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Document Description
Title
Far
from the
homes
of their
fathers
:
Irish
Catholics
in
St.
John's
,
Newfoundland
,
1840-86
Author
Lambert
,
Carolyn
,
1975-
Description
Thesis
(Ph.
D.)--Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
2010.
History
Date
2010
Pagination
xvii, 472 leaves : graphs, maps
Subject
Catholic
Church;
Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
History;
Catholics;
Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
St.
John's--History;
Irish--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--St.
John's--History;
Religion
and
politics--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--History;
Ethnicity--Newfoundland
and
Labrador--Religious
aspects;
Newfoundland
and
Labrador--|xPolitics
and
government--19th
century
Degree
Ph.
D.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Dept. of History.
Discipline
History
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Avalon Peninsula--St. John's
Temporal Coverage
19th Century
Notes
Includes
bibliographical
references
(leaves
395-416).
Abstract
Despite
being
the
first
substantial
Irish
Catholic
settlement
in
British
North
America
,
little
work
has been
done
on the
Irish
Catholic
community
in
St.
John's
,
Newfoundland
in the
second
half
of the
nineteenth
century.
Much
of what has been
written
by
historians
has
focused
on the
migrant
generation
, their
settlement
patterns
and
adaptation.
There
is
little
understanding
of the
development
of the
multigenerational
Irish
ethnic
group
after
1840.
This
study
addresses
this
lacuna
,
examining
the
Irish
Catholic
ethnic
group
in
St.
John's
between
1840
and
1886.
There are
many
reasons
to
undertake
such
a
case
study.
St.
John's
was not
only
the
political
,
economic
and
social
center
of the
colony
,
it
was also the
most
populous
area
with the
largest
number
of
Irish
Catholics.
It
provides
an
opportunity
to
study
the
evolution
of an
Irish
Catholic
group
that was
unique
in
North
America
in that
it
formed
the
majority
of the
city's
population
during
that
period.
Demographically
,
St.
John's
was also
distinctive
because
Catholics
were
counterbalanced
by a
Protestant
population
that was of
English
rather
than
Irish
descent.
This
makes
the
context
of
study
different
from
other
urban
areas
of
British
North
America
,
where
Catholics
formed
a
minority
and
Irish
Protestants
formed
a
large
portion
of the
population.
Lack
of
large-scale
Irish
migration
to
Newfoundland
after
the
1830s
allows
for an
examination
of the
development
of a
Catholic
group
that was
established
in the
pre-Famine
period
and that was
majority
Newfoundland-born
by
1857.
--
As the
first
detailed
account
of
Irish
Catholics
in
St.
John's
between
1840
and
1886
, this
study
chronicles
their
political
,
religious
and
social
evolution
through
an
examination
of the
Catholic
Church
,
education
,
associations
,
politics
and
support
for
Irish
nationalism.
As a
community
study
viewed
through
the
lens
of
ethnicity
,
it
traces
the
evolution
of the
identity
of the
multi-generational
community.
The
findings
are
placed
within
the
context
of the
wider
North
American
diaspora
to
illuminate
how the
Irish
Catholic
experience
in
St.
John's
compares
to
other
regions.
--
Catholics
in
St.
John's
did
well
compared
to
other
urban
areas
in
North
America.
By
1886
, they were an
integral
part
of the
fabric
of
St.
John's
at
all
levels.
The
Catholic
community
of the
late
1880s
was
confident
,
politically
involved
, and
socially
active
due
to the
leadership
of the
Catholic
Church
and an
expanded
middle-class
elite.
Greater
resources
allowed
the
Church
to
assume
control
over
education
and
associational
life
,
which
reinforced
religious
devotion
and
allowed
it
to
impose
its
moral
code
upon
the
community.
Catholics
continued
to have a
say
in the
running
of the
colony
as they
dominated
electoral
politics
and
maintained
a
strong
political
voice.
Politics
became
less
divisive
and
less
ethnically
and
religiously-based.
By the
1880s
, the
growth
of
Newfoundland
nationalism
superseded
that of
Irish
nationalism.
For
native-born
Catholics
and their
political
leaders
,
far
removed
from the
everyday
struggles
of
Ireland
,
local
political
issues
and
concerns
became
paramount.
--
Between
1840
and
1886
, the
Catholic
community
in
St.
John's
evolved
from a
largely
immigrant
one
defined
by an
Irish
ethnic
identity
and
world
view
, to
one
where
Catholicism
and not
ethnicity
became
the
basis
of
community
solidarity.
Members
identified
primarily
as
Newfoundland-born
Catholics
, and
it
was their
religion
that
provided
them with an
essential
link
to their
Irish
past.
Although
a
romantic
attachment
to
Ireland
remained
, they were
far
from the
homes
of their
fathers.
Type
Text
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
a3330502
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(57.68
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Lambert_Carolyn.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
132814.cpd