| The Truth About Emigration
FORMER House Speaker
Tip O’Neill’s complaint that the then Irish government advised
against Irish American politicians getting Ireland an exemption in the
1965 Immigration and Nationality Act was highlighted in this column a
few weeks back.
At the time Ireland had an annual quota of just over 17,853 visas a year,
but when the act was enacted the number of Irish emigrating had dropped
to only 267 visas for the first six months, as the new act removed the
old European quotas.
An official at the Irish Embassy remarked before the Irish quota was removed
that immigration quotas were “outmoded, unjust and should be revised.”
The reason given by the government at the time and Taoiseach (Prime Minister)
Sean Lemass was that Ireland needed to keep its people at home.
After our article ran a few weeks back we received a fascinating article
written for Eire/Ireland in 2002 by Professor Mary Daly of University
College Dublin, a leading historian of the period. Daly studied the Irish
government/Irish America relationship at the time and came up with some
fascinating nuggets.
It runs against the grain to report some of them. The widely assumed flood
of Irish who came to the U.S. in the mid part of the last century turns
out to be somewhat of an illusion.
Only 62,400 Irish moved to America in the 10-year period between 1951
and 1961. During that period, the Irish filled less than 50% of their
17,853 quota every year but one.
A big part of that was the sheer distance from Ireland to America before
regular air travel. In the same period about 350,000 Irish moved to Britain.
It was not a time when Ireland ranked very high in the estimation of many
Americans. When the Irish government extended citizenship in 1956 to the
descendants of Irish emigrants only 100 people per year picked up on it.
No Love Lost
DALY’S article is also fascinating for the insights it provides
into the relationship between the Irish government and the Irish American
community.
Partition, of course, was a major problem in the relationship and Irish
Americans felt the Irish government was not doing enough. In 1958 Irish
Consul General John Conway in New York reported that relationships between
the New York county clubs and the Irish government were very cool because
Mayo-born lawyer and community leader Paul O’Dwyer had adopted an
attitude towards Dublin that was “unfriendly and at times even offensive.”
Conway clearly had no great love for the community, saying the Irish-born
had “little political power, little social status, little financial
or economic worth ... the leadership of the principal Irish organizations
seem neither skilful enough nor dedicated enough to arrest the decline
of our influence here.”
Conway certainly didn’t believe Irish Americans were much better.
“Irish Americans have not quite reached the top political rung,”
he said, and he predicted that John F. Kennedy was “unlikely to
become president.”
Besides, Conway noted, “our contact with Irish Americans is so limited
that we are in danger of losing any real connection with them.”
Other Irish agencies felt likewise. Bord Failte, the Irish Tourist Board,
believed the ethnic market was limited and declining, while the Irish
Trade Board stated that Irish and Irish Americans had no interest in Irish
products.
In 1952 a group of American consultants were asked to select 10 Irish
products that could be marketed in the U.S. They failed to identify even
one product.
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