Monday, May 19, 2014

Allen Blog-Hugh's Story- Part 10- Hope for new world- Immigration to America

                     Immigration



The DeWitt Clinton, built 1848, wrecked off the coast of New Jersey in 1860. A Patrick Allen, age 21, is on the May 1856 sailing of this ship.
The Allen children were young during the height of the famine, but as the famine eased, they reached their maturity. The Allen offspring, like many of their neighbors, delayed marriage and starting a family in those tough times. The eldest, Mary, was 25 when she married Patrick Byrne in 1851 in Summerhill.


Mary and Patrick may well have been the first members of the family to immigrate to America. The records of immigration are confusing at best, but it does appear that Mary's first child, Anna Burns, was born in New Jersey in 1856. (The 1900 census shows them immigrating in 1860, but also being married in 1860....which is not correct according to the information in the Dangan church register above.) The 1870 census of Jersey County, Illinois shows Anna, age 15 (born abt. 1855) and Patson, age 13 (born abt. 1857) both born in New Jersey. The first child born in Illinois was Franklin, age 11 (born 1859.) The spelling of "Byrne" has been changed to "Burn" by the time of this census.  Mary also appears to be the only Allen who was married in Ireland before immigrating to America.



Our family history tells us that Hugh Allen arrived in America at Castle Garden, New York, and lived and worked in New York for a few years before moving to Illinois. We know that he was in Illinois before 1863, when he registered for the civil war draft. We know that his brother, Franklin, was in Jersey County Illinois by 1861, when his daughter Delia was born there. The 1930 census claims that brother Thomas came to the U.S. in 1861.

Register of the Joseph Gilchirst from November 1857, showing a Hugh Allen, age 26, sailing from Liverpool to New York


Immigration records have been hard to trace- many burned in a fire on Ellis Island. But some ship registers remain. There is a Patrick Allen, age 21, who arrived onboard the DeWitt Clinton at Castle Garden in June 1856. There is a Hugh Allen, age 26,  who arrived onboard the Joseph Gilchrist in November 1857.  In any case, it is unclear whether the Allen brothers traveled to America together, or individually, as money was saved to get them passage. What we can guess at, however, is that they had similar experiences along the way.

Leaving Summerhill

When Hugh left home, whether alone or with one or even two brothers, it must have been with a many mixed emotions- a heart heavy with grief at leaving his parents (whom he would never see again) and full of the excitement of a young man starting out on his own on his way to a new land full of hope and opportunity. He would have been in his mid-twenties, and already an experienced farmer who was not a stranger to hard work and tough times.

Did the family travel with him to nearby Dublin to wave goodbye to him as he caught the boat across the Irish Sea to Liverpool, or did they say goodbye at home, or in the village? Either way, it was surely a heartbreaking farewell.


Embarkation at Waterloo Docks- Liverpool


The steamer from Dublin took less than three hours to reach Liverpool. Once in the port of Liverpool, Hugh would have had at least a one night stay, probably in less than desirable lodgings near the docks, while he arranged for his passage. In Liverpool, passage brokers arranged for fares, which averaged about 5 pounds for steerage passage. 

A passage advertisement to New York via steamer



Hugh would have signed a passage contract, and been given his ticket.







Hugh and his fellow passengers had to go through a medical examination before they were allowed to board the ship. This was an effort to keep the ships free from the dreaded fever. Those who passed had their tickets stamped and were allowed to board the ship 24 hours before sailing. Hugh would have carried his few possessions on board, jostling with about 400 other passengers to find a spot between decks for the voyage, which would last 3-4 weeks.






Ships were towed ten miles down the Mersey River while the crew onboard conducted a search for stowaways- a common practice among those who could not afford the fare. Those caught in time were put ashore- others were used as laborers during the voyage. All the ticketed passengers assembled on the quarter deck, where the ship's officers conducted a roll-call comparing tickets and the passenger list. This often took 2-4 hours.(First class passengers in cabins were exempt.) After the roll-call was completed, the steerage passengers were allowed to go back to their berths between decks.






The beginning of the voyage was often a time of great celebration among the passengers,  with new friendships made and great hope for better times to come. Many passengers were young adults, and there was time for country music with fiddle and flute and dancing with new acquaintances.

The accommodations themselves were simple. Passengers were given an allotment of food, which could be cooked on deck in good weather, or below deck in foul weather. Some ships provided a cook. The food was simple; bread, flour, oatmeal, rice or potatoes, and tea. Passengers were expected to supplement this with  their own supplies.

If seas were calm, steerage passengers were allowed time on deck, but in foul weather, they were crowded into their space between decks.



Once arriving in New York, ships were again checked for fever. Those with fever aboard were  quarantined for 30 days on Staten Island. Those with healthy passengers were allowed to disembark at Castle Garden, on the lower tip of Manhattan. New York received over 650,000 Irish immigrants during the famine years- giving the city a larger population of Irish born citizens than Dublin.


Once in Castle Garden, Hugh would have had to find his way in the city. Many Irish countrymen were set up on the docks trying to make a penny out of steering the new immigrants along- to their friends boarding houses, etc. The ghettos of New York were full of poor Irish immigrants trying to find jobs and begin making their way in this new country. If Mary and her husband were already in New Jersey, Hugh was lucky indeed to have someone to help him get adjusted and find employment. According to the "History of Jersey County" he continued working for a time in New York state before heading west.




Sunday, May 18, 2014

Allen Blog-Hugh's Story-Part 9- The Famine

The Famine


Eviction

Boys watching an eviction

A pattern quickly emerges of a privileged class who lived very different lives from those of their tenants. The average life expectancy of a tenant farmer in Ireland was about 40 years. Childhood mortality was high- Richard and Margaret Allen did well to raise ten children to adulthood. One third of the tenant families in Meath in 1851 lived in one room, smoky, windowless mud cabins. [1] With restrictions on schooling, few adults could read or write. Tenants could be evicted from their homes with little or no notice, and any improvements which a tenant family made on their homes or fields became the property of the landlord- which led to a sense of frustration regarding money and effort spent on spent on improving existing conditions. It was an insecure existence, with little hope of a better future.



There had been food shortages in the past, but 1845, 1846, and 1848 brought blight- a horrible disease with no cure- one which blew in on an ill wind and spread from field to field overnight. The potato- which was cheap, nutritious, and easy to grow- had become the main crop for most poor families in Ireland. Now, along with the disease, panic spread- throughout Meath and all over Ireland- as the blight turned previously healthy green potato plants black and rotted the potatoes which had already formed in the ground into inedible stinking slime. Not only was their meagre cash crop gone; worse, so was the main source of food for nearly all tenant families. They watched helplessly as their previously green healthy fields turned into black disease ridden wastelands.




Richard and Margaret Allen had nine children when the blight hit. In 1846, during the height of the "great hunger" years, Mary (age 20) and Franklin (age 17) were surely out of school and may have found outside jobs to help bring in money for the family to live on. John (13,) Hugh (12,) Patrick (11,) Peter (9,) and Richard (7,) may have been lucky enough to stay in school and help out in the fields part time. At home, Margaret still had two very young children- Thomas age 5, and Edward age 2- and she was pregnant with her last child- Catherine- who would be born in May 1847- in the midst of the famine.


The survival of all ten children in the Allen family shows that they were among the more fortunate within the struggling Irish population. Perhaps with a slightly larger farm they had been able to grow a greater variety of crops, with other vegetables that were unaffected by the horrible blight. It would have helped to have enough animals on the farm to feed them and provide for a tiny bit of cash to see them through for a time in the midst of the chaos. But surely it was a time of want and suffering for all families. To make matters worse, the winter of 1846-1847, while Margaret was pregnant with Catherine, was a bitterly cold one, with unusual snows and a harsh blizzard. For families already short on turf for heat, every family would have been miserably cold in their simple cottages.


Perhaps the hardest thing would have been seeing friends and neighbors who had only tiny plots of land and who subsisted largely on their potato crops as they suffered during the hungry years. As starvation set in and bodies weakened, people became ill. Typhus, dysentery, and fevers spread throughout the whole population. Margaret Allen would have been in constant fear for the health of her family. School may have been shut down at times during the worst of the fevers, which spread rapidly through communities. Surely the family traveled wearily to the church in Dangan to stand by gravesides as neighbors buried their loved ones taken by fever or famine.




To make matters worse, in 1849 land values fell sharply and throughout Ireland, landowners began to auction off their estates. New owners tended to be harsher in evicting tenants in an attempt to consolidate the existing tiny plots of farmland into profitable grazing land for cattle. Rents were raised, and mass evictions conducted. Between 1849 and 1850 nearly 50,000 additional families were evicted throughout Ireland.




As evictions increased, whole families roamed the roads on the way to the cities of Trim and Dublin, begging for food. Many died right along the roadside. Some were driven to thievery in their desperate attempts for survival.The penalties for stealing were harsh; in the Trim sessions in 1849 are recorded typical punishments; ten years transportation for stealing bacon, a fortnight in prison for stealing bread, a year in prison for stealing a sheep, eight months in prison for stealing turf to heat their homes. [3]



There was an attempt at construction projects, such as those led by the Allen's landlord, Charles P. Leslie. Over 700,000 people were hired in these projects, but the wages were often so low that they were not enough to keep the workers' families from dying of starvation. Government soup kitchens opened up offering a bowl of porridge and a slice of bread each day. Starvation in Meath was rampant; one visitor in the Trim district found a father dead of starvation on his cottage floor, with his starving children around him, too weak to make the trip to the poorhouse. [4]



The poorhouse, or workhouse, was infamous as "the most feared and hated institution in Ireland." [5] Great Umberstown, where the Allens lived, was in the Trim workhouse union, and their taxes helped to support the workhouse there, which was built in 1841 as a home for paupers. But the workhouse was a last resort for families, who dreaded the possibility of ending up there. Perhaps the worst part of the experience was that families were immediately split up and might only see each other once a week. Men and women were housed in separate areas, and children over the age of 2 were taken from their mothers. Many children were hired out to work-which was thought to increase their chances of survival. In 1850, four thousand young girls, age 14-19, (100 of them from Meath,)[6] were shipped from the workhouses to Australia. Rules in the workhouse were extremely strict- even for Victorian times. Clothing and food was of the poorest level; the philosophy being that the workhouse should not be a place where people would want to go if they could live better outside its walls. The poor conditions normally kept the population of the workhouse low; but by the end of the famine, overcrowding became a problem in many areas. Disease entered with the poor, despite separate fever hospitals, and many died. 



Between 1845 and the end of the famine in 1852, it is estimated that a million people died of starvation and disease in Ireland. [7] Another million people were lost to immigration.

1846 famine- Samuel Craig was a probationer to a presbyterian congregation of  20 persons in Summerhill. He became secretary for the famine relief committee and distributed "stirabout" to about a thousand people a day. In 1847 there was a cholera epidemic and he established a fever hospital in the outbuildings of a local nobleman. When the doctor was too weak to care for patients, Craig nursed them and even obtained coffins for the poor.


[1] Navan Historical Society http://www.navanhistory.ie/index.php?page=lost-generations
[2]Researching the Irish Famine http://www.nli.ie/blog/index.php/2012/01/20/researching-the-irish-famine/
[3] http://www.irelandoldnews.com/Cavan/1849/JUL.html
[4] Victorian Childhood; Themes and Variations by Thomas Edward Jordan p 14
[5] Irish Workhouse Centre
 http://irishworkhousecentre.ie/the-workhouse-story/#
[6] Navan Historical Society http://www.navanhistory.ie/index.php?page=the-great-hunger-2
[7] http://www.archaeology.co.uk/articles/features/the-kilkenny-workhouse-mass-burials-an-archaeology-of-the-great-irish-famine.htm
8) meathhistoryhub.ie/summerhill-presbyterians











Saturday, May 17, 2014

Allen Blog-Hugh's Story- Part 8- The Feast- Summerhill Demesne


Summerhill House

Summerhill Demesne

Listed on the same page as the Allen family on Griffith's Valuation is "Summerhill Demesne." Demesne is a feudal term, referring to times when the king granted large pieces of land, or baronies, to his barons who lived on the demesne property, which included their own home, plus gardens, hunting grounds, etc. These barons leased out the land they owned surrounding their home to serfs.) Ireland in the 1800's still operated much like a feudal society. The serfs had become tenant farmers, still dependent on the baron for their living.

The landowner of Summerhill Demesne in 1855 was the Honorable Hercules L. Rowley- Lord Langford. The valuation shows that the demesne included 755 acres of land. All in all, Lord Langford owned 2,231 acres throughout Ireland.

The 2nd Baron Langford succeeded the title in 1825, the same year as the marriage of Richard Allen and Margaret Sweeney.
This Baron lived only 14 years after succeeding the title, dying in 1839, and leaving his 15 year old son as heir. His son was educated at Eton, but also died young, at age 29 in 1854, leaving the title to his 6 year old son, who lived until 1919.

         Baron Langford
                                    
                             Sir Hercules

An excellent overview of the lives of the Langford family and other landed families in Meath is offered by Terence Dooley in "A World Turned Upside Down; a study of the changing social world of the landed nobility of County Meath- 1875-1945." These families lived a "Downton Abbey" type existence, hiring an army of servants from England, Scotland, and Protestant Ireland, with few Irish Catholics employed on the grounds. Servants who were employed generally lived on the estate in cottages or in the attics of the house. They generally worked 6 days a week, for very little pay.



                                                                                                          Summerhill House                

The family entertained guests at lavish dinners and all night balls were held on occasions. Games such as croquet were popular during the day. Gentlemen enjoyed shooting for game on the vast grounds, which also brought food to the table. Fox hunting, however, was the most important activity, often taking place five days a week. Tenant farmers were required to allow the hunt to cross their fields. Racing and steeplechase events were also popular. The Meath nobility were well known for their breeding and ownership of fine horses, used both in racing and hunting. Lord Langford's "Sir Hercules" was unbeaten in Ireland in 1828 and became a famous foundation stud in Irish racing.

One claim to fame of Summerhill Demesne is that is was visited/rented by the Empress of Austria in 1879-1880, who sought it out due to its reputation for excellent hunting and hounds. The Empress was, by the way, Roman Catholic, and even constructed a Catholic chapel in the house for worship during her stay. (Apparently the residents tolerated Catholicism in an empress!)



                                                                   Catherine, Empress of Austria

The Langfords tended to be absent landowners, and were away in London when the IRA burned Summerhill House in 1921. Once one of the greatest houses in Ireland, now only ruins remained. In time, even the memories of the greatness of Summerhill faded away. I read recently that now, even the ruins are gone, plowed over and planted into fields.





The 4th Baron Langford- National Portrait Gallery


More information on Summerhill Demesne and the town of Summerhill can be found at:

http://www.meath.ie/CountyCouncil/Heritage/ArchitecturalHeritage/ArchitecturalConservationAreas/File,40004,en.pdf


[1] www.askaboutireland.ie- managing a big house- a servant's lot

[2] http://www.abandonedireland.com/Summerhill_1.html


Friday, May 16, 2014

Allen Blog- Hugh's Story- Part 7- The Leslies- Landlords of the Allens


The Leslie Family 1905 [all photographs by Mark Leslie- see citation at end]



It is unlikely that the Allen's ever met their landlord, Charles Powell Leslie. His vast estates throughout Ireland were handled by agents who collected the rents and took care of the details regarding the lands and their tenants. The Leslie family lived on their country estate in County Monaghan in Northern Ireland.  Like most wealthy families of the time, they also likely kept a Dublin residence for the social season there (Christmas to St. Patrick's Day) and then a London residence for the summer ball season- to introduce their daughters to society. When on their Irish country estate, they would have spent leisure time shooting, fox hunting, and entertaining at dinners and balls. Their home was a showcase, filled with symbols of wealth and works of art. [1]


The lives of the Leslies were a world apart from those of their tenants. Children were educated at home by governesses and tutors and then boys were sent on to Eton or Harrow before college. A grand tour in Europe would have been considered a part of their education for most. 




The indoor staff at Castle Leslie 1890









Norman and Shane Leslie with their father 1897


















Charles Powell Leslie II (1769-1831) would have spent a great deal of time in Dublin, as his father was a member of Irish Parliament representing their home estate in County Monaghan. He was educated at Oxford and became a colonel for the Monaghan Militia, which succeeded in putting down the 1798 Irish Rebellion. According to Irish Leader Daniel O'Connell, he was "one of the most uncompromising enemies of his Catholic country men." [2]Moving to London to sit in Parliament there, Leslie voted against proposals for Catholic Relief in 1811 and Catholic Emancipation and lost his seat in Parliament on that issue in 1826.

His son, Charles Powell Leslie III (1821-1871) was ten years old at the death of his father. He came of age during the famine years and was much more supportive of his tenants than his father had been. He promoted free education for local farmers to study scientific farming methods. [3] During the famine years, this generation of Leslie's was known to suspend payment of rents for struggling tenants and there is no record of them ever evicting tenants during these hard years while Ireland suffered from widespread mass evictions. Leslie also organized relief work to try and provide income for families during the famine years, and his mother set up soup kitchens to provide for the starving. [4]





Lady Leslie with local school children in Glaslough 1890



His heir, Sir John Leslie, built Castle Leslie in Monaghan in 1870 on a 1000 acre estate. His wife, Lady Leonie Jerome Leslie, was the sister of Jennie Jerome Randolph Churchill, who was the mother of Winston Churchill.





Lady Leonie Leslie (on far right) with her mother and sisters (Jennie Churchill standing with Winston on her left)


The eldest son and heir, Norman Leslie, was tragically killed in WWI. His brother, Shane Leslie, inherited the estate. Interestingly, he converted to Catholicism (and as a result was disbarred; but remained the heir.) He also married an American, Marjorie Ida, a native of Vermont (who was actually raised in American Samoa, where her father was a diplomat!)



Marjorie wife of Shane Leslie at Castle Leslie
                                  




Lady Leonie Leslie with Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret








Castle Leslie in County Monaghan is still in the possession of the Leslie family, and is open to paying guests. The chapel there gained notoriety recently when it served as the wedding place of Paul McCartney.[5] An extensive history and virtual tour is available on the Castle Leslie website:





*All photographs on this page were submitted by Mark Leslie to "Edwardian Country House Life" on "Travelers 411."  More of his photo collection on the Leslie's can be seen on that site.

https://www.travelers411.com/forums/album.php?albumid=721


Thursday, May 15, 2014

Allen Blog- Hugh's Story- Part 6- Nearby Towns and Market Days

Market Day [1]



                          Market Day



Market days were held in the nearby town of Summerhill to the southeast and in the historic medieval town of Trim to the north. The pretty village of Summerhill was a little over three miles from Great Umberstown. [2] This would be about an hour’s walk- although if they owned a horse and cart, with any luck the cart was piled high with produce for sale on market day! Although this distance may seem a long way walk for us, the folk of the time routinely walked much farther than we do today, and walking was considered an enjoyable pastime- with a day at the town market a much anticipated outing. This was a chance not just to buy and sell goods, but to visit with other friends and neighbors, catch up on news and gossip, and for young people, a chance to court potential sweethearts. Fairs were held in April, June, September, and November.











[3]




                                       Summerhill


The village of Summerhill had first been known as “Lynches Knock” and the ruins of the original castle, could still be seen there. This was the site of the Battle of Dungan’s Hill in the 1600’s, where the Irish army was defeated in their march toward Dublin. Afterwards, Cromwell gave this land to the Protestant Bishop of Meath, who sold it to Sir Hercules Rowley, Baron Langford, who abandoned the castle to build a new family home in the 1730’s, the Summerhill Demesne, which stood outside the village. In 1837 the village had 331 inhabitants and 49 buildings. In 1901 these included a post office, police barracks, doctor’s office, three groceries, bakery (which delivered bread to villagers by horse and cart,) a sweet shop, two pubs, and a tannery.[4]




                                                                                             [5]
Summerhill Post Office circa 1911- postmistress Phyllis Gogarty of Clondoogan (The Gogarty's were friends of the Allens) [6]


A Fair Day in nearby Navan, Meath [7]

Trim


The historic medieval city of Trim, on the river Boyne was about four and a half miles to the north and could be reached by walking in about an hour and a half. [8] 





Trim, which was once the county seat, had weekly markets. In 1837, there were about 570 houses, and 3,000 people residing in the town. There was a flour mill, a brewery, and a tannery, and outside of town a large mill which produced quantities of flour and oatmeal. There were army barracks in the town with about 80 soldiers stationed there. A new courthouse had been built, as well as a county jail which could hold 140 prisoners.[9] 

Trim Castle was home to Ireland’s largest Norman Castle, build in the 12th century. (This castle was used recently in the filming of "Braveheart.") Trim was also once home to historic Catholic monasteries and abbeys, destroyed during the reformation, but whose ruins still existed about the area. Trim was where the dreaded workhouse which was built to house paupers, and a dismal place of last resort for many who faced hopelessness and starvation during the famine years.

Boyne River and bridge into Trim


 Trim circa 1900


Returning from Market [10]

Resources and information on Summerhill history and Summerhill today:

The report below has many pictures of Summerhill- both today and historical- as well as maps of the area:

http://www.meath.ie/CountyCouncil/Heritage/ArchitecturalHeritage/ArchitecturalConservationAreas/File,40004,en.pdf

Shaw's Pub is the local tavern with food and live music:

http://shawspub.wix.com/summerhill



[1] Illustrated London News 1857
[2] Google Maps- directions-See photo tour google maps link https://mapsengine.google.com/map/edit?mid=z2xplTJpQDmE.k36UII-Kc9ik
[3] “A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 by Samuel Lewis http://www.libraryireland.com/topog/
[7]http://www.navanhistory.ie/index.php?page=fair-green
[8] Google maps- directions- see photo tour google maps link
[9] “A Topographical Dictionary of Ireland 1837 by Samuel Lewis http://www.libraryireland.com/topog/
[10] Illustrated London News 1857