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Coffin Ship

Page 11

by William Henry


  Today, some forty million Americans claim to have Irish ancestry. A large percentage of these people maintain that their ancestors arrived in the United States during the famine. In Boston alone over twenty per cent of the population are Irish-American, giving rise to a flourishing community, with countless Gaelic football teams, Irish gift stores, pubs and radio and television programmes. On Sunday, 28 June 1998, The Irish Famine Memorial Park, at the corner of School and Washington Streets, was dedicated, forever ‘enshrining a timeless tale of tragedy and triumph’.

  It has been a long and arduous journey through time and space since Henry David Thoreau wrote these final words on the Cohasset shoreline:

  This rocky shore is called Pleasant Cove on some maps; on the map of Cohasset, the name appears to be confined to the particular cove where I saw the wreck of the St. John. The ocean did not look, now, as if any were ever shipwrecked in it; it was not grand and sublime, but beautiful as a lake. Not a vestige of a wreck was visible, nor could I believe that the bones of many a shipwrecked man were buried in that pure sand.[3]

  [1]Thoreau, Henry David, Cape Cod (1865), pp. 5, 7, 8.

  [2]Ibid., pp. 1, 8.

  [3]Diary of Elizabeth Lothrop (11-10-1849, 25-12-1849). Thoreau, Henry David, Cape Cod (1865), pp. 5, 8, 10.

  APPENDIX

  LIST OF FAMINE SHIPS THAT ADVERTISED IN AND SERVICED GALWAY 1845–1850

  Abbotsford

  Albion

  Alice

  Amphetrite

  Argimou

  Barbara

  Bethel

  Cambyses

  Caractacus

  Caroline

  Carolina

  Cashmere

  Celeste

  C. H. Appelton

  Charlotte

  Clarence

  Clytha

  Coldstream

  Commence

  Corrib

  Cremona

  Cushlamachree

  Daniel

  David

  Delphin

  Doctor Kneises

  Downes

  Eliza Ann

  Elizapeth Hughes

  Emma Prescott

  Emmeline

  Fanny

  Francis-Watts

  GEM

  G. W. Brinkerhoff

  G. W. Laurence

  Haidee

  Helen

  Helena

  Henderson

  H. Mellon

  IHN John

  Irvine

  Islam

  John Begg

  John Clifford

  Josephine

  Joshua Carroll

  Kate

  Laing

  Lelia

  Linden

  Lively

  Lord Fitzgerald

  Lord Fitzroy

  Lyna

  Malvina

  Manchester

  Margaret Milne

  Maria

  Marine Plant

  Martha

  Messenger

  M. Howes

  Minerva

  Nancy

  Napoleon

  Northumberland

  Ohio

  Orwell Lass

  Pacific

  Pageant

  Plant

  Preciosa

  Rebecca

  Redwing

  Regina

  Robert Alexander Parke

  Russia E. D.

  Sarah Milledge

  Seabird

  St. George

  St. John

  Tassie

  Thalia

  The Arab

  The Asia

  The Lucullus

  The Medora

  Thetis

  Thomas Baker

  Valhalla

  Viceroy

  Victoria

  Wakefield

  Walkella

  W. H. Spear

  William Kerry

  XL

  Young Queen

  REFERENCES

  The Articles, Letters, Magazines and Newspaper records contained in the references, some of which are undated, are mainly from the John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola collection.

  Miscellaneous Articles

  Bob Cuble, ‘Irish, Past and Present, Found Tragedy and Hope’.

  ‘Catholics to Honour Irish Immigrants Lost in Cohasset Shipwreck of 1849,’ 1949.

  Cormac Ó Gráda, ‘Ireland’s Great Famine’.

  ‘Cross is Monument to Irish’.

  ‘Immigrants – Memorial at Cohasset Being Erected – Brig St. John Wrecked in 1849 on Minot’s Ledge – Victims of the Disaster Numbered 99’ (Newspaper article).

  Ken Crotty, ‘Sinking of Irish Boat Described’ (3-10-1949).

  M. Kennedy, ‘The Winter Voyages of the Famine Ships, Cushlamachree and Londonderry’.

  Martin P. Harney, SJ, ‘A Tragic Episode of the Irish Famine Immigration’.

  Martin P. Harney, SJ, ‘The Storm of October 1849’.

  Martin P. Harney, SJ, ‘The Wreck of the Brig St. John’.

  Notes copied from Newcomb Bates (Jr), the Town Clerk of (Cohasset) (7-10-1849).

  The League of the Sacred Heart (Loyla Chapel B.C. High School); ‘Brig St. John of Galway, Ireland Lost October 7, 1849, at Cohasset’.

  ‘The Wreck of the Emigrant Brig “St. John” on October 7, 1849,’ statement of lifeboat crew.

  ‘To Their Memory’.

  ‘Wreck of the Brig St. John’ (1949).

  Private Letters

  Ancient Order of Hibernians in America (undated).

  Ancient Order of Hibernians in America (undated).

  Ancient Order of Hibernians in America (5-12-1941).

  Ancient Order of Hibernians in America (30-11-1961).

  Ancient Order of Hibernians in America (21-5-1962).

  The Archbishop of Boston (10-3-1999).

  Article by Robert N. Fraser, the Curator of the Cohasset Maritime Museum (1-1-1979).

  Boston College High School, Press Release, ‘Midnight Memorial Mass for Irish Victims of Brig “Saint John” off Cohasset’, Fr Walter Martin (October, 1989).

  ‘Brig St. John’, John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola.

  The Curator of the Cohasset Historical Society (23-7-1978).

  The Curator of the Cohasset Historical Society (29-11-1989).

  The Curator of the Cohasset Historical Society, ‘Information Relating to the “St. John” Wreck’, David Wadsworth (8-3-1984). John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola collection.

  The Curator of the Cohasset Maritime Museum (17-12-1978).

  The President of Cohasset Central Cemetery Corporation (26-5-1914).

  ‘The Wreck of the Brig St. John’, John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola (1999).

  Cohasset Town Records, Book II, 1844-1865.

  Diary of Elizabeth Lothrop: 11-10-1849, 25-12-1849.

  Internet Articles

  http://www.moytura.com/sligo1.htm

  http://www.islayinfo.com/Exmouth-islay-tragedy.html

  http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/history/shipwreck_st_jo

  http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/history/stjohn_burials

  http://www.clarelibrary.ie/eolas/coclare/history/awful shipwreck.htm

  Interview

  John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola, 18-7-2008.

  Lecture

  ‘The Brig St. John Disaster 1849’, John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola, 29-1-2007.

  Lloyd’s Register and Supplement

  1845, 1846, 1847, 1850.

  Historical Maritime Information: Merchant Shipping Losses and Shipwrecks.

  Magazines

  Brig St. John of Galway was Cohasset’s Worst Shipwreck, Cohasset Historical Society. John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola collection.

  Brig St. John Memorial Mass, Ancient Order of Hibernians. Father John Murphy, Division 9, Plymouth, 4-10-1997.

  Centenary Commemoration, 21-8-1949.

  Cohasset Vignettes, Robert Fraser, 1981.

  Ennistymon Parish Magazine, ‘The Wreck of the Irish Emigrant Ship’, ‘The Shipwreck of the
St. John’. Articles compiled from material supplied by Brud Slattery, John Flanagan (both Lahinch), and Frank Flanagan (USA), 1996.

  Glór na nOileán, ‘An Brig St. John’, Pádraig Ó Maoilchiaráin.

  Marine Disasters, ‘II – The Wreck of the St. John’, Willard De Lue.

  The Mariner, ‘The History of Central Cemetery’, David Wadsworth. John Bhaba Jaick Ó Congaola collection.

  Newspapers

  Boston Daily Herald:

  ‘Brig St. John of Galway, Ireland, Lost October 7, 1849 at Cohasset’.

  ‘List of Survivors and Drowned’.

  ‘Tell it to Joe – Monument to Shipwrecked Irish’, Joe McLaughlin (8-7-1976).

  ‘The Burial of the Victims of the St. John – Melancholy Sight’ (12-10-1849).

  ‘Triumph Out of Tragedy – Commemorating the 150 Anniversary of the Great Hunger’ (26-6-1998).

  Boston Irish Reporter:

  ‘Cohasset Monument Honors Famine Victims’ (October, 1996).

  Boston Sunday Herald:

  ‘Cohasset Ceremony Recalls Shipwreck’ (10-10-1999).

  Cohasset Mariner:

  ‘Meeting the Governor’ (2-7-1998).

  Dublin Evening Post:

  A report (9-9-1845).

  Galway Advertiser:

  ‘The Workhouse’ (3-3-1994).

  ‘When Galway Starved’ (27-6-1996).

  Galway Mercury and Weekly Connaught Advertiser:

  A report dated 5-6-1847.

  ‘A Famine Report’ (13-3-1847).

  ‘Emigration’ (1-5-1847).

  ‘Irish Sufferings – Whig and Tory Sympathy’ (3-7-1847).

  ‘More Deaths by Starvation’ (22-1-1848).

  ‘Passage Across the Atlantic’ (19-6-1847).

  ‘Song of the Famine’ (5-9-1846).

  ‘Starvation – Inquest’ (13-3-1847).

  ‘The Devon Commission’ (26-6-1847).

  ‘The Song of the Famine’ (10-7-1847).

  ‘Wreck of an Emigrant Ship’ (27-10-1849).

  ‘Wreck of the St. John’ (3-11-1849).

  Galway Vindicator:

  ‘Awful Shipwreck at Minot’s Ledge – Loss of St. John of Galway. About One Hundred Drowned – Men, Women and Children’ (3-11-1849).

  Illustrated London News:

  A report dated 8-5-1847.

  ‘Famine and Starvation in the County of Cork’ (16-1-1847).

  ‘Mortality in Skibbereen’ (30-1-1846).

  ‘Sketches in the West of Ireland’, Mr James Mahony (13/20-2-1847).

  ‘The Galway Starvation Riots’ (25-6-1842).

  ‘The Late Food Riots in Ireland’ (7-11-1846).

  ‘The Potato Disease’ (18-10-1845).

  The Boston Irish Echo:

  ‘More on the Ill-Fated Brig, St. John – Remembers the St. John,’ Paddy Mulkerrins (14-4-1984).

  ‘More on the Ill-Fated Brig, St. John,’ Bill Loughran (14-4-1984).

  ‘Survivors Found’, Paddy Mulkerrins (letter to editor).

  ‘The Ill-Fated Brig St. John,’ Bill Loughran (14-1-1984).

  The Boston Mail:

  ‘Wreck of the St. John’ (11-10-1849).

  The Boston Post:

  ‘Brig St. John Memorial’ (12-10-1849).

  ‘Brig St. John of Galway – List of Survivors and Drowned’ (12-10-1849).

  ‘The Burial of the Victims of the St. John – Melancholy Sight’ (12-10-1849).

  The Boston Sunday Globe:

  ‘150 Years Later: Honouring the Irish who Died at Sea off Cohasset Coast’ (3-10-1999).

  ‘Remembering the St. John Disaster of 1849’ (3-10-1999).

  ‘Those Known to Have Perished’ (3-10-1999).

  The Connacht Tribune:

  ‘The Great Famine, Tribune Extra’ (24-3-1995).

  The Freeman’s Journal:

  ‘The Burial of the Victims’ (26-10-1849).

  ‘The Wreck of the Irish Emigrant Ship St. John’ (26-10-1849).

  ‘Wreck of the Irish Emigrant Ship Lamentable Loss of Life’ (24-10-1849).

  The Galway City Tribune; Tribune Extra:

  ‘Galway Victims of a Major Tragedy’ (27-11-1998).

  The Irish Emigrant:

  ‘Brig Saint John Anniversary’ (13-12-1999).

  ‘Ninety-Nine Irish Lives Lost in Brig St. John Shipwreck’ (September, 1999).

  The Irish World and American Industrial Liberator and Gaelic American:

  ‘Death of a Famine Ship’, Frank Durkan (6-10-1984).

  The Jesuit or Catholic Sentinel:

  ‘Memorial to Irish’ (4-1-1934).

  The Patriot Ledger:

  ‘Brig Wreck Killed 143 off Cohasset’, Edward Rowe Snow (6-10-1959).

  ‘Celtic Cross: Cohasset’s Memorial to a Shipwreck’, Laura Doherty.

  ‘Ceremonies to Honor Irish Shipwreck Victims’ (6-10-1999).

  ‘Cross Monument to Irish’, Edward Rowe Snow (6-10-1959).

  ‘Doomsday at Little Harbor’, Bob Cubie (6-10-1999).

  ‘Shipwreck Revisited: 99 Irish Immigrants Perished in 1849 Storm’, Molly Hochkeppel (9-10-1989).

  ‘To Mark Anniversary of Old Brig’s Sinking’, Edward Rowe Snow.

  The Pilot:

  ‘Wreck of Brig St. John’, George E. Ryan (October, 1979).

  Tribune Extra:

  ‘Galway Victims of a Major Tragedy’ (27-11-1998).

  Video

  Brig St. John. Telegael.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Comber, H., The Book of Thomas J. Comber and Eliza Comerford (n.d.).

  Cunningham, J., ‘A Town Tormented by the Sea’: Galway 1790–1914 (Geography Publications, Dublin, 2004).

  Gallagher, T., Paddy’s Lament, Ireland 1846-1847: Prelude to Hatred (Poolbeg Press Ltd, Swords, 1985).

  Garvey, Fr G., Bushypark Celebrates 1837-1987 (Fr Gerard Garvey, 1988).

  Henry, W., Role of Honour, Mayors of Galway City 1485-2001 (Galway City Council, 2001).

  Henry, W., St Clerans: The Tale of a Manor House (Merv Griffin, 1999).

  Laxton, E., The Famine Ships; The Irish Exodus to America 1846-51 (Bloomsbury, London, 1996).

  Litton, Helen, The Irish Famine: An Illustrated History (Wolfhound Press, Dublin, 1994).

  McBride, D., When Hunger Stalked the North (Adare Press, Banbridge, 1994).

  Murray, J.P., Galway: A Medico-Social History (Kenny’s Bookshop and Art Gallery, Galway, 1994).

  Ó Cathaoir, Brendan, Famine Diary (Irish Academic Press, Dublin, 1999).

  O’Dowd, Peadar, Down by the Claddagh (Kenny’s Bookshop and Art Galleries Ltd, 1993).

  O’Dowd, Peadar, Galway City (Galway Corporation, 1998).

  O’Dowd, Peadar, The Great Famine and the West 1845-1850 (Galway Corporation, 1995).

  Ó hÉideáin, E., The Dominicans in Galway 1241-1991 (The Dominican Priory, Galway, 1991).

  Porteir, Cathal (ed.), The Great Irish Famine (Mercier Press, 1995).

  Thoreau, Henry David, Cape Cod (WW Norton and Company, New York, 1865).

  Villiers-Tuthill, K., Beyond the Twelve Bens: A History of Clifden and District 1860-1923 (Kathleen Villiers-Tuthill, 1990).

  White, R., 1847 Famine Ship Diary (Mercier Press, Cork, 1994).

  Woodham-Smith, C., The Great Hunger (Harper and Row, United States, 1989).

  Also by William Henry

  The Shimmering Waste: The Life and Times of Robert O’Hara Burke

  St Clerans: The Tale of a Manor House

  The Lynch Family of Galway

  Role of Honour: The Mayors of Galway City 1485-2001

  Mervue 1955-2003

  The Galway Arms Golfing Society

  Fields of Slaughter: The Battle of Knockdoe 1504

  Supreme Sacrifice: The Story of Eamonn Ceannt 1881-1916

  Galway and the Great War

  Forgotten Heroes: Galway Soldiers of the Great War

  Galway’s Great War Memorial Book 1914-1918

  Tir na nÓg: A New Adventure

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