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The Shamrock & the Shield
An Oral History of the Irish in Montreal
By Patricia Burns
[oral history]
Although there have been some Irish living in Montreal since the early 1600s, augmented by Irish soldiers arriving with the conquering British army, it was only in the early 1800s that an Irish presence was truly noticed. By 1824 there were sufficient Irish in Montreal to organize the first St. Patrick's Day Parade, and ten years later the St. Patrick's Society was founded. In 1847 St. Patrick's Basilica, Montreal's first church built for the Irish Catholics opened--a year before thousands of sick Irish escaping the famine in Ireland arrived.
To remember history demonstrates pride in our heritage. Oral history makes our past come alive by putting a human face on bare facts. Patricia Burns grew up in Montreal listening to her grandparents and parents relating tales of men freezing to death on sailing ships and of rum-runners being killed by police. Remembering these stories, she has continued the tradition, and since 1991 she has been recording the memories of men and women from all walks of life, many who grew up in the working class community of Griffintown.
CANADIAN AND US RE-RELEASE DATE: MARCH 2005
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ISBN: |
1-55065-109-9 |
Price: |
CDN $21.95
US $15.95 |
Illustrated: |
Yes |
Cover: |
Trade Paper |
Size: |
5.5 x 8.5 |
No. of Pages: |
204 |
In Print: |
In print |
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