would like.
      But just after this trail, on unfamiliar land with no money or supplies, no livestock, no nothing....there was a family of Irish trappers who had immigrated to the US years before. He saved what few of us were left, his wife taught our leaders to read and write, his family helped feed us, taught us to build bigger homes. The story is still told us that his people, like our people were persecuted by invaders.
      When the famine hit Ireland, our council opened our borders for all Irish, a "safe place". Then sent what little money we could. Oh and potato seeds. LOL 😆
      Kindred Spirits we will always be. There is a monument in Ireland dedicated to it. Many of us go to visit.

    • @maggiemae7539
      @maggiemae7539 Před 10 měsíci

      I doubt the Choctaws were hurting for money a few years ago. Do you know how many casinos they own? Just in Oklahoma?

    • @haleyguthrie3113
      @haleyguthrie3113 Před 10 měsíci +17

      @maggiemae7539 of course now we are better. But right after the trail of tears...when we donated money to Ireland, we most certainly had no money. Besides...gambling became our only way to support ourselves after we weren't allowed to work the land or keep livestock for any kind of trade. No one ever likes to mention that bit of history....

  • @michaeloreilly2533
    @michaeloreilly2533 Před 10 měsíci +11

    My father was born in county Cavan in 1920. He distinctly recalled the start of WWII and how for the first time in history a foreign enemy had taken a war to the British soil. He described the feeling in Ireland as mixed - in one sense they knew if England fell, Ireland would be next. On the other hand he described a strong sentiment of satisfaction amongst many irish as “after 800 years of having the boot on someone else’s throat how does it feel when it’s on yours?”
    My father wasn’t a vindictive or overly political man (in fact the only thing he ever said about politics was “wherever you go be against the government”) he was just sharing his experience during yet another challenging time in Irish history.

  • @ZentaBon
    @ZentaBon Před 2 lety +403

    It must've been incredibly horrifying, imagine nearing your harvest only for every potato in your field to be hollow, infected...realizing you and your entire community may very well starve.

    • @zaubermaus8190
      @zaubermaus8190 Před 2 lety +3

      couldn't they just hunt some deers instead or something?

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Před 2 lety +38

      @@zaubermaus8190 No, most woodlands were off limits to peasants.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Před 2 lety +17

      @@zaubermaus8190 Not many survive via hunting alone, notice hunter gather's still existing have very low population densities, it was agriculture that allowed millions off ppl in a modest size land.

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Před 2 lety +7

      The biggest take away here IMO is *be diversified* even if just multiple types of tuber, likely sweet potatoes (much healthier anyway) for example, would not be so susceptible to same disease, multiple types of potato, etc.
      The best eating shippable banana's went extinct half a century ago, what we typically have today is not as good and also threatened bc bananas are *all clones* , near zero biodiversity. Naturally there are 'hundreds' (at least dozens) of other types consumed in the tropics but not so suitable to transport.

    • @ltmbcb26
      @ltmbcb26 Před 2 lety +21

      @@Mrbfgray Ireland was exporting food at the time. The Irish were only allowed to keep the potatoes

  • @ItsAVolcano
    @ItsAVolcano Před 2 lety +281

    Gotta love the British exporting record amounts of wheat out of Ireland while simultaneously arguing the Irish died purely from their own inherent laziness.😒

    • @theshadowman1398
      @theshadowman1398 Před 2 lety

      West is trying to do the same thing in Ukraine now while waiving their morally bankrupt finger at Russia

    • @mytech6779
      @mytech6779 Před rokem +35

      And then blaming the free market for the result of those government exports.

    • @sleepisthecousinofdeath7395
      @sleepisthecousinofdeath7395 Před rokem

      THESE PEOPLE DONT KNOW HISTORY THEY THINK IRISH WERE JUST DUMB THIS WAS GENOCIDE

    • @nerysghemor5781
      @nerysghemor5781 Před rokem +21

      Just like Stalin did to Ukraine in the Holodomor.

    • @LordMalice6d9
      @LordMalice6d9 Před rokem +13

      @@nerysghemor5781 So are you suggesting that the Irish famine was a politically manufactured ethnic cleansing similar to the Holodomor in Ukraine?

  • @derrickliga7995
    @derrickliga7995 Před 2 lety +322

    My great great great grandparents came over due to the famine. My GGG Grandma and her brother were put on a coffin ship by her parents. Her mom and dad had to stay behind in Ireland and starved to death but their kids were able to survive in the US and carry on the family line

    • @applesauce_0743
      @applesauce_0743 Před 2 lety +4

      that is insane!

    • @cornstar1253
      @cornstar1253 Před rokem

      Why didn't they eat animals? If you have grass and a steady supply of manure, you have meat.

    • @ftffighter
      @ftffighter Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@cornstar1253 They probably did

    • @katherinegarlock2249
      @katherinegarlock2249 Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@cornstar1253Livestock is expensive, even more so back then. Also, you need land to raise livestock, which they had been evicted from, as stated in the video.

    • @davidcollins2993
      @davidcollins2993 Před 10 měsíci

      God wish we had people like that today.

  • @niamhmcallister2313
    @niamhmcallister2313 Před rokem +10

    In Ireland when we're taught about this it's unequivocally described as a genocide, I always find it so interesting other countries don't. The intentional shipping of all sorts of food from the island to systematically weaken the country, the blight killed the potato but the British created the famine

    • @donovanbradford8231
      @donovanbradford8231 Před 10 měsíci

      As adult and talking with my relatives about my ancestry this part of Irish history does hit hard as both of the main branches at least on my moms side can be traced to this time. However while one ancestor does very much remember the famine as he watched people leaving the Irish shores while sitting on his father's shoulders. The other major one was forced to leave during the protestant migration into Ireland as he was burned out of his home and force to flee to America. Nearest I can figure as to maybe why some don't call the famine a genocide is the death in some regards was an unintended consequences of the loss of potatoes. Vs the force migration of Irish familes from their homes because of how they chose to identify. Not saying either interpretation is wrong but from my own experience it seems to boil down how you view the event as a whole.

    • @QueenofTNT
      @QueenofTNT Před 4 měsíci +1

      I can’t say much as an American (we mostly learned about the effects the exodus had on American culture and populations in school) but the more I learn about the British rule of Ireland, the more I’d consider the Great Hunger a form of genocide, mostly because the decades before seemingly follow the steps of genocide, although with the killings done by cruel negligence (although there probably were some sort of purposeful killings done by British forces during that time, because...yknow, the British did that a lot to people they didn’t like even if the reason was a stupid one) especially in the way the Hunger ultimately ended up devastating the population and the oppression lived under British rule - it almost reminds me of the forced colonization & genocide of the Native American populations here in the US.

  • @surpriseandterror9698
    @surpriseandterror9698 Před 2 lety +333

    Something wild to note: Ireland's population still hasn't recovered from the Irish potato famine and the exodus that resulted.

    • @essentialamerican2235
      @essentialamerican2235 Před 2 lety +5

      True

    • @aaronring4704
      @aaronring4704 Před 2 lety +9

      I thought it recently had. Like, just in the last couple of years.

    • @abitdazed
      @abitdazed Před 2 lety +12

      Sure, I'd say FF/FG have sent nearly as many abroad, myself including myself!

    • @surpriseandterror9698
      @surpriseandterror9698 Před 2 lety +20

      @@aaronring4704 From what wiki has to say, it reached 8 million before the famine, and they just crossed 5 million recently.

    • @panda-peanut
      @panda-peanut Před 2 lety +14

      If you add in the almost 2 million people in Northern Ireland, the total population of the entire island is just shy of 7 million. And I think they should be included in the total as until 1921 and the Government of Ireland Act, which separated Ireland and Northern Ireland, the island of was one cohesive population.

  • @falcokunzy
    @falcokunzy Před rokem +250

    Simon: “Experts believe the soup kitchens disprove British committed genocide.”
    Also Simon: “The British deliberately stopped the soup kitchens.”
    It’s genocide.

    • @serenkeating7672
      @serenkeating7672 Před 11 měsíci

      In fact, the soup kitchens themselves were a form of genocide. The vast, vast majority of those suffering in the famine were Catholic, and the soup kitchens required any who availed of them to convert to Protestantism, which is actually a form of cultural genocide as defined by the UN.

    • @tobyjohnson1239
      @tobyjohnson1239 Před 11 měsíci +4

      just isn't tho, pal

    • @richardnolan3903
      @richardnolan3903 Před 11 měsíci

      If it was genocide, the British would not have paid for 800,000 Irish people to emigrate to America and 300,000 to Great Britain.

    • @user-fn2mx6dd5k
      @user-fn2mx6dd5k Před 11 měsíci

      English were so despicable might as well be

    • @user-fn2mx6dd5k
      @user-fn2mx6dd5k Před 11 měsíci +26

      ​@@tobyjohnson1239whatever you say brit

  • @bushmanPMRR
    @bushmanPMRR Před 2 lety +166

    I'm an Englishman who married an Irish lady and when she first told me about the famine I was stunned and shocked. We were never taught anything about this at school and for me, famine was something that happened in Africa or Asia, not on our own doorstep.
    There's a great song by The Dubliners called The Fields Of Athenry which uses the famine as its subject matter and is well worth a listen to.
    A few years ago we were very fortunate to be able to move from London to a beautiful spot in Kilkenny, Ireland and I doubt I'd ever move back to England as I love it here so much.
    Funny thing is, with my accent the only anti British /English comment I've ever had was from a German!

    • @ApocTank66
      @ApocTank66 Před 2 lety +22

      England not teach about the failings of the British Empire!? You don't say!?

    • @bushmanPMRR
      @bushmanPMRR Před 2 lety +5

      @@ApocTank66 nor the successes either

    • @gloin10
      @gloin10 Před 2 lety +9

      @@bushmanPMRR
      What "...successes..." would those be?
      Concentration camps?
      Two Bengal famines?

    • @Kalandra86
      @Kalandra86 Před 2 lety +3

      One of my favourite songs! It’s eerily beautiful.

    • @Ricky_Baldy
      @Ricky_Baldy Před 2 lety +16

      I think most Irish people are happy to let bygone be bygones, so long as the legacies left are wholly acknowledged. They doesn't mean that ordinary English people need to apologise or otherwise make amends on a daily basis but a frank acceptance of what happened. The truth is that many ordinary working English people were brutalised by their own government and that's a point that isn't lost on most Irish people. As you said, you weren't told about any of this in school and I'd wager that was a deliberate oversight in order to preserve a carefully curated version of the legacy of the British empire.

  • @seanh857
    @seanh857 Před 2 lety +672

    I've been waiting for this one. Wanted to see how an Englishman would tell the story. You did quite well to be fair, couple of little things glossed over like having to revoke your religion and become protestant to have the soup in some of the soup kitchens. Many god fearing people would choose death before doing something so blasphemous. I'd be interested to hear how much of this information, if any, is taught in schools in the UK.

    • @yaboi925
      @yaboi925 Před 2 lety +74

      i think something incredibly disgusting he did was continually try to make the irish look dumber than they were, like saying we lived in mudhuts and that the starvation dysentery was the irish eating blight potatoes, when it was actually improperly prepared corn, as the english didnt show us to actually make the corn edible

    • @maryhildreth754
      @maryhildreth754 Před 2 lety +63

      Simon didn't write it. He has writers who send him the script and he reads and records it. He also has editors who get it ready to post. As he has writers from many countries, the script could be from anywhere.

    • @yaboi925
      @yaboi925 Před 2 lety +52

      @@maryhildreth754 literally no excuse, what he reads is on him, you wouldnt say biden or trump or exempt from judgement because all of their public addresses go through team. stop making excuses were there doesn't need to be any

    • @bushmanPMRR
      @bushmanPMRR Před 2 lety +91

      I'm an Englishman who married an Irish woman and when she first told me about the famine I couldn't believe it. We were never taught about it at school, it was the sort of thing that happened in Africa or Asia but not on our own doorstep!
      Thankfully we were very fortunate to have moved from London to Kilkenny a couple of years ago and I love it here and cannot ever see myself moving back to London or even England, and no, I'm not a hand-wringing apologist, just pragmatic and logical.

    • @aste4949
      @aste4949 Před 2 lety +124

      @@yaboi925 How does that read as calling them dumb? He described how they were actively and deliberately kept locked up in biting poverty with only the most barebones of options. And then how even meager soup and literally their own clothes on their backs were taken away. He was very clear so much was deliberately caused and maintained first and foremost by the bigoted English-dominated upper rungs of society and government.
      A lot of detail about what the starving people tried to eat to survive was left out, I agree, but the details included are still clear evidence of last-resort desperation, not stupidity.

  • @gingerandbroke1402
    @gingerandbroke1402 Před 2 lety +474

    To get soup in some of the soup kitchens you'd have to give up your Irish name for an Anglican one. And those road work projects are known as Famine Roads where many were worked to death and thrown into the ditch.

    • @surpriseandterror9698
      @surpriseandterror9698 Před 2 lety +57

      I dunno, kinda sounds like genocide to me. Weird distinction this dude makes without an effective difference.

    • @ShaneBermingham616
      @ShaneBermingham616 Před 2 lety

      Lots of whitewashing in this video

    • @NymbusCumulo928
      @NymbusCumulo928 Před 2 lety

      @@surpriseandterror9698 genocide is maliciously intentional, most of these atrocities came simply out of ignorance and sudden necessity . . .
      don't get me wrong, what the English did was an unforgivable mass violation of human rights . . . however, they weren't gassing people for being irish
      not a genocide

    • @surpriseandterror9698
      @surpriseandterror9698 Před 2 lety

      @@NymbusCumulo928 The English hated the Irish, wanted to remove their culture, saw them as subhuman workers at best and a pest at worse. They were *very* clear about this, and their half-hearted attempts at alleviating suffering that were mixed with Means Testing of all things are pretty clear examples. Even when they were starving to death or dying of disease the English saw them as moochers and parasites.
      If the Irish Famine wasn't an active act of genocide, then neither was the Holodomor, or the Bengal Famine of 1943 (the latter also commited by Great Britain). You don't need a gun or a gas chamber to commit genocide, all you need is to control the food supply. It's demographically-biased mass murder which, I'm sure we can find a shorter name for.

    • @garylake1676
      @garylake1676 Před 2 lety +22

      Sadly, this is occurring in Eastern Ukraine as we speak, the 'ability' of humans to wish to eradicate a different thought process, is as old as the dawn of civilisation itself, we all have evil within us, yet we claim to be 'civilised', even worse, America claims to be the leaders of the 'Free World', yet their Foreign Policy is often anything but 'civilised'.
      China is doing exactly this to the Uighurs right now, and has being doing so for many years.
      When will we humans actually learn?

  • @Hannah-hx5sp
    @Hannah-hx5sp Před 2 lety +165

    I live in Ulster / Northern Ireland. The very back end of my local (former) hospital site has a mass grave from this era, it was a workhouse. Mass grave for all the nameless, poor workers. Extremely sad and it has such a dark and tragic aura about it (i dont like being there at night, it is 100% haunted). At the very least, out of respect, the NHS has not built over it. Just a big memorial stone on a very large patch of grass.

    • @wowplayer160
      @wowplayer160 Před rokem +5

      Spoiler, it's not haunted.

    • @billabong9215
      @billabong9215 Před rokem +2

      Might as well build over it. 100 years later. The families of those very people were fighting to stay with the British empire, the empire who tried to starve their ancestors out of existence.

    • @Bdoc76
      @Bdoc76 Před rokem

      The town had a population of over 60k, Lowtherstown ( Irvinestown ) over 20,000, if we are talking about the same place there's a much more positive future being crafted on that site now.

    • @tim3172
      @tim3172 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@billabong9215 It's almost like times and politics shift over time and you should eventually let the past go, or something...

    • @icemanire5467
      @icemanire5467 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@billabong9215Descendants of Scots and English you mean. The native Irish Catholics tend to lean Republican.

  • @briantimmons4615
    @briantimmons4615 Před 2 lety +25

    It was so preventable, which is probably the saddest thing.

  • @Patricia-zq5ug
    @Patricia-zq5ug Před 2 lety +112

    My great-great-grandmother came to Canada through Ellis Island in the 1840s with 9 children. None of them ever became rich, but they made lives for themselves and in 1852 my great-grandfather married and soon owned land and raised his own large family. Thank goodness they were able to emigrate!

    • @pompeymonkey3271
      @pompeymonkey3271 Před 2 lety

      And now so many of the richest nations are against immigration.
      It is so sad that one group of people have the power to arbitrarily deny the same opportunities and freedoms to others that they value so highly themselves. :(

    • @joprocter4573
      @joprocter4573 Před rokem

      Now they couldn't do that even now WITHOUT FUNDS N FOOD

    • @donovanbradford8231
      @donovanbradford8231 Před 10 měsíci

      Part of my ancestral line is similar as they landed in New Finland and over the years and decades worked their way across Canada and into the U.S. where they ultimately settled in California.

  • @Mikkelltheimmortal
    @Mikkelltheimmortal Před 2 lety +59

    Having suffered from starvation I find it hard to watch this without getting emotional when you talk about how the government let them down so badly

    • @codymoe4986
      @codymoe4986 Před rokem

      Use your words...starvation means you died from lack of food
      Starving means you are dying from lack of food...
      Hopefully you are now eating a bit more...

    • @Mikkelltheimmortal
      @Mikkelltheimmortal Před rokem +20

      @@codymoe4986 I looked it up, starvation is defined as suffering from malnutrition that can lead to permanent organ damage or death. While by definition I used the word correctly, I could have used a better word like malnutrition.
      It's a good reminder that the English language is far more complicated than it appears on the surface

    • @riichobamin7612
      @riichobamin7612 Před rokem +6

      I hope you are doing well now Steve. Take care bro 🍻

    • @riichobamin7612
      @riichobamin7612 Před rokem +13

      ​@@codymoe4986when a person is recounting a hard time in their life, that is hardly the time to be so pedantic.

    • @tim3172
      @tim3172 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@codymoe4986 Step #1 of correcting someone is making sure they're wrong.
      Step #2 is making sure you're right.

  • @beths1140
    @beths1140 Před rokem +11

    My grandmother's grandmother was from Ireland. My grandma always said that she was a hard woman. I asked her, "Didn't half of her children die in the potato famine? That would make me a hard woman, too." She lost 4 out of 8 children before coming to the US.

  • @hanglee5586
    @hanglee5586 Před 2 lety +70

    This video could easily be on the Into The Shadows series.

  • @joanhuffman2166
    @joanhuffman2166 Před 2 lety +147

    Simon says Ireland grew corn to sell to England. Corn defined as a general term for cereal grains, is what they grew.
    Video shows sweet corn 🌽, which was not grown in Ireland at that time.

    • @HellsCowBoy666
      @HellsCowBoy666 Před 2 lety +16

      Also they didn’t “sell” it. They were tenant farmers that were paid farm for the English. The only profit they saw was from their labor not the actual value of what they grew.

    • @skaldlouiscyphre2453
      @skaldlouiscyphre2453 Před 2 lety

      @@tripplefives1402
      " the others being dent corn, flint corn, pod corn, popcorn, and flour corn"
      Adding that to help support what you're saying, although it should be noted that sweet corn is one of the six categories of maize.

    • @aaronring4704
      @aaronring4704 Před 2 lety +1

      Nearly as egregious a tragedy as the maize itself...

    • @mirzaahmed6589
      @mirzaahmed6589 Před 2 lety +3

      Also, the photo they had was not of maize / "Indian corn".

    • @industrialathlete6096
      @industrialathlete6096 Před 2 lety +7

      Corn is used to refer to crops such as wheat and barley. It can also be used to refer to the seeds from these plants.
      [British]

  • @KojiGaming
    @KojiGaming Před 2 lety +65

    My father's family left Ireland during this time and fled to Spain. From there they made their way to America, eventually settling in Cajun country in Southern Louisiana.
    Crazy to think I'd be in Ireland if not for this event. Or more likely not born at all.

  • @ShaneBermingham616
    @ShaneBermingham616 Před 2 lety +316

    The Famine Plot: England's Role in Ireland's Greatest Tragedy

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 2 lety

      Tim Pat Coogan is a charlatan and that book was complete and utter shite. It got torn to shreds by just about every prominent Irish historian. Something which Coogan isn't.

    • @nhd6128
      @nhd6128 Před 2 lety +49

      Can't imagine why Ireland wanted independence..

    • @finneire1282
      @finneire1282 Před 2 lety +5

      Tim Pat Coogan, right?

    • @robbie6852
      @robbie6852 Před 2 lety

      Bastards

    • @AcornElectron
      @AcornElectron Před 2 lety +4

      Easy now, it’s a fact channel. No politics please. Makes it degenerate into a slagging (slanging) match where everyone is right.

  • @larrymullins3853
    @larrymullins3853 Před 2 lety +63

    Thank you for covering this . I live in Australia, but when I was home last I visited 2 famine grave yards with a friend. These were only a few miles outside our town in the county . There was a notice on the ruined walls of an old stone church. It said for every one headstone you see here there are probably 50 other un marked graves ... it was a very large derelict grave yard only a few minutes walk off the current main road...

    • @dama3979
      @dama3979 Před 2 lety

      Stop calling it a famine, it was a genocide it was the culmination of 700 years of oppression

  • @anikatrix
    @anikatrix Před 2 lety +71

    Just a note some of those soup kitchens required catholics to convert and anglicised their names many converted back afterwards but it still did alot of damage look up the term t'aking the soup'

    • @jomidiam
      @jomidiam Před rokem +4

      A woman I knew from County Galway called it "taking the porridge".

    • @malsmith1618
      @malsmith1618 Před rokem +3

      Also if you took the soup they dropped the o from your name
      Example o Sullivan/Sullivan

  • @josephbuckley5638
    @josephbuckley5638 Před 2 lety +70

    there was a condition on the soup kitchens: to get soup you must be Protestant - to represent this you would remove the "O" from your surname (which is why O'Mahony and Mahony are both surnames)
    To "take the soup" is still an insult in Ireland

    • @jrmckim
      @jrmckim Před 2 lety +9

      One of my friends family name was changed from O'gannon to Gannon because of this. Then when the soup kitchens disappeared they had to keep the name. They emigrated to America in 1850.

    • @arkadikharovscabinetofcuri3465
      @arkadikharovscabinetofcuri3465 Před 2 lety

      Much as to why there is still a divided Ireland, and probably always will be

    • @ArchangelAva
      @ArchangelAva Před 2 lety +4

      Most Irish names don’t have an ‘O’ before they. We’re hardly all covert Protestants!

    • @maepoole1977
      @maepoole1977 Před 2 lety

      not all of the soup kitchens

    • @josephbuckley5638
      @josephbuckley5638 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ArchangelAva That's because you've only ever seen the English translation of most Irish names, some kept the 'O' in the translation, others haven't - in Irish the 'O' means "son of" (a daughter would have 'Ní' and a wife would have "Uí")
      take my surname "Buckley" for example; In Irish it's O'Buachalla to mean "son of the cowboys" - my sister would be Ní Bhuachalla and my mam would be Uí Bhuachalla - therefore converting to Protestantism and removing the 'O' would be renouncing your family line
      (the "h" in Ní Bhuachalla is a gramatical rule called the séimhiú that is really complicated and I won't go into)

  • @Sing_A_Rebel_Song
    @Sing_A_Rebel_Song Před 10 měsíci +2

    As an Irish person, I’m glad you covered this topic. Almost all my ancestors on my dad’s side were Irish immigrants who left Ireland during the famine. We don’t even know what part of Ireland they were from. The famine caused them to lose everything and miraculously, a few made it to Ellis Island, and later Wisconsin, alive. We’ve been trying to research our family for the past three generations but we still don’t know anything. Our last name got changed to an American version when they came here and because of all the native Irish variations, we don’t even know what it originally was. My ancestors lost their homes, their friends, their family and even their lives in hopes that they could have a better life in America, and they didn’t even get that

    • @SugarandSarcasm
      @SugarandSarcasm Před 9 měsíci +1

      We have some ancestry unknowns as well. It can be difficult

    • @susanmolnar9606
      @susanmolnar9606 Před 9 měsíci

      I understand exactly what you’re saying. My family emigrated quickly from Germany when “he” became chancellor but not all who were regular Germans left. They were not Jews and were never heard from again.

  • @scribbly2983
    @scribbly2983 Před 2 lety +44

    My grandad was from Connemara and you can still see the effects of the famine out there. Famine walls everywhere and the area is still emptier now than it was pre famine.

    • @namae6637
      @namae6637 Před 2 lety +4

      A third of the population here in Connemara died or emigrated and the cholera epidemic hit right after. We didn’t stop dying off until around the end of the Victorian era.

    • @joesmalley397
      @joesmalley397 Před 2 lety +3

      What's a famine wall?

    • @michaelhogan9053
      @michaelhogan9053 Před 2 lety +4

      @@joesmalley397 Connemara is next to the Atlantic Ocean. The peasants kicked off their land went as far West as possible. They literally stacked walls in little squares and filled the inside with sand and seaweed to try and grow food. These plots are often shown in Irish Calendars, people don't know their bleak origins. Now they are full of grass.

    • @joesmalley397
      @joesmalley397 Před 2 lety +2

      @@michaelhogan9053 I’m so fascinated yet saddened to hear this (especially as an English guy), this isn’t something I’ve ever heard of despite being very interested in history and appreciate the comment man. Best Wishes.

  • @matthewhiggins1984
    @matthewhiggins1984 Před rokem +7

    This explained so many of the facets of this complex period of history. This controversy over “famine or human-influenced disaster” you mention at the end is why so many call it The Great Hunger. The phrase encompasses so much more than famine does.

  • @sallyintucson
    @sallyintucson Před 2 lety +86

    It wasn’t just corn that was exported from Ireland during the famine. There were all sorts of vegetables that were grown there and they were all exported by money hungry English businesses.

    • @1lightheaded
      @1lightheaded Před rokem

      Two hundred shades of green my mam told me . That island is so lush there is no way you could have a famine. I spent three weeks there in 94 . As soon as I got off the boat at Dun Laoghaire it struck me . I was born in Yorkshire but have lived in Canada since 69 and I was treated with respect the whole time . It's a Magic island .

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Před rokem +1

      Do when most of the food is taken away from you

  • @AmyC531
    @AmyC531 Před rokem +2

    Despite growing up in an area with a large population of people (including myself) descended from Irish emigrants who fled the potato famine, it wasn't until I was an adult that I truly understood that the whole thing wasn't 'famine' so much as genocide.

  • @--enyo--
    @--enyo-- Před 2 lety +83

    It’s pretty staggering that even today the population hasn’t recovered to pre-famine levels as per the video.

    • @JimTheFly
      @JimTheFly Před 2 lety +14

      I went onto Wikipedia to see just how bad it was. Not only did the famine decimate the population, but it still continued to drop for the next 100 years. As late as 1960, the population was still only a bit over 4 million. Even with a large influx of immigrants, many from Poland or other Eastern European countries, the country's population is still only around 6.5 million as of 2016, or still 20% below what pre-famine Ireland was.

    • @danielwebb8402
      @danielwebb8402 Před 2 lety +7

      Especially as half of the states thinks they are proud Irishman. But no one has wanted to move back.

    • @tomhenry897
      @tomhenry897 Před rokem +2

      Russia hasn’t recovered from ww1 ww2 and communism

    • @tim3172
      @tim3172 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@tomhenry897 *Surely* you're including the horrible, devastating effects of Putin, right?
      ... right?

    • @TheJthom9
      @TheJthom9 Před 6 měsíci

      That is because there was still continual net emigration occurring all the way into the 1960s. Ireland has been a place of emigration for many centuries. 10 million Irish in total have emigrated in its history, a figure higher than the current population of the island of Ireland

  • @likebot.
    @likebot. Před 2 lety +20

    My ancestors survived the famine, barely, and as soon as were able to afford passage to N.A. they took whatever ship was crossing the atlantic and ended up in Canada only to sharecrop for another British landlord here.

    • @SuperGarysWorld
      @SuperGarysWorld Před 2 lety +7

      Now that is heart breaking. Imagine leaving your home, broken and bent by the British gentry, people dieing on the streets while the lord's in their mansions threw parties. The only solace that your going somewhere you can make a fresh start away from all that awful just to end up in pretty much the same situation =[

    • @MarloSoBalJr
      @MarloSoBalJr Před 2 lety +8

      'No matter where you go, you can never escape the British quo'

  • @caerdwyn7467
    @caerdwyn7467 Před rokem +5

    The more I learn about English aristocracy and the British Empire...

  • @JK-zx3go
    @JK-zx3go Před 2 lety +24

    The British establishment at its most horrific.
    "Having a monarchy next door is a little like having a neighbour who’s really into clowns and has daubed their house with clown murals, displays clown dolls in each window and has an insatiable desire to hear about and discuss clown-related news stories. More specifically, for the Irish, it’s like having a neighbour who’s really into clowns and, also, your grandfather was murdered by a clown." Freyne

  • @4KChillVibes.
    @4KChillVibes. Před 2 lety +72

    So many of the atrocaties that occurred during that period didnt make the vlog but overall a decent telling of some of what transpirred . To this day there are entire old towns marked on maps that no longer exsist, a couple of stacks of heaped rocks in the corner of a field are the remains of houses where small villages used to be. the 1840's when more food was exported from a nation than the previous 100 or following 100 years, boats packed with prisoners taken from work houses for the supposed non compliance of work house rules and deposited in every corner of the world, and to this day the population hasn't even reached 75% of pre famine levels. currently there are 138million people globally you can claim irish ancestry and through all our strife we continuely give more to the needy and hungry than any country on the planet.

    • @iriswaterford8881
      @iriswaterford8881 Před 2 lety +3

      I have Irish blood. Both were convicts after doing their 7 years they married & had 9 children.

    • @RowanWarren78
      @RowanWarren78 Před 2 lety +5

      I'm Scot-Irish, and my Irish ancestors would come to America and become cotton and tobacco farmers. Many others weren't fortunate enough to be able to emigrate.

    • @rezarfar
      @rezarfar Před 2 lety +3

      Not like he can sit there and give you some 12 hour sob story about Irelands greatest disaster. All these videos are this length, as sad as this was, much worse things have happened, he isn't going to sit there and talk about those things for hours either.
      Stop sniffing your own farts.

    • @rezarfar
      @rezarfar Před 2 lety +1

      @@RowanWarren78 and how many of them kept slaves... lol

    • @RowanWarren78
      @RowanWarren78 Před 2 lety +11

      @@rezarfar None, not because we were kinder or more compassionate, as I'm sure my ancestors were products of their time like everyone else. We simply weren't here until the late 19th century. The other half that came in the 18th century didn't own slaves either. They had small family farms and very little money (but lots of kids😆). Most of the people who owned slaves were people with some wealth, and lots of land. We've been able to access land records to find out exactly where we settled and what our holdings were. Through these records you can find out whether your ancestors had servants or slaves as they were accounted for. Oh dear, did you think everyone owned slaves?😳

  • @alexa.d.d1006
    @alexa.d.d1006 Před 2 lety +17

    My cottage is surrounded by an abandoned famine village of small cottages sometimes I remind myself either the people escaped or they are under those cottages

  • @MolassesLover
    @MolassesLover Před 2 lety +16

    9:01 “What happened next would be all too inevitable…”
    *SQUARESPACE*

  • @TinksiehTink
    @TinksiehTink Před 2 lety +56

    Simon just refused to say "so I hope you enjoyed today's video" 💕

    • @resileaf9501
      @resileaf9501 Před 2 lety +14

      He usually doesn't say it on the darkest videos.

    • @norbitcleaverhook5040
      @norbitcleaverhook5040 Před 2 lety +3

      Could you imagine? He's British

    • @nerysghemor5781
      @nerysghemor5781 Před rokem +3

      He generally doesn't say anything like that in videos like this.

    • @Balrog-tf3bg
      @Balrog-tf3bg Před rokem +7

      @@nerysghemor5781 it always kinda unnerves me when people say “I hope you enjoyed the video, please like subscribe and ring the bell for more!” Or “I hope you found this video entertaining!” after just talking about the most horrible and sad stuff out there. That’s one thing I like about Simon (and his writers) is he’s actually pretty sensitive, and in case of his true crime shows really doesn’t try and glorify the perpetrators

  • @lekiscool
    @lekiscool Před 2 lety +89

    Thank you for telling it the way that you did. My family is from south of Dublin. I’m not sure how they survived.
    They are/were Catholic.

  • @carmelmulroy6459
    @carmelmulroy6459 Před 2 lety +12

    You forgot to mention the Choctaw and the quakers. But you did well within the time restraints.

  • @WaddedBliss
    @WaddedBliss Před 2 lety +8

    If it was just the potatoes that were affected, at the end of the day, you will pay the price if you're a fussy eater.
    Alan Partridge.

  • @jimmccusker271
    @jimmccusker271 Před 2 lety +6

    My Irish Father could have written this - it's exactly how he described it to me when I was younger… Simon is awesome and really knows how to tell a story with the perfect delivery. Kudos to the entire team

  • @Manuel-gu9ls
    @Manuel-gu9ls Před 2 lety +19

    I've been waiting for this kind of video for years now the topic of the video has finally shown... Thank you Simon and to all who made it possible...

  • @DTSephiroth
    @DTSephiroth Před 2 lety +10

    11:17 had to be one of the funniest things I've ever heard from Simon.

  • @J0NNYLURVECABBAGE
    @J0NNYLURVECABBAGE Před 2 lety +7

    As a person who was born and educated on the english side of the Irish Sea, it's always amazed me the severe lack of education I received about Irish history, especially the potato famines. Well written videos like this should be compulsory in uk secondary schools, the only time that I personally found out about any Irish history was when I moved to the south of Ireland.

  • @kevinrwhooley9439
    @kevinrwhooley9439 Před 2 lety +17

    Almost perfect that they released this on Bloomsday.

  • @saulthechicanootaku
    @saulthechicanootaku Před 2 lety +71

    It's quite crazy how despite how beloved and significant the potato is to the Irish, the potato is originally from Peru. Regardless, I imagine how Irish people nowadays hold potatoes near and dear to their hearts because of the famine that their ancestors had to go through while Peruvians feel proud that something from their country is so widely beloved by a group of people

    • @LynkJDL1
      @LynkJDL1 Před 2 lety +27

      It was a steady and durable crop that could grow in varied terrain. The British barred the Irish from farming or owning land so it became overly relied on by poor tennants.

    • @All_Hail_Chael
      @All_Hail_Chael Před 2 lety +1

      Hilariously, they wouldn't even have the potato to eat if it wasn't for England.

    • @psuedopotato
      @psuedopotato Před 2 lety +4

      They (Irish) actually produces other crops. But they export most of it to the Brits except potatoes since the Brits didn't want it.

    • @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158
      @azazelreficulmefistofelicu7158 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tripplefives1402 Have you ever grow potatoes?
      "You dont even have to replant them because the tubers can resprout in the spring"
      If you don't "replant" the tubers (potatoes), does that means that you leave them underground instead of harvesting them? What's the point of growing potatoes if you don't harvest them? And how do you fertilize the land without ruining them?
      I'm not throwing hate here, it may well be that in different countries there are different processes to grow potatoes and yours could be more efficient. Just curious as the method I know and have used has been a constant for centuries.

    • @yaboi925
      @yaboi925 Před 2 lety +12

      @@All_Hail_Chael they also wouldnt have had a giant famine, the likes of which the nation still hasnt recovered in terms of population, and had their whole culture lost and or stolen, haha so hilarious.

  • @kathyastrom1315
    @kathyastrom1315 Před 2 lety +11

    My mom’s side of my family came over to the States after 1850 from all over Ireland. AFAIK, they had no stories about the famine that they wanted to pass down to their descendants, so I have to guess at what their lives were like over there.

  • @jennieobrien3141
    @jennieobrien3141 Před rokem +2

    My ancestors left Ireland during the potato famine. I'm so thankful they survived this tragedy.

  • @tonysolino3131
    @tonysolino3131 Před 2 lety +9

    Sometime when your family has a personal connection to the story these videos are hard to get through. I always appreciate Simon telling the stories straight and without bias. Ver well done.

  • @darraghkane18
    @darraghkane18 Před 2 lety +12

    Great video. It’s worth mentioning that foreign aid could not exceed that given by queen Victoria. Charity and the great hunger in Ireland is well worth a read.
    Sadly most irish people know very little of it, particularly the amount of food that was being exported. We brushed it under the rug and never dealt with the effect it had on us, particularly the phycological effect it had.
    This was wonderful. Keep the great videos coming.

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Před 2 lety

      Do Irish people know what caused the famine, or will they continue to blame the British people and the fungus or will they understand that it was British politicians and the restrictive laws they made which are very anti capitalist and restricted trade so much the people could not innovate or work their way out of the famine. America had several crop plagues in its history and even during the Great Depression, starvation was hardly an issue. Not to mention the Great Depression was caused by government doing dumb things but the desire to work and innovate is what kept mass starvation from happening.

    • @redelfshotthefood8213
      @redelfshotthefood8213 Před rokem

      In Canada 🇨🇦 we have a national holiday to Queen Victoria: Victoria Day. I wonder how many more years before we repurpose the day...

    • @seanmccann8368
      @seanmccann8368 Před 2 měsíci

      @@funveeable It wasn't the Chinese people.

  • @natfoote4967
    @natfoote4967 Před 2 lety +43

    The 1729 satirical essay "A Modest Proposal" by Johnathan Swift gives some perspective into the callous and inhumane attitude of many English towards the Irish.

    • @nlwilson4892
      @nlwilson4892 Před 2 lety +6

      To be honest, the English ruling classes had nothing but contempt towards the English lower classes.

    • @johnmckiernan2176
      @johnmckiernan2176 Před 2 lety +16

      @@nlwilson4892 The difference being they didn't let about a quarter of the English lower classes starve to death in about six years. That's actually a significant difference.

    • @nlwilson4892
      @nlwilson4892 Před 2 lety +5

      @@johnmckiernan2176 In my town about a quarter of the poorer areas were wiped out each year with cholera, typhoid etc. for much of the 1800's. The fundamental problem in Ireland was the blight coupled with the over-reliance on one single crop. The English handled it badly, not disputing that at all but the reluctance to help was very similar to the reluctance to help the poor in England, there was some added reluctance with it being not on their doorstep, Irish and Catholic, but there was a general attitude that the poor of any society were not "proper people" they were looked down on as a subclass that served a purpose of providing labour but weren't seen as having right to life or decent living conditions.

    • @PeterCarroll83
      @PeterCarroll83 Před 2 lety +9

      @@nlwilson4892 you say the “fundamental” issue was an over-reliance on one crop and I would encourage you to ask why there was a reliance on one crop. Then we may get closer to fundamental issues. I understand if you’re British that you may be reviled by your colonial past and may want to deflect the egregious behaviour deploying a “not all” argument but it would behoove you not to infer the Irish had chosen to rely on one crop.

    • @nlwilson4892
      @nlwilson4892 Před 2 lety +4

      @@PeterCarroll83 It explains in the video, the potato was very much suited to the ground and climate in most areas. It perhaps doesn't explicitly say that better farming land was used for other crops that were farmed commercially (ie. sold) and much of that was exported to England. It wasn't that the poor farmers had much choice. You can look back to further if you want to analyse into British colonisation with the British and sympathisers taking land into their ownership and pushing others from the land and right back to Cromwell with him persecuting Catholics and driving them west and south. But equally you could go back to Normal invasion of Britain and the Normans that became the aristocracy taking the land into their ownership and making the natives landless serfs, and also the Highland clearances, pushing Scottish crofters off the land and forcing them into Ulster.
      Or you could summarize and say that those with power have generally abused that power to abuse those with less power and used it to gain more power. It is a repeating pattern and unless we accept that and that divide and conquer is part of that strategy then it will keep happening.

  • @vlbz
    @vlbz Před 2 lety +202

    Learning about history really makes you hate people in general. Every now and then you hear about a historical figure who wasn't a complete a-hole, and they seam like real heroes in comparison.

    • @sicily7220
      @sicily7220 Před 2 lety +7

      Hmmm.. If there was no Famine, you would never be interested if it was called the great Potato crop Failure with little death. As for the Famine yes there were some folks that bad very poor decision causing millions deaths. You go back further in history was it part of the cause is the dependence of the Potato. The Potato prior 1500 did not exist in Ireland, so Famine was in the making long before those who made poor decisions were even born.

    • @TheAmericanAmerican
      @TheAmericanAmerican Před 2 lety +12

      Hate them, but also LEARN from them so as to not make their mistakes/decisions again.
      Our present is built on the shoulders of those in the past and so it's our responsibility to continue building a better future.

    • @scifino1
      @scifino1 Před 2 lety +7

      There's a reason, why Simon always says "The past was the worst."

    • @griffinmckenzie7203
      @griffinmckenzie7203 Před 2 lety

      @@sicily7220 And who exactly are you?

    • @NFSBeast2365
      @NFSBeast2365 Před 2 lety

      IKR???

  • @thedudegrowsfood284
    @thedudegrowsfood284 Před 2 lety +13

    The oldest ancestor I find was in London in 1688, sentenced to 5 year's indenture in the Virginia colony. If he had been sent to Barbados sugar-cane fields, I wouldn't be here.

    • @aWILDsomethingCAME
      @aWILDsomethingCAME Před 2 lety

      what was his crime

    • @thedudegrowsfood284
      @thedudegrowsfood284 Před 2 lety +7

      @@aWILDsomethingCAME being Irish and Catholic, i reckon.

    • @johnmckiernan2176
      @johnmckiernan2176 Před 2 lety +2

      @@aWILDsomethingCAME Often there was none. About 70,000 such indentured servants were sent to Barbados and other parts of the Caribbean in the 1650s. Their crime? Defeat in battle. Or having land the Cromwellian troops desired.

  • @rorrodeh
    @rorrodeh Před 2 lety +9

    A song that came to mind was Fields of Athenry, my favorite version being sung by The High Kinds. Beautiful yet crushing sad song

    • @jomidiam
      @jomidiam Před rokem

      My dad loved that song.

  • @aproxamillionwasps474
    @aproxamillionwasps474 Před rokem +4

    The famine is why I live in Canada and not Ireland right now. Those poor people, it breaks my heart to think about all the suffering.

  • @pointly
    @pointly Před 2 lety +13

    "Give me your tired, your poor,
    Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
    The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
    Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
    I lift my lamp beside the golden door!"

    • @heatherjones6647
      @heatherjones6647 Před 2 lety

      Unless they're Muslim, or brown, or black, or poor, or won't kiss Trump's ass.

    • @jamesp4132
      @jamesp4132 Před 2 lety +4

      Help the refugees on your border.

    • @johnmckiernan2176
      @johnmckiernan2176 Před 2 lety +2

      Aren't you the guys who do the children in cages thing?

    • @VaporeonEnjoyer1
      @VaporeonEnjoyer1 Před 2 lety

      @@johnmckiernan2176 Do you think it's just because border patrol really enjoys doing that or do you think there is a serious problem with child trafficking, either to be sold into sex slavery or used as leverage by coyotes to get across the border because they have a child they claim is theirs with them?

  • @jacquelynsmith2351
    @jacquelynsmith2351 Před 2 lety +7

    My great grandma didn't leave Westmeath for Pennsylvania via Canada until 1895, but I think my gg grandparents were traveling in England when she was born, so I'm wondering how the family was 50 years earlier. Bonus points to the author for making Simon use a Star Wars line.

  • @MrKFNeverGiveUp
    @MrKFNeverGiveUp Před 2 lety +70

    It was a genocide of the Irish people disguised as a potato famine!

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 2 lety

      If genocide had been the intention then there would have been nobody left. Wilful neglect was the privilege of the elite in those days.

    • @All_Hail_Chael
      @All_Hail_Chael Před 2 lety +1

      Is that why the UK (eventually) sent them food?
      Pretty shitty genocide, your hysterics do not help, this was bad enough with making it into something it wasn't. If the Brits/Normans wanted to genocide Ireland they had hundereds of years to do it.
      Yet here I am, having an Irish mother (properly Irish, not the yankee version of Irish)

    • @fightingfinn1503
      @fightingfinn1503 Před 2 lety

      Hes a englishman

    • @thedudegrowsfood284
      @thedudegrowsfood284 Před 2 lety +1

      Escape the Famine! Join the Army!

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 2 lety

      @@All_Hail_Chael You're wasting your time with Ireland's self pity junkies. This crap is taught in their schools despite it being debunked by top Irish historians.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 Před 2 lety +8

    1:30 - Chapter 1 - The eve of disaster
    4:55 - Chapter 2 - Coming from America
    9:05 - Mid roll ads
    10:40 - Chapter 3 - The man who starved Ireland
    15:10 - Chapter 4 - Social collapse
    19:15 - Chapter 5 - Escape valve

    • @Lungoose
      @Lungoose Před rokem

      Are you the chapter guy then

  • @easytiger9
    @easytiger9 Před 2 lety +11

    My family are from the Donegal coast. I think they may have coped better, as they were mostly fishermen.

    • @karenfolan56
      @karenfolan56 Před 2 lety +4

      Not a chance. Donegal is mountainous and poor soil. The famine killed many. Every town or village in the county has a famine graveyard and a soup pot

  • @stevenhaas9622
    @stevenhaas9622 Před rokem +3

    You forgot to mention the british government imposed a relief tax on irish land owners to pay for the mediocre relief that was provided and as a result many poor tenant farmers were evicted so that the landowner could avoid paying the relief tax imposed on them based on the number of tenants they had. No tenants= No relief tax to pay.

  • @starrywizdom
    @starrywizdom Před 2 lety +13

    Thank you from the bottom of my Irish heart.

  • @DaraghsTube
    @DaraghsTube Před rokem +1

    Thank you for covering this topic. You did a good job of retelling this time in an honest way.

  • @JamesDunn-sk2sj
    @JamesDunn-sk2sj Před rokem +2

    This is what brought my family to the US. My great great great was the son of a wealthy Irish land owner. After the second year of the famine when it was truly getting terrible he brought several of his Cottiers and their families to the USA and settled in North Carolina.

  • @andrewkelly1337
    @andrewkelly1337 Před 11 měsíci +3

    For saying that nobody serious calls it a genocide, the facts definitely make it sound like genocide

  • @alritebud
    @alritebud Před 2 lety +8

    Good video. One thing to add, in order to use the temporary soup kitchens, Irish people had to give up their faith and convert to Protestantism. To this day there is a saying for traitors in Ireland, 'taking the soup'. It wasn't the altruistic endeavour it seems, although it shows soup kitchens would have helped

  • @randyconnell1130
    @randyconnell1130 Před 2 lety +1

    Simon and crew... well done! Being of Irish descent (my GGreatgrandfather got out on a famine ship) and also a trained historian, this video takes a very complex topic and breaks it down in a way that most people can begin to understand. Of course, the full complexity can never be handled in less than 12-15 hours of video documentary. One thing I could wish you would have been able to touch on was how the Famine (and related mindsets) laid the ground work for The Troubles. In any event: very, very well done!

  • @TheMixCurator
    @TheMixCurator Před rokem +2

    As mentioned, it wasn't just the Irish that had famine issues (although they were hit incredibly hard). My Partner's family also had to leave Italy because of this - They walked from the Veneto/Venice region all the way to Genoa (nearly 400KM/250 Miles) before they got a boat to spend 8 weeks travelling to Brazil.

  • @Scoob505
    @Scoob505 Před 2 lety +8

    I grew up on a famine road in Limerick. My great great grandmother told my granny she saw a dead woman lying in a ditch holding her baby( I think the baby was dead too) on the road when she was going to school one day. There has been a lot of strange sitings around the area at night too, one which I saw. I dont believe in supernatural stuff though, lol.

  • @randomheroat420
    @randomheroat420 Před 2 lety +12

    Another wonderful well written piece.

  • @opossum111
    @opossum111 Před rokem +2

    As far as the "unsupported theory" of the famine being genocide, I'd suggest reading The Famine Plot by Tim Pat Coonan. It's pretty convincing.

  • @johntaylorson7769
    @johntaylorson7769 Před 2 lety +13

    "If you can afford to emigrate you can afford to eat in a modest restaurant".
    - A Partridge.

    • @All_Hail_Chael
      @All_Hail_Chael Před 2 lety +2

      Don't get me started about shops closing on Bloody Sunday!

  • @jrann2667
    @jrann2667 Před 2 lety +9

    Part of my family came to the US during the famine. I remember my grandmother calling them "lace curtain Irish", an American term for those who could afford passage. They settled in the Midwest as farmers, intermarried with the locals, and had good lives. Thank you for telling their story. It would be nice to have one from the American Irish farmer's perspective, please.

  • @oriain81
    @oriain81 Před 2 lety +6

    There was plenty of food in Ireland. Although potatoes were plentiful for the poor. We grew many many different types of crops. A substantial amount of cattle and livestock were on the land too. There was even a small fishing industry. It was all shipped to Brittan. The Irish were left to starve while trains and boats of food were shipped to the UK. Even some english landlords in Ireland were horrified and contacted British authorities but little was done and the poor of Ireland effectively starved or were forced to emigrate. Over half a century later the Irish had enough of poor British rule in Ireland and effectively pushed the British out by every means possible.

  • @darrylcarnell9976
    @darrylcarnell9976 Před 2 lety +1

    Thankyou for telling a story that should not be forgotten. This mattered to me for personal reasons, thankyou again.

  • @charlesachurch7265
    @charlesachurch7265 Před 2 lety

    Great documentary, thanks xxx

  • @ayanomar1408
    @ayanomar1408 Před 2 lety +7

    probablye the most scary aspect is that majority of those affected didnt even have enough to LEAVE!
    I witnessed countries fall into civil war and my first instinct is to leave specially having small children. but the fact that there is no chance to even leave broke my heart.

    • @MarloSoBalJr
      @MarloSoBalJr Před 2 lety +1

      Being on a big ass island surrounded by an ocean; next to the very entity sought to kill you off -- even if indirectly -- and no money, is quite possibly the biggest middle finger to an ethnicity as I have ever seen one

    • @thanhhoangnguyen4754
      @thanhhoangnguyen4754 Před 2 lety

      @@MarloSoBalJr Well not that their coming to USA is safe. Few make it and found job other force to become soilder for a civil war on both side if they want citizenship. I really wonder why what was other country think of this or they busying with their own object.

  • @marthahawkinson-michau9611

    Some of my Swedish ancestors left Sweden after the famine of 1867. Now, you’d think that Sweden could have learned a few lessons from the Irish famine. Nah. You’d be wrong. The Swedish nobility didn’t exactly treat their own peasants much better than the English and Irish landlords treated theirs. Swedish oats were still exported to feed British horses while the peasants ate bark bread and made plans to emigrate to America. My grandfather told me the stories that his grandmother told him.

    • @justonecornetto80
      @justonecornetto80 Před 2 lety +1

      To use an English phrase, you've hit the nail on the head! It was your social class that determined your place in the world, not nationality. Those on here who seem to think it was just the Irish peasants who were victims of the landowning classes couldn't be more wrong. Child mortality due to malnutrition was rife in all British cities during the 1840s. Basic foodstuffs were prohibitively expensive for the poor who often used to resort to eating dogs and cats for sources of protein. Stealing food often resulted in the culprit being deported under penal servitude to Australia. The wealthy could do as they wished to the impoverished masses in those days and that didn't change until the 20th century.

    • @marthahawkinson-michau9611
      @marthahawkinson-michau9611 Před 2 lety

      @@justonecornetto80 Sweden did learn lessons from it long term, but only after experiencing significant population loss due to emigration. Many of the current social programs in Sweden date to just after the turn of the century. It only took four decades of emigration to wake up the nobility. There were entire villages that left Sweden for America. My own ancestors scraped enough to send one person over who then sent money home for the rest.
      I did spend quite a bit of time reading about the after effects of the 1867 Swedish famine because I wanted to understand how my ancestors stories intersected with it. In particular, I didn’t understand the part of the story my grandpa always told about the children being hungry and not having enough food. Eight year old me had nearly zero knowledge of Swedish history because it isn’t taught in American schools. I had to learn it on my own.

  • @stevenroddy7013
    @stevenroddy7013 Před rokem +4

    By a lonely prison wall
    I heard a young girl calling
    "Michael, they have taken you away
    For you stole Trevelyan's corn
    So the young might see the morn
    Now a prison ship lies waiting in the bay"
    Low lie the fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the fields of Athenry
    By a lonely prison wall
    I heard a young man calling
    "Nothing matters, Mary, when you're free
    Against the famine and the crown
    I rebelled, they cut me down
    Now you must raise our child with dignity"
    Low lie the fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the fields of Athenry
    By a lonely harbour wall
    She watched the last star falling
    As that prison ship sailed out against the sky
    For she lived in hope and pray
    For her love in Botany Bay
    It's so lonely 'round the fields of Athenry
    Low lie the fields of Athenry
    Where once we watched the small free birds fly
    Our love was on the wing we had dreams and songs to sing
    It's so lonely 'round the fields of Athenry

  • @StupidCatLady
    @StupidCatLady Před rokem +1

    My family were Irish immigrants. It's horrible the conditions they suffered through. I'm glad they survived the journey and came here, because without them, I wouldn't be here.

  • @trj1442
    @trj1442 Před 2 lety +3

    Another excellent episode. Thankyou Geo team.

  • @billiemink77
    @billiemink77 Před 2 lety +5

    Proud of my Irish heritage the 1st of our clan my great great grands and their 13 children came to the USA in 1850.

  • @Gillemear
    @Gillemear Před 2 lety +5

    Great vid. Was particularly unusual to hear all this is Simon's British accent.

  • @lekiscool
    @lekiscool Před 2 lety +6

    Jamie Oliver: and thats all I’m going to say about Ireland… when I sound like this.

  • @Katzztar
    @Katzztar Před 2 lety +8

    I heard a tale of one national leader (not sure if was Arabic or Indian(India)) who wanted to send money to help with the Irish famine but was told it would be a great insult to Queen Victoria if he sent the amount he wanted, which was around 3-4 times higher than what she gave. So instead he sent a smaller amount of money BUT decided to go around this meager amount by sending ships of loaded with food.

    • @tomjones7184
      @tomjones7184 Před 2 lety

      What Russian or Indian history book did you read that in?😂

    • @admiralsfleet2668
      @admiralsfleet2668 Před 2 lety +10

      It was an Ottoman Sultan (Turkish). I don't know the full details

    • @ebu3455
      @ebu3455 Před 2 lety +6

      Sultan Abdülmecid I of the Ottoman Empire originally offered to send £10,000 but was asked either by British diplomats or his own ministers to reduce it to £1,000 to avoid donating more than the Queen. From wikipedia. There is no detailed explanation in English but you can find in Turkish Wikipedia. In a nutshell, if i translate it ; To workaround the issue and actually he wanted to help starving people Sultan sent 4000 sterlins worth wheat loaded ships to Dublin port but Queen didnt allow them to unload their cargo. After that Sultan gave order to ships anchor at Drogheda port and unload there.

    • @tomjones7184
      @tomjones7184 Před 2 lety

      @@ebu3455 the same Turks who deny the Armenian genocide?

    • @ebu3455
      @ebu3455 Před 2 lety +1

      @@tomjones7184 Im not going to argue with you nor play your hand. The topic is Irish famine. Please respect to topic and not drag it somewhere else.

  • @boneav83
    @boneav83 Před 2 lety +25

    The whole situation can be summed up in one word, Evil. The decisions made were evil, as were the consequences.

  • @oldschoolman1444
    @oldschoolman1444 Před 2 lety +1

    My great grandfather was an Irish immigrant, I vaguely recall stories of the potato famine as a child. Thanks for covering this.

  • @dancingfirefly7761
    @dancingfirefly7761 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for this informative video. I never knew the precise details of the famine, only that my ancestors suffered terribly and death rates were high.

  • @The_Republic_of_Ireland
    @The_Republic_of_Ireland Před 2 lety +7

    Great little documentary but one thing you forgot to mention Simon: the cannibalism during the famine

    • @norbitcleaverhook5040
      @norbitcleaverhook5040 Před 2 lety +7

      Maybe it was better left unsaid. I'm pretty sure every famine end this way, maybe it was a way of showing respect for the people who suffered

    • @cantbelieveitsnotredacted1117
      @cantbelieveitsnotredacted1117 Před rokem +1

      @@norbitcleaverhook5040 leaving out important details to not “offend” doesn’t help anyone. We need to know the full extent of the pain and suffering to even begin to understand.

  • @Nadine19891908
    @Nadine19891908 Před 2 lety +3

    I was half expecting Simon to stand up and walk away at the end ... This felt more like an 'Into the Shadows' video.

  • @duncanlamont1540
    @duncanlamont1540 Před rokem +1

    "Corn" in this context is equivalent term to grain, a general term for wheat, barley etc , not maize which is what we think of as corn today (and as pictured).

  • @kelleh711
    @kelleh711 Před rokem +1

    This was a fantastic video, very informative

  • @trixrabbit8792
    @trixrabbit8792 Před 2 lety +32

    As an American Irish I have to say that the stereotype of the drunken thieving murderer the Irish got in America is a BS stereotype. I’ve known several Irish that don’t drink.

    • @christianmccann7884
      @christianmccann7884 Před 2 lety +2

      I'm Irish and I don't drink ... Don't mind a smoke though .. lol

    • @johnmckiernan2176
      @johnmckiernan2176 Před 2 lety +14

      I can also confirm as an Irish person that I have never, in fact, murdered anyone. Strange, I know...

    • @jaredkennedy6576
      @jaredkennedy6576 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I don't drink.

    • @oneillcfc7921
      @oneillcfc7921 Před 2 lety

      Alot of them did murder because they got forced to fight for the American army stealing land from the Indians. But read up on St Patrick's battalion the only reason that Mexicans celebrate saint Patrick's day.

    • @oppaloopa3698
      @oppaloopa3698 Před 2 lety +3

      Agreed. The town I grew up in had a massive Catholic Irish American population- and I don’t just mean their great, great, great, great grandparents came over. They still had very close ties to the country like cousins they talked to and such.
      I struggle to think of a single one who drank or acted without morals. They were strict Catholics or at least held to the values. Stealing or gambling was treated like a capital offense. They were generally better behaved than the rest of us lmao.
      I was shocked when I heard that this stereotype existed. I’m sure there’s bad Irish out there just like with every group but I’ve yet to come across one.

  • @davidgannon7277
    @davidgannon7277 Před 2 lety +9

    from an irish viewer to and english gent. Thank you for a tuthful and honest video.

  • @falkenvir
    @falkenvir Před rokem

    Thank you Simon, these kinds of atrocities need to come to light. Not just the nice sides of History

  • @Raven-um2wf
    @Raven-um2wf Před 2 lety +2

    It was this series of events that caused my mother's side of ancestry to come over to the US. I did research into this when I was younger and love how well you put it all together.

    • @donovanbradford8231
      @donovanbradford8231 Před 10 měsíci

      I share similar ancestry as both major branches of my Irish family came over around this time as well.